Archive for the 'Think about it.' Category
17th October 2013
John Derbyshire, Patron Saint of Dyspepsia, deals with modern cant.
Modern political discourse consists of little more than the Tinkertoy assembly of cant phrases into speeches: Fix the schools! Out of the shadows! Our brave men and women in uniform! The schools are fine; the “shadow” people are demonstrating in front of TV cameras; and the average American mandarin would faint in horror on hearing that his child had joined the military. Yet still they cant….
…
Practically anything you read or hear about racism, sexism, and homophobia is cant. The most punctilious anti-racists flee like rats from black neighborhoods; the dearth of female mathematicians, in an age when women form an actual majority of college students, is widely understood to be a matter of female preferences, not discrimination; and sensible parents do not leave their kids alone with sexually eccentric adults. Yet the cant goes on.
Posted in Think about it. | Comments Off on A Whining Pretension to Goodness
16th October 2013
“A democracy cannot exist as a permanent form of government. It can only exist until the voters discover that they can vote themselves money from the Public Treasury. From that moment on, the majority always votes for the candidate promising the most benefits from the Public Treasury with the result that a democracy always collapses over loose fiscal policy always followed by dictatorship.”
Alexander Fraser Tyler, “The Decline and Fall of the Athenian Republic”
Posted in Think about it. | Comments Off on Thought for the Day
16th October 2013
Read it.
Because we have nothing more important to do today.
Posted in Think about it. | 1 Comment »
14th October 2013
Read it.
Oops, too late….
Remind your parents not to send you to public school. Bill Gates went to Lakeside, Seattle’s most exclusive prep school where tuition in 1967 was $5,000 (Harvard tuition that year was $1760). Typical classmates included the McCaw brothers, who sold the cellular phone licenses they obtained from the U.S. Government to AT&T for $11.5 billion in 1994. When the kids there wanted to use a computer, they got their moms to hold a rummage sale and raise $3,000 to buy time on a DEC PDP-10, the same machine used by computer science researchers at Stanford and MIT.
And that’s advice we can all appreciate.
Note: Recall that in the 1980s we venerated Donald Trump and studied his “art of the deal”. If Donald Trump had taken the millions he inherited from his father and put it all into mutual funds, you’d never have had to suffer through one of his books. But he’d be just about as rich today.
And that’s all you really need to know about getting rich.
Posted in Think about it. | Comments Off on How to Become as Rich as Bill Gates
12th October 2013
Read it.
Deception #1: universal coverage
Deception #2: no new taxes on the middle class
Deception #3: annual premium savings of $2,500
Deception #4: no increase in the deficit
Deception #5: you can keep your plan if you like it
Posted in Think about it. | Comments Off on Lies of Obamacare
12th October 2013
Posted in Think about it. | Comments Off on Thought for the Day
11th October 2013
Read it.
A useul compendium, all in one place, quite convenient.
Many pro- and anti-evolution bloviators get it wrong; here’s the fix.
Posted in Think about it. | Comments Off on Misconceptions About Evolution
10th October 2013
Read it. And watch the video.
PowerLine looks at what would happen if an Ordinary Citizen ™ were to handle money the way the Federal government does.
Posted in Think about it. | Comments Off on Raise My Debt Limit
10th October 2013
Steve Sailer thinks about hard stuff so that you won’t have to.
Last month in Taki’s Magazine, I wrote about Bill Clinton-lookalike Frances Frei, the Dean of Something at the Harvard Business School, and her war on slutty Halloween costumes. I mentioned that Frei is gay-married to a former student at HBS named Anne Morriss. Now, a reader points out that, in one of those iSteve Convergences, Morriss is involved with a new Lesbian Eugenics firm.
Really, you can’t make this shit up.
I could imagine a scenario — feel free to use this in a Lifetime movie — in which a woman is choosing between Donor X and Donor Y, and Genepeeks says Donor Y is clean but Donor X has a 1 out of 1000 chance of horrible Disease Z. But the lady says, But, from their pictures, I like X’s smile more than Y’s, so I’ll go with Donor X. But then the baby is born with Disease Z, for which the mother can’t forgive herself. Until, she discovers that … well, I don’t know what the plot twist would be because I lose interest in making up my own narratives with consistent rapidity.
And there was much rejoicing….
Posted in Think about it. | Comments Off on Lesbian Eugenics marches on
8th October 2013
Read it.
