Donnerstag, Januar 20, 2011
Mittwoch, Januar 19, 2011
Unintended Consequences...redux
That government takes this advice seriously: they open up flood plains to development; they institute water management policies that are designed primarily to maximize stored and controllable water resources, and they drop training for floods and tell their emergency service people that the need to train for fires and dry conditions instead of floods. This government spent $13bn on desalinization plants to meet water needs, abandoning flood planning because, of course, there wouldn't be any more floods for the foreseeable future.
Sounds sensible, right? Sounds like a sound thing to do?
Read this and see how horribly wrong this has been: just as wrong as when houseowners were told they were not allowed to trim back trees and brush from their houses in the interest of keeping temperatures down to reduce cooling costs, only to see brush fires kill dozens trying to save their houses.
The only thing anthropogenic about the Brisbane floods was the policies that led to abandonment of flood planning, of allowing buildings to be erected on flood plains, of being forced to release massive amounts of water into Brisbane all at once (to save the dam from overflowing) because policies forbade measured releases that would have avoided the degree of flooding to begin with.
In other words, the authorities in charge ignored the historical record, ignored the geological record, ignored the direct and causal relationship between flooding/droughts and the Pacific Decadal Oscillation; ignored the warnings of those who said they were talking a crock, and barged ahead with policies that have now killed people.
There will be an inquiry now, a full judicial review by the Lord Mayor of Brisbane. Tad late for that.
These are the unintended consequences of believing in something to the exclusion of any alternatives. It shows the utter idiocy of politicians beholden to special interest groups.
Oh, and the desalination plants?
Mothballed because of a lack of demand: rain has been so heavy that it is no longer needed. More misallocated capital.
Isn't it ironic, don't you think?
Dienstag, Januar 18, 2011
The Conundrum of Low Interest Rates...
So what's not to like?
Read this to understand the dangers of low interest rates.
First and foremost: misallocation of capital.
This is the first and foremost cardinal sin of economics: money poorly spent, money frittered away on non-essentials, money invested in projects that fail to perform, all of it is wasted.
Economics, after all, is primarily about limited resources and unlimited demand, reconciling the two.
Misallocation of capital is, I repeat, a cardinal sin in economics.
What does this have to do with low interest rates?
Simple: lowering the price of money increases the possible universe of projects that can be financed. Not all projects should be financed; not all projects will be financed; not all projects deserve to be financed. By putting a price on money, you can judge which projects are those that should be financed, that deserve to be financed, and finally those that will be financed because they bring a proper return in income.
Drop the price of money and you strongly expand the "proper" return on income, that which is enough to pay for the project and remain profitable. The more expensive money is, the more difficult it is to find projects worthy of investment: when interest rates are 10%, the universe of viable projects is much, much smaller (and generally involved considerably more work) than when interest rates are at 3%.
A fundamental truth, despite low interest rates remains: that capital is and always will be a limited resource, despite the activities of the government printing presses. Once invested, it is no longer fungible and easily moved from one project to the next; once invested, it is no longer available for other uses.
Hence low interest rates can be extraordinarily destructive: it leads to investments that fail to perform when interest rates are no longer low and when it comes time to refinance the investment, the business case evaporates and someone is left with a white elephant that cannot be sold for love or money. Case in point: Xanadu.
Now, why then the insistence of low interest rates by the Fed?
Well, there was this recession...
Seriously: low interest rates by the Fed saved the financial system from gridlock and collapse as the subprime crisis and its follow-on effects worked it way out. It allowed the banks to avoid liquidity traps and survive.
It also allows the government to take on very large debt levels, as the cost of financing that debt remains well within the ability of the US government to pay via its cash flow.
The downside, of course, is that while the banks survived, they also stopped lending in order to eliminate any new debt turning into a problem, as well as to return to profitability, since the liquidity was invested in US government debt, with the banks making a handy, risk-free return on the money that they had borrowed from the Fed in the first place. After being burned so badly, a risk-free return of 100 basis points sounds awfully good to a lot of bankers; why loan money with risks of default at relatively high levels when you can earn it for free elsewhere?
Another downside is that interest rates won't remain low forever, but that is exactly the only way that the US government can afford a debt crisis without having to either cut spending drastically and/or raise taxes significantly. If interest rates for US government bonds were to climb to, say, 5% for a 90 day bond (which is where a significant portion of US government bonds are issued), the government would have to spend quite a bit more for interest servicing. Back in the good old days (pre-Clinton, to be exact), the US government largely financed spending via long-term bonds; this was explicitly changed by the Clinton Administration to short-term bonds, increasing the inherent instability of the US government's ability to service those bonds.
Why this?
Because short-term bonds are always more volatile than long-term bonds. Bonds have an interest rate and a price; the combination of the two determines the performance of the bond. The interest rate is determined when the bond is issued; the price fluctuates, approaching 100% of the nominal price of the bond when the bond reaches maturity and is paid out at the face value. If demand for a bond suddenly tanks - no one wants to buy it, everyone wants to sell it - then the effective interest rate skyrockets upwards; long-term bonds are usually fairly free of these fluctuations, as they can first be redeemed in years, not in months or days.
Hence if the Fed were to raise interest rates, the ability of the US government to finance its debt could be called into question, as the sum of the debt is huge and even small changes here make mockery of any budgetary planning.
This is perhaps the greatest danger of low interest rates coupled with heavy debt: once that debt is accumulated, it has to be serviced and, invariably, re-financed as short-term bonds mature and have to be repaid (financed by new bonds). The fact that interest rates are low has enabled the US government to take on massive debt; the flip side is that this debt is largely short-term and must be refinanced. Raising interest rates here would effectively cripple the ability of the US to refinance its debt.
If that happens: watch out, what we saw in the last few years is nothing in comparison to a US sovereign debt default.
So now we have the conundrum of low interest rates: great to have as a consumer, but a catastrophe for the economy. The Fed cannot afford to raise interest rates because if it does so, the ability of the federal government to raise capital is badly damaged; if it does not, in the face of inflation, it will damage the rest of the economy. Companies have taken on projects that can only show a return on profit when interest rates are low (because when interest rates rise, they turn the project unprofitable) because it was simpler and easier to do so, rather than finding the projects that were more resilient and rewarding, but harder to do and harder to make work well.
Low interest rates are a trap for the unwary. If companies and the US government had maintained their standards, low interest rates wouldn't be a problem: however, low interest rates drive both companies and the US government to misallocate capital, the cardinal sin of economics.
The conundrum remains: there is no simple solution. The only real solution would have been to not go so heavily into debt (US government) or to maintain high standards of due diligence for corporate investments and spending (companies).
Returning to economically sensible behavior after such a period of debauchery will be both expensive and tedious, marked by much stronger savings rates and the accompanying postponement or abandonment of consumption in order to regenerate savings and hence capital.
We'll all be paying for the low interest rates for decades to come, until companies have written off their losses and government debt comes down significantly.
Now that's a legacy.
There is no easy answer
Donnerstag, Januar 13, 2011
A Political Inversion...
