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30 April, 2017
Capitalism comes naturally; equality (Communism) does not
That is the implication of a recent big paper that looked at all the
psychological research on whether or not people prefer equality.
They do, but only where the two parties really are the same.
When one does more work, people think they should get more for
it. That is a simple summary of the paper excerpted below
Why people prefer unequal societies
Christina Starmans, Mark Sheskin & Paul Bloom
Abstract
There is immense concern about economic inequality, both among the
scholarly community and in the general public, and many insist that
equality is an important social goal. However, when people are asked
about the ideal distribution of wealth in their country, they actually
prefer unequal societies. We suggest that these two phenomena can be
reconciled by noticing that, despite appearances to the contrary, there
is no evidence that people are bothered by economic inequality itself.
Rather, they are bothered by something that is often confounded with
inequality: economic unfairness. Drawing upon laboratory studies,
cross-cultural research, and experiments with babies and young children,
we argue that humans naturally favour fair distributions, not equal
ones, and that when fairness and equality clash, people prefer fair
inequality over unfair equality. Both psychological research and
decisions by policymakers would benefit from more clearly distinguishing
inequality from unfairness.
Fairness in the lab
How can this preference for inequality in the real world be reconciled
with the strong preference for equality found in laboratory studies? We
suggest that this discrepancy arises because the laboratory findings
reviewed above—which report the discovery of egalitarian motives, a
desire for more equality, or inequality aversion—do not in fact provide
evidence that an aversion to inequality is driving the preference for
equal distribution. Instead, these findings are all consistent with both
a preference for equality and with a preference for fairness, because
the studies are designed so that the equal outcome is also the fair one.
This is because the recipients are indistinguishable with regard to
considerations such as need and merit. Hence, whether subjects are
sensitive to fairness or to equality, they will be inclined to
distribute the goods equally.
This idea is supported by numerous studies, including follow-ups of the
experiments described above, by the same researchers, in which fairness
is carefully distinguished from equality. These studies find that people
choose fairness over equality.
For example, in the study in which children had to award erasers to two
boys who had cleaned up their room and chose to throw out the extra
eraser, both boys were described as having done a good job. But when
children were told that one boy did more work than the other, they
awarded the extra eraser to the hard worker28,40. In fact, when one
recipient has done more work, six-year-olds believe that he or she
should receive more resources, even if equal pay is an
option26,41,?42,?43. Likewise, although infants prefer equality in a
neutral circumstance, they expect an experimenter to distribute rewards
preferentially to individuals who have done more work35.
This preference for inequality is not restricted to situations where one
person has done more work, but also extends to rewarding people who
previously acted helpfully or unhelpfully. When three-year-olds
witnessed a puppet help another puppet climb a slide or reach a toy,
they later allocated more resources to the helpful puppet than to a
puppet that pushed another down the slide, or hit him on the head with
the toy44.
As a final twist, consider a situation with two individuals, identical
in all relevant regards, where one gets 10 dollars and the other gets
nothing. This is plainly unequal, but is it fair? It can be, if the
allocation was random. Adults consider it fair to use impartial
procedures such as coin flips and lotteries when distributing many
different kinds of resources. Children have similar views. In the
erasers-for-room-cleaning studies described above, if children are given
a fair ‘spinner’ to randomly choose who gets the extra eraser, they are
happy to create inequality46. One person getting two erasers and
another getting one (or ten and zero for that matter) can be entirely
fair and acceptable, although it is clearly not equal.
Fairness in the real world
It follows, then, that if one believes that (a) people in the real world
exhibit variation in effort, ability, moral deservingness, and so on,
and (b) a fair system takes these considerations into account, then a
preference for fairness will dictate that one should prefer unequal
outcomes in actual societies. The ideal distributions of wealth proposed
by participants in the Norton and Ariely study, then, may reflect how
fairness preferences interact with intuitions about the extent to which
such traits vary in the population.
Tyler uses a related argument to explain why there is not a stronger
degree of public outrage in the face of economic inequality. He argues
that Americans regard the American market system to be a fair procedure
for wealth allocation, and, accordingly, believe strongly in the
possibility of social mobility (see Box 1). On this view, then, people's
discontent about the current social situation will be better predicted
by their beliefs about the unfairness of wealth allocation than by their
beliefs about inequality.....
We have argued that a preference for fair outcomes is early emerging and
universal. But it is also clear that people differ in their intuitions
as to which resources should be distributed on the basis of merit. Most
Americans now believe that a fair system is one in which every adult
gets a vote, but this is a relatively modern intuition. In our own time,
there is controversy over whether fairness dictates that everyone
should have equal access to health care and higher education. Put
differently, there is some disagreement over what should be a right,
held equally and unchanged by any sort of variation in merit.
Nature Human Behaviour 1, Article number: 0082 (2017)
doi:10.1038/s41562-017-0082
******************************
How Trump’s Tax Plan Would Affect High-Tax States Like California, New York
Crimping California's power to tax sounds a lot of fun
High-income earners in high-tax states would see a federal tax rate cut,
but may pay more in the end if they’re unable to deduct state and local
taxes under President Donald Trump’s tax reform proposal announced
Wednesday.
The White House released the contours of his tax reform proposal that
would lower tax rates and reduce the number of tax brackets. However,
the plan would also reduce the number of tax deductions.
When a reporter asked if deducting taxes on state and local income taxes
would also be eliminated, Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin answered,
“Yes.”
“We are going to eliminate on the personal side all tax deductions other
than mortgage interests and charitable deductions,” Mnuchin said at a
White House press conference Wednesday.
House Republicans were already reportedly considering eliminating the
deduction on state and local taxes, which could disproportionately
affect wealthy people in high-tax blue states such as New York and
California.
This federal deduction basically encouraged states to hike taxes, said
Jonathan Williams, the chief economist for the American Legislative
Exchange Commission, a state-centric public policy organization.
“The current policy subsidizes high-tax states,” Williams told The Daily
Signal in a phone interview. “Using that revenue to pay for cutting
rates across the board is a step in the right direction.”
The Trump tax plan would reduce the number of tax brackets from seven to
three brackets of 10 percent, 25 percent, and 35 percent. The plan
would not tax the first $24,000 in income for a couple, which is double
the current standard deduction.
The Trump plan would repeal the alternative minimum tax, phaseout the
death tax, and repeal the 3.8 percent surtax on investment income used
to fund Obamacare.
On the business side, the corporate tax rate will be cut to 15 percent,
from 35 percent. Also, the government would only tax a business’s income
from inside the United States, not income from abroad. This is common
in other countries and is known as a “territorial tax system.”
Gary Cohn, director of the National Economic Council and Trump’s chief
economic adviser, told reporters tax reform is a “once-in-a-generation
opportunity to do something really big.”
The last sweeping reform came in 1986.
“This isn’t going to be easy. Doing big things never is. We’ll be
attacked from the left. We’ll be attacked from the right,” Cohn said.
“But one thing is certain. I would never, ever bet against this
president.”
Cohn added:
In 2017, we are still stuck with a 1988 corporate tax system. That’s why
we are one of the least competitive countries in the developed world
when it comes to taxes. So tax reform is long overdue.
House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., said the plan is the “same
trickle-down economics that undermined the middle class,” and said the
president should work on a fiscally responsible bipartisan plan with
Democrats.
“Instead of focusing on hardworking families as he promised, President
Trump’s tax outline is a wish list for billionaires,” Pelosi said in a
public statement. “What few details are here overwhelmingly cut taxes
for the richest and do little for middle-class Americans and those
trying to get there. Besides which, nowhere does President Trump
indicate how his deficit-exploding tax plan will actually be paid for.”
Adam Michel, a tax policy analyst with The Heritage Foundation, said he
believes the proposal shows Trump is serious about reform:
For too long, America’s out-of-date and overbearing tax system has put a
damper on economic growth while punishing savings and investment. The
president’s plan is a great starting point. Now, the president and
Congress must work together to finally update our broken tax system.
True reform should apply the most efficient and least economically
destructive forms of taxation, have low rates on a broad base, and be as
transparent, predictable, and simple as possible.
Grover Norquist, president of Americans for Tax Reform, praised Trump’s proposal.
“President Trump has re-energized the drive for fundamental tax reform
that creates growth and jobs,” Norquist said in a public statement. “The
plan cuts taxes for businesses and individuals and simplifies the code
so Americans can file on a postcard. Reducing taxes on all businesses
down to 15 percent will turbocharge the economy.”
Mnuchin called the current 35 percent corporate rate “perhaps the most
complicated and uncompetitive business rate in the world.”
He said he anticipates the proposal would return the U.S. to greater
than 3 percent growth without an adverse impact on the debt or revenue.
Throughout most of the Obama administration, economic growth didn’t
surpass 3 percent in a single year.
“This plan will lower the ratio of debt to [gross domestic product]. The
economic plan under Trump would grow the economy, will create massive
amounts of revenues,” Mnuchin said.
The plan is a net tax reduction, Williams said, and fundamental reform
takes cronyism out of the tax code, which could help Trump keep another
promise.
“Draining the tax code swamp is a good way to go about getting rid of all those special interest loopholes,” Williams said.
SOURCE
****************************
For more blog postings from me, see
TONGUE-TIED,
EDUCATION WATCH INTERNATIONAL,
GREENIE WATCH,
POLITICAL CORRECTNESS WATCH,
AUSTRALIAN POLITICS, and
Paralipomena (Occasionally updated), a
Coral reef compendium and
an IQ compendium. (Both updated as news items come in).
GUN WATCH is now mainly put together by Dean Weingarten. I also put up occasional updates on my
Personal blog and each day I gather together my most substantial current writings on
THE PSYCHOLOGIST.
Email me
here (Hotmail address). My Home Pages are
here (Academic) or
here (Pictorial) or
here (Personal)
***************************
28 April, 2017
Racism -- in the Leftist sense -- is normal
In Leftist usage, "racist" is a very rubbery term. Any mention
of race can cause that mention to be categorized as racist. And
consciousness of racial differences is an abomination to the Left.
One would hope that the term were used to describe only those people
who propose some sort of adverse discrimination against others solely
because of their race but that is clearly not to be.
But it has
been known in the psychology textbooks for many decades that some sort
of consciousness of one's own group and loyalty to it is in fact just
about universal. For instance, Brown in his 1986 introductory social
psychology textbook also describes ethnocentrism, racism and their
associated phenomena as "universal ineradicable psychological
processes".
So Leftist usage flies in the face of psychological
reality. We are ALL racists in the Leftist sense, Leftists
themselves included. The Left are in fact obsessed with race, as
their incessant campaigning for "affirmative action" shows.
So it is pleasing to see the latest bit of research that shows we get on best with members of our own group. See below:
Identity and Bias: Insights from Driving Tests
By Revital Bar and Asaf Zussman
Abstract
How does one's identity affect the evaluation of others? To shed light
on this question, we analyze the universe of driving tests conducted in
Israel during 2006-2015, leveraging the effectively random assignment of
students and testers to tests. We find strong and robust evidence of
both ethnic (Arab/Jewish) in-group bias and gender out-group bias: a
student is 15 percent more (or less) likely to pass a test when assigned
a tester from the same ethnicity (gender). We show that these patterns
are consistent with a utility-based interpretation, along the lines of
Becker's (1957) taste-based discrimination model.
SOURCE
REFERENCE: Brown, R.(1986) Social psychology (2nd. Ed.) N.Y.: Free Press.
****************************
Identifying ill-intended refugees
President Donald Trump's first executive order on "Protecting the Nation
from Terrorist Attacks by Foreign Nationals," has been met with
objection, which grew into hysteria, by opponents on the Left and some
on the Right, at home and abroad. The opponents turned to friendly
courts, which halted the President's orders.
The opponents of the immigration executive orders vehemently oppose the
new American president and his actions to protect the country, as he
promised to do. The Left joined by pro-Muslim organizations, such as the
Muslim Brotherhood's affiliated Council on American-Islamic Relations
(CAIR), have been protesting the suspension of U.S. visas to Muslim
refugees and travelers from only seven out of fifty Muslim-majority
countries.
The first order suspended immigration from seven countries: Iran, Iraq,
Syria, Sudan, Libya, Yemen, and Somalia. All have been identified by the
Obama administration as Islamic-terrorist prone countries. The second
EO omitted Iraq, after arrangements were made to increase the country's
vetting of applicants for U.S. visas.
Trump's first executive order proclaims: "The United States must be
vigilant during the visa issuance process to ensure that those approved
for admission do not intend to harm Americans and that they have no ties
to terrorism. In order to protect Americans, we must ensure that those
admitted to this country do not bear hostile attitudes towards our
country and its founding principles. Section 2 of the active order
states that the policy of the U.S. is
"(a) protect our citizens from foreign nationals who intend to commit
terrorist attacks in the United States, and (b) prevent the admission of
foreign nationals who intend to exploit United States immigration laws
for malevolent purposes"
To prevent such individuals from entering the U.S., the executive order
requests the development of a uniform screening program, which in fact
would reinforce requirements that have been deliberately ignored by the
Obama administration.
The virulent criticism against the EO began with a deliberate
disinformation campaign that Trump has issued a ban on Muslims. While he
mentioned such a ban before his election, the EO he issued calls for
suspension, not a ban.
A major problem with the EO, as some pointed out, was the signaling out
of those seven countries, because radical-Islamic terrorists are not
limited to the countries listed. There are unknown numbers of ISIS
volunteers who returned to Europe and other Western nations, which the
new EO exempts. But even if the screening is done by the book, and all
necessary documentation has been obtained and verified, and the
applicant declares he holds no ill intentions toward America and
Americans, nothing efficient is available to the screeners today that
would easily reveal that he or she is lying.
An effective way to find out the applicant's intentions would be
screening through an efficient, unbiased, and non-intrusive
system. Such a system was developed by an Israeli company with a
grant from the Department of Homeland Security, which the Obama
administration refused to utilize.
The Suspect Detection System (SDS) has developed counter-terrorist and
insider-threat detection technology named COGITO. This technology
enables law enforcement agencies to rapidly investigate U.S. visa
applicants (and other travelers) entering the country, insider threats
among employees, etc.
COGITO technology is an automated interrogation system that can
determine in 5-7 minutes if an individual is harboring hostile
intent. The system interviews the examinee with up to 36 questions
while measuring the psychophysical signals of the human body. The
system has 95% accuracy and has helped security agencies globally to
catch terrorists and solve crimes.
According to the company's website, the SDS allows the screening of a
large number of people in a short time. It "does not require operator
training. One operator can handle simultaneously ten stations. It
has a central management and database system that allows storing all
tests results, analysis, and data mining, and is deployed and integrated
with governmental agencies."
Using this system would eliminate the need to use often biased U.S.
Consulate employees. Moreover, the SDS uses an automated
decision-making system, which is "adaptable to a variety of different
questioning contexts, different cultures, and languages. The examination
lasts 5 minutes when there are no indications of harmful intent, and 7
minutes to ascertain it (with only 4% false positive, and 10% false
negative)."
The COGITO is used in 15 countries including Israel, Singapore, China,
India, and Mexico. U.S. airlines operating in Latin America are
using COGITO to check their employees.
But last year DHS refused to use the SDS, claiming that it "would
constitute an intrusion on the privacy of those screened by the system"
and "[i]t may reflect on VISA applicants or Immigrant's civil
rights." However, foreigners applying for a U.S. visa are not
protected by American laws.
SDS capability to detect intent seems to fit President Trump's promise
of "extreme vetting" of Muslim refugees from high-risk regions.
This and other similarly objective systems would not only assist in
making America safer but also be in keeping its policy and tradition of
accepting refugees who do not wish us harm.
SOURCE
*****************************
Wait, Tariffs Cost Consumers Money?
When Democrats propose health insurance mandates, or a carbon tax, or a
higher gas tax, or energy regulations, or a minimum wage hike, or a tax
increase on “the wealthy” (i.e., small business owners), or any number
of other burdensome costs on the economy, the Leftmedia can only coo
about how fair and good those things are. But when Donald Trump slaps a
tariff on Canadian lumber, the Leftmedia blares headlines about how much
it’s going to cost American homebuilders — between $1,200 and $3,000
per house.
Now, to be clear, they’re not wrong about the cost, but these fair-weather free marketeers are profound hypocrites.
Whenever you tax or regulate something, and a tariff is a tax, the price
of that thing goes up and the consumer pays more. This is economics
101. Yet leftists only see this when Trump’s at work.
So what’s going on here? First of all, Trump has long argued that NAFTA
is a terrible trade deal for the U.S. and needs to be renegotiated.
Without going through the whole history of that deal, suffice it to say
that he has a point about other nations not always trading fairly — and
there’s definitely a difference between free and fair. For example,
Canada and Mexico both subsidize goods more than the U.S. does, which
undercuts American producers.
In this case, Canadian lumber is subsidized, and it’s a dispute that has
been ongoing since the early 1980s. Trump’s Commerce Department
calculated its tariff rates on how much various Canadian lumber
producers are subsidized. But the tariff also has to do with Canada’s
own tariffs on imported dairy products, which the Trump administration
argues particularly hurts Wisconsin dairy farmers. Commerce Secretary
Wilbur Ross said, “The Trump administration has been much more focused
on enforcement than had been true previously.”
And whether it’s trade or immigration or foreign policy, Trump the
dealmaker is all about sending signals that he means business. Yes, this
lumber tariff will cost Americans money, and we’re not arguing in favor
of tariffs. But Trump has set about to seek what he believes are fair
trade terms. Don’t think Mexico and China aren’t also getting the
message.
SOURCE
****************************
Energy Economy Challenges Elitist-Centralized Wealth
It’s easy to understand why there exists an elitist bubble in
Washington, DC, and other metroplexes in the Northeast. The nation’s
capital and its surroundings have a long history of attracting wealthy
individuals. In terms of adjusted gross income, the District is second
only to Connecticut. At number three, four and five are Massachusetts,
New Jersey and New York. While riches aren’t indubitably a bad thing,
the old adage is true: Money begets power. And power corrupts —
particularly when that power is put into the hands of lawmakers and
their lobbyist cohorts. That’s why Thomas Jefferson in 1821 warned,
“[W]hen all government, domestic and foreign, in little as in great
things, shall be drawn to Washington as the center of all power, it will
render powerless the checks provided of one government on another.”
So those of us in flyover country won’t be shedding tears over the
accumulation of wealth in more middle class areas of the country. Thanks
to the fracking revolution, the Lone Star State is quickly climbing the
ranks on the list of highest county-specific wealth. Time magazine
reports, “What’s most surprising is that a state that used to never
figure in at the top now dominates the top 10 — including the overall #1
spot on the list. According to [the Transactional Records Access
Clearinghouse], McMullen County, Texas, which lies in the heart of the
Eagle Ford shale patch south of San Antonio, now has the highest average
adjusted gross income in the U.S.: $303,717. At #4 is Texas’s Glasscock
County ($181,375), which sits in the equally productive Permian Basin
in west Texas. And #10 is Texas’s La Salle County ($146,991), which
neighbors McMullen County, to the southwest of San Antonio. In 2005, no
Texas county was ranked among the top 30 most wealthy in the U.S.”
This is the free market in action. As a caveat, the large conglomeration
of wealth in DC isn’t exactly dwindling. It has been ranked as the
second-highest “state” in adjusted gross income since 2011, and
Connecticut, Massachusetts, New Jersey and New York have all occupied
the top five list since 2012. However, the finer details show that
middle America is experiencing an influx of cash flow. That’s great
news. The better news will be if the trend continues. And the best news?
That would be when all extravagant wealth is driven out of Washington,
DC.
SOURCE
****************************
For more blog postings from me, see
TONGUE-TIED,
EDUCATION WATCH INTERNATIONAL,
GREENIE WATCH,
POLITICAL CORRECTNESS WATCH,
AUSTRALIAN POLITICS, and
Paralipomena (Occasionally updated), a
Coral reef compendium and
an IQ compendium. (Both updated as news items come in).
GUN WATCH is now mainly put together by Dean Weingarten. I also put up occasional updates on my
Personal blog and each day I gather together my most substantial current writings on
THE PSYCHOLOGIST.
Email me
here (Hotmail address). My Home Pages are
here (Academic) or
here (Pictorial) or
here (Personal)
***************************
27 April, 2017
Fascism and Communism Were Two Peas in a Pod
Adolf Hitler and Benito Mussolini have become, for many of us today,
mere Hollywood villains – generic personifications of evil or (in
Mussolini's case) buffoonish authoritarianism. Yet their ideologies were
rooted in specific philosophical ideas – ideas which had many
respectable adherents in their day.
Dictator Fanboys
Many in the vanguard of progressive thought were enamored of Mussolini
and even Hitler, considering their dictatorships a useful “social
experiment.”
One person who understands this is Jonah Goldberg, author of the 2007
book Liberal Fascism: The Secret History of the American Left from
Mussolini to the Politics of Meaning. Ten years on, the book still holds
up. Goldberg argues, provocatively, that fascism shared roots in common
with what we call modern liberalism or progressivism.
People often argue over whether Hitler and Mussolini were “right wing”
or “left wing.” More to the point is that both men's ideologies had
roots in the Progressive movement of the turn of the 20th century.
The Progressive movement was closely tied to the philosophy of
Pragmatism: the belief that thought is a tool for action and change. In
contrast to the ancient and medieval philosophers, for whom philosophy
was the contemplation of reality, the Progressives were animated by the
desire to mold reality and to harness knowledge for social betterment.
Many in the vanguard of progressive thought initially were enamored of
Mussolini and even Hitler, considering their dictatorships a useful
“social experiment.”
H.G. Wells, the popular science fiction writer, was one. In a number of
speeches and books he praised the militaristic social mobilization in
the new fascist regimes: an entire society moving as a single unit under
the rule of a Nietzschean superman.
Complete state control of all aspects of life was seen as highly
pragmatic and scientific by many. Nationalism and militarism – elements
commonly associated with the Right – were actually key components of the
Progressive Era, flourishing in particular under President Woodrow
Wilson, as Goldberg documents.
Ideological Twins
Hitler and Mussolini's ideologies grew out of the avant-garde progressive and pragmatic philosophies of the late 19th century.
Popular wisdom holds that Fascism and Communism were diametrical
opposites. Actually, the two ideologies were (and are) so similar that
they had to define themselves in opposition to each other in order to
survive. At the very least, both were socialistic in origin: Mussolini
was immersed in socialism by his father, and the name of Hitler's party –
National Socialist German Workers' Party – speaks for itself.
These regimes fostered hostility to traditional religious beliefs and
morality (both men despised Christianity), “salvation by science” (as
shown, for example, in the Nazi's racist eugenics movement), and
state-controlled health and environmental projects (as shown in a Nazi
slogan, “Nutrition is not a private matter!”).
All of these elements grew out of the “scientific” progressivism of the
early 20th century. Even the Nazis' vÖlkisch ideology—with its
nationalist and traditionalist overtones – was at heart a secular
religion-substitute which enshrined the Will of the People, a concept
which Goldberg traces to the French Revolution.
It would seem undeniable that Hitler and Mussolini, like the Soviet
Union's Joseph Stalin, were revolutionaries and in no sense
conservatives or traditionalists. Their ideologies grew out of the
avant-garde positivist, progressive, and pragmatic philosophies of the
late 19th century.
A Progressive Moment
The point here is not to engage in “left wing”/“right wing” name
calling. Rather, it is to realize that all these political movements
were tied up in a historical moment – Goldberg calls it the “fascist
moment” of Western history – which originated in the French Revolution
and came to fruition in the 20th century.
This moment was “progressive” in that it signaled the abandonment of the
West's moral and philosophical traditions. And it was embodied,
philosophically, in the turn away from the contemplation of truth to
“action, action, action.”
SOURCE
*****************************
Hannity Is Fighting ‘Coordinated Attempt to Silence...Every Outspoken Conservative in This Country’
In his opening monologue Monday night, Fox News’s Sean Hannity addressed
the “well-orchestrated effort by the intolerant left in this country,”
which is trying to “silence every conservative voice,” including his.
Following the ouster of Fox New’s Bill O’Reilly, Hannity appears to be
the next target at Fox News. He said he has hired lawyers and will
challenge his “serial harasser” – an individual he did not name -- in
court.
“In this fiercely divided and vindictive political climate, I will no
longer allow slander and lies about me to go unchallenged, as I see this
now to be a coordinated effort afoot to now silence those with
conservative views. I will fight every single lie about me by any and
all legal means available to me as an American,” Hannity said.
But he also said this isn’t just about him: “I’m speaking out tonight so
that you, our audience, will understand what is really happening and
what is really at stake when it comes to freedom of speech in this
country.”
Hannity noted that he has worked in radio or television for 30 years, 21 of them at Fox News.
“And during this time, there have always been efforts and attempts
to smear and slander and besmirch me and other conservatives, but it
has never been as intense and completely insane as it is right now.”
Things got much worse after the election, said Hannity, who is and has been an outspoken supporter of Donald Trump.
“This is not about Sean Hannity, or one person,," he continued. "There
is now a coordinated attempt to silence the voice of every outspoken
conservative in this country. If we don't stop it right now, there won't
be any conservative voices on radio or television left.
“Now I'm not the only one that these liberal fascists routinely target.
Like me, conservatives are monitored on radio and TV, every word they
say.”
He continued:
“Liberal fascism is alive lie and well in America today. Their goal is
simple. They want to shut up and shut down, completely silence all
conservative voices by any means necessary. Here’s the difference.
Unlike the left, I don't have any problem with what the other side says.
If you want to listen to liberals on radio or TV, read their articles,
follow them on social media, go for it.
Now, I’ll call them out for their bias. I’ll explain why they’re wrong.
I’ll debate them but I’ll never, ever say they should be silenced. And I
won't support boycotts to attack their advertisers, a roundabout way of
silencing them.
So let me be clear tonight. Everyone who publicly supported President
Trump is a target. This is very political. We have seen repeatedly that
the left knows no limits in these efforts. They have gone after and
attacked the first lady; they have attacked members of the president's
family, every White House advisor. They've even attacked his daughter
and his 10-year-old son.
Now ultimately, their goal is to cause as much collateral damage as they
can to anybody who supports the president. They have tried to undermine
the outcome of this election since November 9th.
Please note, this isn’t about me. This is about the left, concocting
boycotts, all in an attempt to silence prominent conservative voices. If
we don't take a stand now, if we allow this to happen now, I'm telling
you, America as we know it -- freedom of speech as we know it -- is
over. Let's stop the boycotts – let’s stop silencing opposition voices.
Let all Americans make their own decisions.
SOURCE
*******************************
Do Black Lies Matter? Do All Lies Matter?
No, there’s no typo. These are not rhetorical questions. Do black lies matter? Do all lies matter?
The answers to these questions are important not only to Kamal Dhimal, a
legal U.S. citizen from Bhutan, whose Charlotte, North Carolina, market
was torched by an incendiary device with a note left at the scene
threatening his life. These questions are important to every law-abiding
American who is watching a grievance industry create chaos and violence
to destroy our nation.
On Sunday, April 9, the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police arrested the
perpetrator of an arson that was being investigated as a hate crime. The
Central Market in east Charlotte was the target of a homemade ignition
contraption flung through the door after a glass window was busted out.
The responding law enforcement found, as hoped, a typed letter addressed
to “Business Owner” — who fled from the subcontinent of India. The
proclamation was signed in bolded larger font, “White America.”
The neatly yet grammatically erred writing was left by the front door. It read:
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
Our newly elected president Donald Trump is our nation builder for white
America. You all know that, we want our country back on the right
track. We need to get rid of Muslims, Indians and all immigrants.
Speci[fic]ally, we don’t want business run by refugees and immigrant
anymore.
We are ready to wake up some of our great state including North Carolina
and we will take care of the country. Immigrants and refugee are taking
our job[s], doing our business and leaving us standard. So, you are not
allowed to do business any more.
We know you are one and many of other immigrant[s] doing business here.
This is our warning. Leave the business and go back where you came from.
If you don’t follow this warning then we are not responsible for the torture starting now.
God bless America
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
Obviously, the intent of the arsonist was to portray the crime as one
committed by a racially driven loyalist of President Donald Trump. You
know, like the ones regularly contrived among the national media who
can’t get over the fact that Hillary Clinton lost.
As defined by the FBI, a hate crime “is a traditional offense like
murder, arson, or vandalism with an added element of bias.” North
Carolina officials proceeded with the information at hand, both
objective and subjective, to investigate an assailant who had inflicted a
crime against the person and property of an individual based on an
element of bias or prejudice.
Members of the grievance industry like Eric Levitz, writing for New York
Magazine, have postulated that such incidents of hate crimes have
directly “coincided with a GOP presidential primary” that featured a
candidate supposedly fueled by the prejudices and nativist hatred of
immigrants coupled with Islamophobia. Whether peddling conjured-up
racism, sexism, gender-bias or “White Privilege,” the new cause célèbre
is victimhood at the hands of some conservative Christian or member of
the working class.
In the case of the Charlotte shop, the hate crime was supposedly
performed by “White America.” Unfortunately for the Presstitutes selling
their cheap, adulterated storylines, it was committed by Curtis
Flournoy, a 32-year-old black man with five previous arrests in
Mecklenburg County.
The problem, as the North Carolina law enforcement experts exposed, was
the hate crime was not borne out of politics of the Right, white
privilege or any other manufactured demon oft-cited by the Left as they
hail and regale victims. The Charlotte crime was an act of hate fueling a
lying narrative.
According to a website built on the published work, “Crying Wolf,” by
Laird Wilcox, an astounding 80% of hate crimes reported on the confines
of a college or university campus are fake. So, of the 10 hate crimes
reported on campuses of higher education, only two of those were
truthfully crimes based on bias or prejudice.
So, back to the premise of discussion: Do all lies matter?
In 2017, truth has been abandoned for a poisonous recipe filled with
substitutes. The modern culture embraces popular, yet uninformed opinion
instead of fact, repeats propaganda fit for any Marxist, socialist or
statist and honors the celebrity of victimhood rather than integrity and
personal achievement.
Indeed, all lies matter. These lies are the lifeblood of the political Left and those who despise American exceptionalism.
SOURCE
****************************
For more blog postings from me, see
TONGUE-TIED,
EDUCATION WATCH INTERNATIONAL,
GREENIE WATCH,
POLITICAL CORRECTNESS WATCH,
AUSTRALIAN POLITICS, and
Paralipomena (Occasionally updated), a
Coral reef compendium and
an IQ compendium. (Both updated as news items come in).
GUN WATCH is now mainly put together by Dean Weingarten. I also put up occasional updates on my
Personal blog and each day I gather together my most substantial current writings on
THE PSYCHOLOGIST.
Email me
here (Hotmail address). My Home Pages are
here (Academic) or
here (Pictorial) or
here (Personal)
***************************
26 April, 2017
Taxes on Unhealthy Food Are Ineffective and Hurt the Poor: They come at the expense of the most vulnerable segments of society
The authors make good points below but they could have gone further
by questioning the whole notion of healthy food. Official advice
on what is healthy frequently undergoes large changes, even U-turns, so
if there is such a thing as healthy or unhealthy food there is no
certainty about what that is. Fat was demonized for decades but it
suddenly became good for you recently. Eat what you like and
ignore the food nannies!
Over the past decade or so, paternalistic objections to fat, sugar, and
salt have gained traction among policymakers, mostly at the state and
local levels of government. Predictably, new taxes have been proposed
and imposed on foods and beverages containing those ingredients. For
elected officials, the prospect of addressing health concerns while
raising new tax revenue is nearly irresistible.
It’s certainly intuitive that taxing sugary soda and
bad-cholesterol-ridden potato chips will prompt consumers to buy fewer
of those items—and that people will substitute healthier alternatives.
But it turns out that consumers’ buying habits do not change markedly in
response to the higher prices, and that the burden of those taxes falls
most heavily on the low-income, who allocate larger shares of their
budgets to food than wealthier people do. Together with our coauthors
Adam Hoffer and Regeana Gvillo, we describe these effects in more detail
in a new paper published in the Journal of Entrepreneurship and Public
Policy.
In assessing these kinds of taxes, it’s critical to understand the
consumption choices people have available. Many programs have tried to
address unhealthy eating, but individuals eat junk food not just because
they enjoy it, but also because of a complex web of eating habits,
accessibility of stores, cooking abilities, and time pressures. Even
when consumers in lower-income neighborhoods want to buy healthier
foods, their options are limited.
High-sugar and high-fat foods are shelf-stable, making them more
convenient than food that spoils quickly and giving them a much lower
price per calorie consumed. The absence of healthy options in so-called
urban food deserts means that taxing junk food will disproportionately
harm the people living there. Also, as everyone who has bought food from
a vending machine knows, the combination of accessibility and hunger
can trigger the purchase of unhealthy food.
Moreover, diet is only one component of a healthy lifestyle. The other
components, such as regular exercise and adequate sleep, are not
directly related to tax policy.
But the most important, though less obvious, point is worth repeating:
expenditures on the items we studied don’t vary much with income,
meaning that the poor spend a higher share of their income on these
products—making taxes on them regressive.
People do tend to buy more expensive, higher-quality versions of
alcohol, tobacco, and some foods as their incomes rise. The largest
effect reported in our paper was for alcohol: a household that makes 1
percent more income spends, on average, 0.31 percent more on alcohol.
(For the average household, this means that if income goes up by $428
per year, alcohol spending goes up $1.) But the quality of things like
soda and potato chips does not scale up, and so expenditures remain
basically constant regardless of income.
It is widely accepted that eating better enhances health, lowers
health-care expenditures, and improves the quality of life. The problem
is that the link between taxes on unhealthy food and the consumption of
such food is weak, and that those taxes come at the expense of the most
vulnerable segments of society.
SOURCE
******************************
The genius of Trumpism
Julius Krein sits in a cafe on the ground floor of his office building
in downtown Boston, wearing a green corduroy blazer and a neat part in
his hair.
He’s just launched a tweedy magazine called American Affairs, and the
press has dubbed it “the intellectual journal of Trumpism.”
It’s a useful label, in some respects. “Frankly,” Krein says, poking at
an apricot tart, “it gets me a lot of clicks.” But it’s also made the
magazine a target for criticism.
Trump, as one skeptical columnist put it, is a “deeply flawed tribune”
for an intellectual movement — an anti-intellectual, a former reality
television star who changes positions at the speed of Twitter.
Can there really be a Trumpism, the skeptics ask, in the face of Trump’s
flip-flops? How do you reconcile the president’s many, glaring
contradictions?
Krein’s answer: You don’t. Instead, you cut right to the bracing
argument at the heart of Trump’s campaign — that it’s time to pull back
from the globalism that’s served coastal elites and turn to a vigorous,
new nationalism that puts ordinary Americans first.
It’s “ism” as game-changer, as once-in-a-generation challenge to
political orthodoxy. And while it’s not clear that Trump himself will
stay faithful to Trumpism — he’s already broken from it in some big,
public ways — Krein is betting that the idea will survive nonetheless,
that the energy the president unleashed will re-order public life in
important ways.
Trump’s wild swings are a blow to Trumpism. They may be fatal in the
end. But the bet here is that “isms” are built more on the salience of
the big idea than the intellectual purity of its namesake; that a
malleable “ism” isn’t doomed to irrelevance, but equipped to endure;
that you start with a big personality and a big moment, and you go from
there.
History suggests that’s a pretty good bet.
SOURCE
****************************
Financial security versus independence
The changing face of the United States should be viewed as an opportunity
James E. Smith and Alex Hatch
In 2015, the Bureau of Labor (BLS) Statistics released the results of a
study dubbed the “National Longitudinal Survey of Youth 1979.”
This survey observed the employment habits of nearly ten thousand men
and women of various groups over a 30-year period. Of all the data
presented by the study, two numbers most characterize the evolution of
the American job market: 11.7 and 93.7.
The former represents the average number of jobs a person will work
between the ages of 18 and 48; the latter the percent of people age 30
to 34 who will spend less than 15 years with any single employer.
These numbers reflect the downward trend, if not the death, of the
one-time American ideal of being a “company man.” The average
American no longer aspires to grind through a nine-to-five job in his or
her perfect first employment scenario. If they did initially, the
volatility of the current job market seems to force a more thorough
review of reality.
At the very least, they certainly don’t expect to be rewarded with a
mantle clock or gold watch after thirty-plus years of faithful service.
Even in their early to mid-thirties, an age when most people begin to
settle down and raise a family, the average American is still willing to
change careers and locations repeatedly to further their long-term
economic viability.
In most cases a planned career change provides an improvement in living
and working conditions, as well as a boost in income. For most, these
improvements are reflected in the standard of living enjoyed, and also
with measureable improvements in future financial security, improved net
value, greater liquidity, and larger retirement benefits.
For some, the correct choices may also provide the ability to cross the
threshold where financial security becomes financial independence:
defined as the ability to continue the same, or better, lifestyle
without a job; the much-heralded early retirement.
The frequency for this likelihood increases for the case where workers
take greater personal and financial risks early in their career by
investing in additional retirement plans, stocks and bonds or, more
significantly, by contributing their time and future income to
innovative technologies and start-ups.
Accordingly, spurred on by the age of the internet, numerous
opportunities have sprung up in the last 30 years, resulting in a more
than eight-fold increase in millionaires. That demographic can be used
here to illustrate the number of people who have become financially
independent.
More specifically, in 1988 there were only about 1.5 million
millionaires in the United States. By 2017, this number had increased to
10.8 million, showing that, as investment savvy workers and the
innovations they support have grown, so too have the number of
financially independent Americans.
By and large though, employer mobility, as enjoyed by American workers,
has often come at the cost of their financial security. According
to the BLS study, during the 30-year period the bureau analyzed, the
subjects spent a total of 22% of their time from age 18 to 48 either
unemployed or out of the workforce. This means that they were out
of the working world for nearly seven years during what should be the
most productive portion of their lives.
While a good portion of this time was likely related to the pursuit of
higher education and training, the result is still the same: the average
American now spends more than half a decade out of the workforce during
their working careers. This results in years of lost wages and
promotions for the individual, lowering their future earnings potential
and seniority in a position, in many cases affecting their job security.
In a broader sense, this also means that there are fewer citizens who
can make positive contributions to the local economy, as well as to the
government in the form of taxes. Today’s employee knows that stability
in a career is not a given, and there is very little chance that the
government will provide any kind of substantial fallback for them should
their employment situation change. Thus, their historically strong
employer loyalty has given way to increased financial depth.
The days when Social Security and even company pension plans would
provide for future living conditions and survival security are long
gone. Even with all the optional retirement vehicles, the reality
is that the American workers must again secure their own future
financial security, independent of government-mandated programs that may
work initially but can never keep pace with changing economic,
demographic, longevity and life-style realities.
Workers must invest in their own future, first through education and
training and then by investing in public and private markets, as well as
in innovation and entrepreneurial opportunities, not to mention second
jobs or the equivalent from their spouses and other family members.
According to the 2016-17 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor report, there
has been a significant uptick in entrepreneurial activity in the last
decade. Most notably, in 2016, 13.6% of all American adults ages 18 to
64 were involved in either the creation or the operation of businesses
that are less than 42 months old. Thus, millions of Americans have
decided to dedicate at least part of their time and financial security
to the pursuit of innovation and wealth creation, instead of working
exclusively in the corporate world.
While entrepreneurship entices Americans with the promise of great
wealth, it is important to note than 90% of all startups fail. For the
sake of financial stability, Americans must understand that the social
safety nets currently in place simply cannot support entrepreneurs who
fail in their endeavors. They must have their own savings and safety
nets to help them survive any failures they may encounter.
We are ultimately responsible for our current situation, and more so for
the future, since we have time to make the plans necessary for that
future lifestyle we have set as our goal. It also means we can bet the
house on one throw of the dice. Proper planning is essential and even
risk taking must have a safety net.
For these and numerous other reasons, it is important for the stability
of our citizens and the social welfare system we enjoy that we take
charge of our own financial security and not expect to find the solution
to our lack of personal planning during the eleventh hour of our
working careers. Programs are in place to provide the fundamental
mechanisms for wealth accumulation. We just need the discipline to take
advantage of them.
More importantly, with that same discipline and a proper outlook to the
future, there appears to be a plethora of ideas that will allow the
transition from hand to mouth to financial security and possibly to
financial independence. The data show that the United States is primed
to make innovation another way to create security and independence. It
is our responsibility to make it happen.
Via email
****************************
For more blog postings from me, see
TONGUE-TIED,
EDUCATION WATCH INTERNATIONAL,
GREENIE WATCH,
POLITICAL CORRECTNESS WATCH,
AUSTRALIAN POLITICS, and
Paralipomena (Occasionally updated), a
Coral reef compendium and
an IQ compendium. (Both updated as news items come in).
GUN WATCH is now mainly put together by Dean Weingarten. I also put up occasional updates on my
Personal blog and each day I gather together my most substantial current writings on
THE PSYCHOLOGIST.
Email me
here (Hotmail address). My Home Pages are
here (Academic) or
here (Pictorial) or
here (Personal)
***************************
25 April, 2017
Leftism as the politics of hate
The article below is from a few years back but it is a vivid
confirmation "from the inside" of all I have been saying about
Leftist hate and elitism
Danusha V. Goska lists "Ten Reasons Why I Am No Longer a Leftist"
How far left was I? So far left my beloved uncle was a card-carrying
member of the Communist Party in a Communist country. When I returned to
his Slovak village to buy him a mass card, the priest refused to sell
me one. So far left that a self-identified terrorist proposed marriage
to me. So far left I was a two-time Peace Corps volunteer and I have a
degree from UC Berkeley. So far left that my Teamster mother used to
tell anyone who would listen that she voted for Gus Hall, Communist
Party chairman, for president. I wore a button saying "Eat the Rich." To
me it wasn't a metaphor.
I voted Republican in the last presidential election.
Below are the top ten reasons I am no longer a leftist. This is not a
rigorous comparison of theories. This list is idiosyncratic,
impressionistic, and intuitive. It's an accounting of the milestones on
my herky-jerky journey.
10) Huffiness.
In the late 1990s I was reading Anatomy of the Spirit, a then recent bestseller by Caroline Myss.
Myss described having lunch with a woman named Mary. A man approached
Mary and asked her if she were free to do a favor for him on June 8th.
No, Mary replied, I absolutely cannot do anything on June 8th because
June 8th is my incest survivors' meeting and we never let each other
down! They have suffered so much already! I would never betray incest
survivors!
Myss was flabbergasted. Mary could have simply said "Yes" or "No."
