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View 642 September 27 - October 3, 2010

 

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Monday, September 27, 2010

 O'Donnell et. al.

I noticed a reference to O'Donnell in your latest. You might be interested in my recent blog posts. My new hobby seems to be debunking exaggerated claims of the nuttiness of tea party candidates.

O'Donnell doesn't strike me as a particularly impressive candidate, but she is a good deal less nutty than her detractors pretend. As best I can tell, her "campaign" against masturbation consisted of one comment as a guest on a TV show about fifteen years a8go, to the effect that the bible says to lust is to commit adultery in your heart, that you can't masturbate without lust, hence masturbation is sinful.

And nobody but me seems to have noticed that her lawsuit against ISI was motivated by the fact that *they* were Christian fundamentalists who believed women had to be under male authority, and so, when the VP she reported to was going to be away for awhile, promoted a new hire who was supposed to be an assistant to her and converted her into his assistant. She complained to (I think) the Equal Opportunity folks, they fired her in response, she sued. --
David Friedman
www.daviddfriedman.com
daviddfriedman.blogspot.com/

Thanks. O'Donnell is an example of citizen government. If self government is to work, someone other than professional politicians must be willing to govern. If we want to reduce the importance of the ruling class, then people who are not part of that well-groomed mutual admiration society must hold office. I am certain that O'Donnell will never vote for many of the horrors that have become law. I am certain that her Democratic opponent will. I will leave the rest to the voters of Delaware.

The reaction of the press to the notion that outsiders might actually get into government has been predictable and often ludicrous. Including bringing in comedians to "testify" to Congress.

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And on an entirely different note:

Japan's Sharp to start e-book business in December

http://www.google.com/hostednews/
afp/article/ALeqM5iu-XfMx4sncH-iElIyRbdiWC0PsQ 

Sharp is a company that always wants to be the first to be second in a growing market. They have the brand name and financial resources to prevail. Look for the initial U.S.A price to be south of $100.00

Just in time for Christmas and the "stocking stuffer" market. It will be interesting to see which e-book distributors thay hook up with.

Sincerely,

Francis Hamit
 Brass Cannon Books

I was just discussing the changed situation with a major publisher this morning on the phone. No one really knows what's going on. The publishing world changes like dreams.

==================

There is a good collection of mail t0day.

========

A teacher who got a below average rating in the LA Times ratings is dead and the talk is that he killed himself over the rating; whereupon the United Teachers of Los Angeles has demanded that all ratings cease and all publications of ratings cease and be taken down and no longer made public because ---

In a supposedly unrelated story, the County of LA refuses to name those employees who make more than $250,000 a year be named because some of the employees say that the are afraid and this will compromise their security.

The entitlement mentality of the ruling class becomes more manifest?

===================

This is the hottest September 27 on record for Los Angeles. It's 112 outside my window. I don't have the air conditioning on but I am about to retreat to an air conditioned room. The main part of the house is not bad, but up here it's pretty bad even with fans.

What the global warming people will make of this I don't know. It was nearly the year without a summer. It is now the year when summer came in fall.

 

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Tuesday, September 28, 2010   

Who are the Independents who voted in Obama?

The Rush Limbaugh program today has a debate on the subject. There are a number of opinions, but none seem to be the obvious: there is no group description because there are many who think of themselves as "independent". They don't all fit into one basket.

The traditional "Independent" voter says "I don't vote for the party, I vote for the man." There used to be a lot of those. I don't hear so many now. They are the traditional "good government" voters who in local elections used to periodically rise up and "turn the rascals out" with reform platforms. Professional politicians called them "googoo's" and in city politics the goal was to keep them lazy. Don't rile them up.

The Obama victory got most of those. He was the one they had been waiting for. Hope and Change. Good Government was coming.

There's another large bloc of independent voters: nominally members of one party or the other, they didn't devote much time or effort to politics, seldom voted at all, and paid most of their attention to their own affairs. These generally turned out en bloc to vote the Creeps out. Some thought they'd get real change, and some were excited at the prospect of hope and change and the Inauguration and the promises of how things were going to be different.