On the one hand you have the Democrats, the traditional party of the unions, of the little guy, fighting for the disadvantaged, caring about those less better off.
On the other hand you have the Republicans, country club members, bosses and exploiters of the poor, slumlords and commercial developers who would love nothing better than to turn out grannies and unmarried black lesbian single mothers onto the street in order to build another shopping mall.
Okay, so much for the fantasy image that the Democrats have been living for the last 50 years.
The inversion of these roles is, for me, amazing. The Democrats have been completely corrupted and now actively are in collusion with those who would rob most Americans blind in a second if they could (and that is what they are working on right now).
Read this to understand what is going on.
Simply put: there has been massive incompetence, fraud and outright theft by the mortgage servicers. Massachusetts (yes, liberal-until-our-dying-breath Massachusetts!) courts have found that the mortgage servicers have been foreclosing on properties that they have no title to (and hence no standing before a court of law). The corollary of this is that if the mortgage servicers don't have title, how can they have securitized the mortgages?
Let's back up a second so that this is better understood.
Someone buying a house gets a mortgage from a mortgage originator. The mortgage originator used to be the local bank, it no longer generally is. The mortgage and the note for the house (title) goes to the mortgage originator. The mortgage originator usually turns the mortgage around and securitizes it, selling off the cash flow of the mortgage to a financial instrument. The note is transferred to the legal entity of the financial instrument as security against failure of the cash flow (non-payment): in this case, with a home mortgage, the financial instrument would be a residential-backed mortgage security (RBMS). If a homeowner fails to pay their mortgage, the mortgage servicer - which, remember did not originate the loan and does not have direct title to the property, as this has been turned over, physically, to the legal entity of the financial instrument as security (it's the basic definition of what a security is!) - then tries to come to an agreement about repaying the monies owed; failing this, they foreclose on the home, selling it for what it can be sold for, and turning the monies over to the financial instrument. When the RBMS is formed, as a legal entity, there is a relatively small window of opportunity for transferring the title and effective legal ownership of the property without paying taxes (this is done deliberately to avoid having unresolved tax problems).
So,that's the theory.
What really happened?
When the mortgage was sold by the mortgage originator, titles and paperwork were transferred. When the mortgage servicing companies sold the mortgages to the RBMS, the paperwork wasn't done properly: the notes of ownership, in some cases, were scanned in and the originals discarded (in violation of 8 centuries of legal precedents); on other cases, no one knows what happened to them, as the originators, original servicers and everyone in-between were closed, were taken over, became another company, etc.
In other words, the legal chain of ownership, the core of the real estate business, was disrupted for any number of reasons, the most usual one being efficiency, rather than doing what the law required. The problem isn't so much that there is a problem when it comes to foreclosure: if the notes weren't properly transferred - and apparently the lawyers involved vouched for the correct transfer, even when they could not have known that this was the case - it also means that the RBMS are no longer securitized financial instruments, but rather ... no one really knows. They don't have recourse to the securities that they were supposed to have, meaning that they are actually worth...no one really knows.
In the name of efficiency and getting literally millions of deals done and sold off, the mortgage servicers failed in their duties, miserably so. They know this or, more exactly, the companies that unwittingly bought their assets without due diligence now know this. Legally, the whole mess must be unwound under control of the courts in order to clearly identify who owns what and who is actually allowed to foreclose; the RBMS side of the business is a catastrophe, as the investors there have been clearly defrauded, fooled into thinking they were buying securitized investments (i.e. with recourse to the assets if the cash flow failed) when, in fact, they were sold fraudulent financial instruments.
However, we are talking billions and billions of dollars here, as well as the future existence of the entire industry.
Rather than leaving this to the courts - where it is supposed to be dealt with - the mortgage servicing industry is putting on an all-stops effort to change the laws in order to make the fraud non-fraud.
Let me quote from that link above:
This proposal guts state control of their own real estate law when the Supreme Court has repeatedly found that "dirt law" is not a Federal matter. It strips homeowners of their right to their day in court to preserve their contractual rights, namely, that only the proven mortgagee, and not a gangster, or in this case, bankster, can take possession of their home.
This is central to the inversion of the political parties in the US: Democrats (which, remember, was the party of States' Rights leading up the Civil War) want to take over determining real estate law from all the states, eliminating due process (since a homeowner being foreclosed on can't have their day in court to point out that they have been current on their payments and that the bank has made a mistake, for instance), all in the name of fixing the greatest cluster-fuck in American history.
Sorry for the language, but this is really what is going on.
The Democrats appear increasingly to be committed to do outright harm to the little guy, the homeowner, really anyone buying a home with a mortgage, in order to protect those who, through their own abuse of the system, have a vested interest in not having the system fall apart because it would cost them money.
In other words, the Democrats are becoming the party of big business, pandering to corrupt businesses in order to preserve the profitability of those businesses.
Don't believe me?
Again, from the link above:
The discussion in the summary takes the view that the only "injured" homeowners that get any consideration are those "genuinely damaged by paperwork failures". Thus the only problems that are addressed are screw-ups in the mod/short sale process and wrongful foreclosures. We see nary a mention of origination fraud or servicing abuses and errors. Yet foreclosure defense attorneys have said in 50% to 70% of the cases they represent, the borrower got in serious arrears as a result of servicing errors and compounding fees; a single late or misapplied payment can quickly compound into a multi thousand dollar deficiency before the borrower even finds out something is amiss.
Read that again: 50%-70% of foreclosures are because the servicers erred and then charged homeowners for their errors, driving them into foreclosure. This is as close to outright theft as can be imagined.
To make matters worse, this destroys contracts without recourse. All in the name of protecting businesses that have been good supporters of the Democrats.
The political inversion is amazing. The Republicans are now fighting for state's rights, protecting the disadvantaged and the small guy, fighting to let them keep what they earn, while the Democrats are the party of big business, corrupted through and through.
Hat-tip to Yves at Naked Capitalism, of course: without her diligent work, much of this would have remained carefully hidden, out of the limelight.
Mittwoch, Januar 12, 2011
Back In The Day...
This prodded me to recall some of the topics discussed back then.
Fundamentally, there was a shift, driven in no small part by the film "One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest" in terms of general consciousness-raising amongst the population, from institutionalization to non-institutionalization.
Back in the day, there were abuses of the system. Borderline (not syndrome, but actual borderline) cases where someone could have lived in society, but parents and others responsible didn't want to be bothered (and yes, there was often money involved, usually a sizable inheritance) and hence someone who simply needed some therapy (to overcome deliberately induced feelings of worthlessness and self-disgust) and normal, non-destructive relationships to become a functioning and, dare say, even happy member of society would often be institutionalized and end up vastly worse-off than before.
But the solution was and is devastating,driven by do-gooders who wanted to correct "horrible wrongs" and ended up inflicting misery and more often than not outright horror and death by removing as many from institutionalization as possible.