Reading this anecdote, I felt that I was confronting the signature
essence of my social life among leftists. We rushed to cast everyone in
one of three roles: victim, victimizer, or champion of the oppressed. We
lived our lives in a constant state of outraged indignation. I did not
want to live that way anymore. I wanted to cultivate a disposition of
gratitude. I wanted to see others, not as victims or victimizers, but as
potential friends, as loved creations of God. I wanted to understand
the point of view of people with whom I disagreed without immediately
demonizing them as enemy oppressors.
I recently attended a training session for professors on a college
campus. The presenter was a new hire in a tenure-track position. He
opened his talk by telling us that he had received an invitation to
share a festive meal with the president of the university. I found this
to be an enviable occurrence and I did not understand why he appeared
dramatically aggrieved. The invitation had been addressed to "Mr. and
Mrs. X." Professor X was a bachelor. He felt slighted. Perhaps the
person who had addressed his envelope had disrespected him because he is
a member of a minority group.
Rolling his eyes, Prof. X went on to say that he was wary of accepting a
position on this lowly commuter campus, with its working-class student
body. The disconnect between leftists' announced value of championing
the poor and the leftist practice of expressing snobbery for them stung
me. Already vulnerable students would be taught by a professor who
regarded association with them as a burden, a failure, and a stigma.
Barack Obama is president. Kim and Kanye and Brad and Angelina are
members of multiracial households. One might think that professors
finally have cause to teach their students to be proud of America for
overcoming racism. Not so fast, Professor X warned. His talk was
on microaggression, defined as slights that prove that America is still
racist, sexist, homophobic, and ableist, that is, discriminatory against
handicapped people.
Professor X projected a series of photographs onto a large screen. In
one, commuters in business suits, carrying briefcases, mounted a flight
of stairs. This photo was an act of microaggression. After all,
Professor X reminded us, handicapped people can't climb stairs.
I appreciate Professor X's desire to champion the downtrodden, but
identifying a photograph of commuters on stairs as an act of
microaggression and evidence that America is still an oppressive hegemon
struck me as someone going out of his way to live his life in a state
of high dudgeon. On the other hand, Prof. X could have chosen to speak
of his own working-class students with more respect.
Yes, there is a time and a place when it is absolutely necessary for a
person to cultivate awareness of his own pain, or of others' pain.
Doctors instruct patients to do this -- "Locate the pain exactly;
calculate where the pain falls on a scale of one to ten; assess whether
the pain is sharp, dull, fleeting, or constant." But doctors do this for
a reason. They want the patient to heal, and to move beyond the pain.
In the left, I found a desire to be in pain constantly, so as always to
have something to protest, from one's history of incest to the inability
of handicapped people to mount flights of stairs.
9) Selective Outrage
I was a graduate student. Female genital mutilation came up in class. I stated, without ornamentation, that it is wrong.
A fellow graduate student, one who was fully funded and is now a
comfortably tenured professor, sneered at me. "You are so intolerant.
Clitoredectomy is just another culture's rite of passage. You Catholics
have confirmation."
When Mitt Romney was the 2012 Republican presidential candidate, he
mentioned that, as Massachusetts governor, he proactively sought out
female candidates for top jobs. He had, he said, "binders full of
women." He meant, of course, that he stored resumes of promising female
job candidates in three-ring binders.
Op-ed pieces, Jon Stewart's "Daily Show," Twitter, Facebook, and Amazon
posts erupted in a feeding frenzy, savaging Romney and the Republican
Party for their "war on women."
I was an active leftist for decades. I never witnessed significant
leftist outrage over clitoredectomy, child marriage, honor killing,
sharia-inspired rape laws, stoning, or acid attacks. Nothing. Zip.
Crickets. I'm not saying that that outrage does not exist. I'm saying I
never saw it.
The left's selective outrage convinced me that much canonical, left-wing
feminism is not so much support for women, as it is a protest against
Western, heterosexual men. It's an "I hate" phenomenon, rather than an
"I love" phenomenon.
8.) It's the thought that counts
My favorite bumper sticker in ultra-liberal Berkeley, California: "Think
Globally; Screw up Locally." In other words, "Love Humanity but Hate
People."
It was past midnight, back in the 1980s, in Kathmandu, Nepal. A group of
Peace Corps volunteers were drinking moonshine at the Momo Cave. A
pretty girl with long blond hair took out her guitar and sang these
lyrics, which I remember by heart from that night:
"If you want your dream to be,
Build it slow and surely.
Small beginnings greater ends.
Heartfelt work grows purely."
I just googled these lyrics, thirty years later, and discovered that
they are Donovan's San Damiano song, inspired by the life of St.
Francis.
Listening to this song that night in the Momo Cave, I thought, that's
what we leftists do wrong. That's what we've got to get right.
We focused so hard on our good intentions. Before our deployment
overseas, Peace Corps vetted us for our idealism and "tolerance," not
for our competence or accomplishments. We all wanted to save the world.
What depressingly little we did accomplish was often erased with the
next drought, landslide, or insurrection.
Peace Corps did not focus on the "small beginnings" necessary to
accomplish its grandiose goals. Schools rarely ran, girls and low caste
children did not attend, and widespread corruption guaranteed that all
students received passing grades. Those students who did learn had no
jobs where they could apply their skills, and if they rose above their
station, the hereditary big men would sabotage them. Thanks to cultural
relativism, we were forbidden to object to rampant sexism or the caste
system. "Only intolerant oppressors judge others' cultures."
I volunteered with the Sisters of Charity. For them, I pumped cold water
from a well and washed lice out of homeless people's clothing. The
sisters did not want to save the world. Someone already had. The sisters
focused on the small things, as their founder, Mother Teresa, advised,
"Don't look for big things, just do small things with great love."
Delousing homeless people's clothing was one of my few concrete
accomplishments.
Back in 1975, after Hillary Rodham had followed Bill Clinton to
Arkansas, she helped create the state's first rape crisis hotline. She
had her eye on the big picture. What was Hillary like in her one-on-one
encounters?
Hillary served as the attorney to a 41-year-old, one of two men accused
of raping a 12-year-old girl. The girl, a virgin before the assault, was
in a coma for five days afterward. She was injured so badly she was
told she'd never have children. In 2014, she is 52 years old, and she
has never had children, nor has she married. She reports that she was
afraid of men after the rape.
A taped interview with Clinton has recently emerged; on it Clinton makes
clear that she thought her client was guilty, and she chuckles when
reporting that she was able to set him free. In a recent
interview, the victim said that Hillary Clinton "took me through Hell"
and "lied like a dog." "I think she wants to be a role model… but I
don’t think she’s a role model at all," the woman said. "If she had have
been, she would have helped me at the time, being a 12-year-old girl
who was raped by two guys."
Hillary had her eye on the all-caps resume bullet point: FOUNDS RAPE HOTLINE.
Hillary's chuckles when reminiscing about her legal victory suggest
that, in her assessment, her contribution to the ruination of the life
of a rape victim is of relatively negligible import.
7) Leftists hate my people.
I'm a working-class Bohunk [central European]. A hundred years ago,
leftists loved us. We worked lousy jobs, company thugs shot us when we
went on strike, and leftists saw our discontent as fuel for their fire.
Karl Marx promised the workers' paradise through an inevitable
revolution of the proletariat. The proletariat is an industrial working
class -- think blue-collar people working in mines, mills, and
factories: exactly what immigrants like my parents were doing.
Polish-Americans participated significantly in a great victory, Flint,
Michigan's 1937 sit-down strike. Italian-Americans produced Sacco and
Vanzetti. Gus Hall was a son of Finnish immigrants.
In the end, though, we didn't show up for the Marxist happily ever
after. We believed in God and we were often devout Catholics. Leftists
wanted us to slough off our ethnic identities and join in the
international proletarian brotherhood -- "Workers of the world, unite!"
But we clung to ethnic distinctiveness. Future generations lost their
ancestral ties, but they didn't adopt the IWW flag; they flew the stars
and stripes. "Property is theft" is a communist motto, but no one is
more house-proud than a first generation Pole who has escaped landless
peasantry and secured his suburban nest.
Leftists felt that we jilted them at the altar. Leftists turned on us.
This isn't just ancient history. In 2004, What's the Matter with Kansas?
spent eighteen weeks on the bestseller lists. The premise of the book:
working people are too stupid to know what's good for them, and so they
vote conservative when they should be voting left. In England, the book
was titled, What's the Matter with America?
We became the left's boogeyman: Joe Six-pack, Joe Hardhat. Though we'd
been in the U.S. for a few short decades when the demonization began,
leftists, in the academy, in media, and in casual speech, blamed
working-class ethnics for American crimes, including racism and the
"imperialist" war in Vietnam. See films like The Deer Hunter. Watch
Archie Bunker on "All in the Family." Listen to a few of the Polack
jokes that elitists pelted me with whenever I introduced myself at UC
Berkeley.
Leftists freely label poor whites as "redneck," "white trash," "trailer
trash," and "hillbilly." At the same time that leftists toss around
these racist and classist slurs, they are so sanctimonious they forbid
anyone to pronounce the N word when reading Mark Twain aloud. President
Bill Clinton's advisor James Carville succinctly summed up leftist
contempt for poor whites in his memorable quote, "Drag a hundred-dollar
bill through a trailer park, you never know what you'll find."
The left's visceral hatred of poor whites overflowed like a broken sewer
when John McCain chose Sarah Palin as his vice presidential running
mate in 2008. It would be impossible, and disturbing, to attempt to
identify the single most offensive comment that leftists lobbed at
Palin. One can report that attacks on Palin were so egregious that
leftists themselves publicly begged that they cease; after all, they
gave the left a bad name. The Reclusive Leftist blogged in 2009 that it
was a "major shock" to discover "the extent to which so many
self-described liberals actually despise working people." The Reclusive
Leftist focuses on Vanity Fair journalist Henry Rollins. Rollins
recommends that leftists "hate-fuck conservative women" and denounces
Palin as a "small town hickoid" who can be bought off with a coupon to a
meal at a chain restaurant.
Smearing us is not enough. Liberal policies sabotage us. Affirmative
action benefits recipients by color, not by income. Even this limited
focus fails. In his 2004 Yale University Press study, Thomas Sowell
insists that affirmative action helps only wealthier African Americans.
Poor blacks do not benefit. In 2009, Princeton sociologists Thomas
Espenshade and Alexandria Radford demonstrated that poor, white
Christians are underrepresented on elite college campuses. Leftists add
insult to injury. A blue-collar white kid, who feels lost and friendless
on the alien terrain of a university campus, a campus he has to leave
immediately after class so he can get to his fulltime job at
MacDonald's, must accept that he is a recipient of "white privilege" –
if he wants to get good grades in mandatory classes on racism.
The left is still looking for its proletariat. It supports mass
immigration for this reason. Harvard's George Borjas, himself a Cuban
immigrant, has been called "America’s leading immigration economist."
Borjas points out that mass immigration from Latin America has sabotaged
America's working poor.
It's more than a little bit weird that leftists, who describe themselves
as the voice of the worker, select workers as their hated other of
choice, and targets of their failed social engineering.
6) I believe in God.
Read Marx and discover a mythology that is irreconcilable with any other
narrative, including the Bible. Hang out in leftist internet
environments, and you will discover a toxic bath of irrational hatred
for the Judeo-Christian tradition. You will discover an alternate
vocabulary in which Jesus is a "dead Jew on a stick" or a "zombie" and
any belief is an arbitrary sham, the equivalent of a recently invented
"flying spaghetti monster." You will discover historical revisionism
that posits Nazism as a Christian denomination. You will discover a
rejection of the Judeo-Christian foundation of Western Civilization and
American concepts of individual rights and law. You will discover a
nihilist void, the kind of vacuum of meaning that nature abhors and
that, all too often, history fills with the worst totalitarian
nightmares, the rough beast that slouches toward Bethlehem.
5 & 4) Straw men and "In order to make an omelet you have to break a few eggs."
It astounds me now to reflect on it, but never, in all my years of
leftist activism, did I ever hear anyone articulate accurately the
position of anyone to our right. In fact, I did not even know those
positions when I was a leftist.
"Truth is that which serves the party." The capital-R revolution was
such a good, it could eliminate all that was bad, that manipulating
facts was not even a venial sin; it was a good. If you want to make an
omelet, you have to break a few eggs. One of those eggs was objective
truth.
Ron Kuby is a left-wing radio talk show host on New York's WABC. He
plays the straw man card hourly. If someone phones in to question
affirmative action – shouldn't such programs benefit recipients by
income, rather than by skin color? – Kuby opens the fire hydrant. He is
shrill. He is bombastic. He accuses the caller of being a member of the
KKK. He paints graphic word pictures of the horrors of lynching and the
death of Emmett Till and asks, "And you support that?"
Well of course THE CALLER did not support that, but it is easier to
orchestrate a mob in a familiar rendition of righteous rage against a
sensationalized straw man than it is to produce a reasoned argument
against a reasonable opponent.
On June 16, 2014, Washington Post columnist Dana Milbank published a
column alleging that a peaceful Muslim was nearly verbally lynched by
violent Islamophobes at a Heritage Foundation-hosted panel. What Milbank
described was despicable. Unfortunately for Milbank and the Washington
Post's credibility, someone filmed the event and posted the film on
YouTube. Panel discussants, including Frank Gaffney and Brigitte
Gabriel, made important points in a courteous manner. Saba Ahmed, the
peaceful Muslim, is a "family friend" of a bombing plotter who expressed
a specific desire to murder children. It soon became clear that Milbank
was, as one blogger put it, "making stuff up."
Milbank slanders anyone who might attempt analysis of jihad, a force
that is currently cited in the murder of innocents -- including Muslims
-- from Nigeria to the Philippines. The leftist strategy of slandering
those who speak uncomfortable facts suppresses discourse and has a
devastating impact on confrontations with truth in journalism and on
college campuses.
2 & 3) It doesn't work. Other approaches work better.
I went to hear David Horowitz speak in 2004. My intention was to heckle
him. Horowitz said something that interrupted my flow of thought. He
pointed out that Camden, Paterson, and Newark had decades of Democratic
leadership.
Ouch.
I grew up among "Greatest Generation" Americans who had helped build
these cities. One older woman told me, "As soon as I got my weekly
paycheck, I rushed to Main Ave in Paterson, and my entire paycheck ended
up on my back, in a new outfit." In the 1950s and 60s, my parents and
my friends' parents fled deadly violence in Newark and Paterson.
Within a few short decades, Paterson, Camden, and Newark devolved into
unlivable slums, with shooting deaths, drug deals, and garbage-strewn
streets. The pain that New Jerseyans express about these failed cities
is our state's open wound.
I live in Paterson. I teach its young. My students are hogtied by
ignorance. I find myself speaking to young people born in the U.S. in a
truncated pidgin I would use with a train station chai wallah in
Calcutta.
Many of my students lack awareness of a lot more than vocabulary. They
don't know about believing in themselves, or stick-to-itiveness. They
don't realize that the people who exercise power over them have faced
and overcome obstacles. I know they don't know these things because they
tell me. One student confessed that when she realized that one of her
teachers had overcome setbacks it changed her own life.
My students do know -- because they have been taught this -- that
America is run by all-powerful racists who will never let them win. My
students know -- because they have been drilled in this -- that the only
way they can get ahead is to locate and cultivate those few white
liberals who will pity them and scatter crumbs on their supplicant,
bowed heads and into their outstretched palms. My students have learned
to focus on the worst thing that ever happened to them, assume that it
happened because America is unjust, and to recite that story,
dirge-like, to whomever is in charge, from the welfare board to college
professors, and to await receipt of largesse.
As Shelby Steele so brilliantly points out in his book White Guilt, the
star of the sob story my students tell in exchange for favors is very
much not the black aid recipient. The star of this story, still, just as
before the Civil Rights Movement that was meant to change who got to
take the lead in American productions, was the white man. The generous
white liberal still gets top billing.
In Dominque La Pierre's 1985 novel City of Joy, a young American doctor,
Max Loeb, confesses that serving the poor in a slum has changed his
mind forever about what might actually improve their lot. "In a slum an
exploiter is better than a Santa Claus… An exploiter forces you to
react, whereas a Santa Claus demobilizes you."
That one stray comment from David Horowitz, a man I regarded as the
enemy, sparked the slow but steady realization that my ideals, the
ideals I had lived by all my life, were poisoning my students and
Paterson, my city.
After I realized that our approaches don't work, I started reading about
other approaches. I had another Aha! moment while listening to a two
minute twenty-three second YouTube video of Milton Friedman responding
to Phil Donahue's castigation of greed. The only rational response to
Friedman is "My God, he's right."
1) Hate.
If hate were the only reason, I'd stop being a leftist for this reason alone.
Almost twenty years ago, when I could not conceive of ever being
anything but a leftist, I joined a left-wing online discussion forum.
Before that I'd had twenty years of face-to-face participation in leftist politics: marching, organizing, socializing.
In this online forum, suddenly my only contact with others was the words
those others typed onto a screen. That limited and focused means of
contact revealed something.
If you took all the words typed into the forum every day and arranged
them according to what part of speech they were, you'd quickly notice
that nouns expressing the emotions of anger, aggression, and disgust,
and verbs speaking of destruction, punishing, and wreaking vengeance,
outnumbered any other class of words.
One topic thread was entitled "What do you view as disgusting about
modern America?" The thread was begun in 2002. Almost eight thousand
posts later, the thread was still going strong in June, 2014.
Those posting messages in this left-wing forumpublicly announced that
they did what they did every day, from voting to attending a rally to
planning a life, because they wanted to destroy something, and because
they hated someone, rather than because they wanted to build something,
or because they loved someone. You went to an anti-war rally because you
hated Bush, not because you loved peace. Thus, when Obama bombed, you
didn't hold any anti-war rally, because you didn't hate Obama.
I experienced powerful cognitive dissonance when I recognized the hate.
The rightest of my right-wing acquaintances -- I had no right-wing
friends -- expressed nothing like this. My right-wing acquaintances
talked about loving: God, their family, their community. I'm not saying
that the right-wingers I knew were better people; I don't know that they
were. I'm speaking here, merely, about language.
In 1995 I developed a crippling illness. I couldn't work, lost my life
savings, and traveled through three states, from surgery to surgery.
A left-wing friend, Pete, sent me emails raging against Republicans like
George Bush, whom he referred to as "Bushitler." The Republicans were
to blame because they opposed socialized medicine. In fact it's not at
all certain that socialized medicine would have helped; the condition I
had is not common and there was no guaranteed treatment.
I visited online discussion forums for others with the same affliction.
One of my fellow sufferers, who identified himself as a successful
corporate executive in New Jersey, publicly announced that the symptoms
were so hideous, and his helpless slide into poverty was so much not
what his wife had bargained for when she married him, that he planned to
take his own life. He stopped posting after that announcement, though I
responded to his post and requested a reply. It is possible that he
committed suicide, exactly as he said he would -- car exhaust in the
garage. I suddenly realized that my "eat the rich" lapel button was a
sin premised on a lie.
In any case, at the time I was diagnosed, Bush wasn't president; Clinton
was. And, as I pointed out to Pete, his unceasing and vehement
expressions of hatred against Republicans did nothing for me.
I had a friend, a nun, Mary Montgomery, one of the Sisters of
Providence, who took me out to lunch every six months or so, and gave me
twenty-dollar Target gift cards on Christmas. Her gestures to support
someone, rather than expressions of hate against someone -- even though
these gestures were miniscule and did nothing to restore me to health --
meant a great deal to me.
Recently, I was trying to explain this aspect of why I stopped being a
leftist to a left-wing friend, Julie. She replied, "No, I'm not an
unpleasant person. I try to be nice to everybody."
"Julie," I said, "You are an active member of the Occupy Movement. You
could spend your days teaching children to read, or visiting the elderly
in nursing homes, or organizing cleanup crews in a garbage-strewn slum.
You don't. You spend your time protestingand trying to destroy
something -- capitalism."
"Yes, but I'm very nice about it," she insisted. "I always protest with a smile."
Pete is now a Facebook friend and his feed overflows with the anger that
I'm sure he assesses as righteous. He protests against homophobic
Christians, American imperialists, and Monsanto. I don't know if Pete
ever donates to an organization he believes in, or a person suffering
from a disease, or if he ever says comforting things to afflicted
intimates. I know he hates.
I do have right-wing friends now and they do get angry and they do
express that anger. But when I encounter unhinged, stratospheric
vituperation, when I encounter detailed revenge fantasies in
scatological and sadistic language, I know I've stumbled upon a
left-wing website.
Given that the left prides itself on being the liberator of women,
homosexuals, and on being "sex positive," one of the weirder and most
obvious aspects of left-wing hate is how often, and how virulently, it
is expressed in terms that are misogynist, homophobic, and in the
distinctive anti-sex voice of a sexually frustrated high-school misfit.
Haters are aware enough of how uncool it would be to use a slur like
"fag," so they sprinkle their discourse with terms indicating anal rape
like "butt hurt." Leftists taunt right-wingers as "tea baggers." The
implication is that the target of their slur is either a woman or a gay
man being orally penetrated by a man, and is, therefore, inferior, and
despicable.
Misogynist speech has a long tradition on the left. In 1964, Stokely
Carmichael said that the only position for women in the Civil Rights
Movement was "prone." Carmichael's misogyny is all the more outrageous
given the very real role of women like Rosa Parks, Viola Liuzzo, and
Fannie Lou Hamer.
In 2012 atheist bloggers Jennifer McCreight and Natalie Reed exposed the
degree to which misogyny dominates the New Atheist movement. McCreight
quoted a prominent atheist's reply to a woman critic. "I will make you a
rape victim if you don't fuck off... I think we should give the guy who
raped you a medal. I hope you fucking drown in rape semen, you ugly,
mean-spirited cow… Is that kind of like the way that rapists dick went
in your pussy? Or did he use your asshole… I'm going to rape you with my
fist."
A high-profile example of leftist invective was delivered by MSNBC's
Martin Bashir in late 2013. Bashir said, on air and in a rehearsed
performance, not as part of a moment's loss of control,
something so vile about Sarah Palin
that I won't repeat it here. Extreme as it is, Bashir's comment is
fairly representative of a good percentage of what I read on left-wing
websites.
I could say as much about a truly frightening phenomenon, left-wing
anti-Semitism, but I'll leave the topic to others better qualified. I
can say that when I first encountered it, at a PLO fundraising party in
Marin County, I felt as if I had time-traveled to pre-war Berlin.
I needed to leave the left, I realized, when I decided that I wanted to
spend time with people building, cultivating, and establishing,
something that they loved.
SOURCE
****************************
For more blog postings from me, see
TONGUE-TIED,
EDUCATION WATCH INTERNATIONAL,
GREENIE WATCH,
POLITICAL CORRECTNESS WATCH,
AUSTRALIAN POLITICS, and
Paralipomena (Occasionally updated), a
Coral reef compendium and
an IQ compendium. (Both updated as news items come in).
GUN WATCH is now mainly put together by Dean Weingarten. I also put up occasional updates on my
Personal blog and each day I gather together my most substantial current writings on
THE PSYCHOLOGIST.
Email me
here (Hotmail address). My Home Pages are
here (Academic) or
here (Pictorial) or
here (Personal)
***************************
24 April, 2017
Leftists never learn
I reproduce below an article by some VERY uncritical thinkers. What
they write reveals their thinking to be just about the same as the
thinking of Adorno et al. in 1950. The great mass of
criticism and refutation thrown at the Adorno work (See for instance the
first half of Altemeyer's first book) has had no impact on them at
all.
But there is a reason for that. In the minds of most
psychologists, the Adorno work is impervious to criticism. No
matter how aware they are of the criticisms and refutations of it: Its
conclusions are just too delicious to let it go. In the best
projective style, it accuses conservatives of all the faults that
liberals themselves have, such as authoritarianism. Its
conclusions are emotionally irresistible. So the authors below are
not alone in continuing to produce "research" that repeats the old
catnip. They quote many others who have not learned from the
criticisms either. Their article is in fact mainstream among
Leftist psychologists.
But it takes only a moment of
inspection to show that the latest study, like most before it, is
entirely reliant on value judgments. What seem like sober
empirical findings are in fact all "spin". As is so common among
psychologists, they take some highly detailed laboratory task and draw
huge conclusions about all humanity from it. They do not rest at
saying that liberals and conservatives respond differently to a
particular experimental task but rather claim with great expansiveness
that this shows how conservatives think generally.
And
they do it all on the basis of responses from an available group of
university students -- and students have often been shown as responding
very differently from the population at large. The authors conclude that
"liberals" behave in a certain way rather than "A non-random selection
of 44 students from Northwestern university" behaved in a certain
way. In the absence of representative sampling the latter is the
only conclusion they are entitled to draw from their data but they are
far more expansive than that.
But two can play at their silly game. Where they conclude that:
"Liberals solved significantly more problems via insight instead of in a step-by-step analytic fashion"
I
would conclude from the same set of results that liberals leap to
conclusions whereas conservatives are more careful. Broadly,
"conservatism=caution" so that is hardly a startling conclusion.
An
amusing feature of the article is that they accept that liberals have a
need for novelty. They are sensation seekers. I reported
the same many years ago -- and my sample was a random one. I
interpreted the finding as showing that liberals are impulsive airheads
but the authors below seem to see it as a good thing. "De gustibus
non disputandum est", I guess.
REFERENCES
Adorno,T.W., Frenkel-Brunswik, E., Levinson, D.J. & Sanford, R.N. (1950) The authoritarian personality. New York: Harper.
Altemeyer, R. (1981). Right-wing authoritarianism. Winnipeg: University Manitoba Press.
The politics of insight
Carola Salvi et al.
Abstract
Previous studies showed that liberals and conservatives differ in
cognitive style. Liberals are more flexible, and tolerant of complexity
and novelty, whereas conservatives are more rigid, are more resistant to
change, and prefer clear answers. We administered a set of compound
remote associate problems, a task extensively used to differentiate
problem-solving styles (via insight or analysis). Using this task,
several researches have proven that self-reports, which differentiate
between insight and analytic problem-solving, are reliable and are
associated with two different neural circuits. In our research we found
that participants self-identifying with distinct political orientations
demonstrated differences in problem-solving strategy. Liberals solved
significantly more problems via insight instead of in a step-by-step
analytic fashion. Our findings extend previous observations that
self-identified political orientations reflect differences in cognitive
styles. More specifically, we show that type of political orientation is
associated with problem-solving strategy. The data converge with
previous neurobehavioural and cognitive studies indicating a link
between cognitive style and the psychological mechanisms that mediate
political beliefs.
Q J Exp Psychol (Hove). 2016 Jun; 69(6): 1064–1072. doi: 10.1080/17470218.2015.1136338
**********************************
The Greatest Threat to America Isn’t Islam – It’s the Left
These days, many people are anxious about the threat that Islam poses to
the West. The fear is understandable but misplaced. And there are a
host of reasons why this proves to be true.
Islam is a religion stuck in pre-medieval times and has rarely produced
any civilizational, scientific or technological advancements. Around 40
percent of Muslims worldwide are illiterate. Muslim nations are unable
to manufacture even the most elementary of things without the aid of
Western engineering, knowledge, and technology. To a great and powerful
civilization, Islam can never pose a threat.
The only reason Islam was ever able to conquer two-thirds of the
Christian territories after the death of Muhammed was because the Roman
and Persian empires had weakened themselves and each other through
centuries of warfare. Also, plague and famine had decimated the
population in the Mediterranean region, leaving them vulnerable to
attack.
The problems we are now facing with Islam are only symptoms of the
left’s success in paralyzing the West and preventing it from asserting
itself. Islam was never strong. The West has become weak. That is
why fear of Islam is misplaced. The real enemy of the West is the
ideological left, an adversary from within which slowly but surely
destroys western civilization by debilitating its cultural and political
immune system. In many ways, the left is like HIV, and Islam is like a
cold. A cold is annoying but hardly life-threatening to someone with a
healthy immune system. To someone ravaged by the HIV, however, even a
common cold can be lethal.
For more than a century, the left has waged a relentless jihad on the
West. In the 19th century, Karl Marx saw Christianity as the cultural
carrier and defender of capitalism and launched an intentional attack on
religion in general, and Christianity in particular. He believed that,
if Christian values could be undermined, it would be much easier to
replace capitalism with utopian socialism. As an articulate
intellectual, Karl Marx attracted many academics to his cause, and
gradually left-wing radicals took over western universities. From this
position of intellectual power, they were slowly able to poison the
minds of most young people by feeding them lies that effectually turned
them into enemies of their own civilization.
The left has been insidious in accomplishing this feat by subtly
rewriting academic history textbooks. Today, most positive elements of
Western civilization have been erased from academia. Modern students do
not learn that capitalism raised billions of people out of poverty and
that every single day hundreds of thousands enter the middle class
around the globe, thanks to free market economics.
At the same time, negative occurrences about other cultures have been
carefully removed. Ask an average student in university, and he will
know nothing about the one hundred million people who were effectively
murdered under communist totalitarianism. He has not been made aware
that almost all places that suffer from poverty in the world are
governed by left-wing, anti-capitalistic regimes.
Instead, leftist professors teach only about the vices and atrocities
that have occurred in our own history. As a student, you will learn that
the West became rich due to slavery and imperialism, but they will
never teach that slavery was endemic to all cultures across the world,
and that it was Western Christian nations which ultimately abolished
slavery.
University professors proclaim all the wealth of the West was stolen
from innocent, peaceful cultures around the world. Students are taught
that whites are fundamentally racist, but it will go unsaid that all
these cultures from which we allegedly stole our wealth had been dirt
poor for thousands of years and any racism that existed in the West
pales in comparison to that of other cultures.
The professors may not use words like “evil,” but it isn’t necessary.
Students infer this conclusion on their own based on the deceptions they
are fed. They deduce that the West in general, and specifically the
United States, must be destroyed so that all the other respectable and
decent cultures of the world can blossom again to create the nirvana
that existed before our ruthless impoverishment and exploitation.
The worst part is that decent conservatives and libertarians across the
world have allowed this to happen practically without moral resistance.
Why? The left has found the great weakness of conservatives: their
conscience and decency. When someone accuses them of being racist or
some other form of evil, their reflex is to apologize and appease. The
more conservatives placate and soothe, the louder the left screams
racism – because it works.
The cultural decay of our civilization will continue until conservatives
choose to stand up and say “enough.” And the first step in what will
certainly be a long process of restoring respect for American culture
and values is to quit apologizing and cease pacifying the left.
SOURCE
********************************
No, Trump Is Not a Neocon
BY: RICH LOWRY
With U.S. missiles flying in Syria, the “mother of all bombs” exploding
in Afghanistan, and an aircraft-carrier strike group heading toward
North Korea, has there been a revolution in President Trump’s foreign
policy?
His most fervent supporters shouldn’t get overly exercised and his
interventionist critics shouldn’t get too excited. What has been on
offer so far is broadly consistent with the Jacksonian worldview that is
the core of Trump’s posture toward the world.
Trump’s views are obviously inchoate. He has an attitude rather than a
doctrine, and upon leaving office, he surely won’t, like Richard Nixon,
write a series of books on international affairs.
What we have learned since he took office is that Trump is not an
isolationist. At times, he’s sounded like one. His America First slogan
(inadvertently) harkened back to the movement to keep us out of World
War II. His outlandish questioning of the NATO alliance, an anchor of
the West, created the sense that he might be willing to overturn the
foundations of the post–World War II order.
This hasn’t come to pass. It’s not possible to be a truly isolationist
president of the United States in the 21st century unless you want to
spend all your time unspooling U.S. commitments and managing the
resulting disruption and crises. And such an approach would undercut the
most consistent element of Trump’s approach — namely strength.
His set-piece foreign-policy speeches during the campaign were clear on
this. “The world is most peaceful and most prosperous when America is
strongest,” he said last April at the Center for the National Interest.
“America will continue and continue forever to play the role of
peacemaker. We will always help save lives and indeed humanity itself,
but to play the role, we must make America strong again.”
In direct contradiction to isolationism, he said repeatedly on the
campaign trail that he would take the war to ISIS and build up our
defenses. He even called himself — in a malapropism — “the most
militaristic person you will ever meet.”
Now, there is no doubt that the Syrian strike is a notable departure for
Trump, and he defended it in unapologetically humanitarian terms. But
it’s entirely possible that the strike will only have the narrow purpose
of reestablishing a red line against the use of chemical weapons in
Syria and reasserting American credibility.
That is particularly important in the context of the brewing showdown
with North Korea, which he roughly forecast in his speech last April.
“President Obama watches helplessly as North Korea increases its
aggression and expands further and further with its nuclear reach,”
Trump said, advocating using economic pressure on China to “get them to
do what they have to do with North Korea, which is totally out of
control.”
The Tomahawks in Syria and saber-rattling at North Korea have Trump’s
critics on the right and left claiming he’s becoming a neoconservative —
a term of abuse that is most poorly understood by the people most
inclined to use it. All neocons may be hawks, but not all hawks are
neocons, who are distinctive in their idealism and robust
interventionism.
We haven’t heard paeans to democracy from Trump, or clarion calls for
human rights. He hasn’t seriously embraced regime change anywhere (even
if his foreign-policy officials say Assad has to go). He shows no sign
of a willingness to make a major commitment of U.S. ground troops
abroad.
Trump is a particular kind of hawk. The Jacksonian school is inclined
toward realism and reluctant to use force, except when a national
interest is clearly at stake. As historian Walter Russell Mead writes,
“Jacksonians believe that international life is and will remain both
violent and anarchic. The United States must be vigilant, strongly
armed. Our diplomacy must be cunning, forceful, and no more scrupulous
than any other country’s.”
This tradition isn’t isolationist or neoconservative, and neither is Trump.
SOURCE
****************************
For more blog postings from me, see
TONGUE-TIED,
EDUCATION WATCH INTERNATIONAL,
GREENIE WATCH,
POLITICAL CORRECTNESS WATCH,
AUSTRALIAN POLITICS, and
Paralipomena (Occasionally updated), a
Coral reef compendium and
an IQ compendium. (Both updated as news items come in).
GUN WATCH is now mainly put together by Dean Weingarten. I also put up occasional updates on my
Personal blog and each day I gather together my most substantial current writings on
THE PSYCHOLOGIST.
Email me
here (Hotmail address). My Home Pages are
here (Academic) or
here (Pictorial) or
here (Personal)
***************************
23 April, 2017
This is appalling. You don't hit a mother carrying babies. The thug must be locked up
An American Airlines flight attendant has been filmed challenging a
passenger to a fight in heated scenes after the staffer allegedly
whacked a mum with a stroller and kicked her off the plane.
The woman had just boarded a flight yesterday afternoon from San Francisco to Dallas when the shocking incident occurred.
Passengers allege the attendant "violently" took a stroller from a lady
with twins - hitting her and just missing one of the babies.
The incident comes amid the debate over airline boarding treatment after
the United Airlines furore involving a man being dragged off a flight
in Chicago.
In the American Airlines incident yesterday, a video posted to Facebook by Surain Adyanthaya caught the tumultuous aftermath.
“OMG! AA Flight attendant violently took a stroller from a lady with her
baby on my flight, hitting her and just missing the baby,” Adyanthaya
captioned the video.
The passenger later added another photo: "They just in-voluntarily
escorted the mother and her kids off the flight and let the flight
attendant back on, who tried to fight other passengers.
"The mom asked for an apology and the AA official declined.
"I have videos of this too but we are taking off."
The footage doesn’t catch the moment when the flight attendant allegedly struck the woman.
But the atmosphere in the cabin turns turbulent as a man steps in to defend her.
“Hey bud, you do that to me and I’ll knock you flat,” the man says to
the attendant as the distraught woman can be seen to the side clutching
her baby, tears streaming down her face.
The attendant fires back: “You stay out of this.”
The man then takes a step forward and the attendant immediately turns
confrontational. “Hit me, c’mon, bring it on!” the attendant shouts.
“C’mon, you don’t know what the story is.”
The passenger responds: “I don’t care what the story is, you don’t hurt a baby.”
The woman is eventually escorted off the flight, but the quarrelsome
attendant is allowed back on, the New York Daily News reports.
The Facebook video quickly spread across social media, and had been shared more than 3,500 times as of early Saturday.
American Airlines condemned the flight attendant’s behaviour and said it had launched an investigation into the incident.
“What we see on this video does not reflect our values or how we care for our customers,” the airline said in a statement.
“We are deeply sorry for the pain we have caused this passenger and her
family and to any other customers affected by the incident.”
American said the woman and her baby have since boarded another flight bound for an international destination.
The attendant has been removed from duty pending an investigation. “We are disappointed by these actions,” American said.
SOURCE
Donald Trump has 'dangerous mental illness', say psychiatry experts
Psychiatrists will usually not hazard a diagnosis of someone they
have not personally interviewed -- but for Trump that basic precaution
flies out the window. And their "diagnosis" is very loose.
He is a narcissist, a paranoid, and prone to grandiose thinking.
It's a catalog of abuse rather than any serious attempt at a diagnosis.
There
is no doubt that Trump is a most unusual man in all sorts of ways. That
makes any attempt at diagnosis difficult and unlikely to fit. You
can show that certain unusual behaviors fit one category but where does
that leave you with all the other unusual behaviors? Diagnosis is
extraordinarily risky in such cases and most unlikely to be accurate.
Nonetheless,
I think Trump's pattern can be reduced to a single obvious syndrome --
one that the psychologists below clearly avoid. But I am not going
to offer my thoughts on that in case they are twisted by the totally
unscrupulous Left. It's Trump's policies that matter, not his
personal idiosyncrasies
Donald Trump has a “dangerous mental illness” and is not fit to lead the
US, a group of psychiatrists have warned during a conference at Yale
University.
Mental health experts claimed the President was “paranoid and
delusional”, and said it was their “ethical responsibility” to warn the
American public about the “dangers” Mr Trump’s psychological state poses
to the country.
Speaking at the conference at Yale’s School of Medicine on Thursday, one
of the mental health professionals, Dr John Gartner, a practising
psychotherapist who advised psychiatric residents at Johns Hopkins
University Medical School, said: “We have an ethical responsibility to
warn the public about Donald Trump's dangerous mental illness.”
Dr Gartner, who is also a founding member of Duty to Warn, an
organisation of several dozen mental health professionals who think Mr
Trump is mentally unfit to be president, said the President's statement
about having the largest crowd at an inauguration was just one of many
that served as warnings of a larger problem.
“Worse than just being a liar or a narcissist, in addition he is
paranoid, delusional and grandiose thinking and he proved that to the
country the first day he was President. If Donald Trump really believes
he had the largest crowd size in history, that’s delusional,” he added.
Chairing the event, Dr Bandy Lee, assistant clinical professor in the
Yale Department of Psychiatry, said: “As some prominent psychiatrists
have noted, [Trump’s mental health] is the elephant in the room. I think
the public is really starting to catch on and widely talk about this
now.”
James Gilligan, a psychiatrist and professor at New York University,
told the conference he had worked some of the “most dangerous people in
society”, including murderers and rapists — but that he was convinced by
the “dangerousness” of Mr Trump.
“I’ve worked with some of the most dangerous people our society
produces, directing mental health programmes in prisons,” he said.
“I’ve worked with murderers and rapists. I can recognise dangerousness
from a mile away. You don’t have to be an expert on dangerousness or
spend fifty years studying it like I have in order to know how dangerous
this man is.”
Dr Gartner started an online petition earlier this year on calling for
Mr Trump to be removed from office, which claims that he is
“psychologically incapable of competently discharging the duties of
President”. The petition has so far garnered more than 41,000
signatures.
It states: “We, the undersigned mental health professionals (please
state your degree), believe in our professional judgment that Donald
Trump manifests a serious mental illness that renders him
psychologically incapable of competently discharging the duties of
President of the United States.
“And we respectfully request he be removed from office, according to
article 4 of the 25th amendment to the Constitution, which states that
the president will be replaced if he is 'unable to discharge the powers
and duties of his office'."
The claims made in the conference have drawn criticism from some in the
psychiatric establishment, who say they violate the American Psychiatric
Association’s “Goldwater rule,” which states psychiatrists are not to
give professional opinions on people they have not personally examined.
They have also been condemned by Republicans, including Connecticut
Republican Party Chairman JR Romano, who accused the group of “throwing
ethical standards out the window because they cannot accept the election
results.”
Responding to the criticism, Dr Gartner said: “This notion that you need
to personally interview someone to form a diagnosis actually doesn’t
make a whole lotta sense. For one thing, research shows that the
psychiatric interview is the least statistical reliable way to make a
diagnosis.”
The doctors have said that even if it is in breach of tradition ethical
standards of psychiatry, it was necessary to break their silence on the
matter because they feared “too much is at stake”.
It is not the first time Mr Trump's mental health has been called into
question. In February, Duty to Warn, which consists of psychiatrists,
psychologists and social workers, signed an open letter warning that his
mental state “makes him incapable of serving safely as president”.
The letter warned that the President’s tendency to “distort reality” to
fit his “personal myth of greatness” and attack those who challenge him
with facts was likely to increase in a position of power.
SOURCE
*********************************
The real Left
Foiled at the ballot box, the Left turns to its tried and true method of political discourse: bricks and baseball bats.
********************************
DIAMOND AND SILK LAY THE SMACKDOWN ON MAXINE WATERS
Rep. Maxine Waters (D-Calif.) is the latest liberal lawmaker to refuse
to work with President Donald Trump, calling him “dangerous.”
Well, Diamond and Silk have a few words for Waters. “When you come for
Donald J. Trump, we are going to come for you boo.” Watch below.
*********************************
How socialism works
********************************
Apocalyptic Progressivism
Victor Davis Hanson
Shortly after the 2008 election, President Obama’s soon-to-be chief of
staff, Rahm Emanuel, infamously declared, “You never let a serious
crisis go to waste.”
He elaborated: “What I mean by that [is] it’s an opportunity to do things you think you could not do before.”
Disasters, such as the September 2008 financial crisis, were thus seen
as opportunities. Out of the chaos, a shell-shocked public might at last
be ready to accept more state regulation of the economy and far greater
deficit spending. Indeed, the national debt doubled in the eight years
following the 2008 crisis.
During the 2008 campaign, gas prices at one point averaged over $4 a
gallon. Then-candidate Obama reacted by pushing a green agenda — as if
the cash-strapped but skeptical public could be pushed into alternative
energy agendas.
Obama mocked then-Republican vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin’s
prescient advice to “drill, baby, drill” — as if Palin’s endorsement of
new technologies such as fracking and horizontal drilling could never
ensure consumers plentiful fuel.
Instead, in September 2008, Steven Chu, who would go on to become
Obama’s secretary of energy, told The Wall Street Journal, “Somehow we
have to figure out how to boost the price of gasoline to the levels in
Europe.”
