30 April 2009

Obama Prophecies

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"What I've said I will repeat. "



-Barack Hussein Obama


Truer words were never spoken.




So far, the Obama administration has simply recycled everything. They staffed the government with retreads from prior administrations. They talk of FDR, nationalization, and socialism as the promised panacea, like statists have done for most of the last century. He offers no workable solutions, only lively rhetoric.



He blames problems on prior administrations rather than tackling them and giving us solutions. Who cares if the prior administration endorsed torture? it's a PRIOR ADMINISTRATION. Stop living in the past. Furthermore, how can we violate the Geneva Convention against people who a priori violated it by not dressing as combatants?






This man has zero experience. He is an embarassment.

29 April 2009

Pick Who You Want Now

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Arlen Specter turned Benedict Arnold today, demonstrating that he has always been about himself and not about the party. After all the work and money put into keeping him in office, he jumped ship to the welcoming arm of President Obama. But something happened that Specter did not expect.

There was a time when the Republicans held onto incumbents like Specter in order to hold onto a thin majority. However, since he usually votes with the envirostatists anyway, and now that there is no way the Republicans can filibuster anything, the time has come to kick incumbents out who run contra to the principles of America and her denizens.

So, tax us if you want. Ask us to bow down if you want. You are rubbish, filth, slime, and muck, who worked your entire lives for the expansion of the state. In 50 years, nobody will remember your name. Resist us, but if you do not destroy us, we shall overcome in the end.

In 2010 during the primaries, PICK WHO YOU WANT. Now is the time. Throw out the old guard. They aren't interested in acting as Plato's guardians and holding to first principles. They abandoned what they claim to support, and they have ushered in their own end. If you want to change the country, you must bring people into office who have not been around. Although the president promised change, what he actually introduced was a series of retreads from the Clinton Administration.

Like Ikea says, change begins at home. Change begins in your neighborhood, your precinct, your township, your district, and your state. Change the faces there, and you will change the faces at the top. Stop letting politicians prey on party to advance their own careers. Spectre has been in the Senate as long as I have been alive. If by then you haven't figured out how to make America great, you never will.

28 April 2009

Selective Statistics in Politics

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I read a post on Hot Air Blog that puts the political polls and Obama's honeymoon with America in perspective. It cites a Washington Times article that says the following:







President Obama’s media cheerleaders are hailing how loved he is. But at the 100-day mark of his presidency, Mr. Obama is the second-least-popular president in 40 years.



According to Gallup’s April survey, Americans have a lower approval of Mr. Obama at this point than all but one president since Gallup began tracking this in 1969. The only new president less popular was Bill Clinton, who got off to a notoriously bad start after trying to force homosexuals on the military and a federal raid in Waco, Texas, that killed 86. Mr. Obama’s current approval rating of 56 percent is only one tick higher than the 55-percent approval Mr. Clinton had during those crises.



As the attached chart shows, five presidents rated higher than Mr. Obama after 100 days in office. Ronald Reagan topped the charts in April 1981 with 67 percent approval. Following the Gipper, in order of popularity, were: Jimmy Carter with 63 percent in 1977; George W. Bush with 62 percent in 2001; Richard Nixon with 61 percent in 1969; and George H.W. Bush with 58 percent in 1989.





I agree with his first conclusion that The 100-days report is almost worthless in determining the value of a President. Unlike my colleague however I find it interesting that Obama ties with Bush 41 in approval numbers and failed to beat any of the persons who filled the Presidency during my ENTIRE LIFETIME.




They try to tell us that it's a historical milestone. If they mean it's historic that only 44 men in the history of the world have managed to be President of the United States for 100 days, they are right. Actually, it was only 43. William Henry Harrison didn't live that long, so what makes it special that Obama, like 43 of 44 men who held this office, made it to 100 days?




Media reports focus on how well Obama has done in 100 days. Yes, he's richer, more popular, more opulent, ad infinitum, but what about the country? The President's responsibility is to build up America, and all he's done so far is beat it down. In terms of fulfilling his responsibility, I think Obama is a dismal failure, which is saying something knowing how I feel about Carter. For all of his charm, finess and "experience", Obama still couldn’t score above 56% in the Gallup poll.




Here I quote from Hot Air:




Most of his 56% approval comes from Democrats, who unsurprisingly give him 88%
approval thus far. Republicans, just as predictably, give him 24%. Independents, though, only give him 48%, a bit of a surprise considering his success in the election in this group. That’s also far above Bush levels, but it’s not a good number for a President who claims to represent the vast middle of America.




With the media on Obama’s side and his talent at public relations, don’t expect Obama to crater in public-opinion polling any time soon. However, his policies will get less support and less traction as we spend money and see little for the debt Obama’s rolling up.



Obama is not the people's president. He doesn't care about you. His primary focus is to get himself reelected, which is the long and short of his agenda.

27 April 2009

Live Life to Its Fullest

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Last summer, a dear friend of mine gave me that advice but apparently it didn't sink in because she's still giving me the same admonition. I think that sometimes I'm afraid to be happy- like I feel it's not okay for me to do that when there's so much to be done and so many things I ought be doing to advance the cause of liberty. Focusing so much on duty, I don't enjoy the journey and as such render myself unable to live life to its fullest.

When I left for my mission in 1998, I remember that the last thing my father said to me face to face was to have a good time. What followed however were two of the most difficult years of my life- knocking on doors to have them slammed in my face, and making phone calls that went unanswered. Much of that was good preparation for dating.