Breaking Down the New Feudalism: The Emerging Class Structure
The emerging class structure of neo-feudalism, like its European and Asian antecedents, is far more complex than simply a matter of the gilded “them” and the broad “us.” To work as a system, as we can now see in California, we need to understand the broader, more divergent class structure that is emerging.
The Oligarchs: The swelling number of billionaires in the state, particularly in Silicon Valley, has enhanced power that is emerging into something like the old aristocratic French second estate. Through public advocacy and philanthropy, the oligarchs have tended to embrace California’s “green” agenda, with a very negative impact on traditional industries such as manufacturing, agriculture, energy, and construction. Like the aristocrats who saw all value in land, and dismissed other commerce as unworthy, they believe all value belongs to those who own the increasingly abstracted information revolution that has made them so fabulously rich.
The Clerisy: The Oligarchs may have the money, but by themselves they cannot control a huge state like California, much less America. Gentry domination requires allies with a broader social base and their own political power. In the Middle Ages, this role was played largely by the church; in today’s hyper-secular America, the job of shaping the masses has fallen to the government apparat, the professoriat, and the media, which together constitute our new Clerisy. The Clerisy generally defines societal priorities, defends “right-thinking” oligarchs, and chastises those, like traditional energy companies, that deviate from their theology.
The New Serfs: If current trends continue, the fastest growing class will be the permanently property-less. This group includes welfare recipients and other government dependents but also the far more numerous working poor. In the past, the working poor had reasonable aspirations for a better life, epitomized by property ownership or better prospects for their children. Now, with increasingly little prospect of advancement, California’s serfs depend on the Clerisy to produce benefits making their permanent impoverishment less gruesome. This sad result remains inevitable as long as the state’s economy bifurcates between a small high-wage, tech-oriented sector, and an expanding number of lower wage jobs in hospitality, health services, and personal service jobs. As a result, the working class, stunted in their drive to achieve the California dream, now represents the largest portion of domestic migrants out of the state.
The Yeomanry: In neo-feudalist California, the biggest losers tend to be the old private sector middle class. This includes largely small business owners, professionals, and skilled workers in traditional industries most targeted by regulatory shifts and higher taxes. Once catered to by both parties, the yeomanry have become increasingly irrelevant as California has evolved into a one-party state where the ruling Democrats have achieved a potentially permanent, sizable majority consisting largely of the clerisy and the serf class, and funded by the oligarchs. Unable to influence government and largely disdained by the clerisy, these middle income Californians are becoming a permanent outsider group, much like the old Third Estate in early medieval times, forced to pay ever higher taxes as well as soaring utility bills and required to follow regulations imposed by people who often have little use for their “middle class” suburban values.
Posted in Think about it. | Comments Off on California’s New Feudalism Benefits a Few at the Expense of the Multitude
8th October 2013
Read it.
But there is, in my view, an even more fundamental objection to government control over health care: anything run by the government inherently becomes political. The result is that the interests of politicians take precedence over everything else. For a case in point, see the United Kingdom. Over the last year or more, we have covered the unfolding scandal of Britain’s National Health Service, where appallingly bad care–not just inept, but callous–has led to many fatalities and has shaken Britons’ faith in the NHS.
Posted in Think about it. | Comments Off on Government Medicine Is Politicized Medicine
7th October 2013
Read it.
Yeah, this makes me feel old. I remember all of them except the milk pass-through — back in the day when there were milk deliveries, we had an insulated box that would sit on the porch into which the milk guy would put the stuff. (This was in the early 60s, so it wasn’t all that long ago.) (Or maybe it was….)
Posted in Think about it. | 3 Comments »
7th October 2013
Read it.
Eventually I’m allowed to leave the premises with my shopping, having managed to get through the automated Fast Checkout service with the assistance of two shop employees, a public-spirited member of the public and 26 primary school children.
Posted in Think about it. | Comments Off on Why I Don’t Use Do-It-Yourself Checkout
7th October 2013
Freeberg is not afraid to ask the hard questions.
Anyway, I was thinking this morning around five o’clock, heading southbound on I-680…gee, I can’t imagine why…how assholes are made. Isn’t that what really bothers us about assholes? It isn’t that the assholes are there, or that we encounter them. We should expect this. We’re all sons and daughters of Adam and Eve, who got kicked out of the Garden of Eden because they were a couple of assholes. And I think deep down everyone realizes that. So we’re bothered when we meet assholes, but the existence of the asshole is not what bothers us.