The goal wasn't only to "liberate" those who were, in many cases, clinically insane, but also to confront society with its debris, with those who failed to make the grade, to rub society's nose in the dirt, so to speak, because capitalism was so horrible and anyone who didn't want to live the capitalist dream was oppressed and downcast. The institutionalized were viewed as victims of a ruthless and brutal society who did not want to deal with their problems, which needed to have half-way houses placed in the best neighborhoods in order to remind the successful of the societal costs of capitalism.
Yes, I am being serious about this. This is virtually verbatim from one activist psychologist working with one of the deinstitutionalization advocacy groups of the day.
There was a method to the madness: throw the institutionalized out in order to generate budgets for half-way houses, employing those who proclaimed the need to integrate these people into society. The idea was that a generation of advocates could live off the state this way, while at the same time confronting American capitalist society with the costs of capitalism, mental illness of those who were too frail to withstand the rigors of that society. Half-way houses were considered optimal, situated with plenty of room, plenty of space, in upscale neighborhoods to force the rich to see what costs their success required. Half-way houses would let the institutionalized, taking their medications, to reintegrate with society and ultimately help change society so that their "different" ways of perception and behavior would become acceptable.
The reality, of course, was that the advocates, as did most people, found the institutionalized to be extremely difficult to get along with, that they would conveniently forget to take their medications, that putting a half-way house near a school would only infuriate the parents and that the half-way houses would end up in the worst possible neighborhoods because they were powerless to fight them. The reality was that institutionalization was actually necessary in many cases - I remember the statistic of over 90% - in order to prevent, for instance, a severely neurotic young man who masturbated constantly from doing so in the local playground.
It was, as is so often the case, a massive failure. But the activists based their careers on it, the institutions were closed down, the institutionalized became homeless and lived lives of despair in a mental fog.
The best intentions. The worst possible results.
Dienstag, Januar 11, 2011
Blood On Their Hands...
I've not commented on the Arizona shootings because there is too much going on and already too much vitriol - from the left - that it scarcely deserves serious thought.
But seeing that article and the sheer bloody-mindedness that has led to the deaths of many, let's consider this: that the "progressives" in our society are the most dangerous elements in society.
Not because they want to overthrow established principles in the name of progress, not because they want to spend all of your money as do-gooders on pet projects.
No, rather because they are dangerous in their ignorance, dangerous in their deeds, and dangerous in their intentions.
The key quote in the link above is this:
The editor of the Lancet, Richard Horton, sent Dr. Wakefield's paper to six reviewers, four of whom rejected it. That should have been enough to preclude publication. But Mr. Horton thought the paper was provocative and published it anyway.
In other words, Mr. Horton put his own opinions above that of scientific research, choosing to publish bad science in the name of ... what?
Pretending that vaccines are bad for you? Making up a story to further your career? Living in a fantasy world where science is debased into opinion and peer review destroyed - and it has been most thoroughly by the likes of Mr. Horton and by the Global Warming Alarmist Industry, which has rigged peer review to the point of censorship - in order to be "provocative"?
Why not, after all, it's risk-free for the editor. Nothing is going to happen to him: if, at the worst, he comes under fire for being a really bad editor, he can say "but I thought it would be an interesting topic for greater discussion".
Too bad kids have died for this.
The same sort of risk-free political nonsense permeates the left. They can call for the welfare state and insist that the primary role of government is to do good, that progressives have a right to re-make society into something they think is better (destroying family structures and economies along the way). That's why you see the vitriol coming from them in the wake of the Arizona shootings: they think, seriously, that anyone who disagrees with them is not just wrong, but are, necessarily, bad people.
The truth is that the left is seriously irresponsible. You can't trust them with the simplest of tasks, let alone complex ones.
And they have blood on their hands. They just don't see it as blood, but rather necessary sacrifices for the greater good.
Donnerstag, Januar 06, 2011
Back to the Good Old Bad Days...
Well, it's back.
But with a dearly ironic difference.
Read this to see what I mean.
Back in the day NATO was faced with a potential foe - who made it quite clear in their own writings and actions that they considered war, if not inevitable, to be a clear part of the spectrum of political tools at their service. The Soviet Union and the delightfully named Warsaw Pact - delightfully so named because the shorthand became "WarPact" - were belligerent and not above shooting to kill when warning shots were perfectly adequate. Their doctrine - we now know this as a fact, while back in the day it was considered to be an extremist interpretation - was massive use of nuclear weapons to cripple NATO while sending in very large conventional forces to achieve quick victories at extreme cost to civilian populations. When it became clear that NATO could survive and that such a doctrine would be counter-productive at best, the move went to massive conventional forces to achieve "proper correlation of forces" to achieve needed battlefield superiority to be able to defeat NATO divisions in detail. The creation of Operational Maneuver Groups (OMG!) to break through the crust defense of NATO was the final strategic plan of the Soviet Union and the Warsaw Pact.
NATO at first designed its forces as tripwires that would then result in nuclear strikes on WarPact forces entering NATO territories. When certain key countries realized that it would be political suicide if it became public knowledge that NATO's war fighting strategy was massive use of tactical nuclear weapons to destroy WarPact forces, this strategy had to change. While the WarPact chose to use its comparative advantages - large conscript armies coupled with products from heavy industry (tanks, artillery) - NATO chose to counter this with technology, developing extremely effective anti-tank weapons (the Soviets despaired of facing attack helicopters armed with TOW missiles) and long-reach weapons designed to dismantle the ability of the WarPact to actually wage war by crippling their logistics.
We know how this ended: the WarPact collapsed because they devoted too much of their less productive economic output to feeding the military with troops, weapons and logistics and ended up bankrupting their system long before anyone thought that their State would wither away. The NATO plan worked: substituting technology for mass led to the modern US war-fighting doctrine, of relatively small and mobile forces appearing at exactly the right place and the right time with the right weapons to destroy their enemies with minimal casualties, combining technology and information with war-fighting capabilities fine-tuned to achieving the goal of winning the battle with minimum casualties.
So, what does this have to do with China?
China sees itself confronted with a potential foe - who makes it quite clear in their own writings and actions that the deliberate use of force to resolve political confrontations is part and parcel of the spectrum of political tools at their service - that has overwhelming conventional superiority.
Now that's ironic.
Read the story at the link: China is saying, moving from a long-term no-first-use commitment to "we're going to nuke your fleet if you attack us" doctrine of nuclear weapons. They are deliberately lowering the nuclear threshold in order to avoid having to try to match their potential opponent in terms of conventional forces: back in the day, such a doctrine for NATO generated massive bad publicity and quite a bit of opposition (in no small part financed by the WarPact, but that is another story for another day) that ultimately led to the development of conventional weapons to do what nuclear weapons were to be used for.
Lowering the nuclear threshold becomes very, very dangerous when conflict looms: it really does imply that even a small attack will bring Armageddon, that there could be no doctrine of "limited war," that escalation to using nuclear weapons would be fast and unavoidable. If that is your policy, then you have to implement strategic planning that matches that policy (otherwise it is non-believable and invites provocation, since your opponent does not see you backing up your public statements with weapon systems).