So this morning, after I finished reading scriptures and psyched myself up to exercise, I took some time to reread that admonition. Can you be happy in times of trial? Do you have to LOOK happy to be happy? Am I living life to its fullest?

A few years back, when I started taking road trips, people I knew expressed interest in accompanying me. Without exception, when the time came, they all renigged on their interest or didn't return my calls at all, and so I left without them. Some things I've done I would never do alone again, and some things I might have done I didn't because if I'd hurt myself who would have helped me? I decided to go and do these things anyway because I didn't want to put off living waiting for other people.

However much fun I've had, I think life is more full when you have people with which to share your experiences. My students rightly point out the richness of experience I have, but they are interested because of the rapport we built during the semester. I am a real person, and their interest in me is real as well. Most people however don't care about what drives you as much as you do, so sometimes the experiences feel hollow.

I intend to go on straight on and do what it is that I want. I previously posted my plan of activities towards which I wish to work, and I plan to stick to that. They will give me satisfaction. They will give me opportunity. Those things will bring me happiness. By taking the reigns of my own life and sucking the marrow out of it, I can be happy. I know it will bring that.

These are wonderful days. These are my days. These are the days. I will make the most of them. Come with me if you like. If not, you can buy my book ;) and participate in that way.

26 April 2009

Everything I Control

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Yes, I am officially 30, and I am in a "destination" mood. When I took stock of my life thus far this week, I felt a bit dispondent due to disparaties between where I am and where I thought/wanted to be by this age. Granted, like Jessica in my Thursday PM section says, I have accomplished quite a bit in 29 years, they are not necessarily the things I wanted to accomplish in that time, nor are they things I recommend per se.

Much as I am excited for them, a recent slieu of wedding or birth announcements by my peers has me in a dejected state. By the time my parents were my age, they had two children and one on the way and my dad was about 4-5 years into his USAF career. Recently too some close acquaintences of mine have admonished me as before to abandon my lofty morals as a means to gain what they define as happiness.

Ask my best friend, and he'll tell you that I'm one of the happiest men he knows. Not that I'm a laughing, la-di-dah, happy-go-lucky type, but I have that bliss and contentment that comes from being true to oneself and following one's dreams. In that way, I am by far and away ahead of most people, whatever their age.

Today, after a long morning walk, I decided to take certain steps to take control of my destiny and make sure that what I control is under control. What this will do is open opportunities for me, whether they actually come my way or not, so that I can jump at good chances instead of just at shadows. Details follow:
  • I will start my PhD program sometime this summer
  • I will apply for promotion to Scientist III
  • I will sign up for as many sections in the fall as they will allow
  • I will set up and push forward a research project at the university
  • I will buy a house, move in, and find a roommate if possible
  • I will finally get down to learning Spanish
  • I will finish all the rest of my books currently in production and get them published by end of year
  • I will continue to read classics of literature, politics, and math/science to better myself
  • I will eat better and continue exercising for health
  • I will go to Boston in the Fall
These things I control. They will make me a better person. Then I will leave the rest up to God and bind him with chains of righteousness to bless me and wait for him so to do. Everything I control is under control, including, after some work, my mood and temperament. Life is good.

25 April 2009

Do Me a Birthday Favor

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Every American should read this. It's from DeToqueville's book Democracy in America. Do me a favor for my 30th birthday and read this and think about how prophetic his warning was.




Chapter VI

WHAT SORT OF DESPOTISM DEMOCRATIC NATIONS HAVE TO FEAR

I HAD remarked during my stay in the United States that a democratic state of society, similar to that of the Americans, might offer singular facilities for the establishment of despotism; and I perceived, upon my return to Europe, how much use had already been made, by most of our rulers, of the notions, the sentiments, and the wants created by this same social condition, for the purpose of extending the circle of their power. This led me to think that the nations of Christendom would perhaps eventually undergo some oppression like that which hung over several of the nations of the ancient world. .

A more accurate examination of the subject, and five years of further meditation, have not diminished my fears, but have changed their object.

No sovereign ever lived in former ages so absolute or so powerful as to undertake to administer by his own agency, and without the assistance of intermediate powers, all the parts of a great empire; none ever attempted to subject all his subjects indiscriminately to strict uniformity of regulation and personally to tutor and direct every member of the community. The notion of such an undertaking never occurred to the human mind; and if any man had conceived it, the want of information, the imperfection of the administrative system, and, above all, the natural obstacles caused by the inequality of conditions would speedily have checked the execution of so vast a design.

When the Roman emperors were at the height of their power, the different nations of the empire still preserved usages and customs of great diversity; although they were subject to the same monarch, most of the provinces were separately administered; they abounded in powerful and active municipalities; and although the whole government of the empire was centered in the hands of the Emperor alone and he always remained, in case of need, the supreme arbiter in all matters, yet the details of social life and private occupations lay for the most part beyond his control. The emperors possessed, it is true, an immense and unchecked power, which allowed them to gratify all their whimsical tastes and to employ for that purpose the whole strength of the state. They frequently abused that power arbitrarily to deprive their subjects of property or of life; their tyranny was extremely onerous to the few, but it did not reach the many; it was confined to some few main objects and neglected the rest; it was violent, but its range was limited.