…
You lay down just one single incentive that goes in the right direction, makes life easier for non-assholes or provides a much-needed challenge or rebuke to the assholes — the assholes are fine with it, but the asshole-makers start squawking. They do more than that, they’ll gouge your eyes out if you’re not careful. Starving wild animals being kept away from the beef steak. Asshole-makers will not quit the asshole-making lifestyle. And the older I get, the more certain I am that they, more than the assholes, are the real problem. Think of Count Dracula going around biting people turning them into vampires. The “freshman vampires” are not the real problem, Dracula is the real problem. These are Asshole Dracula people.
Posted in Think about it. | Comments Off on Anus Makers
7th October 2013
Read it.
That few reporters knew which end of that sort of big long gun-thingy the bullet came out of made them easy marks for Reformers. I knew something about tanks, having gone through armor school in the Marine Corps and served in an AMTRAC battalion in Vietnam. I could talk shop with guys in armor. But how do you explain to a J-school grad why thermal imagers are superior to micro-channel photomultipliers?
…
Long-range missiles were in their infancy and did not work terribly well. Ignoring the common experience that what works sort of today will work a lot better tomorrow and like gangbusters by next Thursday, Boyd and the Fighter Mafia wanted a philosophical Sopwith Camel. It didn’t bother them that nobody else did. Israel, with the best tactical-fighter force of the age, was and is big on electronics. The Israelis had to win their wars, not talk about them.
Posted in Think about it. | Comments Off on Pay Attention and Think Fast
6th October 2013
The Flight
When the grey geese heard the Fool’s tread
Too near to where they lay,
They lifted neither voice nor head,
But took themselves away.
No water broke, no pinion whirred-
There went no warning call.
The steely, sheltering rushes stirred
A little–that was all.
Only the osiers understood,
And the drowned meadows spied
What else than wreckage of a flood
Stole outward on that tide.
But the far beaches saw their ranks
Gather and greet and grow
By myriads on the naked banks
Watching their sign to go;
Till, with a roar of wings that churned
The shivering shoals to foam,
Flight after flight took air and turned
To find a safer home;
And, far below their steadfast wedge,
They heard (and hastened on)
Men thresh and clamour through the sedge
Aghast that they were gone!
And, when men prayed them come anew
And nest where they were bred,
“Nay, fools foretell what knaves will do,”
Was all the grey geese said.
Posted in Think about it. | Comments Off on Kipling Predicts the Results of Obamacare
6th October 2013
Don Boudreaux, a Real Economist, points out some inconvenient truth.
First-responders’ pay is as low as it is because there are plenty of people able and willing to work as high-quality first-responders relative to the ‘need’ that we have for first-responders. With so many highly skilled and dedicated people already working as first-responders, the value of the additional first-response services that we’d enjoy if we hire one more equally skilled and dedicated person to work as a first-responder is very low. So we’re – rightly – unwilling to pay very much to hire this additional first-responder. It makes no sense to pay an additional, say, $100,000 annually to get labor services that produce an additional, say, $30,000 worth of output.
So understand our good fortune! We live in a society blessed with an abundant supply of high-quality live-saving labor services.
Ask: would you prefer to live in a society in which people’s ability and willingness to work as first-responders were as scarce, relative to our ‘need’ for such services, as is the ability to work as a N.F.L. quarterback? If our society were populated not with tens of thousands, but only with a few dozen, people who can supply top-notch first-response services, would we be better off than we are in reality today or would be worse off? The answer is obvious: we’d be worse off.
First-responders would be better off. They would each be paid very handsomely for their services. But many more of us would, as a result of this wage-raising scarcity of first-responders, die in automobile accidents and home and workplace fires. High-quality first-response services would be very scarce and, hence, very highly priced. Fortunately for us, our world has an abundance of high-quality first-responders. It’s a blessing that we get such essential life-saving and life-enhancing services at relatively low costs.
Markets work even when you don’t want them to. Teachers are another illustration of the basic principle that how well people are paid is not a function of how important is the work that they do but of how many people can provide the same service.
Posted in Think about it. | Comments Off on On the Relatively Low Salaries of Relatively Essential Workers
5th October 2013
Freeberg nails it yet again.