Of course, what it does is lower the nuclear threshold and raise the specter of a nuclear war actually being fought, as once they are in use, there is little or no likelihood that the other side will not use them as well. What was a conventional war with lousy consequences for civilians becomes a nuclear war with absolutely devestating consequences for civilians.
The world is not going to be a safer place if this becomes really is becoming Chinese nuclear doctrine. That is the fundamental line that "peace movements" used to try to discredit NATO war fighting plans and doctrines, that these would make the risk of war greater, rather than less.
How ironic, don't you think?
It looks like we are heading back to the good old bad days of nuclear war-fighting doctrines.
Mittwoch, Januar 05, 2011
Why the Democrats Are Doomed...
It's the answer to all of our problems: let's simply get rid of the Fed, disband it entirely, and replace the Federal Reserve Notes (aka "money") with ... US Money. Printed by the Congress.
Repudiate all debt, simply print money. Need to fund something? Simply print money.
Hallelujah! All of our problems solved!
Author of the Bill, HR 6550: a certain Mr. Kucinich.
If that is the solution, then it is rather apparent that the Democrats have no clue what the problem is. Zilch, nada, not one whit of a tad.
Read this specifically
SEC. 106. ORIGINATION IN LIEU OF BORROWING.
(a) In General- After the effective date, and subject to limitations established by the United States Monetary Authority under provisions of section 302, the Secretary shall originate United States Money to address any negative fund balances resulting from a shortfall in available Government receipts to fund Government appropriations authorized by Congress under law.
(b) Prohibition on Government Borrowing- After the effective date, unless otherwise provided by an Act of the Congress enacted after such date--
(1) no amount may be borrowed by the Secretary from any source; and
(2) no amount may be borrowed by any Federal agency or department, any independent establishment of the executive branch, or any other instrumentality of the United States (other than a national bank, Federal savings association, or Federal credit union) from any source other than the Secretary.
(c) Rule of Construction- No provision of this Act shall be construed as preventing the Congress from exercising its constitutional authority to borrow money on the full faith and credit of the United States.
(d) Technical and Conforming Amendment- On the effective date, chapter 31 of title 31, United States Code, is hereby repealed, subject to the retirement of outstanding instruments of indebtedness of the United States in accordance with section 401.
Ye gods. This is the complete and total abolition of any fiscal responsibility and the destruction of US government bonds as the most secure investment instruments the world has ever seen (okay, the Democrats have been working on that last one for quite a while).
He seriously wants to forbid borrowing by simply allowing Congress to print whatever money it needs.
What would monetary policy then be? Take a look:
(5) GOVERNING PRINCIPLE OF MONETARY POLICY- The Monetary Authority shall pursue a monetary policy based on the governing principle that the supply of money in circulation should not become inflationary nor deflationary in and of itself, but will be sufficient to allow goods and services to move freely in trade in a balanced manner. The Monetary Authority shall maintain long run growth of the monetary and credit aggregates commensurate with the economy's long run potential to increase production, so as to promote effectively the goals of maximum employment, stable prices, and moderate long-term interest rates.
How is this then to be reconciled with allowing Congress to print whatever money is needed?
Hopeful thinking is all: stating that whatever Congress needs will, in effect, not become inflationary or deflationary in and of itself, but will be ... sufficient.
If this is not a case of serious parody - and Mr. Kucinich is scarcely capable of such a sense of droll humor - then this is one of the better examples of why the Democrats are doomed. Sheer ignorance of basic economics and sheer ignorance of how economies actually function appears to be the basis for their thinking: it is the only explanation for such a folly.
Oh, and interest rates may not exceed 8%, nor may the amount of interest over the life of the loan exceed the equity, nor may interest be paid on your regular banking account. Oh, and local governments can borrow money for nothing.
Ye gods. The man seriously just wants to get rid of economics because it keeps on getting in the way.
Keep it up, Democrats. Keep on showing how you elect congresscritters who are fundamentally incompetent, fundamentally ignorant and cannot even begin to understand the consequences of such an act.
Keep it up, and you'll look back at 2010 as one of the good years.
Dienstag, Januar 04, 2011
First post of 2011...
On the other hand, 2011 is shaping up to be a fairly interesting year, not the least because the Democrats were pummeled so heavily and lost the House.
Congress right now is held largely in contempt, with congresscritters of all types rated down there with used car salesmen and the like. It is also rightly held in such contempt: largely speaking, Congress has failed to do its right and proper job under the Constitution, and hasn't since the New Deal. What is this right and proper job?
Read this.
If you consider that, you can see that Congress has been irresponsible for far too long. The whole system of earmarking - aka pork - is indicative of this: it is a way of getting something done without having to stand up and push a bill through that obviously is a payoff for some congresscritters' pet project/constituency/lobbyist payoff/etc. No exceptions here: Congress has failed to fulfill its constitutionally appointed role.
What is that role?
To quote from the above link:
The Constitution gave the federal government the authority to pursue certain limited ends, like national security and ensuring free interstate commerce, but otherwise left us free to pursue our ends either through the states or as private individuals. It did not authorize the federal government to provide us with the vast array of goods and services that today reduce so many of us to government dependents.
How did Congress get into its current state? Roosevelt and the New Deal: they abdicated their responsibility to the Supreme Court to determine what was constitutionally allowed (the Supreme Court should really only decide what is not allowed, rather than what is allowed...) and gave the Executive an enormous expansion of enumerated powers.
What are enumerated powers?
Well, to quote that radical and subversive document, the Constitution of the US, Article I, Section 8:
The Congress shall have Power To lay and collect Taxes, Duties, Imposts and Excises, to pay the Debts and provide for the common Defence and general Welfare of the United States; but all Duties, Imposts and Excises shall be uniform throughout the United States; [Altered by Amendment XVI "Income tax".]
To borrow money on the credit of the United States;
To regulate Commerce with foreign Nations, and among the several States, and with the Indian Tribes;
To establish an uniform Rule of Naturalization, and uniform Laws on the subject of Bankruptcies throughout the United States;
To coin Money, regulate the Value thereof, and of foreign Coin, and fix the Standard of Weights and Measures;
To provide for the Punishment of counterfeiting the Securities and current Coin of the United States;
To establish Post Offices and Post Roads;
To promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts, by securing for limited Times to Authors and Inventors the exclusive Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries;
To constitute Tribunals inferior to the supreme Court;
To define and punish Piracies and Felonies committed on the high Seas, and Offenses against the Law of Nations;
To declare War, grant Letters of Marque and Reprisal, and make Rules concerning Captures on Land and Water;
To raise and support Armies, but no Appropriation of Money to that Use shall be for a longer Term than two Years;
To provide and maintain a Navy;
To make Rules for the Government and Regulation of the land and naval Forces;
To provide for calling forth the Militia to execute the Laws of the Union, suppress Insurrections and repel Invasions;
To provide for organizing, arming, and disciplining, the Militia, and for governing such Part of them as may be employed in the Service of the United States, reserving to the States respectively, the Appointment of the Officers, and the Authority of training the Militia according to the discipline prescribed by Congress;
To exercise exclusive Legislation in all Cases whatsoever, over such District (not exceeding ten Miles square) as may, by Cession of particular States, and the acceptance of Congress, become the Seat of the Government of the United States, and to exercise like Authority over all Places purchased by the Consent of the Legislature of the State in which the Same shall be, for the Erection of Forts, Magazines, Arsenals, dock-Yards, and other needful Buildings; And
To make all Laws which shall be necessary and proper for carrying into Execution the foregoing Powers, and all other Powers vested by this Constitution in the Government of the United States, or in any Department or Officer thereof.