It would seem that if despotism were to be established among the democratic nations of our days, it might assume a different character; it would be more extensive and more mild; it would degrade men without tormenting them. I do not question that, in an age of instruction and equality like our own, sovereigns might more easily succeed in collecting all political power into their own hands and might interfere more habitually and decidedly with the circle of private interests than any sovereign of antiquity could ever do. But this same principle of equality which facilitates despotism tempers its rigor. We have seen how the customs of society become more humane and gentle in proportion as men become more equal and alike. When no member of the community has much power or much wealth, tyranny is, as it were, without opportunities and a field of action. As all fortunes are scanty, the passions of men are naturally circumscribed, their imagination limited, their pleasures simple. This universal moderation moderates the sovereign himself and checks within certain limits the inordinate stretch of his desires.

Independently of these reasons, drawn from the nature of the state of society itself, I might add many others arising from causes beyond my subject; but I shall keep within the limits I have laid down.

Democratic governments may become violent and even cruel at certain periods of extreme effervescence or of great danger, but these crises will be rare and brief. When I consider the petty passions of our contemporaries, the mildness of their manners, the extent of their education, the purity of their religion, the gentleness of their morality, their regular and industrious habits, and the restraint which they almost all observe in their vices no less than in their virtues, I have no fear that they will meet with tyrants in their rulers, but rather with guardians.1

I think, then, that the species of oppression by which democratic nations are menaced is unlike anything that ever before existed in the world; our contemporaries will find no prototype of it in their memories. I seek in vain for an expression that will accurately convey the whole of the idea I have formed of it; the old words despotism and tyranny are inappropriate: the thing itself is new, and since I cannot name, I must attempt to define it.

I seek to trace the novel features under which despotism may appear in the world. The first thing that strikes the observation is an innumerable multitude of men, all equal and alike, incessantly endeavoring to procure the petty and paltry pleasures with which they glut their lives. Each of them, living apart, is as a stranger to the fate of all the rest; his children and his private friends constitute to him the whole of mankind. As for the rest of his fellow citizens, he is close to them, but he does not see them; he touches them, but he does not feel them; he exists only in himself and for himself alone; and if his kindred still remain to him, he may be said at any rate to have lost his country.

Above this race of men stands an immense and tutelary power, which takes upon itself alone to secure their gratifications and to watch over their fate. That power is absolute, minute, regular, provident, and mild. It would be like the authority of a parent if, like that authority, its object was to prepare men for manhood; but it seeks, on the contrary, to keep them in perpetual childhood: it is well content that the people should rejoice, provided they think of nothing but rejoicing. For their happiness such a government willingly labors, but it chooses to be the sole agent and the only arbiter of that happiness; it provides for their security, foresees and supplies their necessities, facilitates their pleasures, manages their principal concerns, directs their industry, regulates the descent of property, and subdivides their inheritances: what remains, but to spare them all the care of thinking and all the trouble of living?

Thus it every day renders the exercise of the free agency of man less useful and less frequent; it circumscribes the will within a narrower range and gradually robs a man of all the uses of himself. The principle of equality has prepared men for these things;it has predisposed men to endure them and often to look on them as benefits.

After having thus successively taken each member of the community in its powerful grasp and fashioned him at will, the supreme power then extends its arm over the whole community. It covers the surface of society with a network of small complicated rules, minute and uniform, through which the most original minds and the most energetic characters cannot penetrate, to rise above the crowd. The will of man is not shattered, but softened, bent, and guided; men are seldom forced by it to act, but they are constantly restrained from acting. Such a power does not destroy, but it prevents existence; it does not tyrannize, but it compresses, enervates, extinguishes, and stupefies a people, till each nation is reduced to nothing better than a flock of timid and industrious animals, of which the government is the shepherd.

I have always thought that servitude of the regular, quiet, and gentle kind which I have just described might be combined more easily than is commonly believed with some of the outward forms of freedom, and that it might even establish itself under the wing of the sovereignty of the people.

Our contemporaries are constantly excited by two conflicting passions: they want to be led, and they wish to remain free. As they cannot destroy either the one or the other of these contrary propensities, they strive to satisfy them both at once. They devise a sole, tutelary, and all-powerful form of government, but elected by the people. They combine the principle of centralization and that of popular sovereignty; this gives them a respite: they console themselves for being in tutelage by the reflection that they have chosen their own guardians. Every man allows himself to be put in leading-strings, because he sees that it is not a person or a class of persons, but the people at large who hold the end of his chain.

By this system the people shake off their state of dependence just long enough to select their master and then relapse into it again. A great many persons at the present day are quite contented with this sort of compromise between administrative despotism and the sovereignty of the people; and they think they have done enough for the protection of individual freedom when they have surrendered it to the power of the nation at large. This does not satisfy me: the nature of him I am to obey signifies less to me than the fact of extorted obedience. I do not deny, however, that a constitution of this kind appears to me to be infinitely preferable to one which, after having concentrated all the powers of government, should vest them in the hands of an irresponsible person or body of persons. Of all the forms that democratic despotism could assume, the latter would assuredly be the worst.

When the sovereign is elective, or narrowly watched by a legislature which is really elective and independent, the oppression that he exercises over individuals is sometimes greater, but it is always less degrading; because every man, when he is oppressed and disarmed, may still imagine that, while he yields obedience, it is to himself he yields it, and that it is to one of his own inclinations that all the rest give way. In like manner, I can understand that when the sovereign represents the nation and is dependent upon the people, the rights and the power of which every citizen is deprived serve not only the head of the state, but the state itself; and that private persons derive some return from the sacrifice of their independence which they have made to the public. To create a representation of the people in every centralized country is, therefore, to diminish the evil that extreme centralization may produce, but not to get rid of it.