In other words, if gas prices were to reach $9 or $10 a gallon, angry
Americans would at last be forced to seek alternatives to their
gas-powered cars, such as taking the bus or using even higher-priced
alternative fuels.
When up for re-election in 2012, President Obama doubled down on his
belief that gas was destined to get costlier: “And you know we can’t
just drill our way to lower gas prices.”
Yet even as Obama spoke, U.S. frackers were upping the supply and
reducing the cost of gas — despite efforts by the Obama administration
to deny new oil drilling permits on federal lands.
U.S oil production roughly doubled from 2008 to 2015. And by 2017, the
old bogeyman of “peak oil” production had been put to rest, as the U.S.
became nearly self-sufficient in fossil fuel production.
Viewing the world in apocalyptic terms was also useful during the California drought.
In March 2016, even as the four-year drought was over and California
precipitation had returned to normal, Gov. Jerry Brown was still harping
on the connection between “climate change” and near-permanent drought.
“We are running out of time because it’s not raining,” Brown
melodramatically warned. “This is a serious matter we’re experiencing in
California, as kind of a foretaste.”
Foretaste to what, exactly?
In 2017, it rained and snowed even more than it had during a normal year of precipitation in 2016.
Currently, a drenched California’s challenge is not theoretical global
warming, but the more mundane issue of long-neglected dam maintenance
that threatens to undermine overfull reservoirs.
Brown had seen the drought as a means of achieving the aim of
regimenting Californians to readjust their lifestyles in ways deemed
environmentally correct. The state refused to begin work on new
reservoirs, aqueducts and canals to be ready for the inevitable end of
the drought, even though in its some 120 years of accurate record
keeping California had likely never experienced more than a four-year
continuous drought.
And it did not this time around either.
Instead, state officials saw the drought as useful to implement
permanent water rationing, to idle farm acreage, and to divert
irrigation water to environmental agendas.
Well before this year’s full spring snowmelt, over 50 million acre-feet
of water has already cascaded out to sea (“liberated,” in green terms).
The lost freshwater was greater than the capacity of all existing (and
now nearly full) man-made reservoirs in the state, and its loss will
make it harder to deal with the next inevitable drought
No matter: Progressive narratives insisted that man-caused carbon
releases prompted not only record heat and drought but within a few
subsequent months also record coolness and precipitation.
And in Alice in Wonderland fashion, just as drilling was supposedly no
cure for oil shortages, building reservoirs was no remedy for water
scarcity.
In the same manner, neglecting the maintenance and building of roads in
California created a transportation crisis. Until recently, the
preferred solution to the state’s road mayhem and gridlock wasn’t more
freeway construction but instead high-speed rail — as if substandard
streets and highways would force millions of frustrated drivers to use
expensive state-owned mass transit.
These days, shortages of credit, water, oil or adequate roads are no
longer seen as age-old challenges to a tragic human existence. Instead
of overcoming them with courage, ingenuity, technology and scientific
breakthroughs, they are seen as existential “teachable moments.”
In other words, crises are not all bad — if they lead the public to more progressive government.
SOURCE
****************************
For more blog postings from me, see
TONGUE-TIED,
EDUCATION WATCH INTERNATIONAL,
GREENIE WATCH,
POLITICAL CORRECTNESS WATCH,
AUSTRALIAN POLITICS, and
Paralipomena (Occasionally updated), a
Coral reef compendium and
an IQ compendium. (Both updated as news items come in).
GUN WATCH is now mainly put together by Dean Weingarten. I also put up occasional updates on my
Personal blog and each day I gather together my most substantial current writings on
THE PSYCHOLOGIST.
Email me
here (Hotmail address). My Home Pages are
here (Academic) or
here (Pictorial) or
here (Personal)
***************************
21 April, 2017
Leftists Detest Patriotism
An NBC sports writer complains that flags and the national anthem are injecting politics into the game.
NBC Sports writer Craig Calcaterra stirred a hornet’s nest this past
weekend when he took to Twitter to complain about the injection of
politics in sports. “Will you keep politics out of sports, please. We
like sports to be politics-free.” By which he meant the American flag
and national anthem, because he tweeted it with a picture of the Atlanta
Braves' new stadium during the national anthem.
Calcaterra followed up his tweet with an essay on the NBC Sports website
in which he claimed that the presence of American flags and patriotic
imagery in sports is part of a post-9/11 “conspicuous patriotism” meant
to evoke specific feelings in sports fans.
Maybe Calcaterra would like to file his complaint with the Marine who
carried a flag all the way through the Boston Marathon — on a prosthetic
leg.
Of course, American Patriots realize that it’s Calcaterra who’s guilty
of mixing politics and sports. The display at the Braves game, and many
like it at ballparks across the country, are patriotic displays meant to
show support for our country and our military. This sort of thing has
been going on at sporting events for generations. Despite what
Calcaterra thinks, there is no Orwellian propaganda machine at work.
Sports fans are generally a patriotic lot. Calcaterra discovered this in
the responses his tweet generated in the hours and days after he posted
it. Many challenged his thinking, wondering what was so political about
displaying the American flag and being patriotic. One of Calcaterra’s
snarky replies was that “People often wrap themselves in the flag in
order to achieve political ends.”
People often burn the flag for the same reason, but when flags are
displayed in sports, there is no political end to achieve.
America-hating leftists can’t seem to grasp that. For them, everything
is political. And their inherently thin skin leads them to believe that
there is some hidden agenda behind anything they can’t understand. No
wonder they’re so bitter.
Take a look at the farce that was Colin Kaepernick’s protest last
football season. Kaepernick claimed that he refused to stand during the
playing of the National Anthem to show his solidarity for the
mistreatment of black people by police. One could argue that
Kaepernick’s sentiment to protest such abuse was well-intentioned, but
he showed extremely poor judgment by directing his anger at America as a
whole and not simply at those responsible for real abuse.
Kaepernick’s error quickly and roundly drew the ire of football fans,
and he now sits jobless on the sidelines waiting to see if he will even
be picked up by a team for next season. Rumor has it that no NFL team
will touch him after the whole debacle.
Leftists are finding themselves increasingly marginalized in America
either because they cannot grasp the true meaning of patriotism or
because they are terrible at hiding their outright loathing for America.
Perhaps it’s a combination of the two. Either way, they seem to want
the flexibility to embrace patriotism and the American ideal when it
suits them, mainly so they have something to hide behind when they show
their contempt for this country and many of its time-honored
institutions.
The difference between what is patriotic and what is anti-American
should be easy to see, so it’s puzzling that there is such a vigorous
debate over the issue. But leftists will keep that argument going
because it’s in their nature.
It would just be nice if they can keep that debate out of sports. We
Americans like baseball, football, basketball, and all the other
contests because we admire physical skill and athletic prowess. We’re
not looking for more social justice warriors. Hollywood, Washington and
the mass media have given us more than enough of them to go around.
Sports is one of the few things in American life that is inherently
politics-free. That’s why we like sports. Let’s keep it that way.
SOURCE
*******************************
Big Labor Robs Members to Support Democrats
If you’re wondering why millions of workers are abandoning the idea of
unionization, this statistic provides a clear answer: At least $1.7
billion — three-quarters of which came straight out of workers' pockets —
was used to promote 2016 political campaigns, according to the National
Institute for Labor Relations Research.
Two things stick out in the report. 1): “labor unions, which have the
ability to tax employees via forced-dues, [are] the only 501(c)5
entities capable of sustaining this kind political expenditure for the
past decade”; and 2): “Union officials spent $1.3 billion directly from
union treasuries (filled with forced dues and fees) to spend it on
politics, dwarfing George Soros' and the Koch Brothers' reported
combined political spending during the same period.”
Democrats talk a lot talk about voters “making their voices heard” by
“getting out the vote,” but most of this money is being siphoned from
workers who don’t have a voice in how political contributions are
allocated. And, needless to say, Democrats are the biggest
beneficiaries. The most recent data reveals that just 14.6 million
Americans (or 10.7% of the workforce) were unionized last year. This is a
9.4% reduction from 1983, when membership was 17.7 million (a
participation rate of 20.1%). This might explain why, according to The
Washington Free Beacon, there is a disparity between Big Labor’s
political activism and the votes cast by subordinates: “Trump received
votes from 43 percent of union households, while garnering two
endorsements from unions representing Border Patrol agents and police
officers.”
As National Right to Work Foundation’s Mark Mix put it, “This election
was a case study in the disconnect between union bosses and their
members, and the chasm is growing.” If unions truly believed in the idea
of democracy, they’d quit forcing members to fund partisan politics.
SOURCE
****************************
Net Neutrality Noise and Its Ultimate Goal: Total Government Control
For over a decade, professional liberal organizers and agitators –
backed by a tidal wave of big liberal foundations and Silicon Valley
corporate money – have told a bizarre scare story that without
heavy-handed government regulation, Internet service providers (ISPs)
will start blocking what websites you can go to and impeding free speech
on the Internet. No such thing happened in the approximately two
decades that ISPs were unregulated “information services” under the 1996
Telecom Act. Indeed, the opposite occurred as robust competition
between phone and cable companies – and later wireless companies – drove
speeds dramatically higher and consumers benefited from an Internet
that innovated beyond our wildest dreams.
Nonetheless, in 2015, ultraliberal advocacy groups (fueled by $196
million from the Soros and Ford Foundations) and Silicon Valley giants
like Google (which cycled a shocking 250 personnel through the Obama
administration and saw regulating ISPs as a way to guarantee themselves
access to below-market rate downstream bandwidth for their YouTube unit)
succeeded in getting the FCC to reclassify ISPs as regulated public
utilities. This was done under a Depression-era law designed for the old
Ma Bell telephone monopoly. Thousands of complaints to
potentially micromanage every aspect of the Internet piled up at the FCC
Enforcement Bureau and the commission was set to adopt a sweeping new
broadband tax to replace the private investment it scared off – with
strings attached of course – during a Hillary Clinton administration.
The liberal organizers of the phony net neutrality scare campaign had
even bigger plans; Robert McChesney, the founder of Free Press – the
group that was cited 46 times in the Obama net neutrality order – openly
bragged: “At the moment, the battle over network neutrality is not to
completely eliminate the telephone and cable companies. We are not at
that point yet. But the ultimate goal is to get rid of the media
capitalists in the phone and cable companies and to divest them from
control.”
If that’s too subtle for you, McChesney also said: “In the end, there is
no real answer but to remove brick by brick the capitalist system
itself, rebuilding the entire society on socialist principles.”
The American people elected Donald Trump, and President Trump elevated
free-market champion Ajit Pai to be FCC chairman and undo the mischief
the Obama FCC had done before it could reach its ultimate goals.
Chairman Pai is soon expected to unveil his plan to undo the Obama order
and replace it with a light-touch approach that centers on competition
and consumer protection and allows government intervention only when
there is actual consumer harm – not just scare stories. And in a
refreshing break from the usual pattern of regulators accruing to
themselves as much power as possible, the Pai plan will probably
relinquish authority from his own agency to the Federal Trade
Commission, which has far better expertise in consumer protection and
competition issues.
To the well-funded groups on the left that created the phony net
neutrality issue as a pretext for a government takeover of the Internet,
any step back will be unacceptable and the apocalyptic rhetoric will
flow like water. They will again have hundreds of millions of
dollars and massive platforms from the Silicon Valley giants like Google
that supported the Obama regulations. And the liberal media will
happily jump on board every vicious smear and lie to tarnish Chairman
Pai and President Trump and try to spook Congress into reversing
course. Some conservatives may be tempted to simply ride the tide
of fake outrage. But that can only lead to McChesney’s ultimate
goal of total government control. On this issue, conservatives in
Washington D.C. must do what they were elected to do: stand and fight.
And win.
SOURCE
*****************************
The Ugly Face of Sharia Law in America
Two recent reports underscore the danger of being ambivalent toward Western values.
According to The Detroit News, a middle-aged doctor by the name of
Jumana Nagarwala has been arrested for illegally conducting female
genital mutilation on two minors. Additionally, the Detroit Free Press
reports that “an attorney for [Nagarwala] admitted that her client
performed a procedure on the juveniles' private parts, but maintained
that it wasn’t cutting. Instead, the lawyer said Dr. Jumana Nagarwala,
44, of Northville, removed the membrane from the girls' genitals as part
of a religious practice that is tied to an international Indian-Muslim
group that the doctor belongs to.” This spin doesn’t make the incidents
any less horrendous. In fact, the minors were instructed not to divulge
anything about the ordeal. And without the FBI’s involvement, the
malefactors might have gotten away with it.
Meanwhile, in Minnesota, Abdullah Rashid is “trying to impose what he
calls ‘the civil part of the sharia law’ in the Cedar-Riverside
neighborhood of Minneapolis,” according to the StarTribune. His
enforcement measures include ordering people to avoid alcohol and drugs,
soliciting “indecent” females to wear Muslim garb, and encouraging
folks not to socialize with the opposite sex. If there’s any good news
it’s that the Tribune says “local Muslim leaders are sounding the alarm.
They are working to stop Rashid’s group, General Presidency of the
Religious Affairs and Welfare of the Ummah, and have notified
Minneapolis police, who say he’s being banned from a Cedar-Riverside
property.” But these Islam-inspired shenanigans aren’t new, particularly
in Minneapolis. The problem is only getting worse.
We don’t know if Nagarwala is an immigrant (though presumably she is),
and reports indicate Rashid is a Georgia native. But in both cases, they
are being influenced by an ideology that’s prevalent in Islamic
nations. The immigration debate — an issue in which both the Democrat
and Republican Parties once found common ground — has turned into one of
the most politically divisive topics. The Left arduously advocates open
borders, which it says is about compassion and inclusivility. But that
view is either misguided or politically calculated or both. What
leftists completely disregard is the idea of assimilation. And without
assimilation, the stories above with continue to metastasize.
SOURCE
****************************
For more blog postings from me, see
TONGUE-TIED,
EDUCATION WATCH INTERNATIONAL,
GREENIE WATCH,
POLITICAL CORRECTNESS WATCH,
AUSTRALIAN POLITICS, and
Paralipomena (Occasionally updated), a
Coral reef compendium and
an IQ compendium. (Both updated as news items come in).
GUN WATCH is now mainly put together by Dean Weingarten. I also put up occasional updates on my
Personal blog and each day I gather together my most substantial current writings on
THE PSYCHOLOGIST.
Email me
here (Hotmail address). My Home Pages are
here (Academic) or
here (Pictorial) or
here (Personal)
***************************
20 April, 2017
Scientific proof that Trump voters are racist?
Excerpt below from Thomas Wood, an assistant professor of political
science at Ohio State University. Tom may know a lot about
political science but he knows nothing about psychometrics. Both his
measure of authoritarianism and his measure of racism have no known
validity at predicting actual behaviour in the general population.
Rather hilariously, The Stenner scale of "authoritarianism" is embarassingly INVALID.
That may be because it is in a "forced-choice" format that makes
it difficult for many people to report their views accurately. It has
been PROCLAIMED as a measure of authoritarianism but there is no proof
that it is. More on that here
And
the Symbolic Racism scale is problematic in what it defines as racism.
Its items could in fact be seen as simply true or false hypotheses.
Take, for instance the item:
"Generations of slavery and
discrimination have created conditions that make it difficult for blacks
to work their way out of the lower class".
That is a
Leftist credo but where is the evidence for it? That it is a
false statement could reasonably be concluded from the fact that many
other initially disadvantaged minorities have in fact worked their way
up to prosperity.
So is it racist to acknowledge reality?
Leftists seem to think it is but everything they disagree with is racist
to them so that tells us nothing. The scale results could in fact tell
us that Trump voters are more open to reality.
One
also wonders why results from only 4 out of the 8 items of the Symbolic
Racism scale were presented. Were results from the other four
less congenial to the beliefs of the writer?
But in any case the
scale is known only to predict other attitudes, not any aspect of actual
behaviour. The results below therefore tell us nothing firm
During the 2016 presidential campaign, many observers wondered exactly
what motivated voters most: Was it income? Authoritarianism? Racial
attitudes?
Let the analyses begin. Last week, the widely respected 2016 American
National Election Study was released, sending political scientists into a
flurry of data modeling and chart making.
The ANES has been conducted since 1948, at first through in-person
surveys, and now also online, with about 1,200 nationally representative
respondents answering some questions for about 80 minutes. This
incredibly rich, publicly funded data source allows us to put elections
into historical perspective, examining how much each factor affected the
vote in 2016 compared with other recent elections.
Below, I’ll examine three narratives that became widely accepted about
the 2016 election and see how they stack up against the ANES data.
The rich, the poor, and the in-between
The first narrative was about how income affected vote choice. Trump was
said to be unusually appealing to low-income voters, especially in the
Midwest, compared with recent Republican presidential nominees. True or
false?
The ANES provides us data on income and presidential vote choice going
back to 1948. To remove the effects of inflation and rising prosperity, I
plot the percentage voting for the Republican presidential candidate
relative to the overall sample, by where they rank in U.S. income, from
the top to the bottom fifth. To most directly test the Donald Trump
income hypothesis, I’ve restricted this analysis to white voters.
2016 was plainly an anomaly. While the wealthy are usually most likely
to vote for the Republican, they didn’t this time; and while the poor
are usually less likely to vote for the Republican, they were unusually
supportive of Trump. And the degree to which the wealthy disdained the
2016 Republican candidate was without recent historical precedent.
Authoritarians or not?
Many commentators and social scientists wrote about how much about
authoritarianism influenced voters. Authoritarianism, as used by
political scientists, isn’t the same as fascism; it’s a psychological
disposition in which voters have an aversion to social change and
threats to social order. Since respondents might not want to say they
fear chaos or are drawn to strong leadership, this disposition is
measured by asking voters about the right way to rear children.
The next chart shows how white GOP presidential voters have answered
these questions since 2000. As we can see, Trump’s voters appear a
little less authoritarian than recent white Republican voters.
Did racism affect the voting?
Many observers debated how important Trump’s racial appeals were to his
voters. During the campaign, Trump made overt racial comments, with
seemingly little electoral penalty. Could the unusual 2016 race have
further affected Americans’ racial attitudes?
To test this, I use what is called the “symbolic racism scale” to
compare whites who voted for the Democratic presidential candidate with
those who voted for the Republican. This scale measures racial attitudes
among respondents who know that it’s socially unacceptable to say
things perceived as racially prejudiced. Rather than asking overtly
prejudiced questions — “do you believe blacks are lazy” — we ask whether
racial inequalities today are a result of social bias or personal lack
of effort and irresponsibility.....
Finally, the statistical tool of regression can tease apart which had
more influence on the 2016 vote: authoritarianism or symbolic racism,
after controlling for education, race, ideology, and age. Moving from
the 50th to the 75th percentile in the authoritarian scale made someone
about 3 percent more likely to vote for Trump. The same jump on the SRS
scale made someone 20 percent more likely to vote for Trump.
Racial attitudes made a bigger difference in electing Trump than authoritarianism.
More
HERE
******************************
The Willful Subversion of Critical Institutions Threatens America
Certain of our institutions play a critical role in sustaining the
republic and promoting and protecting the unique character of the United
States of America, and they therefore have a tremendous obligation to
operate ethically and honorably. To the extent that they abandon their
obligation, the country’s fundamental character is threatened.
Those institutions are the justice system, the education system, and the information media.
Imagine you have a business renting apartments. One of your tenants, who
has rented a place for $1,500 a month for three years sends you a check
for only $900 for the current month.
You contact the tenant and are told that he views the lease that both
you and he signed as a “living document,” the meaning of which may be
altered as circumstances change. Having lost the job that paid $73,000 a
year, his new job pays only $45,000, and he says he can now only afford
$900 rent a month.
That is precisely the rationale that activist judges apply when they
abandon the clear language of the U.S. Constitution and the laws of the
land to make rulings they say are in line with current circumstances and
the “mood” of the country, and because the Founders and those who
enacted older laws were unable at that time to imagine current
circumstances, that old stuff must be modernized.
However, the laws or constitutional principles that activist judges
disagree with must be amended or repealed through existing formal
processes, not ignored or altered because they are viewed as
inconvenient. If momentary interpretations are all that matter, and the
Constitution is merely a “living document,” we don’t have a Constitution
and we are not a nation of laws.
A nation needs its history and culture — all of it: the good, the bad,
and the ugly — to be passed down from generation to generation so that
its people will know who they are and where they came from, and can
properly determine where they want to go and why.
While families should pass much of this along to children, we largely
entrust this duty to formal education. To guide the learning process and
assist students in learning an array of important and useful subjects
and life lessons, we employ teachers, professors, instructors and such,
who coach and assist students.
Most of us had at least some teachers, professors and coaches who
inspired us and helped us learn difficult subject matter, develop our
skills, and learn how to think critically and logically. Hopefully, we
did not have any that strayed from their professional duties and tried
to tell us what to think about things, rather than developing the
ability to think for ourselves.
Today, among the great number of effective educators there are too many
who stray from the straight and narrow, especially in colleges and
universities, where education too often takes a back seat to political
and ideological indoctrination and politically correct policies.
Imposing beliefs on students is worse than merely disrespecting the
student; it is an outright abandonment of integrity and principle.
Along with an accurate base of knowledge about the country’s founding
and history presented to them in schools, the people need to be well
informed about current events. Information journalism contains two
parts, and they must be kept separate. One is news about events, which
must be accurate, honest and objective. The other is opinion, and must
be clearly defined and omitted from straight news.
But far too often, opinion and political considerations sneak into news
reporting, and also into the selection of what news gets reported and
how it is reported, as well as what news does not get coverage. This is
like playing golf blindfolded. You might find your driver, your ball and
a tee, and you might tee up and actually hit the ball, but after that,
you are literally in the dark, depending on the honesty of those around
you to accurately describe the situation for you.
The American Left has a vision of America that is in many ways sharply
at odds with the founding principles. Both beneficial and harmful ideas
that the Left pursues are at odds with the ideal of limited government,
because using government to force things on the people is the Left’s
tool of choice.
Fortunately, there are obstacles to using government to “fundamentally
transform the United States of America,” as a former leftist president
pledged. These obstacles are difficult to remove, as they should be. So
the Left resorts not infrequently to re-interpreting the Constitution
and the laws; managing and manipulating the information coming through
much of the mass media; and sometimes indoctrinating children.
We all need to remember that worthy and broadly beneficial ideas will
sell themselves; they don’t need people to take short cuts or cheat to
get them accepted.
SOURCE
*****************************
On the lighter side
Just about everyone likes the Music of Strauss the younger but we
often hear the music only, without realizing that there are words to go
with it. An example is "Frühlingsstimmen" (Spring
voices). Below is a charming performance of the song by a young
Slovak soprano Patricia Jane?ková. She was only 18 at the time. I liked
one of the comments on the performance: "I was captivated for 7 1/2
minutes - she is just great. Then I watched it again - this time, with
the speakers on: and she was even better?"
I give a translation of the first verse below so you know what it is all about:
The lark rises into the blue,
the mellow wind mildly blowing;
his lovely mild breath revives
and kisses the field, the meadow.
Spring in all its splendour rises,
ah all hardship is over,
sorrow becomes milder,
good expectations,
the belief in happiness returns;
sunshine, you warm us,
ah, all is laughing, oh,oh awakes!
****************************
For more blog postings from me, see
TONGUE-TIED,
EDUCATION WATCH INTERNATIONAL,
GREENIE WATCH,
POLITICAL CORRECTNESS WATCH,
AUSTRALIAN POLITICS, and
Paralipomena (Occasionally updated), a
Coral reef compendium and
an IQ compendium. (Both updated as news items come in).
GUN WATCH is now mainly put together by Dean Weingarten. I also put up occasional updates on my
Personal blog and each day I gather together my most substantial current writings on
THE PSYCHOLOGIST.
Email me
here (Hotmail address). My Home Pages are
here (Academic) or
here (Pictorial) or
here (Personal)
***************************
19 April, 2017
Leftists attack pro-Trump rallyThey are violent people driven by hateA
melee erupted on Saturday in a Berkeley, California park where
supporters and opponents of President Donald Trump were holding
competing rallies, resulting in at least 20 arrests as police struggled
to keep the two camps apart.
As fist fights broke out between the
two sides and people threw bottles and cans over a barricade separating
them, police resorted to using to an explosive device at one point in a
bid to restore order.
Several people were observed by a Reuters
reporter with bloodied faces and minor injuries, but there was no
official word on casualties from authorities. Media, citing police,
reported that at least 11 people were injured.
Police said more arrests could follow after video shot during the melee was reviewed.
The
trouble unfolded when hundreds of Trump opponents staged a
counter-rally alongside an event billed as a “Patriots Day” free-speech
rally and picnic, organized by mostly Trump supporters.
Between 500 and 1,000 people were in the park as the rallies peaked, according to an estimate by a Reuters reporter.
Among
the Trump opponents were some counter-protesters dressed in black and
wearing masks. The other side included self-described “patriots” and
“nationalists”, Trump supporters, free speech advocates, and other
groups.
Daryl Tempesta, 52, who said he served in the U.S. Air
Force near the end of the Cold War, went to the rally to show his
support for Trump.
“As a veteran, I like the track America is on,
and that Trump is willing to stand and say we are still America and we
are not going to be globalist, we’re not going to be a communist
country,” Tempesta said. “That’s a message I can get behind.”
SOURCE *******************************
Donald Trump’s first 100 days better than you would thinkAS
the end of Donald Trump’s first 100 days in office approaches, now’s a
good a time to cut through the fog of misinformation, disinformation,
media propaganda, ideological bias and outright hostility that has
greeted his arrival in Washington and take a clear-eyed look at how he’s
really doing.
Answer: much better than you think.
Let’s
take the area that was supposed to be his Achilles’ heel, foreign
policy. After flirting publicly with the likes of John Bolton, Rudy
Giuliani and David Petraeus, Mr Trump settled on dark horse Rex
Tillerson, the former chief of ExxonMobil, to be his secretary of state.
Like his boss, Mr Tillerson had no prior experience in government —
which has turned out so far to be an excellent thing.
Unencumbered
by the can’t-do conventional wisdom of the Foggy Bottom establishment
and its parrots in the Washington press corps, Mr Tillerson has played
the carrot to Mr Trump’s stick, soothing Chinese feathers ruffled during
the campaign with a March visit to Beijing and setting up the
successful meeting earlier this month between The Donald and the Chinese
president at Mar-a-Largo that coincided with the cruise-missile salvo
fired at Syria’s Bashar al-Assad.
Since then, the Chinese have
openly cautioned the troublesome regime of Kim Jong-un in North Korea
not to antagonise the US with further nuclear sabre-rattling in the
region; “Trump is a man who honours his promises,” warned the People’s
Daily, the ruling party’s official newspaper. Among those promises: a
better trade deal for China and an ominous presidential tweet to the
North Koreans that they’re “looking for trouble,” and signed “USA.” Even
now, US warships are steaming Kim’s way.
Regarding Russia, Mr
Tillerson rocked the former Soviets with a “frank discussion” in Moscow
on Wednesday — diplo-speak for “contentious.” Meanwhile, at the UN,
ambassador Nikki Haley has already proven her mettle, taking a hard line
toward the Russians for their tactical alliance with Assad while making
clear the US commitment to Israel.
Domestically, a first attempt
at repealing and replacing ObamaCare flopped when Speaker Paul Ryan’s
needlessly complex “better way” couldn’t muster enough GOP votes to make
it to the House floor. But the fault was the ambitious Ryan’s. Now the
way’s clear for a cleaner repeal. And, yes, tax reform’s on its way,
too.
True, the president’s two executive orders regarding
visitors from several Muslim countries have been stayed by federal
judges refusing to acknowledge the plain letter of both the Constitution
and the US Code 1182, which give the president plenary power regarding
immigration. But the recent confirmation of Neil Gorsuch as an associate
justice will quickly clear up that misunderstanding when the cases land
in the Supreme Court.
Further,
the Republicans’ use of the “nuclear option” to eliminate the
filibuster for high court nominees means Mr Trump’s next pick is
guaranteed a speedy confirmation.
Over at the National Security
Council, H.R. McMaster has brought order out of the chaos that followed
the abortive tenure of Mike Flynn, shuffling some staffers but retaining
the services of crucial personnel. And at the Pentagon and Homeland
Security, former Marine generals James Mattis and John Kelly can be
counted on to faithfully execute presidential policy. Worries that
they’re too soft on radical Islam are unfounded.
Less remarked
but equally important has been the administration’s speedy action on
downsizing the federal government, proposing real spending cuts and
reorganising the bloated bureaucracy, which has drawn bleats of protest
from the DC swamp creatures watching their sinecures circling the drain.
Mr Trump’s also lifted the hiring freeze, in order to flesh out a
still-undermanned executive staff and replace Obama holdovers.
Despite
these clear successes, the media continues to depict the White House as
a floundering, latter-day court of the Borgias, a backstabber behind
every arras. But that’s to be expected of a novice administration in its
infancy. When the smoke clears, look for an uneasy balance of power
between chief counsellor Steve Bannon and Trump son-in-law Jared
Kushner. Mr Trump can ill-afford to lose Mr Bannon and his diehard
conservative base.
And the sooner the floundering White House
press operation is rebooted, the better; the administration has played
defence against a hostile, sneering media long enough.
No new
president will ever match the whirlwind of new programs introduced by
FDR when he took office during the Depression — the gold standard cited
by Democrats who equate activity with action. But Mr Trump got elected
for precisely the opposite reason: Less government is more freedom.
As long as he keeps that in mind, he — and we — will do just fine.
SOURCE ***************************
Trump Removes the Handcuffs As
the number of Islamic State militants killed by the Massive Ordnance
Air Blast or MOAB nears 100, the U.S. as well as the rest of the world
is assessing the larger and continued impact of the bomb. The strategic
rationale for the using our biggest non-nuclear bomb was sound, as the
Nangarhar province of Afghanistan near the border of Pakistan has become
a recent hot zone for the U.S. military’s engagement with an off-shoot
of Islamic State militants. In this instance, the MOAB eviscerated an
elaborate network of jihadi tunnels. Gen. John W. Nicholson stated that
MOAB “is the right munition to reduce these obstacles and maintain the
momentum of our offensive against ISIS.”
In the larger context,
MOAB signals a significant change from the last eight years. Barack
Obama was no fan of the U.S. military, and while he begrudgingly
understood its necessity he did much to limit its ability to engage in
effective warfare. Donald Trump’s attitude is markedly different,
demonstrated both by his campaign rhetoric in calling for the defeat of
America’s enemies and his willingness to back-up his rhetoric by giving
military commanders the green light to use necessary force.
Significantly, when Trump was asked whether he authorized the bomb
itself, the president answered, “What I do is I authorize the military.
We have the greatest military in the world, and they’ve done a [good]
job as usual. So, we have given them total authorization.”
A few
of observations can be noted here. First, Trump has taken the handcuffs
off U.S. military leadership, trusting in their expertise to wage
effective warfare. Second, Trump believes in winning wars. Wars are won
when one side defeats the other, and too often politicians prove to get
in the way and end up prolonging war, leading ultimately to more
suffering and lost lives. As David French of National Review states,
“Excessive American caution has cost American lives and American limbs.”
Third, this bomb, coupled with the U.S. bombing of the Syrian air base
responsible for launching the chemical attack, sends a clear message to
both North Korea and Iran that Trump will use any means necessary,
including force, to counter their aggression.
SOURCE ***************************
Immigration Hawks Ascend to Senior DHS PositionsTwo
leading advocates for reforming illegal and legal immigration
enforcement were appointed by President Donald Trump to serve as senior
advisors for the Department of Homeland Security (DHS).
Jon
Feere, the former legal analyst for the Center for Immigration Studies,
and Julie Kirchner, the previous executive director for the Federation
of American Immigration Reform (FAIR), have both been appointed to
senior positions.
Feere, who work with the Trump campaign and
transition team on immigration policy, will serve as the senior adviser
to the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agency Director Thomas
Homan.
Kirchner, a campaign alum as well, will serve as the
senior adviser to Customs and Border Protection (CBP) Commissioner Kevin
McAleenan.
Center for Immigration Studies Executive Director
Mark Krikorian told Breitbart Texas that the Trump Administration
appointed a person who “knows the ins and outs” of immigration when they
chose Feere to serve. “ICE needs somebody like Jon because he’s worked
on immigration policy for many years,” Krikorian said. “After eight
years of Obama, there were civil servants and people at ICE who weren’t
as quite up to date on immigration enforcement.”
FAIR
spokesperson Ira Mehlman told Breitbart Texas that Kirchner’s
appointment is welcome news. “They’re both people with long experience
and deep knowledge and they’re highly qualified for their positions,”
Mehlman said.
Both the Center for Immigration Studies and FAIR
have long been advocates for increased border security, a wall,
reforming foreign guest worker visas and lower levels of legal
immigration to help American wages to rise.
The appointments have
come with the usual media backlash that the Trump Administration has
grown accustomed to. CNN, for instance, has written that Feere and
Kirchner’s appointments have “alarmed” the open borders lobby. The
network propped up opposition to the appointments through the left-wing
Southern Poverty Law Center, with Director Heidi Beirich claiming that
that the Center for Immigration Studies and FAIR publish “racist” and
“xenophobic” reports.
Krikorian, though, said the open borders
lobby is only outraged because they know how effective both nominees
could be. “This isn’t a complaint about qualification,” Krikorian told
Breitbart Texas. “Jon and these others know what they’re doing and
that’s what the anti-borders groups are afraid of.
SOURCE ****************************
For more blog postings from me, see
TONGUE-TIED,
EDUCATION WATCH INTERNATIONAL,
GREENIE WATCH,
POLITICAL CORRECTNESS WATCH,
AUSTRALIAN POLITICS, and
Paralipomena (Occasionally updated), a
Coral reef compendium and
an IQ compendium. (Both updated as news items come in).
GUN WATCH is now mainly put together by Dean Weingarten. I also put up occasional updates on my
Personal blog and each day I gather together my most substantial current writings on
THE PSYCHOLOGIST.
Email me
here (Hotmail address). My Home Pages are
here (Academic) or
here (Pictorial) or
here (Personal)
***************************
18 April, 2017
Trumping healthcare’s bad hand Some history lessons and suggestions to improve US healthcare without breaking the bank By Scot Faulkner (Scot Faulkner was Chief Administrative Officer for the U.S. House of Representatives)
As
the White House and Republican leaders continue debates and
negotiations on a new bill, the blamestorming continues over the failure
to repeal and replace Obamacare. Congressional Republicans have only
themselves to blame. Since returning to majority in the House in January
2011, Republicans have formally voted 54 times to address all or part
of Obamacare. Six were votes on full appeal.
In 2015, H.R. 132 is
typical of these efforts. It simply stated: “such Act is
repealed, and the provisions of law amended or repealed by such Act are
restored or revived as if such Act had not been enacted.” Why
didn’t Republicans vote on this a few weeks ago?
Republicans did
not vote on simply going back in time, because they thought government
should play a significant role in healthcare. It should not. Crippling
regulations need to be changed and the private sector needs to be
encouraged. Last month’s legislation did not clear the way for these
solutions.
The Republicans’ problem is squandering six years with
legislation designed more for fundraising and campaigning than
governing. Instead, they could have viewed their repeal and replace
efforts as prototyping or beta-testing a new product or APP. They could
have tested ideas and built Republican consensus. Not doing this led to
disaster. What to do next?
In 2013, I outlined a patient-centric
versus politician-centric approach. Maybe now it will be followed. Those
wanting an expanded governmental role in healthcare and those opposing
it are fighting the wrong battle in the wrong way.
The debate
over national healthcare policy has lasted over a century – intensifying
during the Clinton Administration and since Obamacare. It has always
been about coverage, liability, and finance, never about care protocols
and patients. If making health affordable is everyone’s stated goal,
then why not focus on the actual care, health, and wellness of
Americans?
America remains the best place on Earth to have an
acute illness or shock-trauma injury. Our nation’s emergency rooms and
first responder protocols are unequaled. Princess Diana may have lived
had her car accident happened in New York City instead of Paris.
America’s diagnostic methods and equipment are unequaled. That’s why
patients from all over the globe seek answers to complex symptoms by
visiting the Mayo Clinic, Cleveland Clinic, Johns Hopkins, Sloan
Kettering and countless other world class facilities.
The other
side of American healthcare is its failings in chronic care, expense,
and a system that is controlled by the medical profession,
pharmaceutical companies and insurance industry. This triad of
entrenched interests has prevented the widespread use of substances and
therapies deemed effective in most of the world.
Thankfully, an
increasing number of healthcare professionals are embracing global best
practices, virtual technology, and patient-centric methods. Some are
even exploring homeopathic and nutritional treatments that are common
place around the globe, but viewed as “nontraditional” in America. These
innovations are improving the health of patients while driving down
costs. This is the arena where policy-makers should check their
partisanship at the door. Seeking ways to improve healthcare, not health
financing, will ultimately make health affordable to us all.
I
have personal experience with the convergence of these worlds. Since
2007, I have been the primary caregiver to several family members with
serious chronic conditions. These conditions have been punctuated by
emergency care and major surgeries. Making decisions and managing
treatment across this spectrum has been a real education that has helped
me identify four major areas of opportunity for health and healthcare
improvement, while addressing the affordability of private and public
health services.
First, not all ailments require doctors and
prescription medications. Government and industry policies drive people
away from cheaper and more effective natural remedies. Herbal remedies
have been successfully used since the first humans. For example, apple
cider vinegar has completely solved acid reflex. Cayenne pepper has
improved heart function.
However, natural substances are not
covered as a medical expense either by insurance or tax deductions.
Instead, acid reflex sufferers must pay for over-the-counter treatments
(which are also not covered by insurance or tax deductions), or must
obtain expensive prescriptions after paying to see a doctor or
specialist. Being a natural treatment, the vinegar regime also avoids
side effects and drug interactions. Why not go “back to the future” and
find ways to support these more affordable and effective treatments?
Second,
nurse practitioners form one of the new front lines of care. The
overwhelming majority of my family’s office visits are with a nurse
practitioner interacting with the patient and lab technicians.
Occasionally, a doctor will review the information and discuss treatment
options with the patient. Supporting the evolution to nurse
practitioners through education, professional certification, protocol
modifications and pricing would reduce costs and expand health options
for professionals and patients.
Third, community caregiving is
another new frontline of achieving and sustaining wellness. In
2009-2011, I was part of the planning team for developing a
community-based care system for the Atlanta area. We found a disturbing
pattern – patients, especially Medicare/Medicaid patients, arrive in
hospital emergency rooms when their chronic conditions (diabetes,
congestive heart failure or chronic obstructive pulmonary disease or
COPD, eg) become acute. These patients are treated at the most expensive
point of care: emergency room. Once they are released, many do not have
the support (family, friends, neighbors) or the capacity (some form of
dementia) to follow a treatment regime that would prevent the next
emergency room visit. These revolving door patients drive-up costs and
end-up in a cycle of deterioration.
Our solution was to develop a
community-based healthcare network. Such networks are known as
“Accountable Care Organizations” (ACOs). They break-out of traditional
hospital and doctor office environments to forge partnerships with the
community – churches, social workers, local government, neighbor
associations, and nonprofits. A needy patient with chronic conditions is
assessed holistically.
This includes risk factors (i.e. smoking,
alcoholism, drugs) and environmental factors (family & home
environment). A care plan is developed and assigned to a multi-faceted
care team (comprising community resources) and a care manager. Doctors
and nurses are part of the team. The majority of health actions take
place among family and community – driven by electronic medical records,
aided by remote sensors and virtual care, and guided by the managed
care team.
The result of this holistic approach is improved care,
sustainable health and reduced costs. It is the one way Medicare and
Medicaid costs can be substantially reduced while enhancing quality of
life. There are initiatives to promote this methodology within the
Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), but it is occurring too
slowly and is too isolated. ACOs are making a difference, but no major
politician has embraced the concept and neither party has promoted them
as a way to reduce Entitlement costs.
Fourth, families have
always been a pivotal component in healthcare. Whether it is a parent
staying home to care for sick children, or adult children caring for
ailing parents, family caregiving is vital; but it is also emotionally
and financially draining.
Having been the care manager, medical
power of attorney, and patient advocate for both my parents and my wife,
I know how much time is spent with ailing family members. Current IRS
regulations provide for listing parents as dependents based only upon
financial support.
However, there are no tax credits or
deductions for those who have the medical power of attorney and devote
countless hours to direct care or acting as the patient’s advocate for
managing their care. Politicians at both the state and federal levels
should provide relief for this indispensable and growing volunteer
service sector. Supporting Family-based assistance will save billions in
public assistance.
According to the National Alliance of
Caregiving, 70 million Americans provide unpaid assistance and support
to older people and adults with disabilities. Forty percent of these
caregivers provide care for 2-5 years, while approximately 29% provide
care for 5-10 years. Unpaid caregiving by family and friends has an
estimated national economic value (in 2004) of $306 billion annually –
exceeding combined costs for nursing home care ($103.2 billion) and home
health care ($36.1 billion). This value is increasing as the population
ages.
These four areas of opportunity will not address every
health issue or entirely diffuse the fiscal bombs strapped to medical
entitlements, but they are a good nonpartisan start. It is time for
politicians to focus on the wellbeing of patients, not themselves.
Via email*****************************
Conservatives Must Hate the Poor – Because They Want Less Gov’tWhen
you’re a conservative, you have to develop a thick skin. You get used
to hearing how heartless you are. How devoid of compassion.
And
why? Because you don’t automatically support every government program
that purports to help poor people. Why, you conservatives must hate poor
people!
For our liberal friends, life is simple. “Hey, here’s a
social problem,” they’ll say, in essence. “Let’s throw some money at it.
That will solve it.” If we disagree, they take it as proof we care more
about money than about people.
There’s a certain irony at work
here. Sure, money is a concern. After all, scarce resources are being
taken, either from the taxpayers or borrowed from future generations.
But it isn’t just – or even primarily – the money that bothers us. It's
all the regulations, all the big government, that goes along with it.
Because
when actual flesh-and-blood people are being considered, when we
consider how big government affects human beings, we find many victims
of its policies not among the rich, but among the poor.
The
problem of big government crops up in many different ways. The rules,
the regulations, the fine print – they all affect what you can buy, or
how much it costs, or what you can do. They dictate whether you can run a
lemonade stand, or sell roses on a street corner, or even just drive a
car without having to go through some overly complicated governmental
process.
A new Heritage Foundation report, “Big Government
Policies that Hurt the Poor and How to Address Them,” outlines the
phenomenon in detail. One of the charts shows exactly why big government
amounts to misplaced compassion – the one that shows household spending
as a percent of after-tax income.