In addition, to put this in perspective, the 10th Amendment is worth quoting as well:The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people.
Now, this is going to out me as a strict constructionist (duh), but the Supreme Court made mistakes when it allowed the US Congress to interpret "To make all Laws which shall be necessary and proper" to mean an effective carte blanche to make laws however Congress saw fit, rather than to make laws "necessary and proper".
It's all a question of perspective: how is the government allowed to spend money?
To again quote from the above link:
In 1794, for example, James Madison, the principal author of the Constitution, rose on the House floor to object to a bill appropriating $15,000 for the relief of French refugees who had fled to Baltimore and Philadelphia from an insurrection in San Domingo. He could not, he said, "undertake to lay [his] finger on that article of the Federal Constitution which granted a right to Congress of expending, on objects of benevolence, the money of their constituents." The bill failed.
Bingo: if such a bill were to be brought forward today, it would pass without a fight (well, at least under the last Congress). Who would want to go on record of not caring for the modern equivalent of French refugees?
Well, according to James Madison, it is not the role of the government to spend money on objects of benevolence.
It is the role of the Federal government to do what is enumerated: we are going broke trying to be benevolent.
The sooner that this is realized, the better. If you want to be benevolent, Democrats, then do it with your own damn money. Not with the money of taxpayers.
Nowhere amongst the enumerated powers is "to provide benevolence."
If "progressives" (in quotes because their policies increasingly show them to be regresssive, not progressive, i.e. harming the poor, rather than helping them) or Democrats want to provide for benevolence, let them amend the Constitution. Anything less than that is cowardly, showing that they have not the courage of their convictions.
It will be a good start to 2011 when the Constitution, for the first time, is read out aloud at the beginning of the next Congress. A very good start indeed...
Donnerstag, Dezember 23, 2010
The Face of Corruption...
Doesn't sound so bad, does it? A film studio for New Mexico, what's so bad about that?
Simple:
Father and son Lance Hool and Jason Hool — longtime friends of Gov. Bill Richardson — are the principal shareholders in Santa Fe Studios. State Democratic Party chair Javier Gonzalez is also a partner in the venture.
Further, after initial approval, the agreement has been changed multiple times, with the local government paying for more and more of the project:
The most recent version of the deal includes the following commitments of public resources:
- Santa Fe County will administer the $10 million economic- development grant on the project.
- Santa Fe County will provide $3.6 million worth of infrastructure improvements to the project, including dedicating as many as 25 acre-feet of water for the studio.
- Los Alamos National Bank will loan the project developers at least $6.5 million, which Santa Fe County will guarantee by placing $6.5 million worth of "cash reserves" in a "lock box" account at the bank.
According to the motion filed Wednesday, if there is a default of the terms of the Project Participation Agreement, Santa Fe County will also be obligated to reimburse the state for any of the grant money spent on the project.
So, from a modest spending proposal, Santa Fe county is now administering the project and, most importantly, is guaranteeing the project, removing any and all risk for anyone investing...and those investing just happen to be longtime friends of the Governor and the State Democratic Party Chair.
This is the face of corruption today: instead of taking on risk in a commercial undertaking, your friendly local government takes that on instead, but only if you are the right people.
At least some is trying to fight this:
But Wednesday's filing claims the new agreement still violates laws meant to prevent the government from donating public resources to private developers or from lending or pledging its credit to aid "any person, association or public or private corporation."
The motion alleges that:
- Neither Santa Fe Studios nor its holding company, La Luz Holdings, qualifies for public assistance under Local Economic Development Act rules.
- Santa Fe County changed the terms of its own ordinance governing the use of county gross-receipts tax revenue to allow the use without posing the question to voters as is required by law.
- Only 16.5 of the 65 acres purchased by Santa Fe Studios and La Luz Holdings for the studio project will be used to build the studios that are named as the focus of the $10 million grant, while the remainder will be a private real-estate development.
Corruption, in the eyes of the corrupted, is simply a way of doing business. It costs the taxpayers massive amounts of money, but because there isn't one single person "hurt", a blind eye is turned and those with connections make out like bandits. In a town facing real problems with oversupply of housing, foreclosures and bankruptcies, someone is using his leverage with the local government to build more housing.
But hey, what's the rule of law to these friends of the Governor and the State Democratic Party Chair?
At least someone is trying to stop this: it may well get nowhere, because all of those involved are either corrupt or complicit: oddly enough, no one involved could be reached for comment, or declined to comment because they weren't aware of what is going on.
Now that's convenient.
And kudos to the Santa Fe New Mexican: they are doing their job, reporting on what is obviously a sweetheart deal for political friends.
Dienstag, Dezember 21, 2010
Ironic Is The Least I Can Say...
Ye gods.
What is ironic is that the Democrats, the party that claims to represent the workers in the US, the friend of the little guy, the party so dead set against big business, is ... yep, lobbying for changes that big business desperately want.
Net neutrality is nothing less than an attempt by internet providers to rout internet traffic to maximize their profitability. Ignore all other arguments: at the end of the day, that is all that there is to this. This is commercial interests wanting to maximize their profitability, minimize their costs, and try to make monopoly profits.
The only way they can do this is to change the laws, changing the fundamental nature of the internet, allowing them to fiddle with packets and their routing. Don't pay enough? Then you get dropped into the big bucket of "well, your packet will get there someday"; pay enough, and your access is like it is now.
And that is supposed to be a consumer benefit?
Not.
What the Democrats also don't realize is that if you allow discrimination based on price, you can also discriminate against content and source. Which opens the internet to significantly more censorship than has been the case. But what do you expect from the party that desperately fought the Civil Rights Act.
A lot of money was invested in what are now called darknets, parts of the internet that are usually not very accessible because the companies that control them have largely turned them off. They are the fiber-optic networks that were installed during the Dot-Net bubble, when companies threw billions at infrastructure.
Now they are kept deliberately off the system in order to create artificial constraints on data flow in order to bring them back on only when the companies involved can charge monopoly prices for access.
The building of these networks is a classic bubble malinvestment, an investment that turned out to be completely useless. Now the companies involved want to turn that around and recover their invested billions. Right now, there is no cash flow, no revenues from these nets, and the investments, if they haven't been completely written off, are like lead weights on the balance sheets, reducing profitability.