I admit that, by this means, room is left for the intervention of individuals in the more important affairs; but it is not the less suppressed in the smaller and more privates ones. It must not be forgotten that it is especially dangerous to enslave men in the minor details of life. For my own part, I should be inclined to think freedom less necessary in great things than in little ones, if it were possible to be secure of the one without possessing the other.

Subjection in minor affairs breaks out every day and is felt by the whole community indiscriminately. It does not drive men to resistance, but it crosses them at every turn, till they are led to surrender the exercise of their own will. Thus their spirit is gradually broken and their character enervated; whereas that obedience which is exacted on a few important but rare occasions only exhibits servitude at certain intervals and throws the burden of it upon a small number of men. It is in vain to summon a people who have been rendered so dependent on the central power to choose from time to time the representatives of that power; this rare and brief exercise of their free choice, however important it may be, will not prevent them from gradually losing the faculties of thinking, feeling, and acting for themselves, and thus gradually falling below the level of humanity.

I add that they will soon become incapable of exercising the great and only privilege which remains to them. The democratic nations that have introduced freedom into their political constitution at the very time when they were augmenting the despotism of their administrative constitution have been led into strange paradoxes. To manage those minor affairs in which good sense is all that is wanted, the people are held to be unequal to the task; but when the government of the country is at stake, the people are invested with immense powers; they are alternately made the play things of their ruler, and his masters, more than kings and less than men. After having exhausted all the different modes of election without finding one to suit their purpose, they are still amazed and still bent on seeking further; as if the evil they notice did not originate in the constitution of the country far more than in that of the electoral body.

It is indeed difficult to conceive how men who have entirely given up the habit of self-government should succeed in making a proper choice of those by whom they are to be governed; and no one will ever believe that a liberal, wise, and energetic government can spring from the suffrages of a subservient people.2

A constitution republican in its head and ultra-monarchical in all its other parts has always appeared to me to be a short-lived monster. The vices of rulers and the ineptitude of the people would speedily bring about its ruin; and the nation, weary of its representatives and of itself, would create freer institutions or soon return to stretch itself at the feet of a single master.

24 April 2009

Setbacks and Progress

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Not all change is good. Not all forward momentum is good. While the shortest distance between two points may be a straight line, sometimes we can't get to our destination as the crow flies due to obstacles in our path. It shows a lack of wisdom to continue pushing forward against an indominable foe when we could simply go around it. Sometimes in order to go forwards you must first go backwards.

About halfway through my sojourn in the missionary training center in UT, I was injured in a soccer game. The injury kept me off my leg for weeks on end. I hobbled around on crutches and treated the wound as delicately as possible until I finally saw a physician. The injury directed exactly where I would begin my service as a missionary since the doctor forbade me from doing too much walking. God has often shut up the way for me to get me where he needs me to be.

The injury held me back. It also gave me perspective. I take better care of myself now, especially since I run, since there was some undetected and untreated damage that I can feel in my ankle and knee when I run for more than an hour at a time. Before, I took my good health for granted. Additionally, I came to see years later that people are doing the best they can with what they have, and that I cannot expect them to walk as fast as I do or as determinately.

Sometimes I forget the lesson. People regularly ask me to slow down, not to hold me back, but so that they can keep up. If you want to get where you want to go in the condition you want, sometimes, you have to take a step backwards.

Last summer, I was out riding bikes with a friend who lacked the experience I do. I found myself riding back down to check up on my friend so that I didn't get out too far ahead. See, I wanted to arrive together; it wasn't a race, and so in order to do what I wanted to do, periodically I had to go backwards.

If you run up against an obstacle, pushing against it won't get you the results you want necessarily. Sometimes it's best to seek another route and go around. One night on the way home from work in Lovelock, I was driving along I-80 in the snow and came up against stalled traffic. A semi-truck had jacknifed in the canyon and blocked both lanes of traffic in the winding Truckee River corridor just east of Reno. I drove across the median, headed back to a previous exit and took the back road home. That road by comparison was relatively empty and almost entirely devoid of snow, so I made good time once I opted to turn around and head back to the previous exit. I do not know how long I'd have waited for the road to clear, but I also found a safer route that night by being willing to take a step back to make good time moving forward.

Right now, I'm facing a setback in my life. After much thought and some discussion with my cousin and my mother, I realized that maybe this was what I needed in order to make progress. It would not be the first time. So, I decided to choose happy thoughts and hope that this is what I need to get to where I want to go, even if I can't see it right now.

23 April 2009

Choose Happy Thoughts

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A dear friend of mine admonished me to do this the other day, and I'm inclined to agree with the sentiment, although it's more difficult than it seems. As I get older, I grow more convinced that a state of happiness or contentment is an issue of choice rather than circumstance. So, even as I realize how few things I really control in life, I am trying to choose to be happy.

It's a difficult endeavor. Having had a recent conversation with a faculty member I admire, I am almost convinced that happiness is hard-wired to haplotype. Not to excuse my dour nature, but Ray was always a happy child and he's an even-keeled individual who doesn't let things get to him. Some people find it second nature to be inclined to happiness. I've always tended to be a sober child and an even more somber adult.

Back in the early days of the Peanuts series, Charles Schultz demonstrated this principle. His character Lucy won't let Linus play with her toys but she will let him play with a rubber band. He takes it and has a grand old time with something simple. Lucy can't stand for that and takes it away: "I didn't mean for you to have THAT much fun with it!"