People, just minding their own business but relying in some way on something-or-another, are having their plans disrupted because strangers are not achieving agreement with other strangers. Thousands of miles away. Strangers who will remain strangers, who will always be strangers. And what the hell does failed-to-reach-agreement mean, anyway? Each side did a diligent and judicious job of minimally choosing its “hill I wanna die on” positions, and some of those were found to be mutually exclusive, so they gave it a few more hasty tries while the clock chimed midnight, and then collapsed in despair? Like that? Or is it more like, someone didn’t even bother to show up. Maybe no one did? Or phoned it in, literally and figuratively?
I can certainly appreciate how it’s so aggravating. I don’t understand how people keep falling for it over & over again. I don’t understand why some people choose to make a lifestyle out of this. It’s quite silly, when you look at it from a distance, or ponder it for awhile. Oh goody, the strangers I’ll never meet happened to agree on something, so I get…access to a park. A paycheck. A seat at the ball game. A boat ride. So glad they agreed…this time.
Yeah, these things are all ratchet-traps; the dependents are in a situation in which they have no choice. But that’s usually because, before, they passed some point where the choice went away. Because they gave it up. All this debating & discussing about “ObamaCare” was about exactly that, was it not?
…
The question is not whether this is one of those deals where people love to complain about something, but won’t get off their fat asses to solve it. That’s settled. The question is, what forces are at work here; what dynamics; what is happening to them. On this, I’m less than certain. I must form theories. And my favorite theory at this time is — this is a process of urbanization.
Posted in Think about it. | Comments Off on When Things Shut Down
3rd October 2013
John Stossel reveals some inconvenient truth.
I call them “government” instead of “public” schools because not much is “public” about them. Members of the public don’t get to pick their kids’ schools, teachers, curriculum or cost.
By contrast, supermarkets are “private” yet open to everyone. You can stroll in 24 hours a day. Just try that with your kid’s public school. You might be arrested.
…
Defenders of government schools often claim their schools are what create the American “melting pot.” Different races, ethnic groups and income levels mix together in government-funded schools.
Bunk. If it was ever true, it isn’t now.
University of Arkansas education professor Jay Greene examined school classrooms and found that public schools were more likely to be almost entirely white or entirely minority.
He also looked at who sat with whom in school lunchrooms. At private schools, students of different races were more likely to sit together.
Posted in Think about it. | Comments Off on Escaping Government Schools
3rd October 2013
Read it.
As we survey the smoking, shattered remains of the federal goverment… Oh, wait, that was a rerun of Independence Day. Awesome scene. Anyway, as we yawn and gaze on the histrionics over the government not-so-shutdown of 2013, there are definitely a few upsides to be seen. I might go so far as to venture that it’s mostly upsides, but let’s stick with a few highlights for now.
Posted in Think about it. | Comments Off on Government Shutdown 2013: Kick Back and Enjoy a Bit Less Harassment
2nd October 2013
Posted in Think about it. | Comments Off on Picture of the Day
29th September 2013
Read it.
Adjunct faculty members at Tufts University have voted to unionize with the Service Employees International Union, marking the national union’s first victory in a campaign to organize adjuncts across the Boston area and push institutions to improve their working conditions.
[Recap for the dimwitted: Unions arise when a particular occupation has a skillset that is easily subject to substitution on the part of management because supply vastly exceeds demand, hence collective coercion on the part of workers is the only way to raise (or sustain) their price over what the market-clearing amount would be. Historically, violence and activities that would be unlawful if any group other than a union did them are an integral part of this coercion.]
Posted in Think about it. | Comments Off on Tufts U. Adjuncts Vote to Unionize
29th September 2013
Steve Sailer looks at striving within the Crust.
I’m sure it bores most people, but I can never get enough of New York Times articles about the Wechsler I.Q. tests that the 3,000 most important four-year-olds in the world (or at least in Manhattan and the better parts of Brooklyn) take each year so their parents can pay $40,000 per year for them to attend kindergarten with some of the other 2,999 most important small children in the world. Pay no attention to that IQ test behind the curtain!
These are not just helicopter parents — these are Apache-gunship-escorted-Ospreys-loaded-with-Delta-Force parents.
Whatever magically non-competitive test replaces the Wechsler IQ test for NYC kindergarten admissions will instantly become the most gamed status symbol this side of Seoul.