Here's an idea: how about simply opening the nets up and start earning a revenue stream from them. The companies that blew billions on these nets need to feel the pain of making poor investment decisions rather than forcing consumers to pay for them (since pricing without discrimination doesn't let them raise prices due to competition: ain't capitalism grand for consumers as well?)
Sigh. Knowing the Democrats, this will probably go through, only to be repealed. But the only victories the Democrats are capable of, it seems, are Pyrrhic victories. Isn't it ironic...
Dienstag, Dezember 14, 2010
Ha! Of course...
Duh. Been the problem from the start.
Eric Cantor has the right idea:let's put a stake through the heart of ObamaCare and repeal it in its entirety, end the nightmare that Pelosi wrought.
What a catastrophe she has been for this country. What a catastrophe both she and Obama have been for the Democrats. At this point, any decent conservative, especially a woman, could beat Obama hands-down based on his fiscal track record alone, and he would richly deserve the defeat.
The only good thing that has come out of this is the slowly dawning comprehension that if you want to redistribute people's money, you gotta let them earn it first, and that at some point folks are going to say "hell no". Only idiots think otherwise.
Then again, that's who was elected in 2008.
Donnerstag, Dezember 02, 2010
It Takes A Government...
The last shall be first: two bubbles. Gold and China, and they are inter-related. The Chinese who can are buying up gold like never before - hence the gold bubble - and for very, very good reason. China itself is a bubble.
Don't believe me?
Consider this:: as I've said time and time again, a cardinal, deadly sin of economics is the misallocation of capital.
Great portions of the Chinese economy are currently working without price information. See this here by Megan McArdle:
When you're in China, it's easy to get caught up in the constant extolling of the benefits of (modified) central planning, After all, the Shanghai-Hangzhou train, which I rode, is awesome, and it's certainly true that the market probably wouldn't have provided it. The Chinese argue that the new high speed rail network is critical not merely to move the population around, but to free up the existing railbed for more freight traffic.
On the other hand, there are great dangers to being able to point at an infrastructure problem like this and say: "Make it so." We interviewed someone at the rail ministry, and initially I was going to ask him the normal financial questions you ask someone planning a major capital expansion in the United States: capital costs, cost-effectiveness, and so forth. The answers are more often than not the fever dreams of the most optimistic consultant they could find, but at least there is some tether to reality: the head of the agency doesn't actually want to be fired because his budget overruns just ate the money allocated for children's health care.
In China, I was stumped as to how you'd even ask that question. These projects don't have to go to the market for loans; the government directs the state-owned banks to lend to them, at interest rates decided by the state. There's no opportunity cost to the money, since it's not like the rail ministry would otherwise be building a chain of noodle shops. And the ridership projections are vetted by the same people who want to build 16,000 km of high-speed rail.
Prices are really useful. But in whole large sectors of the Chinese economy, particularly the banking sector, the government sets those prices. This means huge information loss, and the concomitant possibility that there is a vast misallocation of resources.
Understand, please, that China is not a market economy: it remains a controlled economy, one where prices continue to be made meaningless. It is first and foremost a government-owned economy with some privatization (but don't you dare think about behaving in ways that The Party doesn't like!) and a mercantilist attitude that exploits the openness of foreign markets to destroy competition and assimilate technologies in order for The Party to survive. It is, of course, not entirely that simple, but this remains the core of the Chinese political economy. They, The Party (which, of course, in its current incarnation is nothing but a collection of apparatchniks and thugs), is riding a wave of economic expansion and growth, one that almost literally has to grow at 8% a year in order to cover all the mistakes, errors and incompetence of The Party in order to keep peasants coming to the cities and entering the industrial workforce under conditions that should outrage, but don't because they are kept carefully hidden.
Further (same source):
To get a really catastrophic misallocation of resources, it seems to take a government; corporations can only screw things up on an artisinal scale. For that matter, it's worth noting that our government has spent the last seven decades trying to keep the price of housing low, and that much of that intervention, such as the creation of mortgage securitization, ultimately significantly contributed to the crisis.
It's worth remembering that at the time they were built, all those useless houses looked like prosperity. So too, massive mispricing in China may look pretty sweet--unless a hiccup suddenly leaves the government with a hell of an expensive white elephant. Or lots of them. As anyone who has contemplated purchasing a luxury car will know, just because something is really awesome, doesn't mean it's a good idea, economically speaking. Buying without knowing the price is dangerous no matter where you are.
This is what is facing us now: far too many True Believers in the Chinese economy, convinced that it will continue to expand at 8%+, coupled with the Chinese themselves, buying gold like it is going out of style.
If prices were accurate, you wouldn't have that: the uncertainties of missing prices (or, more exactly, the intuitive knowledge that capital is being misallocated right and left, largely because the Chinese government cannot bear to have someone point out that the Emperor has no clothes.
It really does take a government for really catastrophic misallocation of resources: this is happening in China today. We don't know if China can afford a HS rail network (not only for the reasons that Megan put forward in that link) as we don't know what it will cost and whether that will be an investment that really will pay back.
Especially when you consider that the Chinese are aiming at a vast expansion of inner-China flights, which is in direct competition to HS rain. In other wards, the left hand doesn't know what the right hand has done, is doing, and plans to do.
When China falls, it will fall very, very hard. Communist countries always do when The Party tries to hold onto power far too long. This is going to be a major catastrophe, an epic fail. It really does take a government to do that.
Donnerstag, November 25, 2010
Happy Thanksgiving, Everyone!
But I wanted to pass this on from John Scalzi, a rather talented science-fiction writer: I'm guessing that he may not have a cousin named "Chet". But this remains a lovely prayer for Thanksgiving...
This Thanksgiving, we pause to reflect on all the bounty and good fortune with which you have graced us this year. Thank you, Lord, for this feast we have in front of us and for the family and friends who are with us today to enjoy this bounty and this day with us, even our Cousin Chet. Thank you for our health and for our happiness.
We also thank you for the world and that in your wisdom you have not stopped the Earth's core from rotating, collapsing our planet's magnetic field and causing microwaves from the sun to fry whole cities, requiring a plucky band of scientists to drill down through the mantle and start the core's rotation with nuclear bombs. That seems like a lot of work, so we are pleased you've kept the Earth's core as it is.
We also thank you for once again not allowing our technology to gain sentience, to launch our own missiles at us, to send a robot back in time to kill the mother of the human resistance, to enslave us all, and finally to use our bodies as batteries. That doesn't even make sense from an energy-management point of view, Lord, and you'd think the robots would know that. But in your wisdom, you haven't made it an issue yet, so thank you.
Additionally, let us extend our gratitude that this was not the year that you allowed the alien armadas to attack, to rapaciously steal our natural resources, and to feed on us, obliging us to make a last-ditch effort to infect their computers with a virus, rely on microbes to give them a nasty cold, or moisten them vigorously in the hope that they are water-soluble. I think I speak for all of us when I say that moistening aliens was not on the agenda for any of us at this table. Thank you, Lord, for sparing us that duty.