Some people think we're not supposed to have fun or joy or contentment with certain things. When participants define terms differently debate becomes quickly an exercise in futility. I think sometimes people want me to relax my standards and beliefs because they're not supposed to work. If they do, then these people lose their excuse and justifications.

Next week in lab, my students and I will discuss animal behavior and altruism in nature. Even bats and mice will notice and remember those moochers and looters who depend on altruism to survive. Only humans seem to make excuses. Virtue may not come with immediate rewards, but if a man is as he thinketh, then I choose the higher thoughts and higher pleasures. At least, I will try to.

22 April 2009

Earth Day Scam

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I ignored all the well wishers today on earth day. I like the earth. I like digging in it, hiking over it, driving across it, and harvesting crops from it. It keeps me alive, and I do the same in return. I'm not a green freak. I don't shop at Whole Foods. I recycle, but I don't freak out about it. I hate waste. I also hate all that lovely oil, uranium, and other stuff going to waste beneath hectares of vacant wilderness seen by narry a man.



I drove a few extra places today to make sure I did my part to keep plants alive. I was glad I had a car since it was 94F outside and it would have been a long walk and a torturous bike ride at 13:00. Speaking of cars, I love my Saturn and thank God regularly for the untold amounts of money this car has saved me (monthly payments, maintenance, dating costs, fuel, taxes, etc.). No offense to Saturn and many thanks to them, but their hybrid aura gets the same MPG as the XR model according to their own website (22/33mpg compared to 26/34mpg). Do you know what else the two cars have in common? They're both 4 cylinder engines. The hybrid costs $1400 more just in MSRP, not to mention higher taxes, registration, and repair, all to save a few pennies at the pump. What then, I ask, is the use of having a hybrid engine if it doesn't boost fuel economy? This is your government at work- you get shafted.

My gripe with Earth day isn't over the earth, it's over the people who advance it. The Founders of this movement were
terrorists. The rest are gypsies, tramps and thieves, who are making a killing getting us to "go green" at great personal expense while the government writes legislation endorsing and ensconcing their misguided agenda. Carbon dioxide is not the original pollutant. Before there were humans and animals at all, plants belched their waste product into the atmosphere, and it was oxygen. Besides, the "natural state" of things is disarray and entropy, not pristine beauty.

If you haven't taken the opportunity to read it, I'm going to give you the opening paragraphs of Jurassic Park.


You think man can destroy the planet? What intoxicating vanity. Let me tell you about our planet. Earth is four-and-a-half-billion-years-old. There's been life on it for nearly that long, 3.8 billion years. Bacteria first; later the first multicellular life, then the first complex creatures in the sea, on the land. Then finally the great sweeping ages of animals, the amphibians, the dinosaurs, at last the mammals, each one enduring millions on millions of years, great dynasties of creatures rising, flourishing, dying away -- all this against a background of continuous and violent upheaval. Mountain ranges thrust up, eroded away, cometary impacts, volcano eruptions, oceans rising and falling, whole continents moving, an endless, constant, violent change, colliding, buckling to make mountains over millions of years. Earth has survived everything in its time. It will certainly survive us. If all the nuclear weapons in the world went off at once and all the plants, all the animals died and the earth was sizzling hot for a hundred thousand years, life would survive, somewhere: under the soil, frozen in Arctic ice. Sooner or later, when the planet was no longer inhospitable, life would spread again. The evolutionary process would begin again. It might take a few billion years for life to regain its present variety. Of course, it would be very different from what it is now, but the earth would survive our folly, only we would not. If the ozone layer gets thinner, ultraviolet radiation sears the earth, so what? Ultraviolet radiation is good for life. It's powerful energy. It promotes mutation, change. Many forms of life will thrive with more UV radiation. Many others will die out. Do you think this is the first time that's happened? Think about oxygen. Necessary for life now, but oxygen is actually a metabolic poison, a corrosive glass, like fluorine. When oxygen was first produced as a waste product by certain plant cells some three billion years ago, it created a crisis for all other life on earth. Those plants were polluting the environment, exhaling a lethal gas. Earth eventually had an atmosphere incompatible with life. Nevertheless, life on earth took care of itself. In the thinking of the human being a hundred years is a long time. A hundred years ago we didn't have cars, airplanes, computers or vaccines. It was a whole different world, but to the earth, a hundred years is nothing. A million years is nothing. This planet lives and breathes on a much vaster scale. We can't imagine its slow and powerful rhythms, and we haven't got the humility to try. We've been residents here for the blink of an eye. If we're gone tomorrow, the earth will not miss us.



It would be hubris to assume that something as insignificant as man can destroy the environment.

21 April 2009

Free to Leave

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Anyone who knows anything about me knows that I love my country. I tried for three consecutive years to join the military, all to no avail. When I asked my best friend about the flag lapel pin, he said that I don't need to do that for people to see I'm a patriot. It comes through in everything I say and do.

As such, I take it almost as a personal affront to hear recent immigrants and illegal aliens rag on my country. If you hate America and American ideas so much, why would you come here? There is a professor at work who constantly talks about how much better things were at her previous university. If Rhode Island is so great, why doesn't she go back? If your country was so much better (health care, economics, politics, etc.), then what possessed you to come here in the first place? We like things here the way they are.

In America, her citizens enjoy an unspoken and undervalued freedom.
Bill Manders calls the freedom to leave. Instead, these ingrates come to America and whine about how bad their lives are. Then they try to undermine the very nation that gives them their prosperity. As they benefit from it, they luxuriate in it, and they want to set themselves up at the top they undermine from within.

