Fox

Socialist guerilla artist Banksy uploaded a “couch gag” for The Simpsons to YouTube, which Fox aired last night.

The Simpsons is a highly-merchandised capital enterprise that has grossed $527 million since its debut in 1989. Now in its twenty-second season, The Simpsons has broadcast 467 episodes and was the first Fox show to land in the Top 30 ratings for a season.

Banksy makes his disgust for capitalism perfectly clear in his depiction of The Simpsons as a sweatshop representative of western civilization.

You’re able to enjoy these clips due to your own advanced technology — as we speak I’m uploading this post from my Droid.

Banksy makes a point that we should be aware of the cost of capitalism. Yet be grateful that the children Banksy depicts in this clip are hanging celluloid screen shots, rather than prostituting themselves or having been kidnapped into violent slavery.

Capitalism makes the world better for everyone, even those at the bottom of the trickle-down ladder.

Watch the clip before YouTube removes it again:

Tax Freedom Day was April 9. But when you factor in the cost of regulation (on which more here), it turns out we work nearly half the year just to pay for government. Wayne Crews and I give the details, as well as some ideas for regulatory reform, over at Fox Forum. The three we give are:

-Disclosure. Each year’s federal budget, or the annual “Economic Report of the President,” should include in-depth chapters exploring the regulatory state, along the lines of Ten Thousand Commandments. The more the public and policymakers know about regulatory costs, the more likely they are to do something about them.

-Eliminate obsolete rules. Congress should task the Office of Management and Budget with identifying rules to eliminate each year. Congress should also implement its own bipartisan packages of cuts to be voted on, up or down, without amendment. Mandatory 5-year sunsets for all new rules would also help. Congress can reauthorize useful rules, while obsolete or harmful ones would automatically expire.

-Most important of all, Congress needs to reassume its lawmaking responsibilities. It passed 125 bills last year—but federal agencies passed 3,503 final rules. This “regulation without representation” should end. There is too little accountability when it comes to regulation.

The House passed the Commercial Advertisement Loudness Mitigation Act on Wednesday. If it becomes law, the FCC would control the volume level of television commercials. Some of them are noticeably louder than regular programming. This is, to put it tactfully, irritating.

Rep. Rick Boucher told the Associated Press that “It’s an annoying experience, and something really should be done about it.”

He was talking about the commercials, though his remarks better fit the regulations he voted for.

Still, he’s right that something needs to be done. Loud commercials are a nuisance. They are also avoidable. For example, I avoid them by watching as little television as possible. Maybe read a book or spend time with loved ones instead. There are other ways, too. Here are a few:

-Use the mute button on your remote.

-If you have DVR and you’re watching a show you recorded, you can fast forward through the commercials.

-Change the channel.

-Let broadcasters know how you feel. Tell them not to run loud commercials. You can contact ABC here; CBS here; Fox here; and NBC here. They’d rather you watch their channel than not, after all. And the best way to prevent a viewer exodus is not alienating them.

Besides, they’d probably rather hear from you than the FCC.

(Hat tip to Fred Smith)

The prosecutor in Contra Costa County, California won’t prosecute shoplifters anymore, citing budget cuts. It’s open season on retailers in that large suburban country. But rather than focusing on that, many prosecutor associations are stupidly supporting the federal hate-crimes bill, which would waste taxpayers’ money by allowing people who have been acquitted in state court to be reprosecuted in federal court.

The FCC is wasting time fining broadcasters for fleeting expletives under an indecency policy that is applied broader than the FCC’s own written regulations suggest (for example, the FCC treats buttocks as being a “sexual organ,” contrary to the definition‘s plain meaning). In a 5-to-4 decision today in FCC v. Fox Television Stations, the Supreme Court ruled that the FCC’s policy isn’t “arbitrary and capricious” in violation of the Administrative Procedure Act. It overturned a federal appeals court decision that voided massive fines imposed by the FCC against Fox. The Supreme Court refused to rule on the First Amendment issue that the federal appeals court earlier avoided, leaving that issue for it to address on remand.

The FCC’s policy may yet be struck down, since it survived only because the Supreme Court temporarily ducked the First Amendment issue: the liberal Supreme Court justices who dissented don’t like indecency regulations (at least outside the workplace), but they do like most other broadcast speech restrictions (like compulsory must-carry mandates and racial preferences in the award of broadcast licenses, upheld against an equal-protection challenge in the Supreme Court’s 5-to-4 Metro Broadcasting decision, which was overruled by the Supreme Court’s 2000 Adarand decision).

By contrast, the conservative justices dislike indecency, but also dislike the legal rationale, the scarcity doctrine, that is often cited as a basis for it being banned on the radio, since that scarcity doctrine is also the basis of the “Fairness Doctrine” that liberals want to use to shut down conservative talk radio. (The scarcity doctrine claims that speech on the air can be restricted in the name of the public interest, since broadcast spectrum is a scarce resource — never mind that there are more radio stations than newspapers, whose speech cannot be restricted under the Supreme Court’s Tornillo decision; and never mind the fact that the FCC’s own lawyers have admitted in the past that the scarcity rationale is bunk).

Conservative justice Clarence Thomas, who provided the deciding vote in favor of the FCC, only concurred in the ruling because it didn’t reach the First Amendment. He made clear in his concurring opinion that if it had, he would likely have rejected the “Red Lion” scarcity doctrine on which Supreme Court decisions restricting broadcast speech are heavily based (like its Pacifica decision, which held that indecent speech, which cannot be banned elsewhere in society, is nevertheless not protected on the broadcast airwaves). As he noted, “Red Lion and Pacifica were unconvincing when they were issued, and the passage of time has only increased doubt regarding their continued validity.”

When the conservative justices finally do reach the First Amendment issue, they may discard the scarcity rationale for restricting speech, and reluctantly limit the FCC’s expansive indecency ban, which would the courts would not tolerate under the First Amendment in most other contexts. (The conservative justices dislike other speech restrictions commonly defended under the scarcity rationale, but favored by liberal groups, like must-carry regulations, minority-preference mandates, and the Fairness Doctrine). By contrast, the liberal justices, who usually have little respect for precedent they disagree with (like today’s decision), will probably continue to argue that the FCC’s indecency policy is “arbitrary and capricious” in violation of the APA, and possibly the First Amendment as well.

Four former presidents of Latin American countries and the former president of Spain joined in an ardent plea for the U.S. to strengthen its ties with those countries that share the values of freedom, democracy, and economic progress. In their editorial today in the Wall Street Journal, José Maria Aznar (Spain), Vicente Fox (Mexico), Andrés Pastrana (Colombia), Julio Maria Sanguinetti (Uruguay), and Franciso Flores (El Salvador) also pointed out that “Free trade is one way to help prevent the resurgence of autocracy in the region.”

Poverty is a painful reality in many countries. Millions of people do not have access to health care or education. This is unacceptable. We strongly believe that the benefits of globalization should be available to everybody. We have found in our own countries that strengthening democratic institutions, providing good governance, and opening up our borders to trade is the best way to improve social conditions and economic welfare.

Latin America has much to gain from free trade. Successfully negotiating free-trade agreements will help bring progress and prosperity to Latin American countries, as well as around the globe.

The former leaders called on President-elect Obama to support their efforts in realizing a common dream based on democratic values and principles. That plea is especially apt when these few Latin American countries are surrounded by or adjacent to leftist governments increasingly hostile to the U.S.