We are rapidly turning into ancient China, where how you do on The Exams determines what you become, not the content of your character or your capacity to achieve or anything silly like that.
But there is hope! Specifically, Los Angeles:
Los Angeles just isn’t as IQ obsessed as New York is. It’s a who-you-know culture, and if you don’t know anybody, why would they let your child in to their kindergarten for the children of cool parents? Maybe if you are extremely good looking, they’d make an exception. But if you are ugly and unpopular, who cares what your kid’s I.Q. is?
Hmm, well, then again, maybe not….
Posted in Think about it. | Comments Off on The 3,000 Most Important Toddlers in the World
29th September 2013
Read it.
Ted Cruz is looking better and better.
Cornyn has been a tremendous disappointment to Texas conservatives (although not, perhaps, to Texas Republicans); not as bad as Kaye Hutchinson, and certainly not as bad as John McCain, but still a disappointment.
Still, Mirengoff’s criticism is well founded. Cruz ought to say what he thinks, and help the rest of us out in our evaluation of Cornyn … and Cruz.
Posted in Think about it. | Comments Off on Cruz Declines to Endorse Cornyn
29th September 2013
Posted in Think about it. | Comments Off on Question: Will Dianne Feinstein Investigate Her Own Leak Of Classified Info? Will She Face Espionage Act Charges?
28th September 2013
Read it.
And who could blame them?
Posted in Think about it. | Comments Off on Poll: Almost 20 Percent of Americans Would Vote To Secede From Their State
28th September 2013
A primer.
As the federal government’s fiscal year 2013 wheezes to a close without a budget in place for fiscal 2014, here is some basic information everyone should understand.
This is from tReason magazine, so it’s not the usual left-wing drivel.
Posted in Think about it. | 2 Comments »
28th September 2013
Read it. And for sure watch the video.
Durbin complained that Cruz wanted to deny health care to the uninsured; did he not, Durbin asked, enjoy the benefits of the generous congressional health-care package himself?
Cruz said he wouldn’t answer Durbin until Durbin first replied to three questions Cruz had posed. Durbin, with an “a-ha” gesture, responded by saying it was clear Cruz was simply refusing to answer his embarrassing question.
He’d walked into Cruz’s trap. For then Cruz said, no, Senator, I’m eligible for the congressional plan — but I’m not enrolled in it.
Posted in Think about it. | Comments Off on Cruz Squashes Durbin Like the Dick That He Is
27th September 2013
Read it..
The gist of the message is that, from the outset, the calculations used to sell Obamacare to the American public were slipshod and/or naive and/or mistaken and/or simplistic and/or outright lies (see more here).
And this is news to exactly whom?
Posted in Think about it. | Comments Off on Obamacare: Bait and Switch
27th September 2013
Guy Somerset rakes up the past.
On September 20, 2013, President Obama flew the black flag above his White House to honor prisoners of war and soldiers still missing in action.
If you were unaware of this, it is not surprising. The proclamation was quietly released to the media without a televised speech. On the day itself the Commander-in-Chief did make a public appearance…where he spoke about the debt ceiling instead.
It brings to mind December 7, or Pearl Harbor Day, which Americans and their president still widely commemorated until the late twentieth century. Contrast this against only the twelfth anniversary of September 11, which went by largely unnoticed, or at least with far less dignity than it deserved.
Posted in Think about it. | Comments Off on The Men That Others Forgot
27th September 2013
Read it.
Apparently a lot of people didn’t really say what other people said they said. Or something.
Posted in Think about it. | Comments Off on Who Really Said That?
26th September 2013
Read it.
Last year I wrote about some very interesting research being done by Paul J. Heald at the University of Illinois, based on software that crawled Amazon for a random selection of books. At the time, his results were only preliminary, but they were nevertheless startling: There were as many books available from the 1910s as there were from the 2000s. The number of books from the 1850s was double the number available from the 1950s. Why? Copyright protections (which cover titles published in 1923 and after) had squashed the market for books from the middle of the 20th century, keeping those titles off shelves and out of the hands of the reading public.
Mickey Mouse has a lot to answer for.
Posted in Think about it. | Comments Off on The Hole in Our Collective Memory: How Copyright Made Mid-Century Books Vanish
26th September 2013
Read it.
For years, we’ve been arguing against faith-based policy making when it comes to intellectual property. This is the belief that “if some intellectual property is good, more must be better,” when it’s never been established that the fundamental principle is true in the first place.