Rousseau wrote that IF AND ONLY IF (IFF) we all give up our personal natural rights to the same degree at the same time it will work, but the reality is that that will never happen, and so utopia on earth is impossible. To all of you who hate America, you are free to leave at any time. That's the great thing about Federalism- if you don't like the local laws, you move. Stop trying to create a national bureaucracy that renders every corner of our country the same so that there is neither choice nor mobility. That's unamerican, and we have no more frontier in which to flee.

There are no perfect countries. There are no perfect people to run them. Stop trying to make earth which is fallen the utopia that heaven alone can sustain.

20 April 2009

Insignificant Gestures

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The President says that the Bush Administration overspent. His solution? Spend more money faster. Obama even went so far as to say that FDR's problem was that he didn't spend money fast enough. Then he has the gall to think we're idiots by saying he'll cut the deficit he created by 10%. We still owe 90% more in the end.

On tax day, he defended himself. Cuts amount to $100 million from $10 trillion which is really just a drop in the bucket. He touts his tax refund. Refunds amount to a measely $1/day. Don't spend it all in one place.

My Probability and Statistics teacher really liked my project. He didn't like that it was groundbreakingly insightful. He liked that we, unlike other groups, admitted that our data wasn't statistically relevant to prove our hypothesis. That's what the president and his drones refuse to admit- what he's doing is statistically irrelevant.
The heritage foundation displays this in great context with a nice graph.

Most of what Obama does and says constitutes nothing more than empty gestures. Government officials dont' really have any perspective on this. I remember during the 1991 Iraq war an official saying "A billion here, a billion there, pretty soon it adds up to real money." Yet, Americans get hyped up because 100 sounds larger than 10, so they think it's a lot, forgetting the orders of magnitude inbetween. And million is about 1/1000th of a trillion, so even though it might not be chump change to you, it is to them.

Rush asked why he would want a man who is worth less than he is to manage his portfolio. Why do we trust people who have never built a commercial empire in their life with the commerce of the nation entire? Don't let it happen again.

17 April 2009

Videos to See

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If you haven't seen these Milton Friedman videos yet, you should. If you haven't read Ludwig von Mises yet, you should. It gave me a unique perspective into the world of economics, valuation, and interdependency of people. Not that we have to do whatever whenever for any reason whatsoever, but some overly altrusitic people have it all wrong. You watch these videos and decide for yourself.


16 April 2009

Put Money Where Your Politics Is

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We talk about putting our money on the table. I live in Vegas, and people bet on their beliefs all the time. However, the fact of the matter is that in most matters of belief and principle, most people are all talk.

The people who supposedly advocate on behalf of the needy want us to do the work while they get the glory. Rich entertainers stage benefit concerts to collect money and donate very little themselves. The president, despite earning millions last year, donated about 6% to charity. All the while, as I said previously, they bite the hand that feeds them. They attack the nation that allows them to have the luxurious lives they live and tell us we are greedy and evil and need to atone.

People like this play us like fiddles, galvanizing our guilt. They want us to feel bad for offenses we did not give and circumstances about which we know nothing and in which we can do little. You see the ads at Christmas every year about starving children in africa, and maybe your mother used that phrase to get you to finish your meal. I promise to stop bringing that up to people I know and love. It's a form of manipulation.

Let's manipulate the system the way they do to their detriment. I propose we start voting with our pocketbooks and stop patronizing shops, services, and people whose politics run counter to our own and put that money instead into industries that work for the engines of liberty. ACORN, Americans for Change, Center for American Progress, World Wildlife Fund, the Sierra Club, and a whole slieu of leftist leaning "charitable" organizations protected under the non-profit rules in this nation depend on donations. If donations dry up, with what will they be able to lobby for change we oppose? If instead our donations and spending goes to companies who support Americanism, then the people who agree with us will have more money to spend.

Last month I watched the original Manchurian Candidate movie. The good senator pledged that he would spend every cent he had and every cent he could borrow blocking the communists. It's time companies like WalMart and the like stopped worrying about being "socially conscious" or "environmentally friendly" and start giving money to organizations that will not seek their destruction. What we currently do is akin to handing Iran a nuclear missile and hoping and praying they won't shoot it back at us. Asinine insanity!

Put your money where your politics is. Years ago, a general authority of my church was seen shopping at a chain far from his home. When asked why he went out of his way to shop there he explained that they shared his principles. Stop going to Whole Foods, Wild Oats, and other organizations whose sole real purpose is to destroy the prosperity of the Enlightened Experiment. If you don't stand for something, you will fall for anything, and we already have enough automatons in America. That's why Obama won the election.

15 April 2009

Prove It

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The President made sweeping assumptions and claims in his economic speech today trying to help people feel better as they surrender the fruits of their blood, sweat and tears to the IRS. His rhetoric reminded me unfortunately of the frustratingly inaccurate sweeping grandosity of many scientists at conferences I attended, where people want to be seen that they're making a difference when in reality they're not doing much of importance.



I made myself unpopular at those conferences by challenging colleague's conclusions. I basically asked the same questions, all pointing to statistical relevancy of their results. More often than not, their experiments lacked sufficient rigidity to support their sweeping generalities. Some people tested too few subjects. Others ignored variables or had poor controls. Some obfuscated results, omitted errors, or fabricated data. Usually the proof was in the probability and statistics, and their histograms didn't support their conclusions. Unfortunately for my career mine didn't either, meaning that I appear to have accomplished very little in a research capacity.



I want the president to prove to me how his policies have created the outcomes he claims.