Our further thanks to you, our Lord, for not allowing the aliens to invade one at a time and conquer us by taking us over on an individual basis. That you in your wisdom have not allowed aliens to quietly inhabit our bodies and identities -- the better to attack us by cornering us in the rec room or outside while having a smoke -- means that we can enjoy each other's company without undue paranoia. It also means that if we are obliged to set a flame thrower on Cousin Chet, as we are sometimes tempted to, we will not see his flaming head sprout arms and try to scurry away. And for that we are truly blessed.
Thank you for not allowing the total moral and economic decline of the United States, our Lord, that would turn one or more of our great cities into a prison or spring any number of apocalyptic scenarios upon us that would turn our planet into a vasty wasteland where only dune buggies and leather-clad miscreants have survived. It's not that we have anything against leather-clad miscreants -- I refer you, Lord, to the previously mentioned Cousin Chet -- but we prefer them to be in the minority, and also those dune buggies so rarely have seat belts -- that's just not safe.
Most specifically, thank you, Lord, for not sending a large meteor or comet tumbling straight at the planet, forcing the government to turn to oil-rig operators to save us all. That oil rig in the Gulf this year didn't exactly inspire confidence, if you know what I mean, Lord. And while we know that humanity would likely survive such a massive impact thanks to those underground cities the government has built, we are not at all confident that any of us at this table would get a pass into those cities, and we don't have either dune buggies or wardrobes made mostly of animal hide. So thank you, Lord, for not making us worry about that this year.
Finally, Lord, thank you for once again keeping the scientists from bioengineering dinosaurs back to life. While the idea of a pterodactyl with stuffing and all the trimmings seems like a good one at first blush, getting past the raptors in the supermarket parking lot would probably be a challenge, and we would end up having to stake one of our own to the shopping-cart return so the rest of us could get past, and I'm not sure that we could persuade Cousin Chet to do that more than once.
For these and so many other things, Lord, we offer our humble gratitude to you this Thanksgiving. However, I think I speak for everyone when I say we would still like speeder bikes, so if you could get someone to invent those by Christmas we would all be obliged.
Amen.
That is all. Let the tryptophane overdosing begin!
Dienstag, November 23, 2010
People feel misled and betrayed...
The title of the post comes from this. Key phrase, the only one that really matters:
The past week has been a traumatic one for the Irish electorate. People feel misled and betrayed.
This covers it all.
It is the reason for the dismal Democratic showing in the US as well: the people feel misled and betrayed.
We are seeing the culmination of literally decades of mistakes and errors, of sheer blind bloody-mindedness, all made in the name of "doing good."
Margaret Thatcher put it well when, in a TV interview for Thames TV This Week on Feb. 5, 1976, she said, "...and Socialist governments traditionally do make a financial mess. They [socialists] always run out of other people's money. It's quite a characteristic of them."
We have reached that point. The Welfare State is driving everyone into poverty. We have reached the point where there is no money left.
The collapse of the Soviet Union and "Real Existing Socialism" wasn't enough to kill this fundamental point: the basic tenets of socialism - that the great, unwashed masses need to be led to a glorious future where they will get what they deserve - have, implemented incompetently and led by the New Class of classless socialists (see Milovan Đilas and this for more), now led to the collapse of finances world-wide.
The slow, subtle and incremental destruction of wealth via redistribution of income via social spending plans must be manifestly visible by now. Decades of debt accumulation for welfare systems designed by do-gooders meddling with societies en masse are now crushing and increasingly reaching the point of no return.
The people feel misled and betrayed: they were misled by the promises of socialists promising them that they could have a future without work, that they could enjoy the fruits of success without having to work for them; they were betrayed because this is not possible. Repeat: Not Possible.
I've mentioned Kipling here time and time again: The Gods of the Copybook Headings. The poem tells you all of the reasons never, ever to believe someone who calls himself a progressive (which today is the cover-name for socialist, given the utter bankruptcy of socialism). Here are the last two stanzas:
As it will be in the future, it was at the birth of Man
There are only four things certain since Social Progress began.
That the Dog returns to his Vomit and the Sow returns to her Mire,
And the burnt Fool's bandaged finger goes wabbling back to the Fire;
And that after this is accomplished, and the brave new world begins
When all men are paid for existing and no man must pay for his sins,
As surely as Water will wet us, as surely as Fire will burn,
The Gods of the Copybook Headings with terror and slaughter return!
When all men are paid for existing and no man must pay for his sins: that is exactly what progressives have been championing for the last 45 years. The Gods of the Copybook Headings are nothing more than moral and economic truths of the most basic kind, the ones that stand firmly in the way of utopias of all kinds and fashions, the nemesis of the woolly-thinking, do-gooders of all times, and the shoals upon which all such pipe-dreams shatter and drown.
That is why the people are feeling misled and betrayed. As Abraham Lincoln once said: You can fool all the people some of the time, and some of the people all of the time, but you can't fool all of the people all of the time.
Old Abe had something there. The progressives have educated three generations to believe that they could bring prosperity to all by spending other people's money; the progressives have squandered the wealth of three generations to make it so; the progressives have given the next three generations a burden to bear that will grind them down as none of them has ever deserved; the progressives have betrayed the future and misled the people like almost none before (Communist governments did it better and collapsed just as thoroughly).
Progressives have bankrupted the West. It is time to throw off the shackles of progressive lunacy and turn out the betrayers, sending them into exile and despair for their sins.
The workers (blue and white collar both), the productive elements of society, are now oppressed by the New Class of Djilas, parasites living off their toil.
To paraphrase Marx: Workers Of The World, Unite: You Have Nothing Left To Lose. Government debt has taken everything else.
Dienstag, November 16, 2010
The Fox Has Opened Up A KFC Franchise...
The city's Health Services Board, which decides what medical plans San Francisco uses and how they're implemented, has seven members — a majority of whom are elected by city employees to represent city employees. Every step of the retirement process is controlled by people who have a vested interest in it — literally. Not only is the fox guarding the henhouse, the fox has opened up a KFC franchise.
The man is right: the purpose of San Francisco, at this point, is not to run the city of San Francisco, but rather to ensure that the workers of San Francisco have some awfully nice pensions that the taxpayer has agreed to pay for.
What?
You say that you didn't agree?
Sucker: your elected officials bowed before the public employee unions and you, the taxpayers of that lovely city, where you'll find people with flowers in their hair, are being sent the bills.
Ye gods.
Before you say that the politicians should have stopped this, understand that politicians and public unions are joined at the hip in San Francisco, Siamese twins that cannot survive or function without each other.
As it is, both have conspired to ensure that when push comes to shove, the taxpayer will be going to jail.
Ye gods.
And liberals wonder why they are unpopular? Why they lose elections?
We'll know that the lesson has percolated down to where it will really start to make a change when San Francisco gets its pension schemes in order and has jailed those responsible for fraud and conspiracy, The income from RICO should be enough to cover the court costs to tear that system down, but only public outrage - aka Tea Party - can ensure that it never happens again.