Which it isn’t, of course. The reason we have patents and copyrights is because they represented an improvement over the old arbitrary monopolies that monarchs would often grant their friends. Increasingly they act as a barrier to innovation and progress, as is the case with every government-granted privilege.
Posted in Think about it. | Comments Off on More and More Research Showing That the Assumptions Underpinning Copyright Law Are Fundamentally Wrong
26th September 2013
The Other McCain turns over a rock.
Clintus J. Alford, 37, was sentenced to 40 to 60 years in prison Monday for raping two girls, ages 12 and 14. He had previously been convicted in 2004 of false imprisonment for a case involving an 11-year-old girl, and served two years in prison for that offense.
I guess we’re all Trayvon Martin now. (Except white people, of course.)
Posted in Think about it. | Comments Off on Nebraska Sex Offender Re-Offends (And His Brother Is a Sex Offender, Too)
25th September 2013
Read it.
Child psychologists are being given a new directive which is that the age range they work with is increasing from 0-18 to 0-25.
Actually, it’s always been 25 in the Real World — just look at where auto insurance rates break. Actuaries aren’t bound by tradition or politics; it’s all about the numbers.
Posted in Think about it. | Comments Off on Is 25 the New Cut-Off Point for Adulthood?
24th September 2013
Read it.
Just in case you were wondering. I know I was.
Posted in Think about it. | Comments Off on The Opportunity Cost of Buying iPhones and Cronuts
21st September 2013
The Other McCain is on the case.
For the contemporary Left to stigmatize its opponents as Jew-haters is the exact opposite of truth. The Left — what used to be called “the far Left,” or “the extreme Left,” or simply Commies — has always been willing to exploit anti-Semitism when it suits their purposes. And in recent decades, as the Democrat Party has increasingly fallen under control of the Left, you see more and more Democrats aligned with the enemies of Israel, and using the term “neocon” as a sort of dog-whistle code word for “Jews.”
This what I mean when I refer to the “Sirhan Sirhan wing of the Democrat Party.” The increasing dominance of the Left — ideologues who share the dangerous views of extremists like Bill Ayers and Rev. Jeremiah Wright — shares less in common with Bobby Kennedy than they do with his assassin. But try asking anyone under 30 about who assassinated RFK (correct answer: a Palestinian nationalist) or who assassinated John F. Kennedy (correct answer: a pro-Castro communist named Lee Harvey Oswald) and you immediately discover that young people have been taught no facts about history.
Posted in Think about it. | Comments Off on The Left Suppresses Its Own History
20th September 2013
John Derbyshire, Patron Saint of Dyspepsia, speaks for us all.
We have reached a point of diminishing returns in our public life. Hardly anything actually needs doing. We may in fact be past that point; not only does nothing much need doing, but we’d benefit if much of what has been done were to be undone. What useful work can I do with Windows 8 that I couldn’t do with XP?
Politicians make a living—a very grand living indeed at the higher levels—by saying there are things wrong that need fixing. Are there, though?
Hint: Not as much as they would have you believe.
We are so short of real discontents nowadays, we have to make problems up. There aren’t any hungry children. There aren’t any people dying because they can’t afford an operation. There aren’t any Joad families on the road desperately seeking work and homes. There aren’t any workers being exploited by unscrupulous bosses or tenants being evicted by unscrupulous landlords. Nobody’s being lynched or denied due process or forced by poverty to give up a child for adoption. I wouldn’t say nobody’s poor anymore, but there is no longer what the Victorians called a “deserving poor.” To be in dire straits nowadays, you have to be really, really feckless.
I know a few of those. It is not a pretty sight.
Posted in Think about it. | Comments Off on The Lost Art of Stasis
20th September 2013
Read it.
South Carolina Republicans go RINO hunting.
On Monday evening, the Fairfield County GOP in South Carolina formally censured Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) for his activities in the U.S. Senate. The official GOP body in the state passed its own version of a 29-point resolution shredding Graham’s record in Washington as “in contravention of” principles of the Republican Party as contained in the South Carolina GOP platform.
Maybe the ones in Arizona will take the hint.
Posted in Think about it. | Comments Off on SC Republicans Issue Another Formal Rebuke of Lindsey Graham
17th September 2013
Read it.