  • How has he spurred economic growth? He's been threatening to raise taxes and regulation for over a year. How does that encourage businesses to invest, hire people, and venture?
  • How has he made us safe? He closed GITMO, ignored the pirates in favor of pizza and puppies, and ordered 10% cuts to the military, but he did declare conservatives enemies of the state via DHS.

  • How has he alleviated our tax burden? He spoke yesterday about making tax day less arduous and easier. What has he done to do that? He gave us all $1 a day in tax cuts. Big whoop.

  • How has he sacrificed? he wears designer suits and flies in a personal pizza chef and ordered a ton of special marine helicopters. He did however manage to give 6% of his income to charity last year, but I still give more per capita. Plus, he earned $2.5 million last year, making him uberrich since he earns 10x the $250K/year that makes one "rich".

Obama is the ultimate in hypocrisy. For him it's do as I say, not as I do. You can't take credit for every little thing that goes well and distance yourself from every HUGE thing that goes badly. That's actually the opposite of what I learned in my Organizational Behavior class. We learned that if it turns out poorly, I did it; if it turns out OK, we did it, and if it goes well, YOU did it. He takes all the glory to him and ascribes all the error to his enemies. Sorry Mr. President, but this knife cuts both ways. If his policy causes good things, something must be causing the less good things too, and the only thing different from the previous administration is his policy, ergo, if he causes the good, he also causes the side effects. Anything good that happens he did. Anything bad that happens is someone else's fault. I can't go for that. No can do.


If this presidency made it through the FDA Drug approval process for salving the nation's wounds, I propose the following addendum would of necessity by way of warning be included in any sweeping statement.


President Obama, from Democrat Pharmaceuticals. Making you better than you really are. Possible side effects may include recession, depression, general discomfort, criminal allegations, higher taxes, headaches, blurred or distorted vision, loss of balance, dry mouth, numbness, periodontal disease, lockjaw, tremors, climate change, heart palpitations, varicose veins, liver damage, legal damages, kidney failure, business failure, loss of taste, loss of smell, loss of sight, loss of pension, loss of job, loss of limb, early Alzheimer's, cardiac arrest, criminal arrest, and in extremely rare cases...death. Obama. Making you better than you really are.




He's like a bad scientist who assumes correlation implies causality, as long as it's good. They get apoplectic about serendipitous coincidence that they didnt cause and can't reproduce to save their lives. how many people have PhDs on bad science? How many presidents do we have on false hope? Enough bad science.


14 April 2009

Biting the Hand That Feeds

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I grow tired of ingrates in my own country who don't appreciate what they have. I lived in socialist Austria for about two years, and I was never so glad to see America as I was when I returned home. Many Americans do not realize how well they have things. Just because today your fiduciary status isn't as good as you want or as it was six months ago doesn't mean we're not well off. Remember that Obama's brother survives in Africa on $20 a year.


Many Americans bite the hand that feeds them. They denigrate the society that lets them have what they have and paint us as villains. You see them on parade on TV leading crusades against the greedy imperialistic American when they have their opulence because of Capitalism and Freedom. Hollywood starlets who earn millions don't want us to have what we want, drive what we wish, eat what we like, and live where it suits us. While they do whatever they want whenever they want, living in the lap of luxury, they criticise the very people who buy their product. I am often aghast that so many of my countrymen listen to potentates paid to pretend to live. What do they know about anything?


They luxuriate in our society and get treated magnificently and then turn again and rend it. Well were we warned about casting pearls before swine. I think it might be time for price and wage controls on hollywood. If salary caps work for CEOs, why not for actors? If it were a principled stand, it would be across the board, instead, it's against the productive sector as part of an ideological crusade against opponents. Today Mark Levin said of such luxuriation, "if you're not repulsed by now there's something wrong with you, God's honest truth" They've never had it so good


13 April 2009

Making a Big Deal

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The media is gaga over the president authorizing military action and saying what a cool guy the president is and how well he responds under pressure, that he has been weighed, measured, and not found wanting. That's not the story.

The captain of the Maersk Alabama put it correctly. The real story is that our
Navy Seals are heroes. It's not about the president. It's not about the captain. It's about the brave men and women who keep America safe. Obama has done zero to keep America safe.


Yet, they make a big deal, like usual, about every minutea the president does. Every time he signs a bill, ties his shoe, digs in the garden, shakes someone's hand, we hear about it in the press. In the end three bullets were fired, three terrorists fell dead, and three men should have earned medals for service.


Obama however will pin a medal on himself. What a great guy. He was so deeply involved. The warship was ready. It didn't need a presidential signature to protect American citizens. It was deferring so as to not precipitate a larger protracted conflict, but the Somalians had already declared war by their actions. He allowed the military to act; he did not give the order to fire. That's a misconception.


None of this is by accident. They want you to think the president is a great guy. He's an empty suit. He has the thinnest resume of any man in a leadership role I've ever known. Now he won't discuss it, and we'll never be able to pin him down. Obama never does anything that isn't scripted if he can avoid it. Every time he's caught without the teleprompter he reveals himself as a mealy-mouthed demagogue interested only in the aggrandization of his own legacy and career and the ensconcement of his name in the annals of world history.


Truth is, this man is irrelevant. If the Envirostatists win, America will vanish and he will be irrelevant. If the Envirostatists lose, he will fade into obscurity as a speed bump in the parking lot of American liberty.


Much ado about nothing. And thus he clothes himself with odd old ends stolen forth from holy writ and seems a saint when most he plays the devil.

