Tuesday, March 31, 2009

Overreach

Yessir, I think we have overreach.

U.S. Threatens Bankruptcy for GM, Chrystler

Maybe I'm the amateur, here, but this definitely looks like a shitty way to sustain a domestic auto industry to me.

WWBD? (What Would Buffet Do?)

Know better than me, that's for sure.

All I know is having the Federal government call the shots on the biggest auto manufacturer in America is a sign of the weakness of our industry, not strength.

And no political propaganda to the contrary will make that not so.

Friday, March 27, 2009

No sense at all

I think I've finally made my peace with the fact that life often makes no sense at all. And that is not a fact that I am always able to change. I've wasted much energy mourning that sometimes cruel, often pointless fact of life already.

Time to enjoy life more and worry about it less.

Sunday, March 15, 2009

Getting honest with ourselves

Nobody listens to real climate change experts

I generally share the sentiments of this column. I believe that a modest warming is occurring. I am skeptical of catastrophic scenarios. And I am quite confident, at this point, because of the tenor of the debate, that climate change has been so politicized that it has rendered more reasonable policy debates and policy-making nearly impossible.

One of the comments on this column illustrates, tongue-in-cheek, the problem of the modern politics, left and right.

"This is nothing more than vile propaganda.

I really believe climate change denial should be an imprisonable offense. Hundreds of millions of people will die if something isn't done...

I know this because my children are brainwashed/taught these very things in school. If they argue against the 'facts', they'll come home with low grades. And schools (and indeed universities) are hardly the places to make poltical points now, are they?"

Threats and intimidation clearly undermine more open, honest debate.

The problem is that everyone loves them to get what they want.

It needs to end.

If we are ever going to be honest with ourselves, that is.

Friday, March 13, 2009

Spring break

You know why so many of the most serious problems in the world go unresolved?

Because most people would rather fight about them than resolve them.

After awhile, it gets old.

Makes me crave a beer, some vegi phad thai, and a week thinking about nothing special.

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Burning the village to save it

On more than just matters of finances, I think Dr. Sowell is correct, here.

Subsidizing Bad Decisions

The bigger tragedy of the world is substituting the ordinary pitfalls of life with political warfare designed to inflict much tragedy to somehow save the village.

I think we can do better than that.

Thursday, March 05, 2009

Certainty

I'm fairly convinced, at this point, that an awful lot of politics, and too much of life, is the long psychodrama of people certain that they must be right. About everything, no less. And who are desperate for the power to back up that all too certain assertion.

Many people die on that alter. Many others are hurt, manipulated, or otherwise maltreated. All of us are poorer for it.

The question is will we settle for it.

How sad if the answer to that question were yes.

Monday, March 02, 2009

Honest, humble, and respecting my intelligence

Christopher Buckley, like all of us, is at his best when he is at his most honest and humble.

The Audacity of Nope

"One feels almost unpatriotic, entertaining negative thoughts about Obama’s grand plan. But it is far from clear that spending oceanic sums of money is the right corrective...

...Now let me say: Unlike Rush Limbaugh, I want President Obama to succeed. I honestly do. We are all in this leaky boat together—did I say 'leaky'? I meant 'sieve-like'—and it would be counterproductive, if not downright suicidal, to want it to go down just to prove a conservative critique of Keynesian economics.

But let’s all be honest about this: No one knows how all this is going to turn out in the end. Do you, really? If we learned one thing during the runup to this rancid enchilada, it is that most of the smartest people in the room were wrong, and the other ones were crooked.

Even today, smart people are still holding spittle-flying debates about what really ended the Great Depression. (That’s reassuring, isn’t it?) Personally, I’m in the camp that maintains it was Pearl Harbor, not FDR’s policies, that actually brought it to an end. Which, I suppose, leaves me to wonder if the best we can hope for is another sneak attack by Japan. Bring it on, as our former president would say. Let’s just pray Japan hasn’t quietly produced The Bomb since 1945. All those centrifuges they said they needed for 'flat-screen plasma TVs'? Uh oh….

I’m all for audacity and all for hope. 'L’audace, l’audace—toujours l’audace!'(Frederick the Great) is an inspiring motto. It worked for Patton. Whatever you think of this leviathan budget, President Obama cannot be accused of being a trimmer, or reticent. And with the New York Times running heart-breaking front-page stories about out-of-work executives now working as $11-an-hour janitors, I’m all for hope, too. Governor Jindal and El Rushbo may not be happy campers, but even Senator John McCain has been sounding positive notes about President Obama’s leadership—while at the same time focusing the nation’s attention on the president’s (ahem) proposed new $11 billion fleet of helicopters. It would be presidential for him to say, as he almost has, that he’ll keep the old model for a few more years.

The strange thing is that one feels almost unpatriotic, entertaining negative thoughts about Mr. Obama’s grand plan, as if one were indulging in—call it—the audacity of nope. It is on the one hand clear that something must be done about our economic woes. But that is very different from saying that spending these vast, oceanic sums of money is the right corrective to a decade of fiscal incontinence.

One thing is certain, however: Government is getting bigger and will stay bigger. Just remember the apothegm that a government that is big enough to give you everything you want is also big enough to take it all away.And remember what de Tocqueville told us about a bureaucracy that grows so profuse that not even the most original mind can penetrate it.

If this is what the American people want, so be it, but they ought to have no illusions about the perils of this approach. Mr. Obama is proposing among everything else $1 trillion in new entitlements, and entitlement programs never go away, or in the oddly poetic bureaucratic jargon, “sunset.” He is proposing $1.4 trillion in new taxes, an appetite for which was largely was whetted by the shameful excesses of American CEO corporate culture. And finally, he has proposed $5 trillion in new debt, one-half the total accumulated national debt in all US history. All in one fell swoop.

He tells us that all this is going to work because the economy is going to be growing by 3.2 percent a year from now. Do you believe that? Would you take out a loan based on that? And in the three years following, he predicts that our economy will grow by 4 percent a year.

This is nothing if not audacious hope. If he’s right, then looking back, March 2009 will be the dawn of the Age of Stimulation, or whatever elegant phrase Niall Ferguson comes up with. If he turns out to be wrong, then it will look very different, the entrance ramp to the Road to Serfdom, perhaps, and he will reap the whirlwind that follows, along with the rest of us."

If there is anything I am learning, this political period, it is that a little humility and a little honest debate goes a long way to earning my trust in a democracy. And the kind of grandstanding and dishonest debate we've been having earns my mistrust fairly quickly, as well.

The last time I remember trusting the political process was the last time that discussions were more honest, moderate, and where people seemed more honestly pitching in together to deal with challenges in front of us.

When that is not happening, I just do not trust the process, no matter who runs it.

Honesty and humility are much more persuasive to me than grand theories and ideologies, anymore, all of which are more interested in winning my ballot than persuading me honestly, I'm convinced.

Be nice if people actually respected my intelligence, for once.