It’s broken down by income
quintiles, and guess what? Government data show incontrovertibly that it
is the poor who pay the biggest percentage of their income for things
such as housing, food, clothing, electricity and gasoline. So when
regulations and other government policies jack up the cost of these
items, the poor are the ones hit the hardest. Not those of us who are
fortunate enough to have done better and moved up the income ladder.
When
we’re dealing with big, intrusive government, we need to forget about
good intentions. Instead, let’s focus on how it adversely impacts people
at the lower end of the income spectrum.
We don’t need another
program. What we need is for government to get out of the way. Stop
intervening. Stop requiring people to do certain things, whether it is
to attend cosmetology school to become hair-braiders, or to stop them in
other ways from making their own economic decisions – which they,
obviously, are in the best position to make.
It may seem hard for
big-government advocates to realize, but I know how to spend my own
money better than some faceless bureaucrat does. I believe that
frustration on this point has done much to create the new economic era
and the new political era in which we find ourselves today.
This
isn’t a new concept. The welfare studies we were doing 20 years ago
addressed the same kind of question. We wanted to know how to rethink
the dozens of means-tested welfare programs that are out there in a way
that encouraged economic opportunity for all Americans, no matter what
their income.
We succeeded, and the great welfare reform of 1996
led to some real and significant changes. I hope that this latest study
will bring some significant changes as well.
“Government is not
the solution to our problem,” Ronald Reagan said. “Government is the
problem.” The sooner we realize this, the sooner we can help all
Americans – especially the poor.
SOURCE ****************************
For more blog postings from me, see
TONGUE-TIED,
EDUCATION WATCH INTERNATIONAL,
GREENIE WATCH,
POLITICAL CORRECTNESS WATCH,
AUSTRALIAN POLITICS, and
Paralipomena (Occasionally updated), a
Coral reef compendium and
an IQ compendium. (Both updated as news items come in).
GUN WATCH is now mainly put together by Dean Weingarten. I also put up occasional updates on my
Personal blog and each day I gather together my most substantial current writings on
THE PSYCHOLOGIST.
Email me
here (Hotmail address). My Home Pages are
here (Academic) or
here (Pictorial) or
here (Personal)
***************************
17 April, 2017
Liberalism and Low Self EsteemThe
article below from late last year by Sean Last makes points that I have
been making for many years -- though I allow that he expresses it
better than I have. I think it was first in 2002 that I pointed
out that Leftism is clearly motivated by ego needs. Leftism makes
Leftists feel good -- as being wise and caring, whether or not they
actually are, and mostly they are not. And Leftists are shallow
enough to NEED that boost -- which is why they run away from any
information that might undermine their half-baked policy preferences of
the day.
But there is more than one source for Leftism and I have outlined many here.
I actually think that the needy egos have hopped onto a train that had
already been got rolling by others: The haters. As the huge
demonstrations against Trump show, Leftists are huge haters. And
their hate is primarily directed at the society in which they
live. They want to destroy it, in the delusion that they can
create a better society. So anybody who wants to make America
great is anathema to them.
A better society can indeed be
created. From the industrial revolution on, society has become
richer and kinder and more capable of improving human lives. But
none of that was done by Leftist policies of expropriation and
destruction. It was done by the steady accumulation of human
wisdom and ingenuity that a capitalist society enabled and
produced. Other societies did well only insofar as they copied
capitalist societies.
So the hatred that Leftists have for the
society in which they live is at best impatient and at worst
blind. There is much to criticize about modern society but
Leftists want to throw the baby out with the bathwater. They fail
to see that a better society is steadily evolving out of our existing
society and that attacks on existing society are therefore attacks on
the only hope for the future.
When Leftists do get the
opportunity to mould a whole society into what they think is desirable,
all we get are ghastly tyrannies like the Soviets, Mao's China, Pol Pot
in Cambodia and the dead hand of Castro's Cuba.
But the hate
thrives nonetheless. Why? It can have many causes. It
can be a traditional hate for "the bosses" that we see in places like
Scotland, it could come from some personal deprivation, like being born
into a very poor family, or it could be the expression of a pathological
personality. Karl Marx hated just about everyone and that is said
to be because for most of his life he had painful boils on his
butt.
But by far the most obvious source for a personality
that is full of hate from birth onwards is psychopathy. I have in
fact had academic journal articles published which report research into
psychopathy so I have enough knowledge of psychopathy to see how
startling are the parallels between psychopathy and Leftism. I go
into details here
To
summarize briefly, Psychopaths love only themselves and hate anyone who
does not take them at their own high valuation of themselves and have
no real morality or ethics whatsoever. They are masters of "faking
good" -- of saying things that they think will make them look and sound
good regardless of any truth in it. They lie at the drop of a
hat. So they are very shallow thinkers. Only the here and
now exists to them. I think that is a pretty good description of
most prominent Leftists. Getting principles or even consistency out of a
Leftist is a mug's game. They will say one thing one day and
something else the next day. He/she will say anything that makes
him/her look good on the given occasion. Obama's 180 degree turn on
homosexual marriage is a good example of that. Or Bill Clinton's
claim that Hillary was named after Sir Edmund, the Everest hero.
So
that is where the needful ego guy comes in. He is not necessarily
fully psychopathic but he shares the psychopath's need for praise and
ego boosting. He jumps onto the psychopathic train being run by
prominent Leftists. I set out here the reasons why the Clintons, Barack Obama and John Kerry are clear cases of psychopathy -- JRIn
this post I am going to argue that one important reason why many people
adopt a liberal political ideology is that it boosts their self esteem
by allowing liberals to view themselves as noble warriors in a great
battle against evil. There is a good deal of empirical data which is
consistent with this theory. But I will also be making use of some
evidence which is purely anecdotal. I fully recognize the limitations of
such data. But I am still going to talk about it because it adds
something meaningful to this theory.
The first question that
needs answering is why liberals would need to increase their self-esteem
in a way that conservatives do not. The answer is simple: liberals have
less self esteem than conservatives to begin with. This is the
conclusion of a 2012 paper published in the Journal of Research on
Personality. The paper included two studies that found that liberals had
lower self esteem than conservatives. The first study’s sample was
moderate in size and consisted of college students. The second study
made use of decades of data from the General Social Survey. The GSS is a
large and highly representative survey that has been administered in
the United States for over 40 years. Another paper published in 2014
replicated this finding in two more samples. Thus, the finding that
liberals have low self esteem has been replicated several times,
including one replication with an extremely high quality sample.
There
is also experimental evidence showing that self esteem has a causal
relation to liberalism. Researchers from Stanford have shown that
causing people to feel especially good, or bad, about their looks
influences their political beliefs and behavior. The researchers
manipulated how people felt about themselves by asking them to recall
incidents in which they felt either very attractive or very
unattractive. When participants were made to feel good about themselves
they became more likely to believe that social inequality was caused by
individual differences in talent rather than by systemic forces outside
of the individuals control. That is, they became more likely to endorse
the conservative view on inequality. They also became less likely to
donate to organizations aimed at lessening social inequality. When
participants were made to feel poorly about themselves the opposite
happened: they adopted a more liberal worldview and were more likely to
donate to liberal groups.
So far we know that liberals have low
self esteem and that having low self esteem causes people to be more
liberal. There are at least two ways of looking at this. One way is to
say that having low self esteem causes someone to be liberal because it
makes it rational for them to favor equality. Equality helps everyone on
the bottom half and that’s probably where you think you are if you have
low self esteem. There’s clearly some truth to this narrative. But I
believe that people with low self esteem will also be attracted to
liberalism because being a liberal helps your self esteem a little bit.
In particular, being a liberal lets you view yourself as a kind of moral
hero waging a battle against dark and evil forces. Who doesn’t feel
good about themselves while playing super hero?
The thing that
initially caused me to think that liberalism boosts self esteem is the
fact that liberals seem to be very proud of their political ideology.
They want everyone to know about it. You can tell someone is liberal by
the car they drive, the clothes they wear, and the food they eat.
Non-liberals aren’t normally like this. I can’t look at someone and know
whether they are a moderate, a conservative, a libertarian, etc. It’s
only liberals that I can reliably spot on sight.
It also seems
clear to me that morality is involved. Liberals are always crusading
against something immoral. It’s never a simple factual disagreement.
Conservatives are sexist, racist, homophobic, etc. And they hate the
poor. Of course, many of these charges are ridiculous. For example,
conservatives advocate the economic policies they do because they think
that everyone will benefit from them. It has nothing to do with hating
the poor. Notice that conservatives don’t respond in kind: conservatives
don’t normally argue that liberals hate the poor, women, straight
people or minorities, even though they think that liberal policies will
negatively effect these groups.
Research by the moral
psychologist Jonathan Haidt lends support to this theory. Haidt has
developed surveys that ask people about their moral values. Early in his
research Haidt found that liberals and conservatives tended to fill out
these surveys differently. After replicating this finding several times
Haidt did something pretty cool: he had liberals fill out the surveys
as they imagined conservatives would and vice versa. Haidt found that
conservatives were fairly accurate in their depictions of the moral
values of liberals. But liberals were widely inaccurate in their view of
conservative morality: they drastically underestimated how much
conservatives cared about moral values like fairness and kindness. Haidt
also had liberals fill out the surveys as if they were the average
liberal and conservatives fill out the surveys as if they were the
average conservative. Once again, conservatives were far more accurate
than liberals. Liberals consistently over-estimated how much the average
liberal cared about various moral values. And thus, Haidt showed that
liberals irrationally view conservatives as immoral and view themselves
as far more righteous than they actually are.
The behavior of
liberals is also consistent with viewing them as moral crusaders. Pew
polling shows that liberals are far more likely than conservatives to
end a friendship with someone due to a political dispute. This is what
we would expect from people who view the opposition as evil. Who wants
to be friends with evil people?
I think this explains why
liberals care so much about things that are offensive and don’t matter.
If you want to feel morally superior to everyone around you, you can’t
agree with them. And so you have to find things wrong with society which
society won’t admit to. And so as time has gone on, liberals have had
to invent increasingly ridiculous complaints about society. Consider
transsexuals and people with autism. By even the most liberal estimates
of transsexual prevalence, autism is about five times as common as
trannies are. And no one could argue with the fact that autistic people
have hard lives. But the left doesn’t generally care about people with
autism because supporting autistic people isn’t offensive to most
people. If the left launched a campaign to help autistic people most
people would probably feel sorry for the mentally ill and agree with
them. And then there would be no bogey men to wage war with. So the left
concentrates on trannies instead. There are basically no trannies. And
most of the few that do exist are clearly insane. So they are the
perfect group for the left to champion. A lesser but similar case can be
made about gay marriage. Being gay is rare, and almost no gays actually
want to marry. But gay marriage is offensive to many people. So it is a
great issue for the left. It creates lots of bogeymen.
I’ve
found that this theory helps to explain a lot about how liberals debate.
In my experience, liberals are more concerned with proving that I am
evil than proving that I am wrong. (“The races differ in mean IQ
scores.” … “You’re racist!”) I now think that this is because they can
only grandstand by showing that I am evil. Showing that I am wrong won’t
boost their self esteem the way that showing to the world that they are
battling evil does.
In summary, studies show that liberals have
low self esteem and that causing low self esteem causes people to be
more liberal. Research also shows that liberals have unrealistically
negative views of the morals of conservatives and unrealistically
positive views of the morals of liberals. And polling shows that
liberals are far more likely to break social ties with people over
politics. They are moral crusaders. The fact that liberals want everyone
to know that they are liberal, that they seem to purposefully pick
offensive views, their debate style, and the fact that being morally
superior normally feels pretty good, suggests to me that the moral
crusading and the low self esteem are connected. Liberals are liberal so
that they can say that society sucks, so that they can say that they
are better than everyone else, so that they can feel a little less
shitty about themselves.
SOURCE ***************************
The Strategic Calculations Behind Trump's Flip-FlopsHeadlines
splashed across much of the mainstream media on Thursday morning stated
that essentially Donald Trump had flipped his position on several
campaign issues. Two of Trump’s policy changes were highlighted by the
following headlines: Bloomberg’s headline, “Trump’s Reversal on China
Currency His Latest Abandoned Promise” and the other in the Washington
Post’s headline, “Trump on NATO: ‘I said it was obsolete. It’s no longer
obsolete.’”
Given Trump’s typical off-the-cuff manner, it’s
tempting to assume that he’s sliding into the realm of all flip-flopping
politicians, but the truth — at least in these two cases — is more
nuanced. In the case of China, Trump can’t think of its currency in a
vacuum, but as part of his effort to contain North Korea. The U.S. and
China will have to cooperate to some extent, meaning labeling China a
currency manipulator is off the table for now. And as for NATO, a huge
part of Trump’s strategy in Syria is to put pressure on Vladimir Putin.
NATO is key in that calculation, thus it’s “no longer obsolete” — just
as we argued from the beginning.
As with every campaign, the
rhetoric of the politician is often overly simplistic, designed to
present big picture issues in the most appealing way, while avoiding
getting bogged down in the minutia of truly complex issues. Trump, like
Barack Obama before him, proved to be skillful at connecting with
Americans in getting his base message out clearly — “Make America Great
Again.”
But unlike Obama, Trump truly was a non-establishment
Washington outsider. Like anyone coming into a new job, there are things
learned once on the job that can prove to change one’s perspective. To
some degree, Trump is learning on the job, as have all presidents before
him, but it would be naïve to suggest that Trump’s apparent flip-flop
in policy position is due entirely to his newfound experience of being
in office. Trump is a business man who is more of a pragmatist than an
ideologue. He understands negotiating tactics — knowing when to “hold
and when to fold.” And unlike Obama, Trump appears to truly listen to
and trust the expertise of his cabinet and advisers.
On a final
note, Trump’s shifting rhetoric on both China and NATO are encouraging
and wise moves, but neither necessarily indicates that he has actually
changed his policy position. This type of talking tough and then moving
to the middle ground may have been his intention from the beginning.
SOURCE ****************************
For more blog postings from me, see
TONGUE-TIED,
EDUCATION WATCH INTERNATIONAL,
GREENIE WATCH,
POLITICAL CORRECTNESS WATCH,
AUSTRALIAN POLITICS, and
Paralipomena (Occasionally updated), a
Coral reef compendium and
an IQ compendium. (Both updated as news items come in).
GUN WATCH is now mainly put together by Dean Weingarten. I also put up occasional updates on my
Personal blog and each day I gather together my most substantial current writings on
THE PSYCHOLOGIST.
Email me
here (Hotmail address). My Home Pages are
here (Academic) or
here (Pictorial) or
here (Personal)
***************************
16 April, 2017
Donald Trump and the Nature of VictorySean
Gabb is an English libertarian/conservative but there are notoriously
as many versions of libertarianism as there are libertarians. So I
do not wholly agree with his points below. But the strength of
Libertarianism is its ability to generate fresh pespectives -- and Gabb
certainly provides that below. He thinks that Trump may go off the
rails in some ways but his rise to power shows the way for future
liberty-oriented politicians. Pure libertarianism will not do. You need
to combine libertarianism with an appeal to national pride, national
self-interest and anti-elitism. I think he is rightSince
I am pushing myself into a debate between foreigners, I must begin by
explaining myself. I am not an American, and do not wish to be one. I do
not live in America, and do not wish to live there. The only country I
love and know well is England. This being said, I have an obvious right
of audience in the debate on Donald Trump. England and America share a
language. Any impartial observer looking at the two countries will see
two ruling classes, almost joined at the hip, facing two subject peoples
whose assumptions about the good life and how it may be promoted
largely overlap. If the relationship is unbalanced by an inequality of
size and wealth, what happens in either country has an inescapable
effect on what happens in the other. Rules of politeness that hold me
from commenting on affairs in France or Germany do not apply to America.
Here, then, are my thoughts on what has happened in America during the
past week.
I am disturbed my Mr Trump’s apparent breaking of his
election promises. He promised no more interventions in the Middle East.
He has attacked Government forces in Syria, and on grounds that seem
dubious in themselves. He promised better relations with Russia. These
relations now seem lower than they were when Mr Obama was the American
President. He denounced NATO as “obsolete.” He is now happy with NATO.
American healthcare is not my proper concern. But it is worth observing,
in the light of his foreign policy, that he seemed to promise his
working class supporters a system less dominated by entrenched special
interests. It is a mercy, I am told by friends whose judgement I trust,
that his only attempt at reform was frustrated.
It may be that he
has no intention of keeping his promises. Perhaps he never had any
intention of keeping them. Perhaps he has seen the scale of resistance
to what he promised, and has given up. Or it may be that he is playing
some clever game, and will, once more, come out unexpectedly triumphant.
I think it will take a year to know the truth beyond reasonable doubt.
For the moment, however, I will assume the former possibility. I first
voted in a general election in 1979, and paid close attention, over the
next decade, to a woman [Margaret Thatcher] who, in breach of every
actual or implied promise, made my country more regulated, more heavily
taxed, more diverse, more subservient to foreign interests, and
generally more enslaved than she found it. Ronald Reagan followed
roughly the same course. It strikes me as more likely than not that Mr
Trump is now doing the same.
If so, this would be a
disappointment. But it is no cause for despair. 2017 is not the early
1980s. The differences go far beyond changes of fashion and an updating
of lies. They are roughly as follows:
First, Mrs Thatcher and Mr
Reagan took up the rhetoric of market liberalism. Many of us looked at
the chapter headings, and assumed the promise was of radical
deregulation and a general penumbra of changes that seemed to follow
from this. We ignored the main text, or the alternative meanings that
could be placed on words. I realised what was happening earlier than
most. Even I took till after the 1983 general election to understand
that the real agenda was one of corporatism and the beginnings of a
police state. It took me longer still to see that this would be a
politically correct police state.
The rhetoric that Donald Trump
took up in his campaign was of populism – and a populism that took
account of all that had been done to his country since about 1980 or
before. There is no unread text in the promises he made. His words have
no alternative meanings. He promised an end to foreign intervention, and
an end to political correctness, and an end to domination by special
interests. After a very short time – and, I grant again, that this short
time may not yet be over – broken promises stand out as plainly as a
wrong in arithmetic.
Second, in the 1980s, we faced a narrative
constructed and maintained from the centre. There was a centralised
media that allowed only certain issues to be discussed, and that ensured
they were discussed only in certain ways. This is not to say that
control of the media was monolithic. Debates were lively, and even
acrimonious. But important facts were often withheld, and the public was
encouraged to look at those facts that were published through various
kinds of partisan lens that kept the truth from being perceived. Of
equal and associated importance, the media in those days were organised
to broadcast from the centre to the periphery. They did little to enable
a conversation between the centre and the periphery, and conversations
within the periphery were localised and compartmentalised. What has
happened since then is too obvious to need describing. When Mr Trump
ordered those missiles to be launched, Facebook and Twitter and the
blogs began an unmanaged and unmanageable debate in which ordinary
people could discuss in public whether and to what extent they had been
lied to.
Third, and following from the above, Mr Trump’s
supporters have the advantage of hindsight. I will boast again that I
rumbled Mrs Thatcher earlier than most. Even so, it took years for it to
dawn on me fully that she was fronting an elaborate fraud – or, at
least, a mistake. Here, I speak from English experience, though I
believe it was much the same in America. The Enemy she and her friends
pointed us toward was a coalition of pro-Soviet union leaders and
alleged degenerates. The remedy involved vast military spending, and an
attack on the working class, and things like the prepublication
censorship of video recordings. The actual enemy was a coalition of
university graduates who wore suits, had at best a lingering taste for
Marxism-Leninism, were not hostile to certain kinds of corporate
enterprise, were out of love with the social liberalism of the 1960s,
and whose own agenda can be summarised as political correctness plus the
constable. Whether or not they noticed these people until it was too
late, the Thatcherites did nothing to stop them, and tended to promote
them. The rest of us were encouraged to laugh now and again at their
linguistic tricks – and then go back to fretting over Arthur Scargill’s
plan to make England into a copy of East Germany.
Nowadays, we
know exactly who the Enemy is. These people run education and the media,
and criminal justice and the administration, and most of big business.
If they are not perfectly united, they stand together in a project to
make the rest of us into denatured tax serf-consumers. Just because some
of them work in the formally private sector does not make them into
friends of private enterprise. Just because some of them want to make
pornography illegal does not make them into social conservatives.
Fourth,
and again following from the above, the Enemy is getting old. When I
was a student, these people were in their thirties or my own age. They
had a messianic belief in their own self-righteousness, and considerable
networking abilities. Most of us, on the other hand, were old farts,
pining for the 1950s, or semi-autistic libertarians, prepared to shun
each other for taking a wrong view of the non-aggression principle.
Those who were neither were chancers or shills. Hardly surprising if we
were shoved aside or simply ignored.
The Enemy is now old and
discredited. The successor generation is stuffed with mediocrities. The
new generation of dissidents is young and not particularly bound by
considerations of ideological purity. Open borders? Shut them!
Socialised healthcare? If our own working classes want it, let it be!
Trade policy? Whatever is politically useful! The managerial state? Shut
down what we cannot take over; what we can take over use before we shut
it down! Though I wrote one of its early texts, I am not sure if I
qualify for membership of the Alternative Right. But I recognise quality
when I see it. None of my old friends ever made the Enemy hysterical
with fright. None of us ever reduced the Enemy to a laughing stock. I
doubt if we ever did much, beyond voting for them, to help our
clay-footed idols get elected.
The two big events of 2016 were
the British Referendum and the election of Donald Trump. For a moment,
it looked as if with a bound, we were free. We are now finding that not
all may be as it then seemed. At the same time, those elections were
won. They were won explicitly as rejections of the present order of
things. Unlike in the 1980s, the correlation of forces is on our side.
If Donald Trump sells out, that is unfortunate. But there will be other
chances.
SOURCE ***************************
Donald Trump is deliberately keeping the world guessingCall
it the mother of all backflips. Donald Trump won
office on a promise to make America less the world’s policeman and more
that weird hermit guy who lives up the street.
Yet as he
approaches the three-month probation mark in the new job, President
Trump is suddenly working all the levers on the foreign affairs front:
Hosting China’s Xi Jinping at his Mar-a-Lago “winter White House”.
Giving Bashar Assad a whack with the metaphorical rolled up newspaper
for a sarin gas attack. Steaming the Carl Vinson carrier group towards
the Korean peninsula.
And, now, dropping the so-called “Mother of All Bombs” on a network of ISIS-controlled caves and tunnels in Afghanistan.
For
close Trump watchers, at first this new muscularism looked very Helen
Lovejoy. His justification for his cruise missile strike on Syria,
particularly his having been moved by images of the child victims of
Assad’s chemical weapons, had no small hint of the reverend’s wife on
The Simpson’s regular imprecation, “won’t somebody think of the
children?” about it.
But the events of the past week suggest there’s also something of the Henry Kissinger going on here, too.
Kissinger,
recall, was the legendary and often controversial US secretary of state
and national security adviser under Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford who
opened American relations with communist China and ran the negotiations
to end the Vietnam War.
A great proponent of “realpolitik” — an
unsentimental, self-interested rationalism in policy making — he also
prized the virtue of unpredictability. Which is something Trump has in
spades.
While pledging to end Obama’s wars and saying that going
anywhere near Syria would be a disaster (“we should stay the hell out of
Syria”, he tweeted in June, 2013), during his campaign Trump also
talked about the need for America to stop telegraphing its moves to the
enemy.
Obama’s hard and fast announcement in 2011 that he would
pull all American troops out of Iraq not only gave what would become
ISIS a vacuum to fill, it gave them a timetable as well.
Trump
would later tell the New York Times, “That’s the problem with our
country. A politician would say, ‘Oh I would never go to war,’ or they’d
say, ‘Oh I would go to war.’ I don’t want to say what I’d do because,
again, we need unpredictability.”
Having punished Assad for
violating a “red line” Obama drew but never enforced around chemical
weapons and seeming to form at least a temporary alliance of convenience
with China over North Korea (which has been allowed to fester for far
too long by both Washington and Beijing) the previously isolationist
Trump is proving both a quick study and adept at keeping the world
guessing.
And although the political Left — which after eight
years suddenly remembered that it’s not cool to bomb foreigners — is
howling, Trump’s approval rating in the Rasmussen daily tracking poll
has been ticking northward again, up to 48 per cent.
Perhaps it
was not Nobel Peace Prize-winning Barack Obama’s endless interventionism
the American people were tired of — it was his fecklessness.
SOURCE **************************
Trump's border wall will get its start in San Diego CountyUp to 400 companies are expected to submit proposals Tuesday to build President Donald Trump’s proposed border wall.
Phillip Molnar and Lyndsay WinkleyContact Reporters
President
Trump’s proposed wall with Mexico will kick off in the San Diego border
community of Otay Mesa, U.S. Customs and Border Protection confirmed
Monday.
The community is home to one of two border crossings in
San Diego and will be the site where 20 chosen bidders will erect
prototypes of the envisioned wall. Winners will be selected around June
1, the agency said.
While funding for the massive infrastructure
project is still not set, up to 450 companies submitted designs last
week. The agency’s bid said roughly 20 companies will be selected to
build the prototypes — 30 feet long and up to 30 feet high.
The
models will be built on a roughly quarter-mile strip of federal land
within 120 feet of the border, said a U.S. official with knowledge of
the plans quoted by the Associated Press.
SOURCE ****************************
For more blog postings from me, see
TONGUE-TIED,
EDUCATION WATCH INTERNATIONAL,
GREENIE WATCH,
POLITICAL CORRECTNESS WATCH,
AUSTRALIAN POLITICS, and
Paralipomena (Occasionally updated), a
Coral reef compendium and
an IQ compendium. (Both updated as news items come in).
GUN WATCH is now mainly put together by Dean Weingarten. I also put up occasional updates on my
Personal blog and each day I gather together my most substantial current writings on
THE PSYCHOLOGIST.
Email me
here (Hotmail address). My Home Pages are
here (Academic) or
here (Pictorial) or
here (Personal)
***************************
14 April, 2017
More on politics and IQFurther
to my recent comments on IQ, someone has drawn my attention to a 2014
article by Noah Carl. Carl recently came to attention for his
articles on Leftism among academics. I had some comments on that
on March 5 and on
March 17. Carl is clearly something of a bad boy from a Leftist perspective. The 2014 journal article is as follows:
Cognitive ability and party identity in the United States (2014)
Noah Carl
Abstract
Carl
(2014) analysed data from the U.S. General Social Survey (GSS), and
found that individuals who identify as Republican have slightly higher
verbal intelligence than those who identify as Democrat. An important
qualification was that the measure of verbal intelligence used was
relatively crude, namely a 10-word vocabulary test. This study examines
three other measures of cognitive ability from the GSS: a test of
probability knowledge, a test of verbal reasoning, and an assessment by
the interviewer of how well the respondent understood the survey
questions. In all three cases, individuals who identify as Republican
score slightly higher than those who identify as Democrat; the
unadjusted differences are 1-3 IQ points, 2-4 IQ points and 2-3 IQ
points, respectively. Path analyses indicate that the associations
between cognitive ability and party identity are largely but not totally
accounted for by socio-economic position: individuals with higher
cognitive ability tend to have better socio-economic positions, and
individuals with better socio-economic positions are more likely to
identify as Republican. These results are consistent with Carl's (2014)
hypothesis that higher intelligence among classically liberal
Republicans compensates for lower intelligence among socially
conservative Republicans.
SOURCE So
what are we to make of it? Let us first compare it with two
papers by the indefatigable Ian Deary. Deary has access to some
very well sampled British databases so is in a position to report highly
generalizable results:
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
Childhood
intelligence predicts voter turnout, voting preferences, and political
involvement in adulthood: The 1970 British Cohort Study (2008)
Ian J. Deary
Abstract
Little
is known about the association between measured intelligence and how
people participate in democratic processes. In the 1970 British Cohort
Study, we examined the association between childhood intelligence and,
at age 34: whether and how people voted in the 2001 UK general election;
how they intended to vote; and whether they had taken part in other
political activities. People with higher childhood intelligence were
more likely to vote in the 2001 election (38% increased prevalence per
SD increase in intelligence), and were more likely to vote for the Green
Party and the Liberal Democrats (49% and 47% increased prevalence per
SD increase in intelligence, respectively). The intelligence-Green party
voting association was largely accounted for by occupational social
class, the intelligence-Liberal Democrat voting association was not.
Similar associations between intelligence and preference for the Green
Party or Liberal Democrats were found as regards voting intentions, but
neither of these associations was accounted for by occupational social
class. People with higher childhood intelligence were more likely to
take part in rallies and demonstrations, and to sign petitions, and
expressed a greater interest in politics (40%, 65%, 33%, and 58%
increased prevalence per SD increase in intelligence, respectively).
SOURCE >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
Bright Children Become Enlightened Adults (2008)Ian J. Deary
Abstract
We
examined the prospective association between general intelligence (g)
at age 10 and liberal and antitraditional social attitudes at age 30 in a
large (N = 7,070), representative sample of the British population born
in 1970. Statistical analyses identified a general latent trait
underlying attitudes that are antiracist, proworking women, socially
liberal, and trusting in the democratic political system. There was a
strong association between higher g at age 10 and more liberal and
antitraditional attitudes at age 30; this association was mediated
partly via educational qualifications, but not at all via occupational
social class. Very similar results were obtained for men and women.
People in less professional occupations-and whose parents had been in
less professional occupations-were less trusting of the democratic
political system. This study confirms social attitudes as a major, novel
field of adult human activity that is related to childhood intelligence
differences.
SOURCE >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
So
in the first Deary study above we find that high IQ British voters did
lean Left but they leant towards minority Leftist parties, not the major
Leftist party, the Labour party. The Labour party has some
repellent union associations so may have been seen as unattractive for
that reason. The two minor parties, however, come across as
high-minded.
The second study looked at the correlates of
attitudes rather than vote. And ever since LaPiere in the 1930s we
have known that attitudes are at best only weakly related to
behaviour. Deary found greater social liberalism among high IQ
people.
And so we come to Carl's 2014 American study. GOP
identifiers were found to be slightly brighter on average than Democrat
identifiers.
It is of course perfectly possible and reasonable
that trends in Britain might not be reflected in the USA -- and vice
versa. That would seem to be the case here. But note that in no
case is the major Leftist party favoured. But the association between
vote and IQ was in any case weak so IQ is clearly a very minor factor in
determining vote. As I have often argued, it is a miserable
personality that makes you Leftist. See, for instance,
here*****************************
Jeff Sessions Delivers Sweeping Reforms to Protect the Border and US CitizensAttorney
General Jeff Sessions paid a visit to the U.S.-Mexico border today
during a trip to Nogales, Arizona, where he spoke to a group of Customs
and Border Protection agents and prosecutors.
He referred to the
southwest border as “ground zero” in the fight against “transnational
gangs like MS-13 and international cartels [that] flood our country with
drugs and leave death and violence in their wake.” He added that “it is
here that criminal aliens and the coyotes and the document-forgers seek
to overthrow our system of lawful immigration.”
Sessions pledged
to ratchet up the fight against “criminal organizations that turn
cities and suburbs into warzones, that rape and kill innocent citizens,
and who profit by smuggling poison and other human beings across our
borders” using “[d]epravity and violence a[s] their calling cards,
including brutal machete attacks and beheadings.”
Sessions
declared: “For those that continue to seek improper and illegal entry
into this country, be forewarned: This is a new era. This is the Trump
era. The lawlessness, the abdication of the duty to enforce our
immigration laws, and the catch and release practices of old are over.”
Sessions
backed up this statement by unveiling a series of new policies. First,
he announced that each of the 94 U.S. attorney’s offices must now
designate one of their prosecutors as a border security coordinator.
Additionally, he announced that every federal prosecutor should consider
prosecuting anybody accused of committing immigration-related offenses
using the following guidelines:
Prosecute anyone suspected of transporting or harboring an illegal alien;
Charging
those who unlawfully enter or attempt to enter the country with a
felony offense if they have two or more prior misdemeanor convictions
for improper entry, or one prior misdemeanor conviction for improper
entry when accompanied by other aggravating circumstances;
Charging
anyone who re-enters the country after a prior removal with a felony,
if the person has a criminal record indicating that he or she poses a
danger to public safety or is affiliated with a gang;
Charging
those who engage in identity theft or immigration-related document fraud
with felonies, including mandatory minimum offenses; and
Charging anyone accused of assaulting, resisting, or impeding a federal law enforcement officer.
Sessions
also announced that he would take measures to accelerate some
initiatives that had previously been announced. He stated that the
administration would appoint 50 more immigration judges this year and 75
more next year.
This is welcome news indeed, since there are
over 540,000 cases pending before 301 immigration judges, which works
out to about 1,800 cases per judge.
Sessions also announced that
the Justice Department had “already surged 25 immigration judges to
detention centers along the border.”
This was part of the
previously announced effort to reassign immigration judges to 12 cities
(New York; Los Angeles; Miami; New Orleans; San Francisco; Baltimore,
Bloomington, Minnesota; El Paso, Texas; Harlingen, Texas; Imperial,
California; Omaha, Nebraska; and Phoenix, Arizona) that have the highest
number of illegal immigrants with criminal charges.
In addition
to proceeding with building a wall along the Mexican border, the Trump
administration has called for the hiring of 5,000 more Border Patrol
agents and 10,000 more Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents over
the next couple of years.
The White House has also sought to
reinvigorate cooperation agreements (which became dormant during the
Obama administration) with state and local officials who seek to perform
the functions of, and otherwise assist, immigration officers in
relation to the investigation, apprehension, and detention of illegal
immigrants.
These efforts have already started to bear fruit.
Sessions noted that from January to February of this year—at a time when
illegal immigration usually rises by 10 to 20 percent—illegal crossings
dropped by 40 percent.
According to Homeland Security Secretary
John Kelly, fewer than 12,500 people were stopped at the border in
March, the lowest monthly figure in at least 17 years. Sessions also
stated that illegal crossings have dropped a whopping 72 percent since
Trump was inaugurated.
Not everyone is supporting the
administration’s efforts, though. Several cities, including New York,
Seattle, Baltimore, Philadelphia, Los Angeles, San Francisco, and
Washington, D.C., have declared themselves to be sanctuary cities and
are resisting the administration’s efforts to combat illegal
immigration, thereby putting their residents in jeopardy.
Perhaps this is what Sessions had in mind when he poignantly added toward the end of his remarks:
Why
are we doing this? Because it is what the duly enacted laws of the
United States require. I took an oath to protect this country from all
enemies, foreign and domestic. How else can we look the parents and
loved ones of Kate Steinle, Grant Ronnebeck, and so many others in [the]
eye and say we are doing everything possible to prevent such tragedies
from ever occurring again?
When it comes to enforcing our
nation’s immigration laws, clearly there is a new sheriff in town. His
name is Jeff Sessions, and illegal immigrants had better beware.
SOURCE ****************************
For more blog postings from me, see
TONGUE-TIED,
EDUCATION WATCH INTERNATIONAL,
GREENIE WATCH,
POLITICAL CORRECTNESS WATCH,
AUSTRALIAN POLITICS, and
Paralipomena (Occasionally updated), a
Coral reef compendium and
an IQ compendium. (Both updated as news items come in).
GUN WATCH is now mainly put together by Dean Weingarten. I also put up occasional updates on my
Personal blog and each day I gather together my most substantial current writings on
THE PSYCHOLOGIST.
Email me
here (Hotmail address). My Home Pages are
here (Academic) or
here (Pictorial) or
here (Personal)
***************************
13 April, 2017
Will N.E. Asia eclipse Caucasians by the end of this century?It
seems obvious that they will. Japan and S. Korea are already rich
and influential countries and China is just getting into its stride --
while economic growth rates in Europe and America are very sluggish.
And
something I notice because I read a lot of academic journal articles
across several disciplines is that there always seems to be an East
Asian among the list of authors. There are very few single-author
papers these days. So East Asians are already there at the heart
of Western science. How soon will it be before the corresponding (main)
author usually has an Asian name?
Prophecy is a mug's game unless
it is based on clear extrapolations from the past and present and even
then "Black Swan" events can upset the applecart. But we are all
interested in the future so at least we can attempt informed
opinions. My opinion is that China will once again be the centre
of the world by the end of this century. So I want to look at why I
might be wrong. No Leftist ever seems to do that but it is certainly
in line with conservative caution.
An obvious factor is the
law of diminishing returns and the ogive curve that seems to describe
most variations in biological phenomena. Apologies for that bit of
academic-speak but it will become VERY clear if we look at Japan.
For about 4 decades after WWII, Japan astonished the world by it huge
economic growth rates. It leapt to some sort of parity with
European countries very rapidly and European countries were growing
richer at that time too.
But it did not continue. It
just about hit a brick wall. Japan has had negligible growth for
around a couple of decades now. A statistician might say that
Japanese economic growth has approached an asymptote. And lots of
things do approach an asymptote. It is normal for natural
processes to have limits on how far they can change. So Japan will
almost certainly never again see high rates of econnomic growth.
It will probably stay on some sort of parity with Western countries but
may never get further than that. Could that happen to China
too? It is clearly possible.
It is also possible that the
USA could get steam up again. Under Obama, huge numbers of Americans
left the workforce, middle incomes stagnated and business was ever more
tightly strangled by regulations. But that already seems to be going
into reverse under Trump. And it's early days yet. The more Uncle Sam
gets his fingers out of business, the more the economy is likely to
grow. And in my reading we are in fact due for a boom under Trump.
It
would be too much of a diversion to tackle the arguments of economists
against Trumpenomics but let me just note that Trump does have an
economics degree and America thrived mightily behind high tariff walls
in the 19th century.
So if America booms again, it might be very difficult for N.E. Asia to keep up, let alone excel.
A
standard criticism of E. Asians is that they are not creative.
They just use well what others have invented. That might seem like
stupid old racism but some recent work in genetics gives it some
substance. And it is in part the work of that intrepid
outspeaker, Edward Dutton -- a Briton who has been "exiled" to Northern
Finland. Maybe he just likes cold climates. His latest paper that I
know of (2015) is below:
Why do Northeast Asians win so few Nobel Prizes?
Kenya Kura, Jan te Nijenhuis & Edward Dutton
Abstract
Most
scientific discoveries have originated from Europe, and Europeans have
won 20 times more Nobel Prizes than have Northeast Asians. We argue that
this is explained not by IQ, but by interracial personality
differences, underpinned by differences in gene distribution. In
particular, the variance in scientific achievement is explained by
differences in inquisitiveness (DRD4 7-repeat), psychological stability
(5HTTLPR long form), and individualism (mu-opioid receptor gene; OPRM1 G
allele ). Northeast Asians tend to be lower in these psychological
traits, which we argue are necessary for exceptional scientific
accomplishments. Since these traits comprise a positive matrix, we
constructed a q index (measuring curiosity) from these gene frequencies
among world populations. It is found that both IQ scores and q index
contribute significantly to the number of per capita Nobel Prizes.
SOURCE Linking
Nobel prizes to genetics is undoubtedly clever and impressive so my
objections to their conclusions are rather weak. My objections may
however be right. The key statistic in their results is the
variance explained by their q factor and IQ combined. It is only
19%. Many other factors could be at work.
And an obvious
factor is history. Nobel prizes are normally awarded late in the
Nobelist's life. And for something like 98% of the time over which
Nobels have been awarded, China had not even got its boots on
academically. Among those Asian co-authors of academic papers
today may be a majority of the Nobelists of tomorrow. In other
words, the criterion for achievement -- a Nobel -- may be too
narrow. I believe it is.
So where does that leave us?
All things considered, I suppose the future will be a lot like the
present, with the new ideas coming mainly from people of N.W. European
ancestry (including Russians, Britons and Americans) and Asia
implementing those ideas even more effectively than we do.
I am
still vastly impressed by China, however. My only visit to China
was many years ago but my son has been to China a couple of times on
problem-solving missions and I have Sinophilic friends. All tell
me that China already dazzles in many ways. My son is a software
engineer and his verdict from contact with them is that the Chinese are
unbeatable. I am inclined to agree. I am inclined to think
that China will eventually pull ahead of the USA in most ways. But
I am also of the view that the USA will remain an indispensable second
place-getter in many ways.
*************************
United Airlines Flunks Economics 101Supply
and Demand: After forcing a paying customer off a flight to make room
for an employee, United Airlines is catching hell, and rightly so. But
what's really disturbing is that no one at United understood the most
basic principle of free market economics.
The story goes like
this. United overbooked a flight from Chicago to Louisville, Ky., on
Sunday night. That's hardly unusual. But in this case, United wanted to
make room for four employees who needed to be in Louisville the next
day, and the next flight to Louisville wasn't until Monday afternoon.
According
to news accounts, United offered passengers at the gate $400 and a
hotel to give up their seats. But nobody took them up on it. After
everyone had boarded the plane, United upped the offer to $800 for
anyone willing to get off. Again, it got no takers.
So, the
airline decided to do the "fair" thing and have a computer randomly pick
four passengers, who were then told to get off the plane. When one
refused, United called in cops. Another passenger recorded that man
being yanked from his seat and dragged off the plane.
A high
school student just learning about economics could explain what United
did wrong. Namely, it tried to ignore the supply and demand curve and
the market clearing price.
Clearly, the combination of an
overnight stay and the reason for being bumped (to accommodate United
workers) pushed the market price for giving up a seat above $800.
United
spokesman Charlie Hobart said the airline tries to come up with a
reasonable compensation offer, but "there comes a point where you're not
going to get volunteers."
That's simply not true. Yes, United's
contract of carriage gives them the ability to bump passengers. But
United could have — and given the circumstances should have — continued
to increase its offer price until it got enough volunteers. At some
point, there would have been a rush to give up seats.
The result:
Everyone would have gone away happy. The passengers who agreed to get
off the flight would have received something they valued more than
arriving on time, and United would have been able to get its own
employees where they needed to be without raising a fuss.
Instead, United tried to impose its own form of price controls and then have the police enforce its nonmarket decision.
Does
that sound familiar to anyone? It should, because this is precisely
what happens when government interferes in any market, either by forcing
prices higher or lower, or mandating businesses offer this or that, to
accommodate some other alleged social goal — and then forcing everyone
to abide by these rules. The result is economic inefficiency, rising
animosity and a growing police state.
Price controls are why
there were gasoline shortages in the 1970s and doctor shortages in
Medicaid today. They explain why the individual insurance markets are
failing under ObamaCare, and why Venezuelan grocery store shelves are
empty.
Such economic illiteracy might be excusable among
government regulators and bureaucrats who make their living telling
other people what to do. But the fact that a private company — in an
industry that is constantly changing ticket prices to meet even slight
changes in demand — didn't understand this basic economic principle is
really troubling.