For the children's sake, you know. You can do this so that San Franciscans can still be known at people with flowers in their hair...
Freitag, November 12, 2010
Environmentalism as Secular Religion...
First and foremost, it's a bit of a hatchet job on someone that the author readily admits he can't understand, done in the name of discounting Dyson Freeman's arguments about anthropogenic global warming.
But the quote that really popped out was this:
Environmentalism does indeed make a very satisfactory kind of religion. It is the faith in which I myself was brought up. In my family, we had no other. My father, David Brower, the first executive director of the Sierra Club and the founder of Friends of the Earth, could confer no higher praise than "He has the religion." By this, my father meant that the person in question understood, felt the cause and the imperative of environmentalism in his or her bones. The tenets go something like this: this living planet is the greatest of miracles. We Homo sapiens, for all the exceptionalism of our species, are part of a terrestrial web of life and are utterly dependent upon it. Nature runs the biosphere much better than we do, as we demonstrate with our ham-handedness each time we try. The arc of human history is unsustainable. We cannot go on destroying natural systems and expect to survive.
Hence: when looking at what environmentalists write, say and propagate, this is what lies at the core of their thought. It is a religion.
The author continues:
Freeman Dyson does not have the religion. He has another religion.
"The main point is religious rather than scientific," he writes, yet never acknowledges that this proposition cuts both ways, never seems to recognize the extent to which his own arguments proceed from faith. Environmentalism worships the wisdom of Nature. Dysonism worships the indomitable ingenuity of Man. Dyson often suggests that science is on his side, but lately little of his popular exposition on planetary matters has anything to do with science. His futurism is solidly in the tradition of Jules Verne, as it has been since he was 8 and wrote "Sir Phillip Roberts's Erolunar Collision." On the question of global warming, the world's climatologists and scientific institutions are almost unanimously arrayed against him. On his predictions for the future of ecosystems, ecologists beg to differ. Dysonian proclamations like "Now, after three billion years, the Darwinian interlude is over" are not science.
Bingo: at the core of the AGW controversies is a religious dispute.
And finally:
Dyson, clearly a busy man, was extraordinarily generous with his time with me at an early stage of my career. His allowing me to be present at an intimate family affair—his reunion with George—provided the climax and denouement for my best and most successful book. In the field, Dyson was an amusing and never-boring companion. Never have I had a relationship of such asymmetrical understanding. Dyson always got the drift of my ideas and sentences before I was three or four words into them, but the converse was not true. When the physicist spoke of his own pet subjects—quantum electrodynamics, say, or certain characteristics of the event horizon in the vicinity of black holes—I had no idea what he was talking about. Dyson is a discoverer of, and fluent in, the mathematics by which the fundamental laws of the universe operate, and in that language I am illiterate.
This is something that constantly and consistently strikes me of being at the core of the problem: that there is no communication, largely because there is a fundamental lack of understanding because one side is functionally illiterate.
An example: when economists talk of consumption, we don't mean that the goods involved are destroyed. For the Club of Rome and others, they assumed that when copper was used for any particular purpose, it was effectively destroyed, never to be used again, which led to their fairly absurd dire forecasts. I've had enough discussions with secular religionists, aka ecologists, who whilst claiming to understand the complexities of the ecosystems to the point where they felt able to forecast dire results, were economic illiterates who, at the same time, were proscribing economic solutions.
Which makes about much sense as me, your humble economist, trying to tell farmers how to farm best. I can't: I can tell them how to perhaps be more productive, but I can't tell them how to farm. I don't know the faintest about farming except what I have read, and that tells me that I really don't know the reality of farming.
Mittwoch, November 03, 2010
Democratic Debacle...
They lost the House with a shift of 60 seats: that's the largest shift since 1948.
But read this as well: the Democrats lost massively in State races.
North Carolina and Alabama have apparently forgiven the Party of Lincoln and their State Legislatures are now Republican for the first time since the Reconstruction (1870 and 1876, respectively).
Also turning Republican: Wisconsin (!) and New Hampshire legislatures.
State Houses in Indiana, Pennsylvania, Michigan, Ohio, Iowa, Montana, and Colorado: now Republican.
Both the Maine and Minnesota Senates: now Republican.
Democrats in Texas and Tennessee saw their virtual tie eliminated, with Texas so solidly Republican that they have the absolute majority and can now pass state constitutional amendments of the the legislative process without Democrat support.
Awesome. Use that power wisely...
Oh, and a small prediction: many companies still in California will find that while the weather isn't quite so perfect in Texas, being able to stay in business is a worthwhile reason to move. California will apparently have to fall flat on its face before reforms can take hold there that will actually do anything to address the problems facing that state.
In one way, the radical environmentalists are right: people invariably destroy nature. The best example for that is now California, where that state, blessed with natural resources, a fantastic climate and scenery, will have to have an epic fail before the current, toxic generation of Democrats can be purged from the system. Governor Moonbeam will lead the way, I am sure, with the rest of the Californian Democrats following him like rats following the Piper from Hameln.
Disappointment Amongst Victory...
But there is some disappointment for this ex-pat:
First and foremost, Barney Frank survived. If anyone (besides Harry Reid, Barbara Boxer and Nancy Pelosi) deserved to lose his re-election bid, it was Rep. Frank, who more or less single-handedly prevented anyone from taking a serious look at Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac when there was enough time to do something about them. For that alone her deserved to lose.
Harry Reid, Barbara Boxer and Nancy Pelosi are in the same category: for their sins, they should have lost.
One particular bright sign of sanity: Alan Grayson, Rep from Florida, was soundly trounced. The worst thug and bully ever to grace Washington DC (at least in recent memory) has been sent packing.
Generally, though: nice job. It's time for the Democrats to say "Well, that didn't go well" for a richly deserved change.
Now, for 2012...gonna be interesting.
Dienstag, Oktober 26, 2010
Ouch...
Read this.
His fundamental point, that there is a real sense of betrayal out there, is fundamental for the development of what is generically called The Tea Party and which may well change the face of US politics.
Not because there are powerful backers, but because of the absolute frustration and disgust that so many have for politics and politicians.
It's not so much that so many are corrupt and enriching themselves, but more so that there a real sociopaths out there who really enjoy screwing the system up for profit and gain. Read this to understand what he means by that.
Systematic cheating, corruption and abuse of the system has led to the dysfunctional system we now have in the US, where if you do everything wrong, you end up getting the most in benefits: the rewards for bad behavior greatly outweigh the rewards for right behavior.
Appearance trumps knowledge.
Without realizing it, without seeing it coming, the Sophists have triumphed: the truth is no longer something to be desired and searched for, but rather to be manipulated and re-defined until there is no meaning to it whatsoever.
Of course, when the Sophists triumph, chaos and anarchy follow, as there are no virtues any more.
Read this for more to understand how the fraud and anger are going to lead to an interesting 2. November. That is, unless voter fraud - which, if you research this, has been an exclusively Democratic act since the 1960s - takes that away as well. If that happens, then all bets are off: political instability will follow economic uncertainty.