Many argue inequality is an unavoidable byproduct of growth—a function of investors and entrepreneurs benefiting from successful demand for their products and value creation in financial markets. Inequality rose quickly during economic expansions (1980s and 1990s) and declined during the most recent recession. In other words, the wealthy gain more during good times and lose more during bad times.
…
A 2012 survey from GlobeScan found that 58 percent of Americans agreed with the statement that “the rich deserve their wealth.” That’s actually higher than it was in 2008, before the economic crisis, Wall Street bailouts and the Occupy movement.
Damn, there’s that pesky democracy thing getting in the way of the Regressive agenda again.
Posted in Think about it. | Comments Off on Why Government Probably Can’t Close the Rich-Poor Gap
16th September 2013
Read it.
MANY scientists believe that by transforming the earth’s natural landscapes, we are undermining the very life support systems that sustain us. Like bacteria in a petri dish, our exploding numbers are reaching the limits of a finite planet, with dire consequences. Disaster looms as humans exceed the earth’s natural carrying capacity. Clearly, this could not be sustainable.
This is nonsense. Even today, I hear some of my scientific colleagues repeat these and similar claims — often unchallenged. And once, I too believed them. Yet these claims demonstrate a profound misunderstanding of the ecology of human systems. The conditions that sustain humanity are not natural and never have been. Since prehistory, human populations have used technologies and engineered ecosystems to sustain populations well beyond the capabilities of unaltered “natural” ecosystems.
…
It was only after years of research into the ecology of agriculture in China that I reached the point where my observations forced me to see beyond my biologists’s blinders. Unable to explain how populations grew for millenniums while increasing the productivity of the same land, I discovered the agricultural economist Ester Boserup, the antidote to the demographer and economist Thomas Malthus and his theory that population growth tends to outrun the food supply. Her theories of population growth as a driver of land productivity explained the data I was gathering in ways that Malthus could never do. While remaining an ecologist, I became a fellow traveler with those who directly study long-term human-environment relationships — archaeologists, geographers, environmental historians and agricultural economists.
Even the Crust can’t keep pretending any more.
Posted in Think about it. | Comments Off on Overpopulation Is Not the Problem
16th September 2013
Steve Sailer blows the whistle.
Social scientists notoriously suffer from “physics envy.” This feeling is quite reasonable: physicists can predict many phenomenon (and they built the atomic bomb, which probably helps even more in garnering respect).
A stranger phenomenon, however, is “IQ envy,” since the study of intelligence is routinely denounced as a pseudoscience. And, yet, if you keep your eyes open, you’ll notice that intelligence is one of the most glamorous attributes in the world of marketing.
Posted in Think about it. | Comments Off on “Emotional intelligence” as IQ Envy
16th September 2013
Paul Mirengoff cuts to the chase.
The world sees the spectacle of (1) a “red line” drawn by the U.S. president being brazenly crossed without retribution and (2) America wantonly farming out its response to the crossing of the red line to Vladimir Putin, a sponsor of the regime we had vowed to punish.
My, what a surprise! Aren’t you surprised? I’m sure surprised.
To be sure, I am not as convinced as Mirengoff that the case for intervention is so clear-cut. The job description of the Federal government isn’t ‘blow up foreigners who are doing stuff we don’t like’, it’s ‘protect the interests of America and its citizens’, and on that basis I don’t see that we have any reason to get involved in Syria at all — both the terrorist-supporting Assad regime and the terrorist-supporting jihadist rebels are our enemies, and the best outcome would be for them to slaughter each other for another ten years, as Iraq and Iran did during the 1980s; to quote Henry Kissinger, ‘It’s too bad both sides can’t lose’.
This view of Obama reminds me of the common view of Roosevelt in 1940 — he’d do the right thing if it weren’t for that pesky democracy thing, being hamstrung by Congress and public opinion and all. The point is that, in a democracy, which we still pretend to be, the President is supposed to be guided by Congress and public opinion, not regard them as inconvenient obstacles. I am far more concerned with the government’s loss of credibility at home than I am worried about what foreigners think; Tomahawk cruise missiles will correct the latter in short order if it becomes necessary.
Posted in Think about it. | Comments Off on Obama Is a Symptom, Not the Cause, of America’s Loss of Credibility
15th September 2013

Comment from the source:
So let’s get one thing straight: I know exactly what Mr. Putin is, and Hillary Clinton is no less brutal, ruthless, amoral, cynical, and exploitative than he is. She lacks the means to do everything he does, but I’d bet my back teeth she wants to acquire those means, and will do all she can to put herself in that position.