Then again, it was the airlines themselves that
fought to keep the government in charge of setting their routes and
fares when Congress decided to deregulate the industry in the 1970s.
SOURCE*************************
Trump wins trade concessions from China in first meeting: ReportPresident
Trump's first meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping reportedly made
progress on trade issues with the world's largest country.
The
Financial Times reported China offered to drop the ban on American beef,
in place since 2003, and offered to allow foreigners to have majority
stakes in Chinese investment and securities companies.
The former
concession from the Chinese would allow American cattle producers to
have access to a massive new market, while the Financial Times reported
the latter is something that was discussed under former President Barack
Obama but was received positively by Trump last week.
Trump and
Xi met for two days of talks at Mar-a-Lago in Florida last week. Trump
tweeted that he and Xi made progress on a personal relationship level
but only time would tell about how the country's trade relationship
would go.
SOURCE **********************************
Democrat Russia narrative implodes ****************************
For more blog postings from me, see
TONGUE-TIED,
EDUCATION WATCH INTERNATIONAL,
GREENIE WATCH,
POLITICAL CORRECTNESS WATCH,
AUSTRALIAN POLITICS, and
Paralipomena (Occasionally updated), a
Coral reef compendium and
an IQ compendium. (Both updated as news items come in).
GUN WATCH is now mainly put together by Dean Weingarten. I also put up occasional updates on my
Personal blog and each day I gather together my most substantial current writings on
THE PSYCHOLOGIST.
Email me
here (Hotmail address). My Home Pages are
here (Academic) or
here (Pictorial) or
here (Personal)
***************************
12 April, 2017
What's Become of the American Dream?Part of the problem is definitional. It isn’t just about houses, cars and material prosperity Peggy Noonan I
want to think aloud about the American dream. People have been saying
for a while that it’s dead. It’s not, but it needs strengthening. We
should start by saying what it means, which is something we’ve gotten
mixed up about. I know its definition because I grew up in the heart of
it and remember how people had long understood it. The American dream is
the belief, held by generation after generation since our beginning and
reanimated over the decades by waves of immigrants, that here you can
start from anywhere and become anything. In America you can rise to the
heights no matter where and in what circumstances you began. You can go
from the bottom to the top.
Behind the dream was another belief:
America was uniquely free, egalitarian and arranged so as to welcome
talent. Lincoln was elected president in part because his supporters
brought lengths of crude split-rails to the Republican National
Convention in Chicago in 1860. They held the rails high and paraded them
in a floor demonstration to tell everyone: This guy was nothing but a
frontier rail splitter, a laborer, a backwoods nobody. Now he will be
president. What a country. What a dream.
This distinguished
America from old Europe, from which it had kicked away. There titles,
families and inherited wealth dictated standing: If you had them, you’d
always be at the top. If you didn’t, you’d always be at the bottom. That
static system bred resentment. We would have a dynamic one that bred
hope.
You can give a dozen examples, and perhaps you are one, of
Americans who turned a brilliant system into a lived-out triumph. Thomas
Edison, the seventh child of modest folk in Michigan and half-deaf to
boot, filled the greatest cities in the world with electric light.
Barbara Stanwyck was from working-class Brooklyn. Her mother died, her
father skipped town, and she was raised by relatives and foster parents.
She went on to a half-century career as a magnetic actress of stage and
screen; in 1944 she was the highest-paid woman in America. Jonas Salk
was a hero of my childhood. His parents were Jewish immigrants from
Poland who settled in East Harlem — again, working-class nobodies.
Naturally young Jonas, an American, scoped out the true facts of his
time and place and thought: I’ll be a great lawyer. His mother is
reported to have said no, a doctor. He went on to cure polio. We used to
talk about him at the public school when we waited in line for the
vaccine.
In America so many paths were offered! But then a big nation that is a great one literally has a lot of paths.
The
American dream was about aspiration and the possibility that, with
dedication and focus, it could be fulfilled. But the American dream was
not about material things — houses, cars, a guarantee of future
increase. That’s the construction we put on it now. It’s wrong. A big
house could be the product of the dream, if that’s what you wanted, but
the house itself was not the dream. You could, acting on your vision of
the dream, read, learn, hold a modest job and rent a home, but at town
council meetings you could stand, lead with wisdom and knowledge, and
become a figure of local respect. Maybe the respect was your dream.
Stanwyck became rich, Salk revered. Both realized the dream.
How did we get the definition mixed up?
I
think part of the answer is: Grandpa. He’d sit on the front stoop in
Levittown in the 1950s. A sunny day, the kids are tripping by, there’s a
tree in the yard and bikes on the street and a car in the front. He was
born in Sicily or Donegal or Dubrovnik, he came here with one change of
clothes tied in a cloth and slung on his back, he didn’t even speak
English, and now look — his grandkids with the bikes. “This is the
American dream,” he says. And the kids, listening, looked around, saw
the houses and the car, and thought: He means the American dream is
things. By inference, the healthier and more enduring the dream, the
bigger the houses get, the more expensive the cars. (They went on to
become sociologists and journalists.)
But that of course is not
what Grandpa meant. He meant: I started with nothing and this place let
me and mine rise. The American dream was not only about materialism, but
material things could be, and often were, its fruits.
The
American dream was never fully realized, not by a long shot, and we all
know this. The original sin of America, slavery, meant some of the
oldest Americans were brutally excluded from it. The dream is best
understood as a continuing project requiring constant repair and
expansion, with an eye to removing barriers and roadblocks for all.
Many
reasons are put forward in the argument over whether the American Dream
is over (no) or ailing (yes) or was always divisive (no — dreams keep
nations together). We see income inequality, as the wealthy prosper
while the middle class grinds away and the working class slips away.
There is a widening distance, literally, between the rich and the poor.
Once the richest man in town lived nearby, on the nicest street on the
right side of the tracks. Now he’s decamped to a loft in SoHo. “The big
sort” has become sociocultural apartheid. It’s globalization, it’s the
decline in the power of private-sector unions and the brakes they
applied.
What ails the dream is a worthy debate. I’d include
this: The dream requires adults who can launch kids sturdily into
Dream-land.
When kids have one or two parents who are
functioning, reliable, affectionate — who will stand in line for the
charter-school lottery, who will fill out the forms, who will see that
the football uniform gets washed and is folded on the stairs in the
morning — there’s a good chance they’ll be OK. If you come from that
now, it’s like being born on third base and being able to hit a triple.
You’ll be able to pursue the dream.
But I see kids who don’t have
that person, who are from families or arrangements that didn’t cohere,
who have no one to stand in line for them or get them up in the morning.
What I see more and more in America is damaged or absent parents. We
all know what’s said in this part — drugs, family breakup. Poor
parenting is not a new story in human history, and has never been new in
America. But insufficient parents used to be able to tell their kids to
go out, go play in America, go play in its culture. And the old
aspirational culture, the one of the American dream, could counter a
lot. Now we have stressed kids operating within a nihilistic popular
culture that can harm them. So these kids have nothing — not the example
of a functioning family and not the comfort of a culture into which
they can safely escape.
This is not a failure of policy but a failure of love. And it’s hard to change national policy on a problem like that.
SOURCE**************************
Why Justice Gorsuch Will Have an Immediate (and Big) Impact on the Supreme Court Relentless,
harsh and wholly unmerited — such were the attacks against Judge Neil
Gorsuch. Yet Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) held firm to
his promise to hold a full-Senate vote on the judge’s nomination and
today we have, once again, a full complement of justices on the U.S.
Supreme Court.
Hopefully, Gorsuch’s confirmation means that the
Court once again has the crucial fifth vote needed to sustain the
Constitution as written and to protect fundamental rights like religious
freedom, free speech, and the right to bear arms.
Once he is
sworn in, Justice Gorsuch will arrive at the Court just in time to hear
the April 19 oral arguments in Trinity Lutheran Church v. Pauley. It is a
case of stark, blatant religious discrimination by the government.
The
state of Missouri provides grants to help nonprofit organizations
resurface their playgrounds with rubber from recycled tires. The goal is
to provide safer play areas for kids. But Missouri denied a grant to
the licensed preschool and daycare center at Trinity Lutheran solely
because it is a church. Missouri said the grant would violate separation
of church and state. In reality, it violated prior Supreme Court
precedent.
Given the hostility to religious freedom expressed in
prior decisions like Burwell v. Hobby Lobby (2014) (the contraceptive
mandate case) and Town of Greece v. Galloway (2014) (the town council
opening prayer case) by the four liberal justices on the Court, Gorsuch
is needed in the Trinity Lutheran case to prevent an injustice from
occurring. Excluding churches from an otherwise neutral and secular
government aid program clearly violates the First Amendment.
Gorsuch
may also make a difference in the Court’s decisions about which of the
pending petitions it will accept for appeal. Each term, the Court
accepts only a little over 70 of the roughly 7,000 petitions it
receives. It will be helpful, therefore, to have another justice who
understands the importance of constitutional issues and will vote to
accept the most important cases for review.
Among the
petitions currently pending is Masterpiece Cakeshop v. Colorado Civil
Rights Commission, an important case about an individual’s right to not
be forced by the government to act in violation of his or her religious
beliefs.
Another petition is Husted v. A. Philip Randolph
Institute. In this case, the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals issued an
erroneous decision, misinterpreting federal law to prevent the state of
Ohio from cleaning up its voter registration list. This is an especially
important case for improving election integrity — and one which Justice
Gorsuch may be inclined to take up.
Another petition that could
help assure election integrity is North Carolina v. North Carolina
NAACP. Here, a three-judge panel of the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals
erroneously threw out North Carolina’s voter ID law as well as numerous
other election reforms.
Justice Gorsuch may also make a
difference on petitions to come — such as the emergency appeals of the
numerous injunctions issued against President Donald Trump’s executive
order temporarily suspending travel from terrorist safe-havens.
As
five dissenting judges from the Ninth Circuit pointed out, those
decisions confound Supreme Court precedent and the constitutional and
federal statutory provisions that authorize the president’s actions.
Neil
Gorsuch should be the fifth vote needed to quash this judicial activism
that interferes with the president’s authority as commander-in-chief to
protect the nation.
SOURCE****************************
New Jewish conspiracy theoryFrom the Left of course. It's the new "Protocols"Chabad
of Port Washington, a Jewish community center on Long Island’s
Manhasset Bay, sits in a squat brick edifice across from a Shell gas
station and a strip mall. The center is an unexceptional building on an
unexceptional street, save for one thing: Some of the shortest routes
between Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin run straight through it.
Two
decades ago, as the Russian president set about consolidating power on
one side of the world, he embarked on a project to supplant his
country’s existing Jewish civil society and replace it with a parallel
structure loyal to him. On the other side of the world, the brash
Manhattan developer was working to get a piece of the massive flows of
capital that were fleeing the former Soviet Union in search of stable
assets in the West, especially real estate, and seeking partners in New
York with ties to the region.
Their respective ambitions led the
two men—along with Trump’s future son-in-law, Jared Kushner—to build a
set of close, overlapping relationships in a small world that intersects
on Chabad, an international Hasidic movement most people have never
heard of.
Starting in 1999, Putin enlisted two of his closest
confidants, the oligarchs Lev Leviev and Roman Abramovich, who would go
on to become Chabad’s biggest patrons worldwide, to create the
Federation of Jewish Communities of Russia under the leadership of
Chabad rabbi Berel Lazar, who would come to be known as “Putin’s rabbi.”
A
few years later, Trump would seek out Russian projects and capital by
joining forces with a partnership called Bayrock-Sapir, led by Soviet
emigres Tevfik Arif, Felix Sater and Tamir Sapir—who maintain close ties
to Chabad. The company’s ventures would lead to multiple lawsuits
alleging fraud and a criminal investigation of a condo project in
Manhattan.
Meanwhile, the links between Trump and Chabad kept
piling up. In 2007, Trump hosted the wedding of Sapir’s daughter and
Leviev’s right-hand man at Mar-a-Lago, his Palm Beach resort. A few
months after the ceremony, Leviev met Trump to discuss potential deals
in Moscow and then hosted a bris for the new couple’s first son at the
holiest site in Chabad Judaism. Trump attended the bris along with
Kushner, who would go on to buy a $300 million building from Leviev and
marry Ivanka Trump, who would form a close relationship with
Abramovich’s wife, Dasha Zhukova. Zhukova would host the power couple in
Russia in 2014 and reportedly attend Trump’s inauguration as their
guest.
With the help of this trans-Atlantic diaspora and some
globetrotting real estate moguls, Trump Tower and Moscow’s Red Square
can feel at times like part of the same tight-knit neighborhood. Now,
with Trump in the Oval Office having proclaimed his desire to reorient
the global order around improved U.S. relations with Putin’s
government—and as the FBI probes the possibility of improper
coordination between Trump associates and the Kremlin—that small world
has suddenly taken on outsize importance.
More
HERE ****************************
For more blog postings from me, see
TONGUE-TIED,
EDUCATION WATCH INTERNATIONAL,
GREENIE WATCH,
POLITICAL CORRECTNESS WATCH,
AUSTRALIAN POLITICS, and
Paralipomena (Occasionally updated), a
Coral reef compendium and
an IQ compendium. (Both updated as news items come in).
GUN WATCH is now mainly put together by Dean Weingarten. I also put up occasional updates on my
Personal blog and each day I gather together my most substantial current writings on
THE PSYCHOLOGIST.
Email me
here (Hotmail address). My Home Pages are
here (Academic) or
here (Pictorial) or
here (Personal)
***************************
11 April, 2017
COMPASSION AND POLITICSNathan
J. Robinson, a leftist writer with an apparently substantial
educational background (He quotes Schopenhauer) has a recent article
under the heading above. I offer below some excerpts from
it. He comes across as someone who is genuinely concerned about
the poor. He also writes that many prominent Democrats don't give a
fig for the poor and in fact look down on the poor. And he is
right to say that this is the opposite of the historic Leftist claim.
It
is a article worth reading in full but, like most Leftist writing,
leaves out half the story. So maybe I should briefly allude to
some of that other half.
He appears to think that Leftist
elitism is a new thing. He seems to see it as something that came
into the light only with the advent of Trump. That is hilariously
wrong. Leftism has always been elitist. Karl Marx, for
instance, was born into a middle class German Jewish family and was
homeschooled by his father, the gentlemanly and rather admirable
Heinrich Marx. He later studied at the universities of Bonn,
Berlin, and Jena. He was fascinated by the ponderous writings of
the near-incomprehensible German philosopher G.W.F. Hegel, regarded by
many as the founder of modern Leftism. Marx was also a parasite, living
off the generosity of his rich businessman admirer, Friedrich
Engels. So Marx was not a man of the people in any sense.
The
Bolsheviks too were overwhelmingly middle class. And the
prominent Leftists in prewar Britain were almost entirely prominent
literary and intellectual figures, such as the Bloomsberries, the Webbs,
J.M. Keynes, H.G. Wells, G.B. Shaw, Bertrand Russell etc. They
were also -- most amusingly but also most revealingly -- great believers in eugenics. And that's as elitist as you can get: Wipe out the dummies!
And
elitism on the American Left is not new to the era of Trump.
Expressions of disdain for the masses were equally prominent at the
onset of the G.W. Bush presidency in 2004. I in fact set up a blog
to preserve such expressions for posterity. Google has however
taken most of that blog down for reasons unknown to me. Never
fear, however! I have kept exact copies of all the posts Google
has censored and have now uploaded them to a new site here. So the whole gruesome episode is once again online for all to see.
Something
else that comrade Robinson fails to remember is that G.W. Bush ran on a
platform of "compassionate conservatism". It may have been no
more sincere than similar protestations from Leftists but it is the
platform he ran on and which got him elected. And if it is deeds
not words that count, who was it who sent in the troops to break the
racial segregation maintained by the Southern Democrats? It was
Ike, a Republican President. And who was it that enlisted
Chappaquiddick Ted to help set up the "No child left behind" attempt to
improve black educational outcomes? It was G.W. Bush. The
Republican record on helping the underdog is at least as good as the
Democrat record. I won't mention Woodrow Wilson's segregationist
policies or FDR's antisemitism.
So comrade Robinson is pissing
into the wind if he thinks it is possible for the Left to become
genuinely egalitarian and compassionate. Elitism is an integral
part of what they are. See here for more details of that. Leftists are as compassionate as their most famous exponents: Robespierre, Stalin, Mao and Pol PotInstead
of heeding suggestions that greater amounts of empathy for
working-class Trump constituencies might make Democrats less likely to
lose these people’s votes, lately some liberals have doubled down. As
Clio Chang pointed out recently in Jacobin, figures including Paul
Krugman (“I try to be charitable, but when you read about Trump voters
now worried about losing Obamacare it’s kind of hard”) and Markos
Moulitsas (“Be happy for coal miners losing their health insurance;
they’re getting exactly what they voted for”) have reacted to stories
about hardships and deprivation in Trump-leaning communities with
unqualified disdain. Ex-New York Times theater critic Frank Rich
recently declared he had “no sympathy for the hillbilly,” and suggested
that:
“Liberals looking for a way to empathize with conservatives
should endorse the core conservative belief in the importance of
personal responsibility. Let Trump’s white working-class base take
responsibility for its own votes — or in some cases failure to vote —
and live with the election’s consequences… Let them reap the
consequences for voting against their own interests.”
This kind
of thinking isn’t limited to media commentators. It seems to be a strand
in liberal thinking more broadly. Matthew Stoller collected a series of
Huffington Post comments on an article about poor whites dying from
ill-health and opiate addiction:
“Sorry, not
sorry. These people are not worthy of any sympathy. They have run around
for decades bitching about poor minorities not “working hard enough,”
or that their situation is “their own fault.” Well guess what? It’s not
so great when it’s you now, is it? Bunch of deplorables, and if they die
quicker than the rest of us that just means the country will be better
off in the long run.”
“Karma is a bitch and if
these people choose to continue to vote Republican and try to deny
other [sic] from attaining the American dream, they deserve no better
than what they are getting!”
“I for one have
little sympathy for these despairing whites. If they can’t compete
against people of color when everything has been rigged in their favor,
then there’s really no help for them. Trump and his G(r)OPers will do
little to elevate their lot. If anything, these poor whites will be
hired to dig grave pits and assemble their own coffins.”
SOURCE ************************************
Today’s populist movements are not the first to challenge parasitic oligarchiesTheir grip needs to be broken in order for their country to flourish, says The Rt. Hon, the Viscount RidleyI
am writing this from the Netherlands, where one of the most gruesome
paintings in the Rijksmuseum, by Jan de Baen, depicts the eviscerated
bodies of the de Witt brothers, hanging upside down after the mob had
killed them and then roasted and eaten their livers in 1672. It is an
episode mentioned in a new book published this week by Douglas Carswell,
a British MP, called Rebel, in which he wrestles with an eternal
dilemma: why populist revolutions sometimes bring tyranny.
The
republics of Rome, Venice and the Netherlands all experienced the same
thing: an inept populist revolt against the growing power of an
oligarchy — by Tiberius Gracchus, Bajamonte Tiepolo and Johan de Witt
respectively — followed by a counter-revolution that resulted in an even
worse oligarchy that throttled prosperity, in the form of Sulla, the
Council of Ten and William of Orange respectively. The coups that killed
the French and Russian revolutions were similar, but more about new
forms of tyranny than returns to old ones.
Carswell sees
parallels in today’s populism. Despite a hundred commentators saying so,
Donald Trump is not like Nero or Hitler, but he may be like Gracchus
(“a cross between Jeremy Corbyn and Donald Trump”): an anti-oligarch
insurgent who soon makes oligarchy look preferable. After Trump,
Americans may fall back in love with the bicoastal elite. Faced with Le
Pen, many French will feel that énarques are not so bad after all. Prime
Minister Farage would have made us appreciate PPE graduates again.
It
is the Dutch parallel that is perhaps most instructive. Mr Trump has
seen off a Bush and a Clinton, just as Johan de Witt tried to prevent
the stadtholder of the Netherlands becoming a hereditary position, owned
by the House of Orange. The similarities perhaps end there. De Witt was
a cultured doctor of law with a fascination for Roman history who
believed in free trade, free speech and republicanism. Yet in the end he
ushered in monarchy, bankruptcy and decline.
That decline was
not, Carswell says, because the Dutch lost their entrepreneurial spirit,
as historians sometimes lazily assert, but because the Orangist elite
became closed and parasitical, living off the spoils of conquest and
investing their regressively raised taxes in bonds issued by
overborrowed government, rather than in ships and shops. By 1713, 70 per
cent of tax revenue went on servicing debt. “A free-wheeling republic
had become a restrictionist, rentier state,” as Carswell puts it.
There
is a lesson here. Europe as a whole is heading down the same path: slow
growth and far too many people living off redistribution rather than
enterprise — in private, public and voluntary sectors. The goose that
always lays the golden eggs of prosperity is the habit of exchange and
specialisation: people doing what they are good at, and getting better
at it with innovation, while swapping the results freely with others
through commerce. (Disclosure: here Carswell draws on my own recent
books to buttress his case, and he showed me the text before
publication.)
Carswell reminds us that “every society that ever
managed to sustain intensive economic growth did so by staying close to
the free-exchange end of the spectrum”. Like a rainforest ecosystem,
commerce is a self-organising system that results in spontaneous order
and complexity. For instance, nobody has planned or is in charge of the
job of feeding ten million people for lunch in London today, but this
incredibly complex task will be achieved smoothly.
Yet history
shows that free exchange is constantly at risk of being infected and
captured by parasites and predators who live off productive people
through taxes, tithes, rents, slavery, subsidy, war and theft. This is
what killed the goose in ancient Greece and Rome, in Renaissance Italy
and Holland’s golden age. From time to time anti-oligarch insurgents are
needed to purge the parasites, expel the predators and free the economy
from their burden.
Now, says Carswell, is such a time. Forget
the Ukip debacle: he is as genuine a rebel as parliament contains, who
wants to “rein back the emerging oligarchy”. One of the problems with
most of the new radicals, whether a Trump, a Farage, a Wilders or a Le
Pen, is that they seem to be in thrall to the myth of the big (wo)man,
who will lead the people to the promised land. Carswell wants to
challenge the myth of the Big Man who knows everything. Instead he would
allow the organisation of society along bottom-up lines.
He
would end the power of central bank bureaucrats, allowing customers to
decide banks’ reserve ratios by choosing among different options with
different risks and rewards.
In place of debased fiat currencies,
he would have self-regulating currencies controlled by competition, not
by officials, along the lines of Bitcoin. He would have corporations
regulated by those who own them and those who buy from them, rather than
by easily lobbied crony regulators and subsidy providers. He would have
public services controlled by members of the public.
All easier
said than done, of course. And in politics he would undermine the power
and privilege of the cartel of the main political parties with their
public subsidies, access to patronage and ability to gerrymander
constituencies to preserve safe seats: “In Clacton, I have twice taken
on and defeated the established parties by doing for myself, often on a
laptop, what political parties spend millions failing to do well.” It is
now possible to do politics without party. Trump, Bernie Sanders and
Emmanuel Macron all ran almost independently of their parties.
Carswell
is right that the left does not get this. He cheered when Corbyn was
elected, but says that radicals on the left do not understand how free
exchange has elevated the human condition or the way that redistribution
ultimately sustains oligarchy. We end up with the spectacle of
left-wing activists such as Owen Jones and Paul Mason campaigning
alongside Goldman Sachs and Christine Lagarde on behalf of the oligarchs
of Brussels.
You might ask what a low-grade oligarch like me is
doing endorsing this insurgent philosophy against my interests. The
truth is I spend most of my time exchanging prose for profit, or
speaking up in parliament for innovation and free exchange, and against
cronyism and subsidy, usually ineffectively.
So when the revolution comes, metaphorically at least, I will join Douglas at the barricades.
SOURCE ****************************
For more blog postings from me, see
TONGUE-TIED,
EDUCATION WATCH INTERNATIONAL,
GREENIE WATCH,
POLITICAL CORRECTNESS WATCH,
AUSTRALIAN POLITICS, and
Paralipomena (Occasionally updated), a
Coral reef compendium and
an IQ compendium. (Both updated as news items come in).
GUN WATCH is now mainly put together by Dean Weingarten. I also put up occasional updates on my
Personal blog and each day I gather together my most substantial current writings on
THE PSYCHOLOGIST.
Email me
here (Hotmail address). My Home Pages are
here (Academic) or
here (Pictorial) or
here (Personal)
***************************
10 April, 2017
Hate-filled DNC Chairman Perez Doesn't Share American Values
"Republicans don't give a s**t" about you" - DNC Chairman Tom Perez, addressing attendees at a rally
Is this what public discourse has come to? The head of one of the two
major parties uses potty mouthed language in public...and then goes on
to say he doesn't care what people think about what he said.
Charming, isn't he...
Of course, we shouldn't be surprised...Perez was Obama's labor
secretary. Anyone who worked for someone as virulently opposed to all of
America's founding ideals and way of life as Barack Obama is bound to
be infected with the same Alinksy inspired communist drivel.
Perez seems to be lacking when it comes to facts in general. In addition
to his other "colorful" remarks, the DNC head claimed that "Donald
Trump, you don't stand for our values."
Whose values? Those of Perez and the left wing loons that form the largest part of the Democrat party? Those values?
People may question how sincere President Trump is regarding his
campaign platform, but the policies he ran on are America's values.
America First means having fair trade that helps keep and expand
American jobs for American workers. Does Mr. Perez disagree with helping
to expand job opportunities for American citizens?
America First means keeping out people who don't belong here, thereby
preserving jobs for Americans. It also means to stop picking the pockets
of American taxpayers who have been forced to support the cost of
keeping up those who are here illegally. Mr. Perez apparently finds that
not to be a value he shares with the majority of Americans, who do
support Trump's policies.
America First also means keeping our people safe from those who mean us
harm. Perez doesn't share that value either, as he apparently thinks the
more potential jihadists flooding into the country, the better.
Actually Mr. Perez, it's a lot more than just "Republicans" or "Trump" who don't "share your values".
Donald Trump won the votes of millions of people who aren't
"Republicans". They were independents, moderates, working class and yes,
a lot of disaffected Democrats who like Reagan, said many years ago, "I
didn't leave the Democrat Party, they left me".
While your party has sold out to a myriad of special interests and
engaged in identity politics for the sake of getting votes, you left the
middle class behind.
Because of that, those middle class "deplorables" find the current
Democrat Party deplorable...That's why your party lost all of those rust
belt states that you took for granted of all these years.
Now you have the nerve to open up that potty mouth of yours and insult
the people who said enough of class warfare and the divisive Democrat
Party.
You're right, we don't share "your values", because your values are
rooted in a very deep anti-American hatred. Your values represent
destroying jobs for Americans. Your values represent destroying the
rights of Christians to worship and exercise their faith freely as
outlined in the first amendment of that document that you so despise.
Your values mean a never ending cycle of poverty for the inner cities
with continued high unemployment and crime in black communities, because
you'd rather buy their votes with welfare schemes than empowering small
businesses.
Your values mean attacking law enforcement and making those communities even less safe as a result.
I could go on, but the fact is you're right about one thing - we don't
share your "values". What you call values are not values at all...they
are nothing more than a not so subtle attempt to take down this country.
No Mr. Perez, we don't share your "values", and we never will.
SOURCE
****************************
Another poisonous bureaucracy
What happens when a reckless, unaccountable arm of the administrative
state collides head-on with a Congressional committee demanding answers
for constituents who have been harassed, extorted, or ignored for more
than five years?
In the case of yesterday’s appearance by Consumer Financial Protection
Bureau (CFPB) Director Richard Cordray before the House Financial
Services Committee, that would be a call for his dismissal. Surrounded
by a cadre of green t-shirt wearing “consumer advocates,” Cordray was
greeted by Chairman Jeb Hensarling (R-Texas) with this statement:
“Under Dodd-Frank, you can be removed for cause. Either way, I believe
the President is clearly justified in dismissing you and I call upon the
President — yet again — to do just that, and to do it immediately.”
Harsh? Maybe. Undeserved? Consider Chairman Hensarling’s succinctly stated case against the CFPB:
“[U]nder Mr. Cordray’s leadership, the CFPB has shown an utter disregard
for protecting markets and has made credit more expensive and less
available in many instances; this is particularly true for low and
moderate income Americans. What is also clear is that under Mr.
Cordray’s leadership, the CFPB has acted unlawfully, routinely denied
market participants due process and abused its powers.”
If the charges against the CFPB had ended there, Chairman Hensarling
would have had enough reason for calling the agency and Cordray out on
the carpet. But the CFPB has been tagged with a laundry list of other
shady practices, including race and sex discrimination, political
favoritism, the targeting of individuals, and extravagant advertising.
Of even greater concern is the CFPB’s total lack of accountability.
Created by the Dodd-Frank Act, the CFPB’s only oversight requirement is
to appear and report twice annually before the House Financial Services
and Senate Banking committees. Its funding comes from the Federal
Reserve System, not Congress; therefore, it is considered “off-budget”
and not constrained by the Congressional appropriations process. The
CFPB is run by a single director, who does not report to the President
and can only be removed for “good cause.” Recently, a federal appeals
panel found this structure to be unconstitutional, calling the unelected
CFPB director “the single most powerful official in Washington,” aside
from the duly elected President.
This absence of agency accountability, combined with the CFPB’s
unprecedented thumbing of its nose to oversight inquiries, reinforced an
adversarial environment for the hearing. Knowing that their
opportunities to question Mr. Cordray were few and far between,
committee members gave the CFPB director their best shots. Sadly,
committee members had more questions than Cordray had answers. Here are a
few highlights.
Prepaid Cards
In October 2016, the CFPB issued a 1,689-page rule, regulating the
issuance of prepaid cards, which have garnered popularity due to rising
checking account fees and minimum balance requirements. Opponents of the
rule say it endangers providers of these cards and the nearly 68
million Americans who use these products. Congressional threats
pressured the CFPB to delay implementation of the rule. At the hearing,
Rep. Roger Williams (R-FL) stated his intention to pursue legislation
introduced by him and Senator David Perdue (R-GA) to use the
Congressional Review Act to rescind the rule.
Small Dollar Lending
Last summer, the CFPB proposed a far-reaching rule regulating small
dollar, or “payday” lending practices. Under questioning from Rep.
Blaine Luetkemeyer (R-MO), Cordray mentioned that the CFPB had received
more than a million public comments to the rule. But he passed on
answering Luetkemeyer’s questions about alternatives for small-dollar
loan users if the regulations effectively ban the product. Nor did
Cordray respond to questions about when to expect a final rule, despite
the public comment period ending six months ago.
International Remittances
Under questioning from Rep. Andy Barr (R-Ky.), Cordray stated that the
CFPB could not exempt credit unions from its regulations, in spite of
the fact that CFPB’s burdensome rulemaking has forced credit unions on
military bases to stop offering remittance products to American military
personnel. Cordray made his assertion, despite the disagreement of Barr
and other committee members, including Democrats.The CFPB continues to
review this regulation.
Questions were also directed at Cordray regarding potential law breaking
by the CFPB during the issuance of indirect auto lending regulations
and rules adversely affecting the manufactured housing industry.
Throughout the hearing, Cordray hemmed, hawed, and otherwise neglected
to give answers.
Congress is unlikely to put up much longer with the dilatory tactics of
the CFPB to explain its heavy-handed and abusive “consumer protection”
tactics. Last year, Chairman Hensarling offered “The Financial CHOICE
Act,” which would overhaul the Dodd-Frank Act, severely rein in the
CFPB, and build in greater accountability safeguards for the agency and
its director. With Hensarling preparingto introduce a 2.0 version
of the Financial CHOICE Act this year and the possibility that President
Trump could remove Cordray from his perch of power, the director may
have to come up with some answers — while he still can.
SOURCE
********************************
She Never Joined a Union. But Union Fees Got Deducted From Her Paycheck
ST. PAUL, Minn.—Patricia Johansen has worked as a home caregiver for her two special-needs grandchildren for about 10 years.
Since she never agreed to join the union that represents such
Medicaid-eligible caregivers in Minnesota, Johansen was surprised to
discover that union dues had been deducted from her benefit check for
about four months.
In an affidavit, the Fergus Falls resident says she is convinced the
union, SEIU Healthcare Minnesota, forged her signature so it could start
deducting the dues.
Johansen’s story is one reason a state lawmaker is scheduling a hearing
where she expects the head of the state’s labor relations agency, a
political appointee of Gov. Mark Dayton, to explain how SEIU Healthcare
Minnesota won a unionization election—and why it should continue to
represent the home caregivers.
State Rep. Marion O’Neill, chairman of the Subcommittee on Employee
Relations, told The Daily Signal that she wants the Dayton appointee to
appear before the joint panel of the Minnesota House and Senate to
address evidence of “fraudulent signatures, nonexistent voters, and
ballot tampering” in a 2014 unionization election.
Johansen’s experience is one such discrepancy.
“We are going to have a full, robust hearing on how this process
happened and have the personal care assistants come forward to talk
about their experiences, and to talk about how it came to be that union
dues were taken out of their paycheck without their knowledge or
permission,” O’Neill, a Republican from Buffalo, said in an interview
with The Daily Signal.
The SEIU affiliate collects $4 million to $5 million in annual dues from
the Medicaid benefits paid to what Minnesota calls personal care
assistants, a lawyer representing them estimates.
The state government considers residents who care for chronically ill or
disabled relatives at home to be personal care assistants who are able
to receive Medicaid benefits for providing that care.
As The Daily Signal previously reported, a relatively small number of
Minnesota’s 27,000 eligible personal care assistants voted in favor of
an affiliate of Service Employees International Union, or SEIU, becoming
their representative in collective bargaining.
Now personal care assistants such as Johansen have banded together in an
effort to set a new election to decertify SEIU Healthcare Minnesota, in
part because of what their lawyers describe as questionable tactics and
the evidence of fraud.
The Minnesota Bureau of Mediation Services, a state agency that
describes itself as promoting “stable and constructive labor-management
relations,” has denied the caregivers’ petition for a new election.
O’Neill wants Commissioner Josh Tilsen, appointed in 2011 by Dayton, a
Democrat, to lead the bureau, to explain its pro-SEIU actions so far.
More
HERE
****************************
For more blog postings from me, see
TONGUE-TIED,
EDUCATION WATCH INTERNATIONAL,
GREENIE WATCH,
POLITICAL CORRECTNESS WATCH,
AUSTRALIAN POLITICS, and
Paralipomena (Occasionally updated), a
Coral reef compendium and
an IQ compendium. (Both updated as news items come in).
GUN WATCH is now mainly put together by Dean Weingarten. I also put up occasional updates on my
Personal blog and each day I gather together my most substantial current writings on
THE PSYCHOLOGIST.
Email me
here (Hotmail address). My Home Pages are
here (Academic) or
here (Pictorial) or
here (Personal)
***************************
9 April, 2017
An important victory
The media hopes it goes away unnoticed .... Another
win for Trump, another loss for Chuck Schumer, the Libtards, and the
media that said Trump couldn't get Gorsuch through the Senate.
But, he did, didn't he?
*****************************
Russia! Russia! Russia! from the Left -- A frantic attempt to cover up for the real crooks -- in the Obama administration.
And judging by his increased military preparations, the fact-free
hysteria has caused concern to Vladimir Vladimirovich. That most
of the loud voices in America seem to be both insane and hostile must
bother him. He must wonder whether Trump can override it
BY: ANN COULTER
The Susan Rice bombshell at least explains why the Democrats won’t stop
babbling about Russia. They need a false flag to justify using national
intelligence agencies to snoop on the Trump team.
Every serious person who has tried to locate any evidence that Russia
attempted to influence the 2016 election — even Trump-haters at the New
York Review of Books and Rolling Stone magazine — has come away
empty-handed and angry. We keep getting bald assertions, unadorned with
anything resembling a fact.
But for now, let’s just consider the raw plausibility of the story.
The fact-less claim is that (1) the Russians wanted Donald Trump to win;
and (2) They thought they could help him win by releasing purloined
emails from the Democratic National Committee showing that the Democrats
were conspiring against Hillary Clinton’s primary opponent, Bernie
Sanders.
First, why on earth would Russia prefer a loose cannon, untested
president like Trump to an utterly corrupt politician, who’d already
shown she could be bought? The more corrupt you think Russia is, the
more Putin ought to love Hillary as president.
The Russians knew Hillary was a joke from her ridiculous “reset” button
as secretary of state. They proceeded to acquire 20 percent of America’s
uranium production, under Hillary’s careful management — in exchange
for a half-million-dollar speaking engagement for her husband and
millions of dollars in donations to the Clinton Foundation.
More
HERE
********************************
Russia! Russia! Russia! no more?
Strike on Syria is Trump's most popular move yet -- Approval from around the world
One president blinked, the other didn’t. When Bashar al-Assad crossed
Barack Obama’s famous red line by using chemical weapons against his own
people, nothing happened to him. When he did it on Donald Trump’s
watch, he got hit with 59 Tomahawk missiles.
The Syrians are outraged at Trump’s actions; so are the Iranians; so are the Russians.
All of this might be good for Trump politically and in defining the character of his still inchoate presidency.
This US missile strike will have real effects — it destroyed a Syrian
air force base — but it is unlikely to change the underlying strategic
dynamics in Syria.
Trump and Secretary of State Rex Tillerson have been at pains to say
this does not represent a basic change of Syria policy from the US. The
missile strike was a one-off — as Malcolm Turnbull puts it, a calibrated
and proportionate response to a war crime.
It has three narrow purposes: to punish the Assad regime for using
chemical weapons; to show Assad that such actions will have costs; and
to deter him from doing such things in the future. The missile
strike has a very good chance of achieving all three of those aims.
It also has wider strategic consequences. It shows bad actors
everywhere that for all his domestic troubles, Trump remains a
dangerous President to cross.
Trump has appointed three generals to his cabinet. He loves the US military and plans to strengthen it considerably.
He is not indifferent to risk; certainly the generals around him will
have all the characteristic military caution about unnecessary military
action, but nor is he scared to exercise the military option.
The political success of this operation lies in its limited, proportionate nature.
Trump is not committing the US to any follow-up action, still less to
large numbers of US boots on the ground and a central role in shaping
Syria politically. He has switched from a few weeks ago believing that
the identity of the Syrian leader was a matter of indifference to the
US to saying now that Assad should go.
This is a real setback for the Syrian dictator who, despite the savagery
of his behaviour throughout the civil war, had won a kind of grudging
acceptance from realists in governments around the world.
Increasingly they had come to recognise that Assad could not be ousted
while he had Russian and Iranian support. More than that, they were
terrified of what might come after Assad.
The biggest risk in the missile strike was that it might unintentionally
kill Russians and provoke some kind of hot conflict between Russian and
American forces in Syria.
This was the greatest danger of escalation. The Americans have avoided
that. They told the Russian forces on the ground what they were doing in
advance and the strike was precisely targeted.
The Russians nonetheless don’t like it, but it is not in Moscow’s interests to escalate against Washington.
And it will be impossible for Trump’s opponents to argue any longer that
he is secretly acting in Russia’s interests. That may be a liberation
for Trump.
For all that, the Syrian tragedy will continue.
SOURCE
****************************
Trump's statement about the strike:
My fellow Americans: On Tuesday, Syrian dictator Bashar al-Assad
launched a horrible chemical weapons attack on innocent civilians.
Using a deadly nerve agent, Assad choked out the lives of helpless men,
women, and children. It was a slow and brutal death for so
many. Even beautiful babies were cruelly murdered in this very
barbaric attack. No child of God should ever suffer such horror.
Tonight, I ordered a targeted military strike on the airfield in Syria
from where the chemical attack was launched. It is in this vital
national security interest of the United States to prevent and deter the
spread and use of deadly chemical weapons. There can be no
dispute that Syria used banned chemical weapons, violated its
obligations under the Chemical Weapons Convention, and ignored the
urging of the U.N. Security Council.
Years of previous attempts at changing Assad’s behavior have all failed,
and failed very dramatically. As a result, the refugee crisis
continues to deepen and the region continues to destabilize, threatening
the United States and its allies.
Tonight, I call on all civilized nations to join us in seeking to end
the slaughter and bloodshed in Syria, and also to end terrorism of all
kinds and all types. We ask for God’s wisdom as we face the
challenge of our very troubled world. We pray for the lives of the
wounded and for the souls of those who have passed. And we hope
that as long as America stands for justice, then peace and harmony will,
in the end, prevail.
SOURCE
*******************************
12,392,000: U.S. Manufacturing Jobs Reach Highest Level in 8 Years
The United States added 11,000 jobs in manufacturing in March reaching a
total of 12,392,000 people employed in the manufacturing sector,
according to data released today by the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
That is the greatest number of people employed in manufacturing in the
United States since January 2009—the month that President Barack Obama
was inaugurated—when there were 12,561,000 people employed in
manufacturing.
In February 2009, manufacturing employment dropped to 12,380,000—a
number it did not exceed until February of this year, when it reached
12,381,000.
At the same time, according to BLS, the number of people employed in
government increased by 9,000 in March, climbing from 22,309,000 in
February to 22,318,000.
Since December 2016, the U.S. has gained 49,000 manufacturing jobs and 19,000 government jobs.
Government jobs in the United States in March still outnumbered manufacturing jobs by 9,926,000.
The number of manufacturing jobs in the United States peaked in June
1979 at 19,553,000. Since then, it has declined by 7,161,000 to the
12,392,000 reported for this March, according to the BLS numbers.
During the same time frame—from June 1979 to February 2017—the number of
government jobs grew from 16,045,000 to the current 22,318,000, an
increase of 6,273,000.
SOURCE
*******************************
Swedes not laughing now
Was Donald Trump right all along about Sweden's crime and immigration problems?
Just over six weeks after Donald Trump was mocked across the world for
suggesting that Sweden was the victim of a terror attack, at least three
people have been left dead when a hijacked truck ploughed into
pedestrians.
The American president's proclaimed attack - which turned out to be
fictitious - was linked to high levels of immigration and rising levels
of crime in the country he said, later clarifying that he had based his
comments on a Fox News report.
He was immediately ridiculed, with Carl Bildt, the former Swedish Prime
Minister asking "what has he been smoking?" and the country's US embassy
appeared to mock him on Twitter.
But yesterday the Swedish capital was hit by its own terrorist attack, with echoes of those in London, Berlin and Nice.
Integration has remained a problem in the country where the relatively
high numbers of immigrants compared to a population of just under 10
million means it has one of the highest rates of immigration per capita
in northern Europe.
The numbers have been rising steadily since the 1990s, and in 2015
Sweden accepted a record number of more than 160,000 refugees.