There are other groups within the "Independent" category.  Few are happy with what we got.

And they never catch wise.

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The Obama Administration defends the upcoming insurance changes in today's Wall Street Journal.

Health Insurers Finally Get Some Oversight

In the past, these companies ran wild with no accountability

In the last two weeks, my department has been accused of "thuggery" (this editorial page) and "Soviet tyranny" (Newt Gingrich). What prompted these accusations? The fact that we told health-insurance companies that, as required by law, we will review large premium increases and identify those that are unreasonable.

There's a long history of special interests using similar attacks to oppose change. In the mid-1960s, for example, some claimed Medicare would put our country on the path to socialism.

But what is really objectionable about these comments is not who they're attacking, but what they're defending. These critics seem to believe that any oversight of the insurance industry is too much, and that consumers would be better off in a system where they have few rights or protections.

Meanwhile, insurance companies no longer sell many policies for children, and are altering the policies they do offer. Under the new laws, if they offer insurance at all they must offer it at the same price to those who are very ill (have pre-existing conditions). Of course that isn't insurance, that's welfare. Perhaps we ought to offer welfare to those who are ill and without insurance, but forcing insurance companies to pay for that may not be the best way to do it.

The simple fact is that medical science continues to develop techniques that may "work" in the sense of prolonging life. Some are obvious: quit smoking, don't get morbidly obese, get some exercise every day. Some are new and expensive. AIDS is no longer a death sentence. The cocktails are expensive, but they do allow a reasonably normal life for extended times. Some cancer drugs will keep patients with advanced cancer technically alive for a few more days, or weeks, or even months, but they cost a lot and there is no pretence of a normal life. Both AIDS and advanced breast cancer are preexisting conditions.

What should the public pay for? Is this independent of what the nation can afford? Was any of this debated? What was the outcome of the debate? I must have missed it.

Insurance companies are raising premiums. If they don't they will be out of business. If they do, Kathleen Sebelius will investigate them.

 

===============

Harlan just got back from the convention in Madison and called. We talked for a while. He's tired. It was good to hear from him.

==============

 

drugs and sport killing in Afghanistan 

Jerry,

Rogue units, drug use, sport killings. I used to think this wouldn't be "another Vietnam" especially since we have no draftees, but nope, we're still sending the same sacks of crap to war now as we did then. Yea, it is exactly another Vietnam and we did it to ourselves, this time with a highly paid, highly trained, highly motivated all-volunteer force.

http://us.cnn.com/2010/WORLD/
asiapcf/09/27/afghanistan.sport.murders/
index.html?hpt=T2 

From the article:

"Other soldiers charged said they were afraid of Gibbs and admitted smoking hashish laced with opium nearly every day. Cpl. Emmitt Quintal, who is charged with trying to interfere with a military investigation and drug abuse, told the Army investigator the whole deployment was using drugs on "bad days, stressful days, days when we needed to escape." Quintal told investigators in May that the platoon -- under Gibbs' direction -- went to the barracks of a man who they believed was a snitch and beat him up. After the beating, Quintal said on the tape, "Gibbs sat down casually and told [him] if he snitched again he would kill him and that he had killed people before and that he had no problem killing again. At that time, Sgt. Gibbs had a cloth. He opened it and dropped it and three human body fingers fell on the ground. At that point, I really lost my head."

DAMN I hope they hang these f**kers, every last one of them. And cashier their entire chain of command for being blind to what was going on in their unit. People are going to be lining up to take shots at me when I deploy, because of what these people did. I'd pull the lever (or the trigger if they get the firing squad) myself. We haven't learned a damn thing. A 20 year war, you'd think we'd be able to see this coming and pull those troops out before they do something like this, but no, we're still making the same stupid leadership errors now as we did then.

Please don't post my name, but holy hell please at least link to the article and write your congresscritter to ask that they do what they can to ensure the strictest punishment if these people are found guilty. PTSD or blast trauma my ass, they got bored and killed people for fun.