Given the current state of the Republican Party, Hillary may very well be our next president. That’s a sobering thought — that the president may be someone who is no better than the former head of the KGB.
Putin is preferable to Hillary in one important respect, however: his brutality and thuggishness are used to advance the interests of his country, and not those of the New World Order. In that sense I’d take him over Hillary any day.
And that is the point of the Putin meme: to undermine Hillary. It’s useful for that purpose. It’s not like any of us would ever want Putin to actually run our country.
It’s unfortunate that I have to explain something so obvious.
Posted to assist people with low comprehension skills, like Dennis.
Posted in Think about it. | Comments Off on Vlad or Hillary?
15th September 2013
Read it.
The power of intuitive first impressions has been demonstrated in a variety of other contexts. One experiment found that people predicted the outcome of political elections remarkably well based on silent 10 second video clips of debates – significantly outperforming political pundits and predictions made based on economic indicators. Chia-Jung Tsay’s analysis of classical musician auditions explicitly drew on this idea by providing participants with only 6 second clips of each performance.
In a real world case, a number of art experts successfully identified a 6th century Greek statue as a fraud. Although the statue had survived a 14 month investigation by a respected museum that included the probings of a geologist, they instantly recognized something was off. They just couldn’t explain how they knew.
Cases like this represent the canon behind the idea of the “adaptive unconscious,” a concept made famous by journalist Malcolm Gladwell in his book Blink. The basic idea is that we constantly, quickly, and unconsciously do the equivalent of judging a book by its cover. After all, a cover provides a lot of relevant information in a world in which we don’t have time to read every page.
Posted in Think about it. | Comments Off on The Science of Snobbery
15th September 2013
Read it.
The most important difference between the world today and 150 years ago isn’t airplane flight or nuclear weapons or the Internet. It’s lifespan. We used to live 35 or 40 years on average in the United States, but now we live almost 80. We used to get one life. Now we get two.
Well, not really — those averages include a lot of dead kids that now are surviving. But it’s still impressive.
You may well be living your second life already. Have you ever had some health problem that could have killed you if you’d been born in an earlier era? Leave aside for a minute the probabilistic ways you would have died in the past—the smallpox that didn’t kill you because it was eradicated by a massive global vaccine drive, the cholera you never contracted because you drink filtered and chemically treated water. Did some specific medical treatment save your life? It’s a fun conversation starter: Why are you not dead yet?
Yeah, I’ll try that the next time I’m at a party with a bunch of people I don’t know. Oh, wait….
Posted in Think about it. | Comments Off on Why Are You Not Dead Yet?
15th September 2013

One of these men grew up surrounded by Communists, and internalized Marxist ideology from a very young age.
The other is the president of Russia.
Posted in Think about it. | Comments Off on Thought for the Day
14th September 2013
Jim Goad is being considered for canonization as a Saint of Dyspepsia.
(Full disclosure: Not for a moment have I approved of the US military’s foolhardy forays into the Middle East. If I had my druthers, I’d bring all the boys—and they’d all be boys, meaning no girls and definitely no boys who suddenly decide that they’re girls—home to guard the true national-security threat, the one along the Mexican border. Before any of you perpetually sour-pussed pea-picking peckerwoods in the peanut gallery start grousing that I’m some sort of neocon, allow me to sternly instruct you that it’s possible to simultaneously disapprove of Islam and Zionism. It is also possible to deplore American military expansionism while being concerned about the fact that bullied loners and cultural outcasts lurking within the armed forces can throw tantrums and endanger American lives because people are terrified of calling them fags and/or ragheads.)
Posted in Think about it. | Comments Off on Dangerously Sensitive
14th September 2013
Read it.
“Billions of dollars are leaving California as they raise marginal income taxes, in favor of coming to Nevada,” says Brown. “Nevada is one of nine states with zero income tax.”
So is Texas … hint, hint….
Posted in Think about it. | Comments Off on How Taxpayers Vote With Their Feet
14th September 2013
Read it.
The topic of spacing after a period (or “full stop” in some parts of the world) has received a lot of attention in recent years. The vitriol that the single-space camp has toward the double-spacers these days is quite amazing, and typographers have made up an entire fake history to justify their position.
Posted in Think about it. | 1 Comment »