Meanwhile, in a report published in February last year the police
"identified 53 residential areas around the country that have become
increasingly marred by crime, social unrest and insecurity".
While the Government denies that these are "no-go zones", it admitted in
a rebuttal to the claims of Mr Trump that police "have experienced
difficulties fulfilling their duties".
SOURCE
****************************
For more blog postings from me, see
TONGUE-TIED,
EDUCATION WATCH INTERNATIONAL,
GREENIE WATCH,
POLITICAL CORRECTNESS WATCH,
AUSTRALIAN POLITICS, and
Paralipomena (Occasionally updated), a
Coral reef compendium and
an IQ compendium. (Both updated as news items come in).
GUN WATCH is now mainly put together by Dean Weingarten. I also put up occasional updates on my
Personal blog and each day I gather together my most substantial current writings on
THE PSYCHOLOGIST.
Email me
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7 April, 2017
Politics and IQ
Are smart people Left-leaning? There is some recent evidence to say so, though the correlation is weak.
A paper by Michael Woodley is therefore of interest ("Problematic constructs and cultural-mediation: A comment on Heaven, Ciarrochi and Leeson (2011)").
He surveys the literature and shows that the findings go both
ways. On some occasions Leftists score highest while on others
conservatives do.
He resolves that the way I do -- by saying that high IQ people are
quicker to figure out what is currently socially acceptable and say
that. At the moment being conservative is likely to bring a ton of
abuse ("racist") down on your head so it is no wonder that smart people
claim to be Leftist
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US healthcare: most people don't know what they're talking about
The article below is good at debunking some myths about U.S.
healthcare. It points out factors that distort the national
averages. It skips over the big one, however. National
averages are a poor guide to the health of most Americans. America
has two big minorities that tend to have poor health and which
therefore drag down the national averages. If the statistics for whites
only are extracted, they show average health levels that are among the
world's best
US healthcare is famous for three things: it's expensive, it's not
universal, and it has poor outcomes. The US spends around $7,000 per
person on healthcare every year, or roughly 18% of GDP; the next highest
spender is Switzerland, which spends about $4,500. Before Obamacare,
approx 15% of the US population were persistently uninsured (8.6% still
are). And as this chart neatly shows, their overall outcome on the most
important variable—overall life expectancy—is fairly poor.
But some of this criticism is wrongheaded and simplistic: when you slice
the data up more reasonably, US outcomes look impressive, but being the
world's outrider is much more expensive than following behind. What's
more, most of the solutions people offer just don't get to the heart of
the issue: if you give people freedom they'll spend a lot on healthcare.
The US undoubtedly spends a huge amount on healthcare. One popular
narrative is that because of market failures and/or extreme
overregulation in healthcare, prices are excessively high. So Americans
with insurance (or covered by Medicare, the universal system for the
elderly, or Medicaid, the government system for the poor) get the same
as other developed world citizens, but those without get very poor care
and die younger. A system like the NHS solves the problem, according to
this view, with bulk buying of land, labour, and inputs, better
incentives, and universal coverage.
But there are some serious flaws in this theory. Firstly, extending
insurance to the previously-uninsured doesn't, in America, seem to have
large benefits. For example, a recent NBER paper found no overall health
gains from the massive insurance expansion under Obamacare.* A famous
RAND study found minuscule benefits over decades from giving out free
insurance to previously uninsured in the 1970s. In fact, over and above
the basics, insuring those who choose not to get insurance doesn't ever
seem to have large gains. Indeed, there is wide geographic variation in
the life expectancy among the low income in the US, but this doesn't
even correlate with access to medical care! This makes it unlikely that
the gap between the US and the rest is explained by universality.
To find the answer, consider the main two ingredients that go into
health outcomes. One is health, and the other is treatment. If latent
health is the same across the Western world, we can presume that any
differences come from differences in treatment. But this is simply not
the case. Obesity is far higher in the USA than in any other major
developed country. Obviously it is a public health problem, but it's
unrealistic to blame it on the US system of paying for doctors,
administrators, hospitals, equipment and drugs.
In fact in the US case it's not even obesity, or indeed their greater
pre-existing disease burden, that is doing most of the work in dragging
their life expectancy down; it's accidental and violent deaths. It is
tragic that the US is so dangerous, but it's not the fault of the
healthcare system; indeed, it's an extra burden that US healthcare
spending must bear. Just simply normalising for violent and accidental
death puts the USA right to the top of the life expectancy rankings.
This is what we'd expect if we approached the topic more honestly, and
dug into the detail of healthcare stats. You might think—you might
think!—that this is what international healthcare rankings like those
from the WHO or the Commonwealth Fund do. Not so. The WHO just looks at a
corrected life expectancy measure, but not one corrected for any of the
factors which attempt to isolate the impact of healthcare. The
Commonwealth Fund's is a mix of high level aggregate measures like
physicians per capita and a survey asking people around the world
questions like whether "Doctor or other clinical staff talked with
patient about a healthy diet and healthy eating". Neither are useless,
but they are not the real deal.
Academic papers that drill down into the detail find that the US does
well in cancer survival, heart attack and stroke survival, and
successfully medicating those with long-term conditions such as
diabetes. In fact, when the Commonwealth Fund did this sort of analysis
themselves decades ago, the US ranked among the best of countries. This
is partly because the US has much more advanced equipment, partly
because it funds more costly treatments in general, and partly because
it funds the newest treatments, when their marginal costs are often
stratospheric. This may subsidise medical research for everyone else.
Now this is not to say the US system works well. The fact that the US
spends vastly more than everyone else, and only does a bit better, if
that, makes the system pretty unimpressive. But it's important to
understand why. The UK really does have "death panels" that refuse
treatments because they're extremely costly relative to their tiny
impact. The USA has a system where most people can buy—are even
subsidised through the tax system to buy—insurance that is as extensive
as they like, paying for ever more expensive and marginally beneficial
therapies. Eventually you're spending a fifth of your GDP on it.
Maybe if the US government straightened things out—scrapped the
incentives that push people to get too much healthcare and deregulated
the system to increase competition and push down costs the US would
spend a more rational share of its income on health. I think this is
pretty likely. But I bet the gap wouldn't go away fully. Americans just
have a lot of cash, and want to spend an increasing share of it on their
wellbeing as they get even richer. As long as the system is mostly
open, I'd expect that to continue.
SOURCE
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Levin: Progressivism, Statism 'Is a Poison for Power'
Talking about the judicial branch of government on his nationally
syndicated radio talk show program, host Mark Levin suggested that the
leftists would use the court to gain power, saying that progressivism,
statism “is a poison for power.”
“[P]rogressivism, or as I call it, statism, but either way, is a
poison,” stated Mark Levin. “It is a poison, and it is a poison for
power.”
Levin’s comments come as Judge Neil Gorsuch awaits confirmation this
week in Washington DC. Below is a transcript of Mark Levin’s
comments from his show:
“You need to know, and I know you do, that progressivism, or as I call
it, statism, but either way, is a poison. It is a poison, and it is a
poison for power.
“And you’ll learn all about it and a heck of a lot more in “Rediscovering Americanism,” but I want to stay on this.
“The leftists decided, the statists decided more than 100 years ago that
the key institution that would be used to alter the American landscape,
the constitutional landscape, the American culture with rugged
individualism, the American psychology of freedom would be the courts.
“First, you needed an all-powerful president, and then you need an
all-powerful president who would change the judiciary. And that’s
exactly what happened – in big chunks, starting in the 1900s, the early
1900s, and then a massive leap with Franklin Roosevelt. “And it’s never
stopped.”
SOURCE
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Benign neglect: How Hong Kong prospered
The power of do-nothing government
Hong Kong could easily be described as the most neoliberal country in the world — a paragon of neoliberal success.
The story of Hong Kong’s growth is both long and fascinating, and could
not be done justice in a mere blogpost. But there is one man who is
worth mentioning, who has much responsibility for making Hong Kong into
what it is today, and yet is all too often forgotten.
John J. Cowperthwaite is not likely a name that you will remember from
your history lessons. In fact, it is not likely a name that you will
remember at all. He is arguably one of history’s most unsung heroes, and
that is a great shame, for he was absolutely instrumental in not only
taking Hong Kong’s economy from strength to strength after the Second
World War, but also in showing the world that laissez faire economics is
workable and brings results.
Milton Friedman said “it would be hard to overestimate the debt that
Hong Kong owes to Cowperthwaite”. But he was by no means a
self-important man. He had a reputation for being shy, and as an
appointed civil servant, he owed no favours to anyone. He arrived in
Hong Kong in 1946 as the Assistant financial secretary, with
instructions to “come up with a plan for economic growth”. But he came
up with no plan, and yet the economy grew. It grew astoundingly. In the
decade that he was financial secretary, wages rose by 50% and the
percentage of those living in poverty in Hong Kong plummeted from 50 to
15%.
What did this son of a Scottish tax collector do to propel so many into
prosperity? The answer is that he didn’t do anything. When a British
executive approached Cowperthwaite to ask him to develop the merchant
banking industry, Cowperthwaite politely palmed him off and told him
that he had better find a merchant banker. Similarly, when a legislator
suggested to Cowperthwaite that the government should prioritise the
development of promising industries, Cowperthwaite refused and asked how
the government could possibly know which businesses had potential and
which did not.
Cowperthwaite flat out refused to collect most economic statistics, from
fear that doing so would give bureaucrats and legislators an excuse to
meddle in the economy. Of course, this caused upset in Whitehall, and
when they commanded a group of civil servants to go over and see just
what the hell was going on, Cowperthwaite sent them home as soon as they
arrived. Yet still from 1945 to 1997 Hong Kong ran a surplus every
financial year – surprising all involved because the surpluses were not
planned. Rather, they arose as a result of the market being left free.
It was slightly unfair of me to state that John Cowperthwaite “didn’t do
anything”. For though his success was largely down to his
non-interventionism, ensuring that there was no intervention was
backbreaking work. People were always trying to tinker with the economy.
But Cowperthwaite maintained: “in the long run, the aggregate of the
decisions of individual businessmen, exercising individual judgment in a
free economy, even if often mistaken, is likely to do less harm than
the centralized decisions of a Government; and certainly the harm is
likely to be counteracted faster.”
Today Hong Kong has a GDP per capita at 264% of the world's average,
which has doubled in the last 15 years. The World Bank now rates the
“ease of doing business” in Hong Kong as the best in the world. It has
no taxes on capital gains, interest income or earnings from abroad. Its
overall tax burden is just half of that of the United States. Its people
are rich and its government small, and for this reason, it makes a
fitting cover for our latest paper, but for this reason also, we should
be thankful to John J Cowperthwaite.
SOURCE
****************************
For more blog postings from me, see
TONGUE-TIED,
EDUCATION WATCH INTERNATIONAL,
GREENIE WATCH,
POLITICAL CORRECTNESS WATCH,
AUSTRALIAN POLITICS, and
Paralipomena (Occasionally updated), a
Coral reef compendium and
an IQ compendium. (Both updated as news items come in).
GUN WATCH is now mainly put together by Dean Weingarten. I also put up occasional updates on my
Personal blog and each day I gather together my most substantial current writings on
THE PSYCHOLOGIST.
Email me
here (Hotmail address). My Home Pages are
here (Academic) or
here (Pictorial) or
here (Personal)
***************************
6 April, 2017
‘Shameful’ Media Defense of Susan Rice in Unmasking Scandal
Liberals in the media are scrambling to cover for the revelation
that Barack Obama’s former National Security Adviser, Susan Rice,
unmasked Donald Trump associates in classified intelligence. Media
Research Center President Brent Bozell issued the following statement:
“The liberal media’s ‘nothing to see here’ approach to Susan Rice’s
politically-motivated unmasking of Trump associates in sensitive
intelligence material is shameful. You’d think someone who lied to the
press and the American people about her role in the unmasking just two
weeks ago would invite more scrutiny. We have a smoking gun that points
to criminal activity by President Obama’s national security advisor and
the media have shown an utter lack of interest in pursuing the story. If
this story is not a top priority for every news outlet, they are aiding
and abetting a cover-up. President Trump has every right to be furious
with the press and the American people have every reason to be
disgusted."
SOURCE
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Limited Government is Important -- and Trump is actually limiting it
Fewer than 70 days into the new administration and some in the media are
already writing and talking about the "do-nothing" Congress and
presidential administration, which critics allege have yet to accomplish
anything significant.
Regardless of what you might hear from their critics, you shouldn't
believe these baseless accusations. In less than three months, President
Trump and Congress have done a lot. Most of their early actions are
getting relatively no attention, however, which is occurring for a
number of reasons, including the fact most members of the mainstream
media are big-government liberals who dislike Mr. Trump and Congress for
what they've achieved.
The laws passed and executive orders issued by Mr. Trump and
congressional Republicans are substantially different than those actions
taken by most previous administrations. Rather than expand the size and
scope of the federal government, Mr. Trump and the GOP have worked to
reduce government's influence on society - in large part by reversing or
blocking "midnight" regulations enacted by Obama administration
officials before they finally made their way out the door at 1600
Pennsylvania Avenue in January.
Republicans have long-claimed their party is the champion of limited
government, but since Ronald Reagan was president in 1980s, they have
done relatively little to back up the claim. Instead, Republican
presidents have often pushed their own brand of activism that grew
government, including No Child Left Behind, the creation of the
Transportation Security Administration, the expansion of prescription
drug coverage, a ban on imported semi-automatic rifles, and the creation
of the U.N. Framework Convention on Climate Change.
When Republican presidents weren't busy doing their best impression of
big-government Democrats, Republican-controlled Congresses repeatedly
failed to block regulations they said are illegal and passed budgets
that increased government's power and control.
Thus far, this trend seems to have halted with the Trump administration.
Mr. Trump issued an executive order that ultimately ensured the
completion of the Dakota Access Pipeline, a project President Barack
Obama blocked in the waning days of his administration to appease his
radical environmental allies.
Mr. Trump also issued an executive order to force reconsideration of the
Environmental Protection Agency's (EPA) Waters of the United States
(WOTUS) rule, which would have greatly expanded the federal government's
control over private property across the United States. Federal courts
had previously stayed WOTUS, out of the suspicion it unconstitutionally
ignored previous Supreme Court wetlands decisions. Now, Trump ordered
EPA to reconsider the rule and has decided not to defend it in court.
Arguably the most far-reaching executive order Mr. Trump has issued is
his directive for all administrative agencies to remove two regulations
for each new regulation they issue.
On the budget front, Mr. Trump has proposed cutting the budgets of the
vast majority of the existing regulatory agencies. For instance, he
proposed cutting EPA's budget by more than 25 percent and reducing the
agency's staff by 20 percent. In the process, Trump would end all of
EPA's climate programs.
Other agencies and cabinet offices would also see significant cuts,
including a nearly 29 percent cut to the State Department's budget and
an approximately 12 percent cut to the Department of the Interior.
Mr. Trump seems intent to do what he has promised - which greatly
conflicts with what other so-called conservatives before him have done -
forcing government to focus on its core functions. No more funding for
the arts, public television, green-energy boondoggles, or international
climate programs on Mr. Trump's watch.
Congress has had the power to review and block major regulations since
it passed the Congressional Review Act (CRA) in 1996, but it has rarely
used it. CRA allows the House and the Senate to pass resolutions of
disapproval to block major regulations issued by federal agencies.
Despite tens of thousands of regulations being enacted in the 20 years
since CRA passed, Congress has used it only three times to block new
rules, and only once has a president signed the resolution. (Mr. Obama
vetoed the two disapproval resolutions passed during his presidency.)
Mr. Trump's ascendance seems to finally have stiffened Congress'
backbone, because the House and Senate are now using the CRA with a
vengeance. Congress has sent more than a half-dozen CRA resolutions
disapproving late-term Obama administration regulations to Trump for his
signature, and, incredibly, he's actually signing them.
Using the CRA, Congress blocked a regulation forcing local school
districts to adopt specific federal teacher-preparation programs and
directions for how states and school districts must evaluate and report
school performance. Congress also prevented regulations that would have
taken away senior citizens' Second Amendment rights if they need help
managing their finances.
In its first use of the CRA under Mr. Trump, Congress halted a rule
imposed by Mr. Obama that would have unnecessarily threatened over
one-third of the nation's coal-mining jobs. Despite the Interior
Department's own reports showing virtually all coal mines have no
off-site impacts and lands are being restored successfully under
existing federal and state regulations, Mr. Obama tried to institute a
so-called "stream protection rule," which would have forced the revision
of more than 400 regulations.
Contrary to what is being reported, Mr. Trump and Congress are quickly
working to achieve one of their most important goals: limiting the size
and power of the federal government over people's lives. And in doing
so, they are keeping the commitment they made when they took the oath of
office, which requires they uphold and defend the Constitution of the
United States.
Let's hope the progress continues.
SOURCE
*****************************
What Congress Can Learn From the Rhode Island Miracle
You’d be hard-pressed to find a more poorly designed program in the
federal budget than Medicaid, the health insurance program for
low-income Americans. The costs are shared between the states and the
feds, which means that the more money a state wastes under Medicaid, the
bigger the check Washington writes to the state. No wonder the program
costs keep spiraling out of control.
Obamacare added nearly 20 million people to the Medicaid rolls, and the
Left considers that a policy victory. Federal and state budgets are
swelling.
Oh, to return to the days when taking people off of welfare — not putting them on the dole — was the goal.
Conservatives have argued that Medicaid’s management should be turned
over to the states through a block-grant allotment of funds. When
Republicans proposed this in their Obamacare replacement bill, liberals
blew a gasket. They hate the notion of allowing governors to run the
program in their states as the governors see fit, free of the thicket of
cumbersome federal rules. The Left portrays the idea as heartless and a
scheme to rip a hole in the safety net.
In reality, block granting Medicaid to the states would likely add a new
incentive structure to control costs while holding state lawmakers
accountable for delivering quality care. Medicaid doesn’t do that right
now. It delivers subpar care, with many top hospitals and treatment
centers refusing to take Medicaid patients.
We already have a wonderful case study of a state running its own
Medicaid program, and Congress and the White House should aim to
duplicate this success story.
I am referring to the under-publicized Rhode Island experiment of a few
years ago. In 2009, Rhode Island received a waiver from federal Medicaid
rules in exchange for a cap on federal costs.
It worked like a charm. A 2013 analysis by Gary Alexander, the former
secretary of Rhode Island’s Health and Human Services, found that in the
first four years the state’s annual cost increases dropped to less than
half of the national pace.
When Rhode Island received its Medicaid waiver, 1 of every 5 residents
was enrolled, and costs were growing by 7.5 percent annually. Under the
waiver, the state’s official Medicaid documents show, costs rose an
average of only 1.3 percent a year from 2009 to 2012 — far below the 4.6
percent rate in the other 49 states.
Rhode Island saved money by reducing the amount of emergency-room visits
by Medicaid recipients for routine medical needs. The state saved even
more by shifting the elderly out of expensive nursing homes, offering
home-care subsidies and promoting assisted-living arrangements. Seniors
often would rather avoid institutionalization, making this a win-win.
An independent assessment by the economic consulting firm Lewin Group
concluded that reforms allowed under the waiver were “highly effective
in controlling Medicaid costs.” The program was found to have “improved
access to more appropriate services.”
Alexander has become the Pied Piper for Medicaid waivers. “This is such a
terrific solution because in Rhode Island we reduced costs and provided
better care. When the state had an incentive to save money rather than
spend it, this changed everything.” He added, “State waivers are the way
out of the Medicaid crisis.”
But the Left and the Washington bureaucrats don’t want to surrender
control of the program. They want a universal, one-size-fits-all
solution. We know from welfare reform in the mid-1990s (with work
requirements, time limits and training programs) that turning control
over to the states will lead to innovative solutions that improve
people’s lives — and save money. Why can’t that success happen with
health care?
Republicans should continue to insist on solutions to Medicaid that
provide some federal funding but allow states maximum flexibility. The
GOP block grant makes financial sense and will help ensure that Medicaid
doesn’t bankrupt Washington and the 50 states.
The Trump administration doesn’t need to wait. It can start this program
tomorrow, simply by putting out word that it will issue Rhode
Island-style Medicaid waivers to states that apply. The White House has
full authority to do this, and many states will line up for the offer.
One big advocate for this is Vice President Mike Pence. Back when Pence
was governor of Indiana, he told me: “If Washington would give me 80
percent of the Medicaid money they now send Indiana but got rid of the
red tape and regulations, I would take that deal in a minute.” Donald
Trump should listen to his vice president and let the Rhode Island
miracle take hold in every state in the nation.
SOURCE
****************************
Liberal logic yet again
Hatred of the rest of us is all they know
****************************
For more blog postings from me, see
TONGUE-TIED,
EDUCATION WATCH INTERNATIONAL,
GREENIE WATCH,
POLITICAL CORRECTNESS WATCH,
AUSTRALIAN POLITICS, and
Paralipomena (Occasionally updated), a
Coral reef compendium and
an IQ compendium. (Both updated as news items come in).
GUN WATCH is now mainly put together by Dean Weingarten. I also put up occasional updates on my
Personal blog and each day I gather together my most substantial current writings on
THE PSYCHOLOGIST.
Email me
here (Hotmail address). My Home Pages are
here (Academic) or
here (Pictorial) or
here (Personal)
***************************
5 April, 2017
Don’t ask cronies to reform crony capitalism
MARTIN HUTCHINSON
Paul Ryan’s health care “reform” bill was defeated last week without
even receiving a vote in the House of Representatives, in spite of the
care he had taken to get input from the health insurance industry. That
was the problem. In a crony capitalist system, where bad lobbyist-pushed
laws and regulations have poured illicit profits into the pockets of
oligopolists, the oligopolists are the last people to consult on how to
reform those laws. The same dynamic is visible in monetary policy, in
bank regulation and in corporate and individual tax. We are a long way
from true free-market capitalism, and we won’t get there by consulting
the current crony “capitalists.”
Healthcare is a classic example. U.S. healthcare costs 18% of GDP,
compared to 12% in the next-highest cost countries, France, Sweden and
Switzerland, 11% in Germany and Canada, 10% in Japan and 9% in Britain
and Australia. Effectively, the U.S. government pays as much for
healthcare as Britain’s state-run system, then private American citizens
pay the same amount all over again. The U.S. gets nothing extra in
terms of outcomes for all this expenditure; indeed U.S. indicators of
healthcare results, such as life expectancy, are distinctly mediocre by
rich-world standards.
Whatever your political view on who should pay for what, getting the
United States’ appallingly high healthcare costs down to those of its
competitors should surely be the top priority, indeed more or less the
only priority, in any healthcare system reform.
Paul Ryan’s American Health Care Act achieved essentially nothing in the
way of cost control. It claimed to do so, replacing Medicaid by a
system of “block grants” to the states, but that change does not
actually reduce the cost of healthcare at all, it merely shifts it from
the Federal government to the states and, inevitably, to America’s less
wealthy citizens who depend on Medicaid.
The legislation did nothing about the trial lawyer blight, it kept all
Obamacare’s cost-increasing regulations in place, it did not provide for
insurers bidding across state lines and it did not remove the egregious
1986 emergency room mandate, by which hospital emergency rooms must
treat indigent patients without limit and without receiving any kind of
compensation from the state that mandates this nonsense. Without proper
cost-reducing measures, the legislation was essentially useless; its 17%
approval in the polls was probably higher than would have been achieved
once the public discovered what a colossal waste of Congressional time
it had been.
The reason for the Ryan bill’s poor quality is that it was designed
after extensive discussions with the insurance industry and other
beneficiaries of the current system. Ryan is a champion fund-raiser and
much admired as a “policy wonk”, largely because of the care he takes to
consult the special interests before proposing new policies. Thus, the
provisions that might make a serious dent in insurance company incomes
were missing from Ryan’s bill, as were provisions that would collapse
the cost of medical care overall, reducing the economic rents that
health insurers, hospital chains, trial lawyers and others could
extract.
This is not a problem limited to healthcare. We are likely to get
another almost perfect example of it when Ryan unveils his corporate tax
reform plan. While it may include some form of “border adjustment tax”,
favored by President Trump, which redistributes income from retailers
to manufacturers, it’s likely that the main feature of it will be the
abandonment of worldwide taxation and a movement to “territoriality” in
corporate tax, by which corporations will pay U.S. corporate income tax
only on U.S. income.
This is a move in precisely the wrong direction. The economically
neutral and efficient means of taxing multinationals would tax all
worldwide income, without any deferral of income earned overseas, but
with a full tax credit for taxes paid overseas. The United States has
never had this system; corporations’ overseas income is deferred from
tax until it is remitted to the United States, under “Subpart F”
legislation introduced in 1962.
Thus, we have a system in which U.S. corporations have stashed over $2
trillion overseas to avoid taxes, and companies such as Apple are
borrowing domestically to pay dividends and engage in economically
damaging repurchases of stock, while keeping ziggurats of cash offshore.
The current system makes no sense at all. It encourages companies to
invest overseas, by giving them the potential to avoid tax on the
investment, thus discriminating against domestic investment, precisely
the problem against which Trump rightly rails. It is also grossly unfair
to U.S. individual taxpayers, who have only a very limited ability to
use this loophole. U.S. taxpayers who earn income overseas, as I did for
some years, must pay full U.S. tax (and in some cases, state tax) on
that income, with a modest $75,000 foreign earned income exemption.
What’s more if they attempt to keep their own money overseas tax free,
in a tax haven bank account, the U.S Treasury goes after the foreign
banks, with a spurious excuse of finding terrorist funding, and subjects
the taxpayers to threats of imprisonment.
The corporate tax bill Ryan is likely to propose, as favored by
corporatist lobbyists from the Wall Street Journal down, would make this
economic insanity worse, by allowing all foreign income to be fully
exempt from U.S. corporate tax. Of course, the first effect of this
would be a “giant sucking sound” of money rushing out of the U.S. into
tax havens for spurious foreign investment, doubtless leveraged to the
eyeballs by Fed-induced cheap money.
There are other examples of this. President Trump’s economic crew, made
up largely of alumni of Goldman Sachs, are unlikely to reform the
disgraceful Fed funny-money policies that have distorted resource
allocation and destroyed productivity growth for the last decade. They
are also likely to gut banking regulations that restrict the insane
amount of leverage in the system, while retaining those that add cost
and bureaucracy, which provide useful barriers to entry against new and
smaller competitors.
We are also likely to see this problem in the Trump administration’s
“reform” of individual taxes. It may well be inspired by President
Reagan’s 1986 tax law, which reduced rates of tax by eliminating
deductions. It may well eliminate the deductions relied upon by the
upper middle class, for home mortgage interest and state and local
taxes. But you can be absolutely sure that, guided as they will be by
the billionaires in the political donor class, the tax law’s drafters
will not reform the true source of inequality and scams: the charitable
tax deduction. This serves the combined purpose of funding a myriad of
sleazy left wing agitators and allowing the ultra-rich to finance their
lifestyles tax-free through foundations such as the Clintons’ while the
merely mega-rich on the two coasts tax-deduct their repulsive social
climbing and networking through charity dinners.
There is an overall principle here, and it should be pretty obvious.
Once an economic system has moved away from a free market, usually
through legislation drafted by panicky and economically illiterate
leftists given license by a war or an economic crisis, it creates crony
capitalists. These benefit from the new restrictions and build
businesses optimized for the restrictions that the laws and regulations
have introduced. Very often, as in the case of medical care and modern
financial services, the new system absorbs a far larger share of GDP
than would the equivalent activity in a free market, with the result
that new avenues are opened up for crony capitalists to generate
extraordinary levels of profits, while the old free-market businesses
are squeezed out of existence.
This happened most visibly in Britain after the 1986 Financial Services
Act, when the merchant banks, which had provided sophisticated financial
services worldwide, some of them for as long as 200 years at modest
economic cost, were within a decade squeezed out by foreign behemoths.
The behemoths were much larger (and so less efficient) because of the
compliance costs they were forced to absorb, which increased the
economic share absorbed by the financial services businesses and their
practitioners, while destroying the quality of service that the merchant
banks had provided.
Similarly in U.S. healthcare, a business with which I am less familiar,
the addition of regulations after 1960 took away the family doctors and
small hospitals that had provided good cost-effective services, and
pushed the business towards large bureaucratic hospital chains, with
teams of lawyers attached to resist shyster lawsuits, plus an entirely
new and unnecessary layer of health insurance companies that exist
purely to shuffle paper and intermediate between patients and health
services providers. As in finance, these new “crony capitalists” have no
interest whatever in dismantling the system under which they have grown
rich.
Every now and then a government is elected that wants to return, at
least partially, to a free market system. To do so, that government must
dismantle a host of regulations which in many sectors have destroyed
the free market and replaced it with a crony capitalist rent-seeking
cabal. The free-market-seeking government will face huge opposition from
the crony capitalists, as well as from the myriad of citizens who
benefit from heavy regulation, high taxes and government control, or are
ideologically in favor of them.
To win through, a free-market government will need to draft the new laws
itself, and not rely on crony capitalist help, however generous the
crony capitalists may be as political donors. If Paul Ryan is a major
political fund-raiser, he should not be allowed near the drafting of
free-market legislation.
SOURCE
****************************
Meals on Wheels Outrage is Based on a Lie
It made for great copy—irresistibly clickable and compulsively
shareable. “Trump’s Budget Would Kill a Program That Feeds 2.4 Million
Senior Citizens,” blared Time’s headline. “Trump Proposed Budget
Eliminates Funds for Meals on Wheels,” claimed The Hill, in a piece that
got 26,000 shares.
But it was false. And it wouldn’t have taken long for reporters to find
and provide some needed context to the relationship between federal
block grant programs, specifically Community Development Block Grants
(CDBG), and the popular Meals on Wheels program.
Funding Has Not Been Cut
From Thursday’s conversation in the press, it was easy to assume that
block grant programs—CDBG and similar block grants for community
services and social services—are the main source of federal funding for
Meals on Wheels. Not so.
Instead, as the national Meals on Wheels site explains, the major source
of federal funding for the programs, accounting for 35 percent of
overall local budgets, comes through the Sixties-era Older Americans
Act. (Local programs also obtain support from state and county
governments, private donors, and so on.)
According to the website, cuts have not been announced in Older
Americans Act funding, although the group fears that they may lie ahead.
So where do the federal block grant programs come in? Well, they give
states and localities a lot of discretion on where to allocate the
money, one option is to add money to supplement Meals on Wheels funding.
Some do use it for that purpose.
But as Scott Shackford makes clear in his new piece for Reason, that
isn’t what CDBG is mostly about. CDBG funds regularly go into
pork-barrel and business-subsidy schemes with a cronyish flavor. That’s
why the program has been a prime target for budget-cutters for decades,
in administration after administration.
It’s important to the CDBG program’s political durability that its
grantees wind up sprinkling a bit of extra money on popular programs
mostly funded by other means. That way, defenders can argue that the
block grants “fund programs like Meals on Wheels.”
That’s what happened in the press this week.
Outrage Over Nothing
The New York Times got things rolling by reporting that the new budget
proposes “the complete elimination of the $3 billion Community
Development Block Grant program, which funds popular programs like Meals
on Wheels, housing assistance and other community assistance efforts.”
CNN’s Jake Tapper then boiled it down to a tweet: “On chopping block: $3
billion Community Development Block Grant program, which funds programs
like Meals on Wheels.”
Meals on Wheels’s own national website, meanwhile, quotes its CEO and
president Ellie Hollander being appropriately cautious and conditional:
“We don’t know the exact impact yet,” she said. Big cuts “would be a
devastating blow.” According to the website, “Details on our network’s
primary source of funding, the Older Americans Act, which has supported
senior nutrition programs for 45 years, have not yet been released.”
Most of the major press coverage Thursday had nothing at all to say
about the OAA, which would only have complicated the shock headlines.
And social media burned all day with indignant posts that seemed unaware
that no cuts had been announced as of yet in the main program that
funds Meals on Wheels.
One reason was the press conference at which budget director Mick
Mulvaney faced a host of questions about the new budget release, with
Peter Alexander of NBC News pressing him especially hard on the
aren’t-you-trying-to-cut-things-like-Meals-on-Wheels angle.
Mulvaney repeatedly tried to switch the conversation over to the
shortcomings of the wider CDBG program, and did not bring up the point
about OAA funding at all. Amid further awkward exchanges, Mulvaney spoke
about how social programs had often not been shown to have benefits.
A charitable reading of his intended point was that activities funded by
block grants in general often lack any proof of positive effect; a less
charitable reading was that he was trying to single out Meals on Wheels
in particular as an endeavor of no proven use to anyone. (A middle
ground, I suppose, would have been to call his office for a
clarification.) No prizes for guessing which direction the press, from
MSNBC to New York magazine, chose to take for its headlines.
SOURCE
****************************
For more blog postings from me, see
TONGUE-TIED,
EDUCATION WATCH INTERNATIONAL,
GREENIE WATCH,
POLITICAL CORRECTNESS WATCH,
AUSTRALIAN POLITICS, and
Paralipomena (Occasionally updated), a
Coral reef compendium and
an IQ compendium. (Both updated as news items come in).
GUN WATCH is now mainly put together by Dean Weingarten. I also put up occasional updates on my
Personal blog and each day I gather together my most substantial current writings on
THE PSYCHOLOGIST.
Email me
here (Hotmail address). My Home Pages are
here (Academic) or
here (Pictorial) or
here (Personal)
***************************
4 April, 2017
A revolt against deference
Frank Furedi
People aren’t rejecting truth – they’re rejecting the values of the elites
When political commentators talk of the emergence of a post-truth world,
they are really lamenting the end of an era when the truths promoted by
the institutions of the state and media were rarely challenged. It’s a
lament that’s been coming for a few years now. Each revolt of sections
of the public against the values of the elites has been met with the
riposte that people are no longer interested in the truth. What the
elites really mean is that people don’t care about their version of the
truth. So when the French celebrity philosopher Bernard-Henri Levy
asserted that people have ‘lost interest in whether politicians tell the
truth’, he was venting his frustration at an electorate that no longer
shares his values.
Today’s elite angst about so-called post-fact or post-truth public
discourse is but the latest version of an historical struggle – a
struggle over the question of who possesses moral and intellectual
authority. Indeed, the rejection of the values and outlook of the
holders of cultural power in many Western societies has long been
portrayed as a rejection of truth itself. The reason elite values have
been enshrined as ‘the truth’, right from the Ancient Greeks onwards, is
because the rulers of society need to secure the deference of the
masses. The masses are being encouraged to defer not to the power of the
elites, but to the truth of elite values.
That this is not widely understood is due to contemporary society’s
reluctance to acknowledge that cultural and political life still relies
on the deference of the public – passive or active – to the values and
moral authority of the elites. The term ‘deference’ – ‘submission to the
acknowledged superior claims, skill, judgement or other qualities of
another’, as the OED defines it – suggests a non-coercive act of
obedience to authority. Hence it was frequently coupled with terms such
as instinct, custom and habit (1). In the 19th century, it was
frequently used to imply people’s willingness to accept and bow down
before the elites on the basis of their superior wisdom. Deference
presumed the intellectual and moral hegemony of the educated middle
class, or cultural elite, over the wider public.
In recent decades it has been suggested that the era of deference is
over. We are told that people are far too critical to defer to the
superior wisdom of others. In this context, the idea of deference has
acquired negative connotations, and is often identified with uncritical
thinking. However, in practice, deference is still demanded by elites.
But it is demanded in the form of calls to respect the authority of the
expert, because he speaks the truth. So, in almost every domain of human
experience, the expert is presented as the producer not just of facts,
but also of the truth. Those who fail to defer to experts risk being
denounced as irrational, superstitious or just plain stupid. Hence, in
2001, the consummate cynic, Michael Moore, could ask his educated
American readers: ‘Do you feel like you live in a nation of idiots?’
Moore knew that his readers would share his contempt for their moral
inferiors (2). Today, many sections of the commentariat share Moore’s
disdain, and portray people’s rejection of their values, and with it
their cultural authority, as something other than it is – that is, as a
rejection of facts and truth.
Historically, concern about what is now called fake news and post-truth
politics was bound up with a worry about the capacity of ordinary people
to discriminate between what the cultural elites interpreted as the
truth and other versions of reality. It was Plato, writing through the
figure of Socrates, who first raised the alarm about the threat to
truth, as he saw it, posed by the invention of reading and writing.
Socrates feared that written ideas, unlike verbal communication, could
acquire a life of their own, and ‘roam about everywhere’. Writing does
not discern between readers who can understand and benefit from a
communication and those who will become misled and confused by it. He
warned that writing reaches those with ‘understanding’ no less than
‘those who have no business with it’ (3). In line with the paternalistic
worldview of his era, Socrates assumed that in the wrong hands, a
little knowledge was a threat to the social order.
Socrates’ disapproval of the written text was based, in part, on a
conviction that the pursuit of the truth was so demanding that only a
few Athenian citizens could be trusted with its undertaking. He insisted
that knowledge ‘is not something that can be put into words like other
sciences’; it is only ‘after long-continued intercourse between teacher
and pupil, in joint pursuit of the subject’ that true knowledge finds
its way to the soul (4). Plato’s main concern appears to have been not
so much the written text, but its circulation among a mass audience.
In today’s self-consciously inclusive democratic public culture,
Socrates’ inclination to restrict people’s freedom to read material of
their own choosing and in circumstances of their own making would be
seen as anathema. Yet even in the 21st century, the public is often
represented as a mass of powerless victims of media manipulation. They
have been led astray by tabloid journalism or by the subliminal
techniques of advertisers, we are told. Such concerns have become
amplified in the age of the internet. And now, after the apparent
rejection of the cultural values of the political establishment by
populist movements, concern with the supposedly fragile status of the
truth often assumes the form of a moral panic.
Socrates’ critique of the capacity of the people to distinguish between
truth and falsehood led him to invest his faith in the authority of the
would-be experts of the day – or, as he imagined them, ‘philosopher
guardians’. He derided the authority of the Athenian demos, and argued
that the people lacked the intellectual resources required to grasp the
truth. In some of the comments attributed to him in the Apology, what he
seeks is not opinion but ‘opinions that are better informed and more
completely thought through’ (5). Consequently, Socrates offered an
unambiguous argument for deference to expertise.
As he put it, if society is ready to defer to the views of experts and
ignore the opinion of ordinary folk on technical matters such as
shipbuilding and architecture, why is it not prepared to defer to
experts on political matters? In his dialogue with Protagoras, Socrates
states that ‘when it is something to do with the government of the
country that is to be debated, the man who gets up to advise [people]
may be a builder or equally well a blacksmith or a shoemaker, a merchant
or ship owner, rich or poor, of good family or none’ (6). Socrates took
the view that the people could not be trusted to find their way to the
truth. As far as he is concerned, what most people think on political
matters is far less important than the views of the one man who really
understands the issues at stake – the expert (7).
Socrates believed that in the domain of politics, there was a need for
men who possessed the wisdom to grasp what is true. Although he looked
to the authority of the moral expert to guide people towards the truth,
he was at a loss to explain where such special individuals could be
found. It is only in modern times, when the focus shifted from the moral
expertise of the philosopher to the factual expertise of the scientist,
that the quest for a political expert has been resolved.
Deference to the expert
Public life in Western societies is underpinned by the assumption that
people will defer to the opinion of an expert. Politicians frequently
remind us that their policies are ‘evidence-based’, which usually means
informed by expert advice. Experts have the last word on topics of
public interest and increasingly on matters to do with people’s private
affairs. The exhortation to defer to experts is underpinned by the
premise that their specialist knowledge entitles them to a higher moral
status than the rest of us.
In the 19th century there was an ascendancy of the expert as the
producer of truth. This was the outcome of the project to construct a
form of deference appropriate to the age of mass politics. Strikingly,
it was during the 19th century that the question of deference emerged as
a major issue in British public life. British elite opinion recognised
that ‘natural deference’ to authority would have to be replaced by a new
form of deference to the superior sections of society. It was
identified by the 19th-century journalist and essayist, Walter Bagehot,
as ‘intellectual deference’ (8).
The debate over deference in 19th-century Britain represented an
important change in the way that the elites have sought to validate
their authority. The most interesting contribution to this shift was
made by liberal and utilitarian thinkers who sought to reconstitute
deference on a new rational foundation. In his 1820 essay Government,
James Mill outlined a theory of political deference that had as its
premise the capacity of the new middle class to exercise moral authority
over the lower orders (9). Mill wrote:
‘The opinions of that class of the people, who are below the middle
rank, are formed, and their minds directed by that intelligent and
virtuous rank, who come most immediately in contact with them, to whom
they fly for advice and assistance in all their numerous difficulties,
upon whom they feel an immediate and daily dependence, in health and in
sickness, in infancy, and in old age: to whom their children look up as
models for their imitation, whose opinion they hear daily repeated, and
account it their honour to adopt.’ (10)
James Mill’s optimism about middle-class hegemony was based on his
belief in that class’s superior public virtues. He praised this class
for giving ‘to science, to art and to legislation itself, their most
distinguished ornaments, the chief source of all that has exalted and
refined human nature’. And he sought to reassure those who doubted the
capacity of middle-class opinion to influence the behaviour of urban
workers and the poor: ‘Of the people beneath them, a vast majority would
be sure to be guided by [the middle class’s] advice and example.’ (11)
James Mill’s son, the philosopher John Stuart Mill, believed that the
power of persuasion was the most effective way of avoiding instability
and conflict. He wrote that the ‘only hope from class legislation in its
narrowest, and political ignorance in its most dangerous form, would
lie in such disposition as the uneducated might have to choose educated
representatives and defer to their opinion’ (12). Mill’s argument for
deference was founded on a belief in the authority of the knowledge of
the expert. Although he was inclined to be more democratic than most of
his liberal contemporaries, he allocated a central role for elected
expert representatives in the drafting of legislation (13), insisting
that it was ‘so important that the electors should choose as their
representatives wiser men than themselves, and should consent to be
governed according to that superior wisdom’ (14).
The elevation of the status of the expert along with the
professionalisation of expertise’s authority has profound implications
for the meaning of truth. As the historian Thomas Haskell pointed out in
The Emergence of Professional Social Science (2000), the
professionalisation of expertise during the 19th century led to ‘changes
in the very notion of truth itself’. Truth was now perceived as the
outcome of expert reasoning, and it was assumed that citizens would
readily defer to it.