A Serving Officer

I post this as requested, but not as either endorsement or condemnation. I have no claim to knowing what actually happened.

I do know that something like that was inevitable, and will happen again. Even with long term volunteer professional soldiers.  I am amazed that there is not more of this. A long war with no end in sight, no visible progress, many signs that we are repeating mistakes made from the time of Alexander the Great onward -- that is the worst thing I can imagine for the health of the Legions. Even if we are in fact winning, even if things have changed from the time of Tamerlane,  Babur the Tiger, the two British Afghan Wars, even if the technology is different and our prospects better, that is not being conveyed to the troops at the sharp end. When there is no visible progress the days are long.

There are many kinds of professional soldiers. Many never break. Many do, and they break in different ways. The old Indian Fighting Army sometimes carried out massacres.  The Foreign Legion famously suffered from cafard, the bug, being bugged; the cure for the bug was a rifle and the chance to use it, but that is not a cure that works if applied daily in situations in which there are complex rules of engagement.   Danger every day with no prospect of ending it with a supreme effort is a quite different stress from, say, D-Day and the conquest of France, Battle of the Bulge, the race to the Rhine. Every company grade officer has known a Sergeant Gibbs, and often was glad to have him; but also knew that one day he would break badly. Leading troops into war is quite different from reading and writing books about it.

 

Competent Empires do not engage their Legions in this kind of war.  Republics do not generally seek to export their cultures on the barrels of their Strykers.

It is the duty of the Commander in Chief to make it clear to the Legions why they are engaged, and what they must do.

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Wednesday,  September 29, 2010

It is pledge drive week for KUSC, which means that for a week I am going to nag all of you to subscribe if you haven't and remind all the subscribers to renew if you have not done that.  Thanks to the many who routinely renew, and apologies to current subscribers since you'll be hearing these appeals all week. The good news is that it only lasts a week, and I don't bug you much in between drives.

============

So Gloria Alred holds a press conference, with tears. Nike Diaz, an undocumented migrant, having worked for Meg Whitman for years, confessed to her employer that she was in fact an illegal immigrant, even though prior to her employment she did in fact submit documents demonstrating that she was in fact legally in the United States. Mrs. Whitman then dismissed the employee, as the law requires. Now come the tears.

Presumably the story is that the Whitman family actually knew that the documents were false. There seems to be an understory to the effect that Mrs. Whitman was exploiting Alred's client: she was only paying $23 a hour (base pay over $57,000 a year for a 48 hour week without overtime) and making social security payments and such.

The nanny confessed her illegal status the day after Mrs. Whitman announced that she was a candidate for governor of California. Niki Diaz came forward with her story and her lawyer yesterday, the day after Mrs. Whitman held her own in a televised debate with Jerry Brown.

Do we all recall "Nannygate"? One of the casualties of that was Clinton's attempt to name Kimba Wood, a Reagan appointed judge, to the position of Attorney General of the United States, after his first appointment (Zoe Baird, a former Carter White House Counsel) failed for the same reason: each woman had employed an illegal alien as a nanny/housekeeper. As a result we got Janet Reno, since Clinton was determined to appoint a female AG and found one without nanny problems. The lesson learned was that if you ever intend to hold public office, you must be sure to employ only documented citizens. Mrs. Whitman certainly learned that lesson. She asked for documents including a California driver's license -- part of the job included driving the Whitman children to school. She paid the Social Security taxes, withheld income taxes, and paid $23/hour. She dealt with a reputable employment agency. And all this is said by Alred to be exploitation. 

Niki Diaz, who was driving the Whitman children to school with an illegal driving license, says she feels badly used and was "thrown away like a piece of garbage."

Meanwhile we have a self-confessed illegal alien h0lding a national press conference. No Immigration officers appeared at the press conference.