Experts versus the people: an unresolved tension
Most experts are responsible and well-meaning individuals who have an
important contribution to make to the welfare of society. However, given
the authority enjoyed by expertise, it is not surprising that it has
become the target of political manipulation. The consolidation of the
political role of experts, and the reliance of politicians on expert
advice rather than on their own analysis, has encouraged the development
of a form of authority that violates the fundamental norms of
democratic accountability. Politicians now find it all too easy to
retreat behind the experts. And they are happy for issues to be
complicated, rather than simplified, explained and resolved.
The problem is not expertise in itself. Society needs expert authority
on technical and scientific matters. But it does not need expert
authority for political decision-making; in that sphere, rather, it
needs people to exercise their own political judgement.
The flipside of the apotheosis of expertise is the idea of an
incompetent public. This is why, historically, the ambiguous
relationship between democracy and a reliance on expertise has led many
commentators to draw pessimistic conclusions about the capacity of the
public to play the role of a responsible citizenry. The public are seen
as irrational, governed by emotion rather than reason. As a result, the
public’s refusal to defer to the experts is perceived as a threat to the
political order – because it promises the rule of unreason and emotion.
The political elites do not see a decline in deference to their
opinions for what it is – a rejection of their values; rather, they
experience it as a rejection of the facts and even of truth itself!
Plato’s disdain for the demos and his advocacy of the authority of the
expert have reappeared today in the form of the anti-populist script. It
was not surprising that during the EU referendum campaign,
anti-populist commentators were outraged and horrified when then
Conservative minister Michael Gove said: ‘I think the people of this
country have had enough of experts.’ From the media and political
establishment’s standpoint, all that stands between civilisation and
barbarism is the authority of the expert.
It’s worth thinking about why Socrates was unable to explain where
political or moral expertise could be found and how it could be
institutionalised. He failed because politics and morality are not
appropriate subjects for the pronouncements of experts. Science can
certainly provide facts, but not truths. It is only through the public
interpretation of facts that people arrive at truths.
Truths are simply not reducible to scientific reasoning. When Thomas
Jefferson, one of the Founding Fathers, stated that ‘we hold these
truths to be self-evident’, he was giving voice to something that was
not simply a product of reasoning. As the political philosopher Hannah
Arendt explained, ‘by virtue of being self-evident, these truths are
pre-rational – they inform reason but are not its product – and since
their self-evidence puts them beyond disclosure and argument, they are
in a sense no less compelling than “despotic power” and no less absolute
than the revealed truths of religion or the axiomatic verities of
mathematics’ (15). In the current climate, different attitudes towards
the truth will not be decided by the ‘facts’, but by the contestation of
cultural authority.
In recent years the decline of deference towards the Western
establishment’s truths has prompted it to wage a crusade against
populism. This has led to a new stage in the decades-long Culture War.
What stands in the way of the elite crusade to regain deference is the
wisdom of the people.
SOURCE
****************************
Which Commandments?
There are three different versions of the Ten Commandments (seen as the
Ten Suggestions by liberal churches) in the Torah. Which is most
authoritative? I have an article up on my
Scripture Blog which looks at that.
****************************
For more blog postings from me, see
TONGUE-TIED,
EDUCATION WATCH INTERNATIONAL,
GREENIE WATCH,
POLITICAL CORRECTNESS WATCH,
AUSTRALIAN POLITICS, and
Paralipomena (Occasionally updated), a
Coral reef compendium and
an IQ compendium. (Both updated as news items come in).
GUN WATCH is now mainly put together by Dean Weingarten. I also put up occasional updates on my
Personal blog and each day I gather together my most substantial current writings on
THE PSYCHOLOGIST.
Email me
here (Hotmail address). My Home Pages are
here (Academic) or
here (Pictorial) or
here (Personal)
***************************
3 April, 2017
Scientists predict reading ability from DNA alone
Reading ability is a major component of IQ so this is another step forward towards measuring IQ directly from brain features
Researchers from King's College London have used a genetic scoring
technique to predict reading performance throughout school years from
DNA alone.
The study, published today in Scientific Studies of Reading, shows that a
genetic score comprising around 20,000 of DNA variants explains five
per cent of the differences between children's reading performance.
Students with the highest and lowest genetic scores differed by a whole
two years in their reading performance.
These findings highlight the potential of using genetic scores to
predict strengths and weaknesses in children's learning abilities.
According to the study authors, these scores could one day be used to
identify and tackle reading difficulties early, rather than waiting
until children develop these problems at school.
The researchers calculated genetic scores (also called polygenic
scores*) for educational achievement in 5,825 individuals from the Twins
Early Development Study (TEDS) based on genetic variants identified to
be important for educational attainment. They then mapped these scores
against reading ability between the ages of seven and 14.
Genetic scores were found to explain up to five per cent of the
differences between children in their reading ability. This association
remained significant even after accounting for cognitive ability and
family socio-economic status.
The study authors note that although five per cent may seem a relatively
small amount, this is substantial compared to other results related to
reading. For example, gender differences have been found to explain less
than one per cent of the differences between children in reading
ability.
Saskia Selzam, first author of the study from the Institute of
Psychiatry, Psychology & Neuroscience (IoPPN) at King's College
London, said: 'The value of polygenic scores is that they make it
possible to predict genetic risk and resilience at the level of the
individual. This is different to twin studies, which tell us about the
overall genetic influence within a large population of people.'
'We think this study provides an important starting point for exploring
genetic differences in reading ability, using polygenic scoring. For
instance, these scores could enable research on resilience to developing
reading difficulties and how children respond individually to different
interventions.'
Professor Robert Plomin, senior author from the IoPPN at King's College
London, said: 'We hope these findings will contribute to better policy
decisions that recognise and respect genetically driven differences
between children in their reading ability.'
*Calculating an individual's polygenic score requires information from a
genome-wide association study (GWAS) that finds specific genetic
variants linked to particular traits, in this case educational
attainment. Some of these genetic variants, known as single nucleotide
polymorphisms (SNPs), are more strongly associated with the trait, and
some are less strongly associated. In a polygenic score, the effects of
these SNPs are weighed by the strength of association and then summed to
a score, so that people with many SNPs related to academic achievement
will have a higher polygenic score and higher academic achievement,
whereas people with fewer associated SNPs will have a lower score and
lower levels of academic achievement.
SOURCE
***************************
Is Putin the 'Preeminent Statesman' of Our Times?
By Patrick J. Buchanan
"If we were to use traditional measures for understanding leaders, which
involve the defense of borders and national flourishing, Putin would
count as the preeminent statesman of our time.
"On the world stage, who could vie with him?"
So asks Chris Caldwell of the Weekly Standard in a remarkable essay in
Hillsdale College's March issue of its magazine, Imprimis.
What elevates Putin above all other 21st-century leaders?
"When Putin took power in the winter of 1999-2000, his country was
defenseless. It was bankrupt. It was being carved up by its new
kleptocratic elites, in collusion with its old imperial rivals, the
Americans. Putin changed that.
"In the first decade of this century, he did what Kemal Ataturk had done
in Turkey in the 1920s. Out of a crumbling empire, he resurrected a
national-state, and gave it coherence and purpose. He disciplined his
country's plutocrats. He restored its military strength. And he refused,
with ever blunter rhetoric, to accept for Russia a subservient role in
an American-run world system drawn up by foreign politicians and
business leaders. His voters credit him with having saved his country."
Putin's approval rating, after 17 years in power, exceeds that of any
rival Western leader. But while his impressive strides toward making
Russia great again explain why he is revered at home and in the Russian
diaspora, what explains Putin's appeal in the West, despite a press that
is every bit as savage as President Trump's?
Answer: Putin stands against the Western progressive vision of what
mankind's future ought to be. Years ago, he aligned himself with
traditionalists, nationalists and populists of the West, and against
what they had come to despise in their own decadent civilization.
What they abhorred, Putin abhorred. He is a God-and-country Russian
patriot. He rejects the New World Order established at the Cold War's
end by the United States. Putin puts Russia first.
And in defying the Americans he speaks for those millions of Europeans
who wish to restore their national identities and recapture their lost
sovereignty from the supranational European Union. Putin also stands
against the progressive moral relativism of a Western elite that has cut
its Christian roots to embrace secularism and hedonism.
The U.S. establishment loathes Putin because, they say, he is an
aggressor, a tyrant, a "killer." He invaded and occupies Ukraine. His
old KGB comrades assassinate journalists, defectors and dissidents.
Yet while politics under both czars and commissars has often been a
blood sport in Russia, what has Putin done to his domestic enemies to
rival what our Arab ally Gen. Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi has done to the
Muslim Brotherhood he overthrew in a military coup in Egypt?
What has Putin done to rival what our NATO ally President Erdogan has
done in Turkey, jailing 40,000 people since last July's coup — or our
Philippine ally Rodrigo Duterte, who has presided over the extrajudicial
killing of thousands of drug dealers?
Does anyone think President Xi Jinping would have handled mass
demonstrations against his regime in Tiananmen Square more gingerly than
did President Putin this last week in Moscow?
Much of the hostility toward Putin stems from the fact that he not only
defies the West, when standing up for Russia's interests, he often
succeeds in his defiance and goes unpunished and unrepentant.
He not only remains popular in his own country, but has admirers in
nations whose political establishments are implacably hostile to him.
In December, one poll found 37 percent of all Republicans had a
favorable view of the Russian leader, but only 17 percent were positive
on President Barack Obama.
There is another reason Putin is viewed favorably. Millions of
ethnonationalists who wish to see their nations secede from the EU see
him as an ally. While Putin has openly welcomed many of these movements,
America's elite do not take even a neutral stance.
Putin has read the new century better than his rivals. While the 20th
century saw the world divided between a Communist East and a free and
democratic West, new and different struggles define the 21st.
The new dividing lines are between social conservatism and
self-indulgent secularism, between tribalism and transnationalism,
between the nation-state and the New World Order.
On the new dividing lines, Putin is on the side of the insurgents. Those
who envision de Gaulle's Europe of Nations replacing the vision of One
Europe, toward which the EU is heading, see Putin as an ally.
So the old question arises: Who owns the future?
In the new struggles of the new century, it is not impossible that
Russia — as was America in the Cold War — may be on the winning side.
Secessionist parties across Europe already look to Moscow rather than
across the Atlantic.
"Putin has become a symbol of national sovereignty in its battle with
globalism," writes Caldwell. "That turns out to be the big battle of our
times. As our last election shows, that's true even here."
SOURCE
***************************
Here’s What Happened to Workers After Philadelphia Passed a Soda Tax
Pepsi announced last week that it will lay off around 100 employees at
distribution plants that supply the Philadelphia area. This is the
latest blow for the city’s new beverage tax, which went into effect in
January.
“Unfortunately, after careful consideration of the economic realities
created by the recently enacted beverage tax, we have been forced to
give notice that we intend to eliminate 80 to 100 positions, including
frontline and supervisory roles,” Pepsi spokesman Dave DeCecco said,
according to Philly.com.
However, the layoffs could be quickly reversed if the beverage tax is abandoned, according to DeCecco.
“If the tax is struck down or repealed, we plan to bring people back to
work,” DeCecco said, according to Reuters. The tax is currently
under appeal in the Commonwealth Court, with arguments anticipated to
begin in early April.
Although it is commonly known as the “soda tax,” the law also includes
all “non-100 percent-fruit drinks; sports drinks; sweetened water;
energy drinks; pre-sweetened coffee or tea; and nonalcoholic beverages
intended to be mixed into an alcoholic drink,” according to the city of
Philadelphia’s website.
The tax, passed in June 2016 by the Philadelphia City Council, adds 1.5
cents to every ounce of liquid, which amounts to an 18-cent tax for a
12-ounce can of soda and a $2.16 tax for a 12-pack of soda.
The tax was implemented to finance pre-kindergarten programs, increase
funding to public parks and facilities, and improve the health of
Philadelphians, according to a statement published online by Mayor James
Kenney’s office.
Since the law was enacted, some local consumers and businesses say they have suffered.
Bloomberg reported:
Canada Dry Delaware Valley—a local distributor of Canada Dry Ginger Ale,
Sunkist, A&W Root Beer, Arizona Iced Tea and Vita Coco—said
business fell 45 percent in Philadelphia in the first five weeks of
2017, compared with the same period last year. Total revenue at Brown’s
Super Stores, which operates 12 ShopRite and Fresh Grocer supermarkets,
fell 15 percent at its six retailers in the city.
According to Bloomberg, the CEO of Brown’s Super Stores, Jeff Brown,
said, “In 30 years of business, there’s never been a circumstance in
which we’ve ever had a sales decline of any significant amount, I would
describe the impact as nothing less than devastating.”
Daren Bakst, a research fellow in agricultural policy at The Heritage Foundation, said:
“The Philadelphia City Council decided it knew what its city residents
should eat and drink. Freedom was apparently not important to them,”
Bakst told The Daily Signal in an email. “They didn’t care that it would
undermine freedom. They didn’t care that it would hurt small businesses
in their city. Nor did they care that a tax like this is regressive,
hurting the poor the most because a greater share of the poor’s income
goes to food purchases.
“The Philadelphia City Council deserves all the blame that is coming
their way. For those unfortunate individuals who are losing their jobs,
they can thank this to the arrogance of people who think they should
socially engineer diets,” Bakst said.
SOURCE
****************************
For more blog postings from me, see
TONGUE-TIED,
EDUCATION WATCH INTERNATIONAL,
GREENIE WATCH,
POLITICAL CORRECTNESS WATCH,
AUSTRALIAN POLITICS, and
Paralipomena (Occasionally updated), a
Coral reef compendium and
an IQ compendium. (Both updated as news items come in).
GUN WATCH is now mainly put together by Dean Weingarten. I also put up occasional updates on my
Personal blog and each day I gather together my most substantial current writings on
THE PSYCHOLOGIST.
Email me
here (Hotmail address). My Home Pages are
here (Academic) or
here (Pictorial) or
here (Personal)
***************************
2 April, 2017
Leftists have no principles -- They say only what suits them at the moment
Democrats seem to be currently afflicted with what may be best described
as a case of politically convenient amnesia. This sad condition has
been most clearly evident through the confirmation process of Judge Neil
Gorsuch to the Supreme Court, and symptoms include acute displays of
remarkable levels of hypocrisy. Observe these past statements by leading
Democrat leaders contrasted by these same Democrats' most recent
statements. Beware, witnessing the total reversal of opinion on
attempting to block a nominee's confirmation by these Democrats might
temp one to scream out a slew of frustration-induced profanities.
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer in 2013: "We much prefer the risk
of up or down votes and majority rule [on judicial nominees], than the
risk of continued total obstruction. That's the bottom line no matter
who's in power."
Schumer now: "The irresistible, immutable logic is, if the nominee
doesn't get 60 [votes], you change the nominee, not the rules."
Senator Tim Kaine in October 2016: "If [Republicans] think they're going
to stonewall the filling of [the SCOTUS] vacancy or other vacancies,
then a Democratic Senate majority will say, 'We're not going to let you
thwart the law.' And so we will change the Senate rules to uphold the
law."
Kaine now: "The way I look at it is the Supreme Court is the only
position that requires you to get to a 60-vote threshold, which means it
mandates that there be some bipartisanship and that is appropriate.
Life tenure. Highest court in the land. Should have to get to 60 votes."
And, "I will oppose his nomination."
Senator Elizabeth Warren in November 2013: "If Republicans continue to
filibuster these highly qualified nominees for no reason than to nullify
the president's constitutional authority, then senators not only have
the right to change the filibuster, senators have a duty to change the
filibuster rules." And she also said, "We need to call out these
filibusters for what they are — naked attempts to nullify the results of
the last presidential election."
Warren now: "I believe Judge Gorsuch's nomination should be blocked."
To be sure, the filibuster is a Senate rule subject to the desires of
any Senate majority. Both parties use those rules to political
advantage. What's striking is Democrat sanctimony.
SOURCE
*******************************
A Health Care Plan So Simple, Even A Republican Can Understand!
Ann Coulter
Right now, there’s no free market because insurance is insanely
regulated not only by Obamacare, but also by the most corrupt
organizations in America: state insurance commissions. (I’m talking to
you, New York!)
Federal and state laws make it illegal to sell health insurance that
doesn’t cover a laughable array of supposedly vital services based on
bureaucrats’ medical opinions of which providers have the best
lobbyists.
As a result, it’s illegal to sell health insurance that covers any of
the medical problems I’d like to insure against. Why can’t the GOP keep
Obamacare for the greedy — but make it legal for Ann to buy health
insurance?
This is how it works today:
ME: I’m perfectly healthy, but I’d like to buy health insurance for
heart disease, broken bones, cancer, and everything else that a normal
person would ever need, but no more.
INSURANCE COMPANY: That will be $700 a month, the deductible is $35,000,
no decent hospital will take it, and you have to pay for doctor’s
visits yourself. But your plan covers shrinks, infertility treatments,
sex change operations, autism spectrum disorder treatment, drug rehab
and 67 other things you will never need.
INSURANCE COMPANY UNDER ANN’S PLAN: That will be $50 a month, the
deductible is $1,000, you can see any doctor you’d like, and you have
full coverage for any important medical problems you could conceivably
have in a million years.
Mine is a two-step plan (and you don’t have to do the second step, so it’s really a one-step plan).
STEP 1: Congress doesn’t repeal Obamacare! Instead, Congress passes a
law, pursuant to its constitutional power to regulate interstate
commerce, that says: “In America, it shall be legal to sell health
insurance on the free market. This law supersedes all other laws, taxes,
mandates, coverage requirements, regulations or prohibitions, state or
federal.”
The end. Love, Ann.
There will be no whining single mothers storming Congress with their
pre-printed placards. People who want to stay on Obamacare can. No one
is taking away anything. They can still have health insurance with free
pony rides. It just won’t be paid for with Ann’s premiums anymore,
because Ann will now be allowed to buy health insurance on the free
market.
Americans will be free to choose among a variety of health insurance
plans offered by willing sellers, competing with one another to provide
the best plans at the lowest price. A nationwide market in health
insurance will drive down costs and improve access — just like
everything else we buy here in America!
Within a year, most Americans will be buying health insurance on the
free market (and half of the rest will be illegal aliens). We’ll have TV
ads with cute little geckos hawking amazing plans and young couples
bragging about their broad coverage and great prices from this or that
insurance company.
The Obamacare plans will still have the “essential benefits” (free pony
rides) that are so important to NPR’s Mara Liasson, but the free market
plans will have whatever plans consumers agree to buy and insurance
companies agree to sell — again, just like every other product we buy
here in America.
Some free market plans will offer all the “essential benefits” mandated
by Obamacare, but the difference will be: Instead of forcing me to pay a
premium that covers Mara Liasson’s special needs, she’ll have to pay
for that coverage herself.
I won’t be compelled to buy health insurance that covers everyone else’s
gambling addiction, drug rehab, pregnancies, marital counseling, social
workers, contact lenses and rotten kids — simply to have insurance for
what doctors call “serious medical problems.”
Then, we’ll see how many people really need free health care.
Until the welfare program is decoupled from the insurance market,
nothing will work. Otherwise, it’s like forcing grocery stores to pay
for everyone to have a house. A carton of milk would suddenly cost
$10,000.
That’s what Obamacare did to health insurance. Paul Ryan’s solution was
to cut taxes on businesses — and make the milk watery. But he still
wouldn’t allow milk to be sold on the free market.
Democrats will be in the position of blocking American companies from
selling a product that people want to buy. How will they explain that to
voters?
Perhaps Democrats will come out and admit that they need to fund health
insurance for the poor by forcing middle-class Americans to pay for it
through their insurance premiums — because otherwise, they’d have to
raise taxes, and they want to keep their Wall Street buddies’ income
taxes low.
Good luck with that!
STEP 2: Next year, Congress formulates a better way of delivering health
care to the welfare cases, which will be much easier since there will
be a LOT fewer of them.
No actual money-making business is going to survive by taking the
welfare cases — the ones that will cover illegal aliens and Mara
Liasson’s talk therapy — so the greedy will get government plans.
But by then, only a minority of Americans will be on the “free” plans.
(Incidentally, this will be a huge money-saver — if anyone cares about
the federal budget.) Eighty percent of Americans will already have good
health plans sold to them by insurance companies competing for their
business.
With cheap plans available, a lot of the greedy will go ahead and buy a
free market plan. Who wants to stand in line at the DMV to see a doctor
when your neighbors have great health care plans for $50 a month?
We will have separated the truly unfortunate from the loudmouthed
bullies who simply enjoy forcing other people to pay for their shrinks
and aromatherapy.
And if the Democrats vote against a sane method of delivering health
care to the welfare cases, who cares? We have lots of wasteful
government programs — take it out of Lockheed Martin’s contract. But at
least the government won’t be depriving the rest of us of a crucial
product just because we are middle class and the Democrats hate us.
There’s your health care bill, GOP!
SOURCE
**************************
The Generational Divide
The young are liberal, the old are conservative. An exception might be coming.
In politics, demographics are key in messaging, for organizational platform development and for policy priorities.
Demographics are pretty consistent with one fact: Age is a major factor
in one’s party affiliation. The younger the voter, the greater
likelihood said voter is leftist or moderately Democrat in their
worldview and philosophy. Logically, the inverse is also often a truism —
the older the voter, the greater the likelihood of he or she leans
center-Right or far-Right.
An old adage, inaccurately attributed to Winston Churchill (and various
others), states: “If you’re not a liberal when you’re young, you have no
heart. If you’re not a conservative by the time you’re old, you have no
brain.”
While the fascination is usually on the monikers given for each
generation and the corresponding traits, it’s the traits found within
these age groups that impact the usefulness of the tiered grouping of
our adult population.
Using classifications employed by the Pew Research Center, the Silent
Generation would currently be 71-88 years of age. This group generally
holds a worldview framed by the hardships of war and economic depression
— sacrifice, personal responsibility, loyalty and the call to adulthood
during crisis. Some 48% of Silents are politically center-Right.
Baby Boomers range from 52-71 years old and are likewise largely defined
as having a strong work ethic, and being goal-centric, self-assured and
more disciplined. And 44% of the Boomers vote to the political Right.
The next stratum is Generation X, Americans who are now 36 to 51 years
old. This groups tends to be more “me” centric, hence their
individualistic approach to social, civic, corporate and political
engagement. This is the first generation to live to work, not work to
live, and they vote to the Right of center 37% of the time.
Finally, Millennials are 18- to 35-year-olds raised to seek constant
communication, input and connection. This group is motivated by meaning,
with their productivity linked to a purpose that is well communicated
or marketed. Just 33% of Millennials vote Right.
So what?
As our cultural institutions — education, media, family, faith,
government, entertainment and business — move to the left, the immersion
of individuals into an environment defined by a “progressive” vision
has changed American culture. Interestingly, as adults age with the
vivid responsibilities of life, such as parenting, debt, investment,
business expansion and countless other realities, a great deal of
progressive failures are exposed. One’s worldview becomes no longer
framed by an academic exercise in social justice, love and tolerance,
but by real life.
As we’ve noted, the more recent one’s birth year, the more one’s
political affiliations tend to be more to the left end of the spectrum.
But that may soon change based on early research into Generation Z.
These post-Millennials have never known life without the Internet,
Islamic terrorism or the hyper-partisan climate at the local, state and
federal levels of government.
Again, so what?
Some of the oldest of Generation Z voted in the 2016 elections. And the
question is, will this be yet another group of youth with an entitled
and emotion-based approach to life? Or will it be a generation guided by
effective role models and adult leaders?
Based on early unscientific data, these first-time voters, raised during
times of recession and personal debt, are more fiscally conservative
than their Millennial elders.
A survey of 50,000 high school students aged 14 to 18 years old was
shocking: Donald Trump won among participants by 46% to Hillary
Clinton’s 31%. A majority identified as Republicans in this Presidential
Pulse Study’s entire polling audience.
Further, those casting their ballots for the first time acknowledged the
economy as the most important issue followed by education, gun rights
and health care. Fifty-six percent declared the country is headed in the
wrong direction. That’s a stark departure from the “progressive” mantra
that Barack Obama was great and the answer was more of the same through
Hillary.
An INC.com article notes that Generation Z identifies honesty as the
most important trait of a leader. These kids have a greater respect for
older generations, and seem to possess the trait of realism instead of
excessive optimism.
That presents an opportunity. Conservatives must not only include the
soundness of small government and value of fiscal discipline for the
older generations who are more conservative, but the “so what” of
meaning and purpose to win the hearts and minds of Millennials and
Generation Xers. And endeavoring to win over Generation Z will pay
immense dividends.
President Donald Trump spoke quite candidly on the campaign trail,
absent the politically correct lexicon of the Left. He pulled no punches
in his simple, yet direct, message. Perhaps his populist approach also
appeals to Generation Z. Perhaps they’ve seen what leftism hath wrought
and want no part of it.
As always, time will tell, but time also has a way of making people more conservative. That’s life experience for you.
SOURCE
****************************
For more blog postings from me, see
TONGUE-TIED,
EDUCATION WATCH INTERNATIONAL,
GREENIE WATCH,
POLITICAL CORRECTNESS WATCH,
AUSTRALIAN POLITICS, and
Paralipomena (Occasionally updated), a
Coral reef compendium and
an IQ compendium. (Both updated as news items come in).
GUN WATCH is now mainly put together by Dean Weingarten. I also put up occasional updates on my
Personal blog and each day I gather together my most substantial current writings on
THE PSYCHOLOGIST.
Email me
here (Hotmail address). My Home Pages are
here (Academic) or
here (Pictorial) or
here (Personal)
**************************
BACKGROUND NOTES:
Home (Index page)
Postings from Brisbane, Australia by John J. Ray
(M.A.; Ph.D.) -- former member of the Australia-Soviet Friendship
Society, former anarcho-capitalist and former member of the British
Conservative party. And now a "Deplorable"
At its most basic psychological level, conservatives are the contented
people and Leftists are the discontented people. And both are largely
dispositional, inborn -- which is why they so rarely change
As a good academic, I first define my terms: A Leftist is a person who
is so dissatisfied with the way things naturally are that he/she is
prepared to use force to make people behave in ways that they otherwise
would not.
So an essential feature of Leftism is that they think they have the right to tell other people what to do
The Left have a lot in common with tortoises. They have a thick mental
shell that protects them from the reality of the world about them
Leftists are the disgruntled folk. They see things in the world that
are not ideal and conclude therefore that they have the right to change
those things by force. Conservative explanations of why things are not
ideal -- and never can be -- fall on deaf ears
Leftists aim to deliver dismay and disruption into other people's lives -- and they are good at achieving that.
There are two varieties of authoritarian Leftism. Fascists are soft
Leftists, preaching one big happy family -- "Better together" in other
words. Communists are hard Leftists, preaching class war.
Socialism is the most evil malady ever to afflict the human brain. The death toll in WWII alone tells you that
You do still occasionally see some mention of the old idea that Leftist
parties represent the worker. In the case of the U.S. Democrats that is
long gone. Now they want to REFORM the worker. No wonder most working
class Americans these days vote Republican. Democrats are the party of
the minorities and the smug
Definition of a Socialist: Someone who wants everything you have...except your job.
Let's start with some thought-provoking graphics
Israel: A great powerhouse of the human spirit
The difference in practice
The United Nations: A great ideal but a sordid reality
Alfred Dreyfus, a reminder of French antisemitism still relevant today
Eugenio Pacelli, a righteous Gentile, a true man of God and a brilliant Pope
Leftism in one picture:
The "steamroller" above who got steamrollered by his own hubris.
Spitzer is a warning of how self-destructive a vast ego can be -- and
also of how destructive of others it can be.
R.I.P. Augusto Pinochet. Pinochet deposed a law-defying Marxist
President at the express and desperate invitation of the Chilean
parliament. Allende had just burnt the electoral rolls so it wasn't
hard to see what was coming. Pinochet pioneered the free-market reforms
which Reagan and Thatcher later unleashed to world-changing effect.
That he used far-Leftist methods to suppress far-Leftist violence is
reasonable if not ideal. The Leftist view that they should have a
monopoly of violence and that others should follow the law is a total
absurdity which shows only that their hate overcomes their reason
Leftist writers usually seem quite reasonable and persuasive at first
glance. The problem is not what they say but what they don't say.
Leftist beliefs are so counterfactual ("all men are equal", "all men are
brothers" etc.) that to be a Leftist you have to have a talent for
blotting out from your mind facts that don't suit you. And that is what
you see in Leftist writing: A very selective view of reality. Facts
that disrupt a Leftist story are simply ignored. Leftist writing is
cherrypicking on a grand scale
So if ever you read something written by a Leftist that sounds totally
reasonable, you have an urgent need to find out what other people say on
that topic. The Leftist will almost certainly have told only half the
story
We conservatives have the facts on our side, which is why Leftists never
want to debate us and do their best to shut us up. It's very revealing
the way they go to great lengths to suppress conservative speech at
universities. Universities should be where the best and brightest
Leftists are to be found but even they cannot stand the intellectual
challenge that conservatism poses for them. It is clearly a great threat
to them. If what we say were ridiculous or wrong, they would grab every
opportunity to let us know it
A conservative does not hanker after the new; He hankers after the good. Leftists hanker after the untested
Just one thing is sufficient to tell all and sundry what an unamerican
lamebrain Obama is. He pronounced an army corps as an army "corpse"
Link here. Can
you imagine any previous American president doing that? Many were men
with significant personal experience in the armed forces in their youth.
A favorite Leftist saying sums up the whole of Leftism: "To make an
omelette, you've got to break eggs". They want to change some state of
affairs and don't care who or what they destroy or damage in the
process. They think their alleged good intentions are sufficient to
absolve them from all blame for even the most evil deeds
In practical politics, the art of Leftism is to sound good while proposing something destructive
Leftists are the "we know best" people, meaning that they are
intrinsically arrogant. Matthew chapter 6 would not be for them. And
arrogance leads directly into authoritarianism
Leftism is fundamentally authoritarian. Whether by revolution or by
legislation, Leftists aim to change what people can and must do. When
in 2008 Obama said that he wanted to "fundamentally transform" America,
he was not talking about America's geography or topography but rather
about American people. He wanted them to stop doing things that they
wanted to do and make them do things that they did not want to do. Can
you get a better definition of authoritarianism than that?
And note that an American President is elected to administer the law, not make it. That seems to have escaped Mr Obama
That Leftism is intrinsically authoritarian is not a new insight. It
was well understood by none other than Friedrich Engels (Yes. THAT
Engels). His clever short essay On authority
was written as a reproof to the dreamy Anarchist Left of his day. It
concludes: "A revolution is certainly the most authoritarian thing there
is; it is the act whereby one part of the population imposes its will
upon the other part by means of rifles, bayonets and cannon —
authoritarian means"
Inside Every Liberal is a Totalitarian Screaming to Get Out
Leftists think of themselves as the new nobility
Many people in literary and academic circles today who once supported
Stalin and his heirs are generally held blameless and may even still be
admired whereas anybody who gave the slightest hint of support for the
similarly brutal Hitler regime is an utter polecat and pariah. Why?
Because Hitler's enemies were "only" the Jews whereas Stalin's enemies
were those the modern day Left still hates -- people who are doing well
for themselves materially. Modern day Leftists understand and excuse
Stalin and his supporters because Stalin's hates are their hates.
Hatred has long been a central pillar of leftist ideologies, premised as
they are on trampling individual rights for the sake of a collectivist
plan. Karl Marx boasted that he was “the greatest hater of the so-called
positive.” In 1923, V.I. Lenin chillingly declared to the Soviet
Commissars of Education, “We must teach our children to hate. Hatred is
the basis of communism.” In his tract “Left-Wing Communism,” Lenin went
so far as to assert that hatred was “the basis of every socialist and
Communist movement.”
If you understand that Leftism is hate, everything falls into place.
The strongest way of influencing people is to convince them that you will do them some good. Leftists and con-men misuse that
Leftists believe only what they want to believe. So presenting evidence
contradicting their beliefs simply enrages them. They do not learn
from it
Psychological defence mechanisms such as projection play a large part in
Leftist thinking and discourse. So their frantic search for evil in the
words and deeds of others is easily understandable. The evil is in
themselves.
Leftists who think that they can conjure up paradise out of their own
limited brains are simply fools -- arrogant and dangerous fools. They
essentially know nothing. Conservatives learn from the thousands of
years of human brains that have preceded us -- including the Bible, the
ancient Greeks and much else. The death of Socrates is, for instance, an
amazing prefiguration of the intolerant 21st century. Ask any
conservative stranded in academe about his freedom of speech
Thomas Sowell: “There are no solutions, only trade-offs.” Leftists don't
understand that -- which is a major factor behind their simplistic
thinking. They just never see the trade-offs. But implementing any
Leftist idea will hit us all with the trade-offs
"The best laid plans of mice and men gang aft agley"[go oft astray] is a well known line from a famous poem by the great Scottish poet, Robert Burns. But the next line is even wiser: "And leave us nought but grief and pain for promised joy". Burns was a Leftist of sorts so he knew how often their theories fail badly.
Mostly, luck happens when opportunity meets preparation.
Most Leftist claims are simply propaganda. Those who utter such claims
must know that they are not telling the whole story. Hitler described
his Marxist adversaries as "lying with a virtuosity that would bend iron
beams". At the risk of ad hominem shrieks, I think that image is too good to remain disused.
Conservatives adapt to the world they live in. Leftists want to change the world to suit themselves
Given their dislike of the world they live in, it would be a surprise if
Leftists were patriotic and loved their own people. Prominent English
Leftist politician Jack Straw probably said it best: "The English as a
race are not worth saving"
In his 1888 book, The Anti-Christ Friedrich Nietzsche argues
that we should treat the common man well and kindly because he is the
backdrop against which the exceptional man can be seen. So Nietzsche
deplores those who agitate the common man: "Whom do I hate most among
the rabble of today? The socialist rabble, the chandala [outcast]
apostles, who undermine the instinct, the pleasure, the worker's sense
of satisfaction with his small existence—who make him envious, who teach
him revenge. The source of wrong is never unequal rights but the claim
of “equal” rights"
Why do conservatives respect tradition and rely on the past in many
ways? Because they want to know what works and the past is the chief
source of evidence on that. Leftists are more faith-based. They cling
to their theories (e.g. global warming) with religious fervour, even
though theories are often wrong
Thinking that you "know best" is an intrinsically precarious and foolish
stance -- because nobody does. Reality is so complex and
unpredictable that it can rarely be predicted far ahead. Conservatives
can see that and that is why conservatives always want change to be done
gradually, in a step by step way. So the Leftist often finds the
things he "knows" to be out of step with reality, which challenges him
and his ego. Sadly, rather than abandoning the things he "knows", he
usually resorts to psychological defence mechanisms such as denial and
projection. He is largely impervious to argument because he has to be.
He can't afford to let reality in.
A prize example of the Leftist tendency to projection (seeing your own
faults in others) is the absurd Robert "Bob" Altemeyer, an acclaimed
psychologist and father of a Canadian Leftist politician. Altemeyer
claims that there is no such thing as Leftist authoritarianism and that
it is conservatives who are "Enemies of Freedom". That Leftists (e.g.
Mrs Obama) are such enemies of freedom that they even want to dictate
what people eat has apparently passed Altemeyer by. Even Stalin did not
go that far. And there is the little fact that all the great
authoritarian regimes of the 20th century (Stalin, Hitler and Mao) were
socialist. Freud saw reliance on defence mechanisms such as projection
as being maladjusted. It is difficult to dispute that. Altemeyer is
too illiterate to realize it but he is actually a good Hegelian. Hegel
thought that "true" freedom was marching in step with a Left-led herd.
What libertarian said this? “The bureaucracy is a parasite on the body
of society, a parasite which ‘chokes’ all its vital pores…The state is a
parasitic organism”. It was VI Lenin,
in August 1917, before he set up his own vastly bureaucratic state. He
could see the problem but had no clue about how to solve it.
It was Democrat John F Kennedy who cut taxes and declared that “a rising tide lifts all boats"
Leftist stupidity is a special class of stupidity. The people concerned
are mostly not stupid in general but they have a character defect
(mostly arrogance) that makes them impatient with complexity and
unwilling to study it. So in their policies they repeatedly shoot
themselves in the foot; They fail to attain their objectives. The
world IS complex so a simplistic approach to it CANNOT work.
Seminal Leftist philosopher, G.W.F. Hegel said something that certainly
applies to his fellow Leftists: "We learn from history that we do not
learn from history". And he captured the Left in this saying too:
"Evil resides in the very gaze which perceives Evil all around itself".
"A man who is not a socialist at age 20 has no heart; A man who is still
a socialist at age 30 has no head". Who said that? Most people
attribute it to Winston but as far as I can tell it was first said by
Georges Clemenceau, French Premier in WWI -- whose own career
approximated the transition concerned. And he in turn was probably
updating an earlier saying about monarchy versus Republicanism by
Guizot. Other attributions here. There is in fact a normal drift from Left to Right as people get older. Both Reagan and Churchill started out as liberals
Funny how to the Leftist intelligentsia poor blacks are 'oppressed' and poor whites are 'trash'. Racism, anyone?
MESSAGE to Leftists: Even if you killed all conservatives tomorrow, you
would just end up in another Soviet Union. Conservatives are all that
stand between you and that dismal fate. And you may not even survive at
all. Stalin killed off all the old Bolsheviks.
MYTH BUSTING:
The Big Lie of the late 20th century was that Nazism was Rightist. It was in fact typical of the Leftism
of its day. It was only to the Right of Stalin's Communism. The very
word "Nazi" is a German abbreviation for "National Socialist" (Nationalsozialist) and the full name of Hitler's political party (translated) was "The National Socialist German Workers' Party" (In German: Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiterpartei)
Just the name of Hitler's political party should be sufficient to reject
the claim that Hitler was "Right wing" but Leftists sometimes retort
that the name "Democratic People's Republic of Korea" is not
informative, in that it is the name of a dismal Stalinist tyranny. But
"People's Republic" is a normal name for a Communist country whereas I
know of no conservative political party that calls itself a "Socialist
Worker's Party". Such parties are in fact usually of the extreme Left
(Trotskyite etc.)
Most people find the viciousness of the Nazis to be incomprehensible --
for instance what they did in their concentration camps. But you just
have to read a little of the vileness that pours out from modern-day
"liberals" in their Twitter and blog comments to understand it all very
well. Leftists haven't changed. They are still boiling with hate
Hatred as a motivating force for political strategy leads to misguided
decisions. “Hatred is blind,” as Alexandre Dumas warned, “rage carries
you away; and he who pours out vengeance runs the risk of tasting a
bitter draught.”
Who said this in 1968? "I am not, and never have been, a man of the right. My position was on the Left and is now in the centre of politics". It was Sir Oswald Mosley, founder and leader of the British Union of Fascists
The term "Fascism" is mostly used by the Left as a brainless term of
abuse. But when they do make a serious attempt to define it, they
produce very complex and elaborate definitions -- e.g. here and here.
In fact, Fascism is simply extreme socialism plus nationalism. But
great gyrations are needed to avoid mentioning the first part of that
recipe, of course.
Three examples of Leftist racism below (much more here and here):
Jesse Owens, the African-American hero of the 1936 Berlin Olympic Games,
said "Hitler didn't snub me – it was our president who snubbed me. The
president didn't even send me a telegram." Democrat Franklin D.
Roosevelt never even invited the quadruple gold medal-winner to the
White House
Beatrice Webb, a founder of the London School of Economics and
the Fabian Society, and married to a Labour MP, mused in 1922 on whether
when English children were "dying from lack of milk", one should extend
"the charitable impulse" to Russian and Chinese children who, if saved
this year, might anyway die next. Besides, she continued, there was "the
larger question of whether those races are desirable inhabitants" and
"obviously" one wouldn't "spend one's available income" on "a Central
African negro".
Hugh Dalton, offered the Colonial Office during Attlee's 1945-51 Labour
government, turned it down because "I had a horrid vision of
pullulating, poverty stricken, diseased nigger communities, for whom one
can do nothing in the short run and who, the more one tries to help
them, are querulous and ungrateful."
The Zimmerman case is an excellent proof that the Left is deep-down racist
Defensible and indefensible usages of the term "racism"
The book, The authoritarian personality, authored by T.W. Adorno
et al. in 1950, has been massively popular among psychologists. It
claims that a set of ideas that were popular in the
"Progressive"-dominated America of the prewar era were "authoritarian".
Leftist regimes always are authoritarian so that claim was not a big
problem. What was quite amazing however is that Adorno et al.
identified such ideas as "conservative". They were in fact simply
popular ideas of the day but ones that had been most heavily promoted by
the Left right up until the then-recent WWII. See here for details of prewar "Progressive" thinking.
Leftist psychologists have an amusingly simplistic conception of
military organizations and military men. They seem to base it on
occasions they have seen troops marching together on parade rather than
any real knowledge of military men and the military life. They think
that military men are "rigid" -- automatons who are unable to adjust to
new challenges or think for themselves. What is incomprehensible to
them is that being kadaver gehorsam (to use the extreme Prussian
term for following orders) actually requires great flexibility -- enough
flexibility to put your own ideas and wishes aside and do something
very difficult. Ask any soldier if all commands are easy to obey.
It would be very easy for me to say that I am too much of an individual
for the army but I did in fact join the army and enjoy it greatly, as
most men do. In my observation, ALL army men are individuals. It is
just that they accept discipline in order to be militarily efficient --
which is the whole point of the exercise. But that's too complex for
simplistic Leftist thinking, of course
Franklin Delano Roosevelt was a war criminal. Both British and American
codebreakers had cracked the Japanese naval code so FDR knew what was
coming at Pearl Harbor. But for his own political reasons he warned
no-one there. So responsibility for the civilian and military deaths at
Pearl Harbor lies with FDR as well as with the Japanese. The huge
firepower available at Pearl Harbor, both aboard ship and on land, could
have largely neutered the attack. Can you imagine 8 battleships and
various lesser craft firing all their AA batteries as the Japanese came
in? The Japanese naval airforce would have been annihilated and the
war would have been over before it began.
FDR prolonged the Depression. He certainly didn't cure it.
WWII did NOT end the Great Depression. It just concealed it. It in fact made living standards worse
FDR appointed a known KKK member, Hugo Black, to the Supreme Court
Joe McCarthy was eventually proved right after the fall of the Soviet Union. To accuse anyone of McCarthyism is to accuse them of accuracy!
The KKK was intimately associated with the Democratic party. They ATTACKED Republicans!
High Level of Welfare Use by Legal and Illegal Immigrants in the USA. Low skill immigrants receive 4 to 5 dollars of benefits for every dollar in taxes paid
People who mention differences in black vs. white IQ are these days
almost universally howled down and subjected to the most extreme abuse.