I have no evidence that this was a October Surprise planned by Democratic Party strategists or that Former Governor Brown was in on the gag. My suspicion is that it will do Mrs. Whitman no great harm, and may do her some good. I note that Mrs. Whitman is not condemning Ms. Diaz, but states that Ms. Diaz has been manipulated by Gloria Alred.

=======================

It is pledge drive week for KUSC, which means that for a week I am going to nag all of you to subscribe if you haven't and remind all the subscribers to renew if you have not done that.  Thanks to the many who routinely renew, and apologies to current subscribers since you'll be hearing these appeals all week. The good news is that it only lasts a week, and I don't bug you much in between drives.

============

KFI now has posted on its web site a copy (with part of the number redacted) of Diaz's Social Security card and her California Driving License, both presented to Ms. Whitman as part of her employment application. This appears to be prima facie evidence of a felony, to wit, using false documents as evidence of immigration status. I doubt that anything will come of that, of course.

One wonders why Ms. Whitman didn't hire a genuine English Nanny since cost wasn't likely to be a decision factor.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Thursday,  September 30, 2010

I am catching up, sort of. I should have the September Mail Bag up tonight at Chaos Manor Reviews.

Meanwhile the pledge drive continues. This place operates on the Public Radio model: like KUSC, the classical music station in Los Angeles (there used to be several classical music stations; most are gone now) it's all free, but it can only continue if we get enough subscriptions and renewals. We have a fairly high renewal rate here -- I am told by others that ours is enviable -- and I thank all my long time subscribers who renew every year.

I know it's difficult in these economic times.

===================

I have more errands this morning, The big news is that MacDonald's may have to drop its health care plans for employees because as the new health care law takes effect the premiums will go up too much. If you like your health care plan you can keep it turns out to have been a well meant promise, but imprudent: it was impossible to keep, as everyone except President Obama knew at the time. Insurance plans that must accept everyone at any time at the same price without regard to the "pre-existing conditions" (i.e. the medical condition of the insured) are not insurance at all; they are welfare plans, and have to be. It was impossible for most health care plans to remain as they were with the new law, and while the President's background and experience may be such that he didn't understand that, certainly the Congressional staffers who drafted the law did understand -- if not, they should be fired for incompetence.

So it goes.

=====================

As I suspected, the Whitman Nanny Affair continues to grab media attention. The LA Times headline was:

Whitman admits using undocumented immigrant as housekeeper

which is an interesting way to put it. The evidence shows that Whitman, undoubtedly aware of Nannygate and certainly able to afford a legal housekeeper (at $23 an hour there were certainly plenty of Americans who wouldn't mind having the job) went to an employment agency and insisted on a legal resident housekeeper, paid Social Security, withheld FICA and Income Tax and otherwise acted as an uncompensated tax collector for the government, and as required by law dismissed the employee as soon as she was told that she was an illegal alien using forged documents. Que mas desea Vd? But the headline is that she admits using an undocumented immigrant, i.e. an illegal alien, as housekeeper. So it goes.

At least we now know just how far we can trust the great newspapers of these United States. I don't suppose that's astonishing to many readers.

I have errands. Back this afternoon.

=============

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Friday,  October 1, 2010

It is pledge drive week for KUSC, which means that for a week I am going to nag all of you to subscribe if you haven't and remind all the subscribers to renew if you have not done that.  Thanks to the many who routinely renew, and apologies to current subscribers since you'll be hearing these appeals all week. The good news is that it only lasts a week, and I don't bug you much in between drives.

The September Chaos Manor Reviews Mailbag is up.

Echoes of the Great Depression, by former Texas Senator Phil Gramm, in today's Wall Street Journal begins

This may not be your grandfather's Great Depression, but many aspects of today's situation would remind him of the 1930s. If the recession that officially ended a year ago feels uncomfortably surreal to you yet familiar to him, it's probably because the recovery went missing.

During the average recovery since World War II, gross domestic product (GDP) surpassed the pre-recession high five quarters after the recession began. It has never taken longer than seven quarters. Yet today, after 11 quarters, GDP is still below what it was in the fourth quarter of 2007. The economy is growing at only about a third of the rate of previous postwar recoveries from major recessions.