I am a psychometrician, however, so I feel obliged to defend the
scientific truth of the matter: The average African adult has about the
same IQ as an average white 11-year-old and African Americans (who are
partly white in ancestry) average out at a mental age of 14. The
American Psychological Association is generally Left-leaning but it is
the world's most prestigious body of academic psychologists. And even
they have had to concede
that sort of gap (one SD) in black vs. white average IQ. 11-year olds
can do a lot of things but they also have their limits and there are
times when such limits need to be allowed for.
The association between high IQ and long life is overwhelmingly genetic: "In the combined sample the genetic contribution to the covariance was 95%"
The Dark Ages were not dark
Judged by his deeds, Abraham Lincoln was one of the bloodiest villains ever to walk the Earth. See here. And: America's uncivil war was caused by trade protectionism. The slavery issue was just camouflage, as Abraham Lincoln himself admitted. See also here
Was slavery already washed up by the tides of history before Lincoln
took it on? Eric Williams in his book "Capitalism and Slavery" tells
us: “The commercial capitalism of the eighteenth century developed the
wealth of Europe by means of slavery and monopoly. But in so doing it
helped to create the industrial capitalism of the nineteenth century,
which turned round and destroyed the power of commercial capitalism,
slavery, and all its works. Without a grasp of these economic changes
the history of the period is meaningless.”
Did William Zantzinger kill poor Hattie Carroll?
Did Bismarck predict where WWI would start or was it just a "free" translation by Churchill?
Conrad Black on the Declaration of Independence
Malcolm Gladwell: "There is more of reality and wisdom in a Chinese fortune cookie than can be found anywhere in Gladwell’s pages"
Some people are born bad -- confirmed by genetics research
The dark side of American exceptionalism: America could well be seen as
the land of folly. It fought two unnecessary civil wars, would have
done well to keep out of two world wars, endured the extraordinary folly
of Prohibition and twice elected a traitor President -- Barack Obama.
That America remains a good place to be is a tribute to the energy and
hard work of individual Americans.
“From the fact that people are very different it follows that, if we
treat them equally, the result must be inequality in their actual
position, and that the only way to place them in an equal position would
be to treat them differently. Equality before the law and material
equality are therefore not only different but are in conflict with each
other; and we can achieve either one or the other, but not both at the
same time.” ? Friedrich Hayek, The Constitution Of Liberty
IN BRIEF:
The 10 "cannots" (By William J. H. Boetcker) that Leftist politicians ignore:
*You cannot bring about prosperity by discouraging thrift.
* You cannot strengthen the weak by weakening the strong.
* You cannot help little men by tearing down big men.
* You cannot lift the wage earner by pulling down the wage payer.
* You cannot help the poor by destroying the rich.
* You cannot establish sound security on borrowed money.
* You cannot further the brotherhood of man by inciting class hatred.
* You cannot keep out of trouble by spending more than you earn.
* You cannot build character and courage by destroying men's initiative and independence.
* And you cannot help men permanently by doing for them what they can and should do for themselves.
A good short definition of conservative: "One who wants you to keep your hand out of his pocket."
Beware of good intentions. They mostly lead to coercion
A gargantuan case of hubris, coupled with stunning level of ignorance
about how the real world works, is the essence of progressivism.
The U.S. Constitution is neither "living" nor dead. It is fixed until
it is amended. But amending it is the privilege of the people, not of
politicians or judges
It is hard to imagine a more stupid or more dangerous way of making
decisions than by putting those decisions in the hands of people who pay
no price for being wrong - Thomas Sowell
Leftists think that utopia can be coerced into existence -- so no
dishonesty or brutality is beyond them in pursuit of that "noble" goal
"England is perhaps the only great country whose intellectuals are
ashamed of their own nationality. In left-wing circles it is always felt
that there is something slightly disgraceful in being an Englishman and
that it is a duty to snigger at every English institution" -- George Orwell
Was 16th century science pioneer Paracelsus a libertarian? His motto was "Alterius non sit qui suus esse potest" which means "Let no man belong to another who can belong to himself."
"When using today's model of society as a rule, most of history will be
found to be full of oppression, bias, and bigotry." What today's
arrogant judges of history fail to realize is that they, too, will be
judged. What will Americans of 100 years from now make of, say, speech
codes, political correctness, and zero tolerance - to name only three?
Assuming, of course, there will still be an America that we, today,
would recognize. Given the rogue Federal government spy apparatus, I am
not at all sure of that. -- Paul Havemann
Economist Ludwig von Mises (1881-1973): "The champions of socialism
call themselves progressives, but they recommend a system which is
characterized by rigid observance of routine and by a resistance to
every kind of improvement. They call themselves liberals, but they are
intent upon abolishing liberty. They call themselves democrats, but they
yearn for dictatorship. They call themselves revolutionaries, but they
want to make the government omnipotent. They promise the blessings of
the Garden of Eden, but they plan to transform the world into a gigantic
post office."
It's the shared hatred of the rest of us that unites Islamists and the Left.
American liberals don't love America. They despise it. All they love is
their own fantasy of what America could become. They are false patriots.
The Democratic Party: Con-men elected by the ignorant and the arrogant
The Democratic Party is a strange amalgam of elites, would-be elites and
minorities. No wonder their policies are so confused and irrational
Why are conservatives more at ease with religion? Because it is basic
to conservatism that some things are unknowable, and religious people
have to accept that too. Leftists think that they know it all and feel
threatened by any exceptions to that. Thinking that you know it all is
however the pride that comes before a fall.
The characteristic emotion of the Leftist is not envy. It's rage
Leftists are committed to grievance, not truth
The British Left poured out a torrent of hate for Margaret Thatcher on
the occasion of her death. She rescued Britain from chaos and restored
Britain's prosperity. What's not to hate about that?
Something you didn't know about Margaret Thatcher
The world's dumbest investor? Without doubt it is Uncle Sam. Nobody
anywhere could rival the scale of the losses on "investments" made under
the Obama administration
"Behind the honeyed but patently absurd pleas for equality is a
ruthless drive for placing themselves (the elites) at the top of a new
hierarchy of power" -- Murray Rothbard - Egalitarianism and the Elites (1995)
A liberal is someone who feels a great debt to his fellow man, which
debt he proposes to pay off with your money. -- G. Gordon Liddy
"World socialism as a whole, and all the figures associated with it,
are shrouded in legend; its contradictions are forgotten or concealed;
it does not respond to arguments but continually ignores them--all this
stems from the mist of irrationality that surrounds socialism and from
its instinctive aversion to scientific analysis... The doctrines of
socialism seethe with contradictions, its theories are at constant odds
with its practice, yet due to a powerful instinct these contradictions
do not in the least hinder the unending propaganda of socialism. Indeed,
no precise, distinct socialism even exists; instead there is only a
vague, rosy notion of something noble and good, of equality, communal
ownership, and justice: the advent of these things will bring instant
euphoria and a social order beyond reproach." -- Solzhenitsyn
"The heart of the wise inclines to the right, but the heart of the fool to the left." -- Ecclesiastes 10:2 (NIV)
My reading of history convinces me that most bad government results from too much government. -- Thomas Jefferson
"Much that passes as idealism is disguised hatred or disguised love of power" -- Bertrand Russell
Evan Sayet:
The Left sides "...invariably with evil over good, wrong over right,
and the behaviors that lead to failure over those that lead to success."
(t=5:35+ on video)
The Republicans are the gracious side of American politics. It is the Democrats who are the nasty party, the haters
Wanting to stay out of the quarrels of other nations is conservative --
but conservatives will fight if attacked or seriously endangered.
Anglo/Irish statesman Lord Castlereagh
(1769-1822), who led the political coalition that defeated Napoleon,
was an isolationist, as were traditional American conservatives.
Some wisdom from the past: "The bosom of America is open to receive not
only the opulent and respectable stranger, but the oppressed and
persecuted of all nations and religions; whom we shall welcome to a
participation of all our rights and privileges, if by decency and
propriety of conduct they appear to merit the enjoyment." —George
Washington, 1783
Some useful definitions:
If a conservative doesn't like guns, he doesn't buy one. If a liberal doesn't like guns, he wants all guns outlawed.
If
a conservative is a vegetarian, he doesn't eat meat. If a liberal is a
vegetarian, he wants all meat products banned for everyone.
If a
conservative is down-and-out, he thinks about how to better his
situation. A liberal wonders who is going to take care of him.
If a conservative doesn't like a talk show host, he switches channels. Liberals demand that those they don't like be shut down.
If
a conservative is a non-believer, he doesn't go to church. A liberal
non-believer wants any mention of God and religion silenced. (Unless
it's a foreign religion, of course!)
If a conservative decides he
needs health care, he goes about shopping for it, or may choose a job
that provides it. A liberal demands that the rest of us pay for his.
There is better evidence for creation than there is for the Leftist
claim that “gender” is a “social construct”. Most Leftist claims seem
to be faith-based rather than founded on the facts
Leftists are classic weak characters. They dish out abuse by the bucketload but cannot take it when they get it back. Witness the Loughner hysteria.
Death taxes:
You would expect a conscientious person, of whatever degree of
intelligence, to reflect on the strange contradiction involved in
denying people the right to unearned wealth, while supporting programs
that give people unearned wealth.
America is no longer the land of the free. It is now the land of the regulated -- though it is not alone in that, of course
The Leftist motto: "I love humanity. It's just people I can't stand"
Why are Leftists always talking about hate? Because it fills their own hearts
Envy is a strong and widespread human emotion so there has alway been
widespread support for policies of economic "levelling". Both the USA
and the modern-day State of Israel were founded by communists but
reality taught both societies that respect for the individual gave much
better outcomes than levelling ideas. Sadly, there are many people in
both societies in whom hatred for others is so strong that they are
incapable of respect for the individual. The destructiveness of what
they support causes them to call themselves many names in different
times and places but they are the backbone of the political Left
Gore Vidal: "Every time a friend succeeds, I die a little". Vidal was of course a Leftist
The large number of rich Leftists suggests that, for them, envy is
secondary. They are directly driven by hatred and scorn for many of the
other people that they see about them. Hatred of others can be rooted
in many things, not only in envy. But the haters come together as the
Left. Some evidence here showing that envy is not what defines the Left
Leftists hate the world around them and want to change it: the people in
it most particularly. Conservatives just want to be left alone to make
their own decisions and follow their own values.
The failure of the Soviet experiment has definitely made the American
Left more vicious and hate-filled than they were. The plain failure of
what passed for ideas among them has enraged rather than humbled them.
Ronald Reagan famously observed that the status quo is Latin for “the
mess we’re in.” So much for the vacant Leftist claim that conservatives
are simply defenders of the status quo. They think that conservatives
are as lacking in principles as they are.
Was Confucius a conservative? The following saying would seem to
reflect good conservative caution: "The superior man, when resting in
safety, does not forget that danger may come. When in a state of
security he does not forget the possibility of ruin. When all is
orderly, he does not forget that disorder may come. Thus his person is
not endangered, and his States and all their clans are preserved."
The shallow thinkers of the Left sometimes claim that conservatives want
to impose their own will on others in the matter of abortion. To make
that claim is however to confuse religion with politics. Conservatives
are in fact divided about their response to abortion. The REAL
opposition to abortion is religious rather than political. And the
church which has historically tended to support the LEFT -- the Roman
Catholic church -- is the most fervent in the anti-abortion cause.
Conservatives are indeed the one side of politics to have moral qualms
on the issue but they tend to seek a middle road in dealing with it.
Taking the issue to the point of legal prohibitions is a religious
doctrine rather than a conservative one -- and the religion concerned
may or may not be characteristically conservative. More on that here
Some Leftist hatred arises from the fact that they blame "society" for their own personal problems and inadequacies
The Leftist hunger for change to the society that they hate leads to a
hunger for control over other people. And they will do and say anything
to get that control: "Power at any price". Leftist politicians are
mostly self-aggrandizing crooks who gain power by deceiving the
uninformed with snake-oil promises -- power which they invariably use
to destroy. Destruction is all that they are good at. Destruction is
what haters do.
Leftists are consistent only in their hate. They don't have principles.
How can they when "there is no such thing as right and wrong"? All
they have is postures, pretend-principles that can be changed as easily
as one changes one's shirt
A Leftist assumption: Making money doesn't entitle you to it, but wanting money does.
"Politicians never accuse you of 'greed' for wanting other people's
money -- only for wanting to keep your own money." --columnist Joe
Sobran (1946-2010)
Leftist policies are candy-coated rat poison that may appear appealing at first, but inevitably do a lot of damage to everyone impacted by them.
A tribute and thanks to Mary Jo Kopechne. Her death was reprehensible
but she probably did more by her death that she ever would have in life:
She spared the world a President Ted Kennedy. That the heap of
corruption that was Ted Kennedy died peacefully in his bed is one of the
clearest demonstrations that we do not live in a just world. Even Joe
Stalin seems to have been smothered to death by Nikita Khrushchev
I often wonder why Leftists refer to conservatives as "wingnuts". A
wingnut is a very useful device that adds versatility wherever it is
used. Clearly, Leftists are not even good at abuse. Once they have
accused their opponents of racism and Nazism, their cupboard is bare.
Similarly, Leftists seem to think it is a devastating critique to refer
to "Worldnet Daily" as "Worldnut Daily". The poverty of their
argumentation is truly pitiful
The Leftist assertion that there is no such thing as right and wrong has
a distinguished history. It was Pontius Pilate who said "What is
truth?" (John 18:38). From a Christian viewpoint, the assertion is
undoubtedly the Devil's gospel
Even in the Old Testament they knew about "Postmodernism": "Woe unto
them that call evil good, and good evil; that put darkness for light,
and light for darkness; that put bitter for sweet, and sweet for
bitter!" - Isaiah 5:20 (KJV)
Was Solomon the first conservative? "The hearts of men are full of evil
and madness is in their hearts" -- Ecclesiastes: 9:3 (RSV). He could
almost have been talking about Global Warming.
Leftist hatred of Christianity goes back as far as the massacre of the
Carmelite nuns during the French revolution. Yancey has written a whole
book tabulating modern Leftist hatred of Christians. It is a rival
religion to Leftism.
"If one rejects laissez faire on account of man's fallibility and moral
weakness, one must for the same reason also reject every kind of
government action." - Ludwig von Mises
The
naive scholar who searches for a consistent Leftist program will not
find it. What there is consists only in the negation of the present.
Because of their need to be different from the mainstream, Leftists are very good at pretending that sow's ears are silk purses
Among intelligent people, Leftism is a character defect. Leftists HATE
success in others -- which is why notably successful societies such as
the USA and Israel are hated and failures such as the Palestinians can
do no wrong.
A Leftist's beliefs are all designed to pander to his ego. So when you
have an argument with a Leftist, you are not really discussing the
facts. You are threatening his self esteem. Which is why the normal
Leftist response to challenge is mere abuse.
Because of the fragility of a Leftist's ego, anything that threatens it
is intolerable and provokes rage. So most Leftist blogs can be
summarized in one sentence: "How DARE anybody question what I
believe!". Rage and abuse substitute for an appeal to facts and reason.
Because their beliefs serve their ego rather than reality, Leftists just KNOW what is good for us. Conservatives need evidence.
Absolute certainty is the privilege of uneducated men and fanatics. -- C.J. Keyser
Hell is paved with good intentions" -- Boswell's Life of Johnson of 1775
"Almost all professors of the arts and sciences are egregiously conceited, and derive their happiness from their conceit" -- Erasmus
THE FALSIFICATION OF HISTORY HAS DONE MORE TO IMPEDE HUMAN DEVELOPMENT THAN ANY ONE THING KNOWN TO MANKIND -- ROUSSEAU
"Seest thou a man wise in his own conceit? there is more hope of a fool than of him" (Proverbs 26: 12). I think that sums up Leftists pretty well.
Eminent British astrophysicist Sir Arthur Stanley Eddington is often
quoted as saying: "Not only is the universe stranger than we imagine, it
is stranger than we can imagine." It was probably in fact said by his
contemporary, J.B.S. Haldane. But regardless of authorship, it could
well be a conservative credo not only about the cosmos but also about
human beings and human society. Mankind is too complex to be summed
up by simple rules and even complex rules are only approximations with
many exceptions.
Politics is the only thing Leftists know about. They know nothing of
economics, history or business. Their only expertise is in promoting
feelings of grievance
Socialism makes the individual the slave of the state -- capitalism frees them.
Many readers here will have noticed that what I say about Leftists
sometimes sounds reminiscent of what Leftists say about conservatives.
There is an excellent reason for that. Leftists are great "projectors"
(people who see their own faults in others). So a good first step in
finding out what is true of Leftists is to look at what they say about
conservatives! They even accuse conservatives of projection (of
course).
The research
shows clearly that one's Left/Right stance is strongly genetically
inherited but nobody knows just what specifically is inherited. What
is inherited that makes people Leftist or Rightist? There is any amount
of evidence that personality traits are strongly genetically inherited
so my proposal is that hard-core Leftists are people who tend to let
their emotions (including hatred and envy) run away with them and who
are much more in need of seeing themselves as better than others -- two
attributes that are probably related to one another. Such Leftists may
be an evolutionary leftover from a more primitive past.
Leftists seem to believe that if someone like Al Gore says it, it must
be right. They obviously have a strong need for an authority figure.
The fact that the two most authoritarian regimes of the 20th century
(Nazi Germany and Soviet Russia) were socialist is thus no surprise.
Leftists often accuse conservatives of being "authoritarian" but that is
just part of their usual "projective" strategy -- seeing in others
what is really true of themselves.
"With their infernal racial set-asides, racial quotas, and race norming,
liberals share many of the Klan's premises. The Klan sees the world in
terms of race and ethnicity. So do liberals! Indeed, liberals and white
supremacists are the only people left in America who are neurotically
obsessed with race. Conservatives champion a color-blind society" -- Ann
Coulter
Politicians are in general only a little above average in intelligence
so the idea that they can make better decisions for us that we can
make ourselves is laughable
A quote from the late Dr. Adrian Rogers: "You cannot legislate the
poor into freedom by legislating the wealthy out of freedom. What one
person receives without working for, another person must work for
without receiving. The government cannot give to anybody anything that
the government does not first take from somebody else. When half of the
people get the idea that they do not have to work because the other
half is going to take care of them, and when the other half gets the
idea that it does no good to work because somebody else is going to get
what they work for, that my dear friend, is about the end of any nation.
You cannot multiply wealth by dividing it."
The Supreme Court of the United States is now and always has been a
judicial abomination. Its guiding principles have always been
political rather than judicial. It is not as political as Stalin's
courts but its respect for the constitution is little better. Some
recent abuses: The "equal treatment" provision of the 14th amendment
was specifically written to outlaw racial discrimination yet the court
has allowed various forms of "affirmative action" for decades -- when
all such policies should have been completely stuck down immediately.
The 2nd. amendment says that the right to bear arms shall not be
infringed yet gun control laws infringe it in every State in the union.
The 1st amendment provides that speech shall be freely exercised yet
the court has upheld various restrictions on the financing and display
of political advertising. The court has found a right to abortion in
the constitution when the word abortion is not even mentioned there.
The court invents rights that do not exist and denies rights that do.
"Some action that is unconstitutional has much to recommend it" -- Elena Kagan, nominated to SCOTUS by Obama
Frank Sulloway, the anti-scientist
The basic aim of all bureaucrats is to maximize their funding and minimize their workload
A lesson in Australian: When an Australian calls someone a "big-noter",
he is saying that the person is a chronic and rather pathetic seeker of
admiration -- as in someone who often pulls out "big notes" (e.g.
$100.00 bills) to pay for things, thus endeavouring to create the
impression that he is rich. The term describes the mentality rather
than the actual behavior with money and it aptly describes many
Leftists. When they purport to show "compassion" by advocating things
that cost themselves nothing (e.g. advocating more taxes on "the rich"
to help "the poor"), an Australian might say that the Leftist is
"big-noting himself". There is an example of the usage here. The term conveys contempt. There is a wise description of Australians generally here
Some ancient wisdom for Leftists: "Be not righteous overmuch; neither make thyself over wise: Why shouldest thou die before thy time?" -- Ecclesiastes 7:16
Jesse Jackson:
"There is nothing more painful to me at this stage in my life than to
walk down the street and hear footsteps and start thinking about robbery
-- then look around and see somebody white and feel relieved." There
ARE important racial differences.
Some Jimmy Carter wisdom: "I think it's inevitable that there will be a lower standard of living than what everybody had always anticipated," he told advisers in 1979. "there's going to be a downward turning."
Heritage is what survives death: Very rare and hence very valuable
Big business is not your friend. As Adam Smith said: "People of the
same trade seldom meet together, even for merriment and diversion, but
the conversation ends in a conspiracy against the public, or in some
contrivance to raise prices. It is impossible indeed to prevent such
meetings, by any law which either could be executed, or would be
consistent with liberty or justice. But though the law cannot hinder
people of the same trade from sometimes assembling together, it ought to
do nothing to facilitate such assemblies; much less to render them
necessary
How can I accept the Communist doctrine, which sets up as its bible,
above and beyond criticism, an obsolete textbook which I know not only
to be scientifically erroneous but without interest or application to
the modern world? How can I adopt a creed which, preferring the mud to
the fish, exalts the boorish proletariat above the bourgeoisie and the
intelligentsia, who with all their faults, are the quality of life and
surely carry the seeds of all human achievement? Even if we need a
religion, how can we find it in the turbid rubbish of the red bookshop?
It is hard for an educated, decent, intelligent son of Western Europe to
find his ideals here, unless he has first suffered some strange and
horrid process of conversion which has changed all his values. -- John Maynard Keynes
Some wisdom from "Bron" Waugh: "The purpose of politics is to help
them [politicians] overcome these feelings of inferiority and compensate
for their personal inadequacies in the pursuit of power"
"There are countless horrible things happening all over the country, and
horrible people prospering, but we must never allow them to disturb our
equanimity or deflect us from our sacred duty to sabotage and annoy
them whenever possible"
The urge to pass new laws must be seen as an illness, not much different
from the urge to bite old women. Anyone suspected of suffering from it
should either be treated with the appropriate pills or, if it is too
late for that, elected to Parliament [or Congress, as the case may be]
and paid a huge salary with endless holidays, to do nothing whatever"
"It is my settled opinion, after some years as a political
correspondent, that no one is attracted to a political career in the
first place unless he is socially or emotionally crippled"
Two lines below of a famous hymn that would be incomprehensible to
Leftists today ("honor"? "right"? "freedom?" Freedom to agree with
them is the only freedom they believe in)
First to fight for right and freedom,
And to keep our honor clean
It is of course the hymn of the USMC -- still today the relentless warriors that they always were. Freedom needs a soldier
If any of the short observations above about Leftism seem wrong, note
that they do not stand alone. The evidence for them is set out at great
length in my MONOGRAPH on Leftism.
3 memoirs of "Supermac", a 20th century Disraeli (Aristocratic British
Conservative Prime Minister -- 1957 to 1963 -- Harold Macmillan):
"It breaks my heart to see (I can't interfere or do anything at my
age) what is happening in our country today - this terrible strike of
the best men in the world, who beat the Kaiser's army and beat Hitler's
army, and never gave in. Pointless, endless. We can't afford that kind
of thing. And then this growing division which the noble Lord who has
just spoken mentioned, of a comparatively prosperous south, and an
ailing north and midlands. That can't go on." -- Mac on the British
working class: "the best men in the world" (From his Maiden speech in
the House of Lords, 13 November 1984)
"As a Conservative, I am naturally in favour of returning into private
ownership and private management all those means of production and
distribution which are now controlled by state capitalism"
During Macmillan's time as prime minister, average living standards
steadily rose while numerous social reforms were carried out
"Talent hits a target no one else can hit; Genius hits a target no one else can see." --?Arthur Schopenhauer
JEWS AND ISRAEL
The Bible is an Israeli book
To me, hostility to the Jews is a terrible tragedy. I weep for them at
times. And I do literally put my money where my mouth is. I do at
times send money to Israeli charities
My (Gentile) opinion of antisemitism: The Jews are the best we've got so killing them is killing us.
"And I will bless them that bless thee, and curse him that curseth thee: and in thee shall all families of the earth be blessed" -- Genesis 12:3
"O pray for the peace of Jerusalem: They shall prosper that love thee" Psalm 122:6.
If I forget you, Jerusalem, may my right hand forget its skill. May
my tongue cling to the roof of my mouth if I do not remember you, if I
do not consider Jerusalem my highest joy -- Psalm 137 (NIV)
Israel, like the Jews throughout history, is hated not for her vices
but her virtues. Israel is hated, as the United States is hated, because
Israel is successful, because Israel is free, and because Israel is
good. As Maxim Gorky put it: “Whatever nonsense the anti-Semites may
talk, they dislike the Jew only because he is obviously better, more
adroit, and more willing and capable of work than they are.” Whether
driven by culture or genes—or like most behavior, an inextricable
mix—the fact of Jewish genius is demonstrable." -- George Gilder
To Leftist haters, all the basic rules of liberal society — rejection of
hate speech, commitment to academic freedom, rooting out racism, the
absolute commitment to human dignity — go out the window when the
subject is Israel.
I have always liked the story of Gideon (See Judges chapters 6 to 8) and
it is surely no surprise that in the present age Israel is the Gideon
of nations: Few in numbers but big in power and impact.
Is the Israel Defence Force the most effective military force per capita
since Genghis Khan? They probably are but they are also the most
ethically advanced military force that the world has ever seen
If I were not an atheist, I would believe that God had a sense of
humour. He gave his chosen people (the Jews) enormous advantages --
high intelligence and high drive -- but to keep it fair he deprived
them of something hugely important too: Political sense. So Jews to
this day tend very strongly to be Leftist -- even though the chief
source of antisemitism for roughly the last 200 years has been the
political Left!
And the other side of the coin is that Jews tend to despise
conservatives and Christians. Yet American fundamentalist Christians
are the bedrock of the vital American support for Israel, the ultimate
bolthole for all Jews. So Jewish political irrationality seems to be a
rather good example of the saying that "The LORD giveth and the LORD
taketh away". There are many other examples of such perversity (or
"balance"). The sometimes severe side-effects of most pharmaceutical
drugs is an obvious one but there is another ethnic example too, a
rather amusing one. Chinese people are in general smart and patient
people but their rate of traffic accidents in China is about 10 times
higher than what prevails in Western societies. They are brilliant
mathematicians and fearless business entrepreneurs but at the same time
bad drivers!
Conservatives, on the other hand, could be antisemitic on entirely
rational grounds: Namely, the overwhelming Leftism of the Diaspora
Jewish population as a whole. Because they judge the individual,
however, only a tiny minority of conservative-oriented people make such
general judgments. The longer Jews continue on their "stiff-necked"
course, however, the more that is in danger of changing. The children
of Israel have been a stiff necked people since the days of Moses,
however, so they will no doubt continue to vote with their emotions
rather than their reason.
I despair of the ADL. Jews have
enough problems already and yet in the ADL one has a prominent Jewish
organization that does its best to make itself offensive to Christians.
Their Leftism is more important to them than the welfare of Jewry --
which is the exact opposite of what they ostensibly stand for! Jewish
cleverness seems to vanish when politics are involved. Fortunately,
Christians are true to their saviour and have loving hearts. Jewish
dissatisfaction with the myopia of the ADL is outlined here. Note that Foxy was too grand to reply to it.
Fortunately for America, though, liberal Jews there are rapidly dying out through intermarriage and failure to reproduce. And the quite poisonous liberal Jews of Israel are not much better off. Judaism is slowly returning to Orthodoxy and the Orthodox tend to be conservative.
The above is good testimony to the accuracy of the basic conservative
insight that almost anything in human life is too complex to be reduced
to any simple rule and too complex to be reduced to any rule at all
without allowance for important exceptions to the rule concerned
Amid their many virtues, one virtue is often lacking among Jews in
general and Israelis in particular: Humility. And that's an
antisemitic comment only if Hashem is antisemitic. From Moses on, the
Hebrew prophets repeatedy accused the Israelites of being "stiff-necked"
and urged them to repent. So it's no wonder that the greatest Jewish
prophet of all -- Jesus -- not only urged humility but exemplified it
in his life and death
"Why should the German be interested in the liberation of the Jew,
if the Jew is not interested in the liberation of the German?... We
recognize in Judaism, therefore, a general anti-social element of the
present time... In the final analysis, the emancipation of the Jews is
the emancipation of mankind from Judaism.... Indeed, in North America,
the practical domination of Judaism over the Christian world has
achieved as its unambiguous and normal expression that the preaching of
the Gospel itself and the Christian ministry have become articles of
trade... Money is the jealous god of Israel, in face of which no other
god may exist". Who said that? Hitler? No. It was Karl Marx. See also here and here and here.
For roughly two centuries now, antisemitism has, throughout the
Western world, been principally associated with Leftism (including the
socialist Hitler) -- as it is to this day. See here.
Karl Marx hated just about everyone. Even his father, the kindly Heinrich Marx, thought Karl was not much of a human being
Leftists call their hatred of Israel "Anti-Zionism" but Zionists are only a small minority in Israel
Some of the Leftist hatred of Israel is motivated by old-fashioned
antisemitism (beliefs in Jewish "control" etc.) but most of it is just
the regular Leftist hatred of success in others. And because the
societies they inhabit do not give them the vast amount of recognition
that their large but weak egos need, some of the most virulent haters
of Israel and America live in those countries. So the hatred is the
product of pathologically high self-esteem.
Their threatened egos sometimes drive Leftists into quite desperate
flights from reality. For instance, they often call Israel an
"Apartheid state" -- when it is in fact the Arab states that practice
Apartheid -- witness the severe restrictions on Christians in Saudi
Arabia. There are no such restrictions in Israel.
If the Palestinians put down their weapons, there'd be peace. If the Israelis put down their weapons, there'd be genocide.
ABOUT
Many people hunger and thirst after righteousness. Some find it in the
hatreds of the Left. Others find it in the love of Christ. I don't
hunger and thirst after righteousness at all. I hunger and thirst after
truth. How old-fashioned can you get?
The kneejerk response of the Green/Left to people who challenge them is
to say that the challenger is in the pay of "Big Oil", "Big Business",
"Big Pharma", "Exxon-Mobil", "The Pioneer Fund" or some other entity
that they see, in their childish way, as a boogeyman. So I think it
might be useful for me to point out that I have NEVER received one cent
from anybody by way of support for what I write. As a retired person, I
live entirely on my own investments. I do not work for anybody and I
am not beholden to anybody. And I have NO investments in oil companies,
mining companies or "Big Pharma"
UPDATE: Despite my (statistical) aversion to mining stocks, I have
recently bought a few shares in BHP -- the world's biggest miner, I
gather. I run the grave risk of becoming a speaker of famous last words
for saying this but I suspect that BHP is now so big as to be largely
immune from the risks that plague most mining companies. I also know of
no issue affecting BHP where my writings would have any relevance. The
Left seem to have a visceral hatred of miners. I have never quite
figured out why.
I imagine that few of my readers will understand it, but I am an
unabashed monarchist. And, as someone who was born and bred in a
monarchy and who still lives there (i.e. Australia), that gives me no
conflicts at all. In theory, one's respect for the monarchy does not
depend on who wears the crown but the impeccable behaviour of the
present Queen does of course help perpetuate that respect. Aside from
my huge respect for the Queen, however, my favourite member of the Royal
family is the redheaded Prince Harry. The Royal family is of course a
military family and Prince Harry is a great example of that. As one of
the world's most privileged people, he could well be an idle layabout
but instead he loves his life in the army. When his girlfriend Chelsy
ditched him because he was so often away, Prince Harry said: "I love
Chelsy but the army comes first". A perfect military man! I doubt that
many women would understand or approve of his attitude but perhaps my
own small army background powers my approval of that attitude.
I imagine that most Americans might find this rather mad -- but I
believe that a constitutional Monarchy is the best form of government
presently available. Can a libertarian be a Monarchist? I think so
-- and prominent British libertarian Sean Gabb seems to think so too! Long live the Queen! (And note that Australia ranks well above the USA on the Index of Economic freedom. Heh!)
The Australian flag with the Union Jack quartered in it
Throughout Europe there is an association between monarchism and
conservatism. It is a little sad that American conservatives do not
have access to that satisfaction. So even though Australia is much more
distant from Europe (geographically) than the USA is, Australia is in
some ways more of an outpost of Europe than America is! Mind you:
Australia is not very atypical of its region. Australia lies just South
of Asia -- and both Japan and Thailand have greatly respected
monarchies. And the demise of the Cambodian monarchy was disastrous for
Cambodia
Throughout the world today, possession of a U.S. or U.K. passport is
greatly valued. I once shared that view. Developments in recent years
have however made me profoundly grateful that I am a 5th generation
Australian. My Australian passport is a door into a much less
oppressive and much less messed-up place than either the USA or Britain
Following the Sotomayor precedent, I would hope that a wise older white
man such as myself with the richness of that experience would more
often than not reach a better conclusion than someone who hasn’t lived
that life.
IQ and ideology: Most academics are Left-leaning. Why? Because very
bright people who have balls go into business, while very bright people
with no balls go into academe. I did both with considerable success,
which makes me a considerable rarity. Although I am a born academic, I
have always been good with money too. My share portfolio even survived
the GFC in good shape. The academics hate it that bright people with
balls make more money than them.
I have no hesitation in saying that the single book which has influenced me most is the New Testament. And my Scripture blog
will show that I know whereof I speak. Some might conclude that I must
therefore be a very confused sort of atheist but I can assure everyone
that I do not feel the least bit confused. The New Testament is a
lighthouse that has illumined the thinking of all sorts of men and women
and I am deeply grateful that it has shone on me.
I am rather pleased to report that I am a lifelong conservative. Out of
intellectual curiosity, I did in my youth join organizations from right
across the political spectrum so I am certainly not closed-minded and
am very familiar with the full spectrum of political thinking.
Nonetheless, I did not have to undergo the lurch from Left to Right that
so many people undergo. At age 13 I used my pocket-money to subscribe
to the "Reader's Digest" -- the main conservative organ available in
small town Australia of the 1950s. I have learnt much since but am
pleased and amused to note that history has since confirmed most of what
I thought at that early age. Conservatism is in touch with reality.
Leftism is not.
I imagine that the RD are still sending mailouts to my 1950s address
Most teenagers have sporting and movie posters on their bedroom walls. At age 14 I had a map of Taiwan on my wall.
"Remind me never to get this guy mad at me" -- Instapundit
It seems to be a common view that you cannot talk informatively about a
country unless you have been there. I completely reject that view but
it is nonetheless likely that some Leftist dimbulb will at some stage
aver that any comments I make about politics and events in the USA
should not be heeded because I am an Australian who has lived almost all
his life in Australia. I am reluctant to pander to such ignorance in
the era of the "global village" but for the sake of the argument I might
mention that I have visited the USA 3 times -- spending enough time in
Los Angeles and NYC to get to know a fair bit about those places at
least. I did however get outside those places enough to realize that
they are NOT America.
"Intellectual" = Leftist dreamer. I have more publications in the
academic journals than almost all "public intellectuals" but I am never
called an intellectual and nor would I want to be. Call me a scholar or
an academic, however, and I will accept either as a just and earned
appellation
A small personal note: I have always been very self-confident. I
inherited it from my mother, along with my skeptical nature. So I don't
need to feed my self-esteem by claiming that I am wiser than others
-- which is what Leftists do.
As with conservatives generally, it bothers me not a bit to admit to
large gaps in my knowledge and understanding. For instance, I don't
know if the slight global warming of the 20th century will resume in the
21st, though I suspect not. And I don't know what a "healthy" diet is,
if there is one. Constantly-changing official advice on the matter
suggests that nobody knows
Leftists are usually just anxious little people trying to pretend that
they are significant. No doubt there are some Leftists who are genuinely
concerned about inequities in our society but their arrogance lies in
thinking that they understand it without close enquiry
My academic background
My full name is Dr. John Joseph RAY. I am a former university teacher
aged 65 at the time of writing in 2009. I was born of Australian
pioneer stock in 1943 at Innisfail in the State of Queensland in
Australia. I trace my ancestry wholly to the British Isles. After an
early education at Innisfail State Rural School and Cairns State High
School, I taught myself for matriculation. I took my B.A. in Psychology
from the University of Queensland in Brisbane. I then moved to Sydney
(in New South Wales, Australia) and took my M.A. in psychology from the
University of Sydney in 1969 and my Ph.D. from the School of
Behavioural Sciences at Macquarie University in 1974. I first tutored
in psychology at Macquarie University and then taught sociology at the
University of NSW. My doctorate is in psychology but I taught mainly
sociology in my 14 years as a university teacher. In High Schools I
taught economics. I have taught in both traditional and "progressive"
(low discipline) High Schools. Fuller biographical notes here
I completed the work for my Ph.D. at the end of 1970 but the degree was
not awarded until 1974 -- due to some academic nastiness from Seymour
Martin Lipset and Fred Emery. A conservative or libertarian who makes
it through the academic maze has to be at least twice as good as the
average conformist Leftist. Fortunately, I am a born academic.
Despite my great sympathy and respect for Christianity, I am the most
complete atheist you could find. I don't even believe that the word
"God" is meaningful. I am not at all original in that view, of course.
Such views are particularly associated with the noted German
philosopher Rudolf Carnap. Unlike Carnap, however, none of my wives
have committed suicide
Very occasionally in my writings I make reference to the greats of
analytical philosophy such as Carnap and Wittgenstein. As philosophy is
a heavily Leftist discipline however, I have long awaited an attack
from some philosopher accusing me of making coat-trailing references not
backed by any real philosophical erudition. I suppose it is
encouraging that no such attacks have eventuated but I thought that I
should perhaps forestall them anyway -- by pointing out that in my
younger days I did complete three full-year courses in analytical
philosophy (at 3 different universities!) and that I have had papers on
mainstream analytical philosophy topics published in academic journals
As well as being an academic, I am an army man and I am pleased and
proud to say that I have worn my country's uniform. Although my service
in the Australian army was chiefly noted for its un-notability, I DID
join voluntarily in the Vietnam era, I DID reach the rank of Sergeant,
and I DID volunteer for a posting in Vietnam. So I think I may be
forgiven for saying something that most army men think but which most
don't say because they think it is too obvious: The profession of arms
is the noblest profession of all because it is the only profession where
you offer to lay down your life in performing your duties. Our men
fought so that people could say and think what they like but I myself
always treat military men with great respect -- respect which in my
view is simply their due.
A real army story here
Even a stopped clock is right twice a day and there is JUST ONE saying
of Hitler's that I rather like. It may not even be original to him but
it is found in chapter 2 of Mein Kampf (published in 1925):
"Widerstaende sind nicht da, dass man vor ihnen kapituliert, sondern
dass man sie bricht". The equivalent English saying is "Difficulties
exist to be overcome" and that traces back at least to the 1920s -- with
attributions to Montessori and others. Hitler's metaphor is however
one of smashing barriers rather than of politely hopping over them and I
am myself certainly more outspoken than polite. Hitler's colloquial
Southern German is notoriously difficult to translate but I think I can
manage a reasonable translation of that saying: "Resistance is there
not for us to capitulate to but for us to break". I am quite sure that I
don't have anything like that degree of determination in my own life
but it seems to me to be a good attitude in general anyway
I have used many sites to post my writings over the years and many have
gone bad on me for various reasons. So if you click on a link here to
my other writings you may get a "page not found" response if the link
was put up some time before the present. All is not lost, however. All
my writings have been reposted elsewhere. If you do strike a failed
link, just take the filename (the last part of the link) and add it to
the address of any of my current home pages and -- Voila! -- you should
find the article concerned.
COMMENTS: I have gradually added comments facilities to all my blogs.
The comments I get are interesting. They are mostly from Leftists and
most consist either of abuse or mere assertions. Reasoned arguments
backed up by references to supporting evidence are almost unheard of
from Leftists. Needless to say, I just delete such useless comments.
You can email me here
(Hotmail address). In emailing me, you can address me as "John", "Jon",
"Dr. Ray" or "JR" and that will be fine -- but my preference is for
"JR" -- and that preference has NOTHING to do with an American soap
opera that featured a character who was referred to in that way
DETAILS OF REGULARLY UPDATED BLOGS BY JOHN RAY:
"Tongue Tied"
"Dissecting Leftism" (Backup here)
"Australian Politics"
"Education Watch International"
"Political Correctness Watch"
"Greenie Watch"
Western Heart
BLOGS OCCASIONALLY UPDATED:
"Marx & Engels in their own words"
"A scripture blog"
"Recipes"
"Some memoirs"
To be continued ....
Coral reef compendium.
IQ Compendium
Queensland Police
Australian Police News
Paralipomena (3)
Of Interest
Dagmar Schellenberger
My alternative Wikipedia
BLOGS NO LONGER BEING UPDATED
"Food & Health Skeptic"
"Eye on Britain"
"Immigration Watch International".
"Leftists as Elitists"
Socialized Medicine
OF INTEREST (2)
QANTAS -- A dying octopus
BRIAN LEITER (Ladderman)
Obama Watch
Obama Watch (2)
Dissecting Leftism -- Large font site
Michael Darby
Paralipomena (2)
AGL -- A bumbling monster
Telstra/Bigpond follies
Optus bungling
Vodafrauds (vodafone)
Bank of Queensland blues
There are also two blogspot blogs which record what I think are my main recent articles here and here. Similar content can be more conveniently accessed via my subject-indexed list of short articles here or here (I rarely write long articles these days)
Mirror for "Dissecting Leftism"
Alt archives
Longer Academic Papers
Johnray links
Academic home page
Academic Backup Page
Dagmar Schellenberger
General Backup
My alternative Wikipedia
General Backup 2
Selected reading
MONOGRAPH ON LEFTISM
CONSERVATISM AS HERESY
Rightism defined
Leftist Churches
Leftist Racism
Fascism is Leftist
Hitler a socialist
Leftism is authoritarian
James on Leftism
Irbe on Leftism
Beltt on Leftism
Lakoff
Van Hiel
Sidanius
Kruglanski
Pyszczynski et al.
Cautionary blogs about big Australian organizations:
TELSTRA
OPTUS
AGL
Bank of Queensland
Queensland Police
Australian police news
QANTAS, a dying octopus
Main academic menu
Menu of recent writings
basic home page
Pictorial Home Page
Selected pictures from blogs (Backup here)
Another picture page (Best with broadband. Rarely updated)
Note: If the link to one of my articles is not working, the
article concerned can generally be viewed by prefixing to the filename
the following:
http://pandora.nla.gov.au/pan/42197/20151027-0014/jonjayray.comuv.com/
OR: (After 2015)
https://web.archive.org/web/20160322114550/http://jonjayray.com/