He later tells us

The Roosevelt administration also conducted a seven-year populist tirade against private business, which FDR denounced as the province of "economic royalists" and "malefactors of great wealth." The war on business and wealth was so traumatic that the League of Nations' 1939 World Economic Survey attributed part of the poor U.S. economic performance to it: "The relations between the leaders of business and the Administration were uneasy, and this uneasiness accentuated the unwillingness of private enterprise to embark on further projects of capital expenditure which might have helped to sustain the economy."

Churchill, who was generally guarded when criticizing New Deal policies, could not hold back. "The disposition to hunt down rich men as if they were noxious beasts," he noted in "Great Contemporaries" (1939), is "a very attractive sport." But "confidence is shaken and enterprise chilled, and the unemployed queue up at the soup kitchens or march out to the public works with ever growing expense to the taxpayer and nothing more appetizing to take home to their families than the leg or wing of what was once a millionaire. . . It is indispensable to the wealth of nations and to the wage and life standards of labour, that capital and credit should be honoured and cherished partners in the economic system. . . ."

None of which is a surprise to those who have read Amity Schlaes The Forgotten Man (print) (Kindle) as I have recommended for some time now. The Obama Administration clearly has not read the book, and continues to thrash around trying the kinds of things that were so remarkably unsuccessful during the New Deal -- but with this difference. The New Deal did create TVA. It did actually build some roads. Some of its projects actually produced something, improved parks, cleared trails, put shovels in people's hands (even if they leaned on them a lot). TVA generated energy. Energy is one of the keys to economic success. TVA may or may not have been more efficient at producing energy than private companies might have been, but it undeniably produced energy and helped keep energy prices low. The current administration hasn't expanded energy production at all unless you count the "green jobs" that turn out to be few and the green energy which turns out to be hard to find.

The administration tells us that the Recession ended a year ago, and thanks to all the TARP and Stimulus spending we had a Summer of Recovery. It depends on how you define recession, of course. To the 10% unemployed we didn't have a recovery and it feels more like slipping into Depression.

The current Administration answer is that the depression ended and we are recovering, and the answer to it all is more of the same. If you are deep in a hole, the first thing to do is to stop digging. The November election gives us a chance to do that. So of course all the talk is about the exploitation of an illegal immigrant as a housekeeper.

Why in the world would anyone pay $23 an hour to an illegal immigrant is not clear. Surely that's not one of those jobs Americans don't want? I suspect that a lot of people would like to be exploited at $23 an hour. But that's the quality of the debate, at least on our local radio shows.

For years we have sown the wind.

God save us from getting the government we deserve.

================

In doing other things I was reminded of an older apologia for this place.

=============

 

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Saturday,  September 2, 2010

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http://www.nytimes.com/2010/10/02/health/research/02infect.html?_r=1

http://www.guardian.co.uk/science/the-lay-scientist/2010/sep/24/1

 

Joe Sobran, RIP.

It's a sad commentary that I can't seem to find a decent obituary of him anywhere - they're all seemingly concerned with either excoriating him over his alleged anti-Semitism (untrue, of course) or using his life and legacy to attack WFB, et. al.

----- Roland Dobbins

I was a speaker at a conference long ago where Sobran was also speaking. We spent a pleasant evening in the bar the night before, along with John Kenneth Galbraith and Arthur Laffer. Long ago, and we had little contact after that evening.. I never thought Sobran an anti-Semite. RIP

 

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Sunday,  October 3, 2010

Long day. I took the day off, but I have posted a mixed bag of interesting mail. And the September mailbag is up over at Chaos Manor Reviews.

The pledge drive continues. My thanks to all those who have subscribed and renewed the past few days. If this continues we'll be able to keep this place open. This site operates on the public radio model: it's free, but it can't stay open without subscribers. If you haven't subscribed, this would be a good time to do that. We can't stay open without subscribers.

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