---update 15:22---
We just learned from the UK Telegraph the following:
"The on-scene commander thought that the captain was in imminent danger and then made that decision, and he had the authority to make that decision and he had seconds to make that decision."


Obama didn't order him to fire. Obama had nothing to do with this whatsoever. The President however couldn't give a flying flapjack about who really deserves the credit. He wants all the glory for things he didn't do and none of the blame for things he occassions. That Navy Commander deserves the credit for the decision. The SEALS deserve credit for the flawless deliverance of an American hostage. The President deserves nothing. Nothing.

11 April 2009

Politicians Should Work For YOU

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The recent pirate problem threw into sharp reflect what the current administration and those who belong to that movement have not yet accomplished. They have not, for all the trillions of dollars spent thereon, won the War on Drugs or Poverty. AIDS still ravages Africa. Americans are not buying into the hype of smart cars and super segues. Some of us still describe ourselves as African-Americans or Italian-Americans. Nothing they do has brought the kind of change we need.

Envirostatists like Obama don’t want to solve the problems of climate change, poverty, hunger, disease, racism, or war. If they did, what would they do for a living? Their livelihood and status depend on their being able to remain ensconced as the spokesmen against these evils of society. As such expect no policy or program or idea from them that will actually work. They need the money.


They talk in grand aires without substance. If alternative fuels were such a gold mine, some company would have gone after them. T Boone Pickens relies despite his rosy outlook on government subsidies for his alternative energy program. All the talk about green jobs and green energy are premised on the assumption that some day soon we won’t need oil. Reality tells us otherwise. How are we going to move cargo across the ocean, overland on the highways, and through the air without oil? How will we drive tanks, planes, and ships in wartime? How will we turn the engines of industry? Like it or not solar and wind turbines generate insufficient cranking amps to run any of these things, not to mention being unreliable and intermittent. If you run out of gas, someone can bring you more. What happens if the wind dies or the battle rages far into the night to our fighting men dependent on solar or wind generation?


They are not serious about solving problems. They are serious about preserving their careers, getting elected, getting speaking gigs, and getting donations from those enraged or enflamed with passions about saving other people. Don’t let them prey on your shame and guilt. Alexis DeTocqueville said of us that “America is great because she is good. If America ceases to be good, America will cease to be great.” We are a good nation, the best on the face of the earth. Despite what the president says, we have no need to go around the world apologizing for the motes in our eye while other nations ignore the beam in their own. In fact, they ought to be apologizing to us and thanking God for America.

Ronald Reagan once told of a Cuban acquaintance of his who said Americans are the most unfortunate of people because if America fails we have no place to which we can flee for refuge. America is the last best hope of man on earth.

The President and his people don’t want to solve problems. They take time only for things that they think will advance their own careers, not the cause of the American people. If you happen to catch crumbs from the table, they’ll take the credit, but they do not do what they do for you.

10 April 2009

Priorities: Pizza and Puppy

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Instead of tending to the Pirates!, our president's priorities involve pizza and a puppy. He's distracted and too busy to make a statement to the American people about the pirates and took a week to get around to dealing with it. However, he took care of what was important to him.

In my experience people make time for the things that are most important to them. Obama made it back to the White House in time for the Wednesday night soiree and now he's flown in a pizza chef from Missouri to cook 20 pizzas for 150 guests. No mention of the carbon footprint of doing this instead of getting it locally. He has a chef in the white house for crying out loud.

Power has gone to his head. They say that power corrupts and that absolute power corrupts absolutely. If George Bush had done this, flying in someone from TX to cook special steaks, the media/propagandist bureau would have had a cow.

Plus, they've finally picked a puppy. Is this the First First Dog? No. Good grief, how unimportant is that? I don't notify people about the asinine banalities of my life like how many dogs I own and when I'm getting another or that I'm taking one to the vet on Tuesday. Now you know. Maybe CNN will be there to do a story.


Stop praising the president for perfunctory priorities. He's supposed to protect American citizens. I doubt that Captain off Somali feels like the president is doing his job...I know I don't.

09 April 2009

Net 30 Day- Why Healthcare is So Expensive

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The president wants you to get angry at private healthcare so that he can justify nationalizing that industry. He claims that costs are exorbitant without telling you why. The fact of the matter is that government is, as usual, culprit and accomplice to the very phenomenon they decry. Health care costs what it costs because the government doesn't keep its word.


Many companies in the area will not sell things to the university for which I work because of a phenomenon called Net 30 Day. This means that we don't even have to acknowledge billing for 30 days. In effect, this drags out our fiduciary obligations into the future. Companies supply products today, and we promise to pay them...eventually. They do get paid, at least so far, but they have to wait 60-90 days to get paid.


None of you would operate a business on that promisory note. However, healthcare is OBLIGATED to do so. When Medicare/Medicaid patients use hospital services, the Federal Government "promises to pay". The reality is that the government shorts and stiffs doctors and hospitals to the tune of millions of dollars every year, and they still don't have enough money to cover expenses.


The US Government does not make good on its debts. You may remember I pointed out that Carter Braxton's $10000 loan during the revolution remains as yet in accounts payable if they haven't written it off completely. They owe him $0.61 trillion or so today. The president wants us mad at the private sector and promises a salve. The problem is that if he won't keep his promise to doctors, why would he keep them to us?

08 April 2009

Pirates! and Old Ironsides

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Yesterday, the Somali pirates finally tested the weakest US president in American history by taking one of our vessels. While the President paces the oval office hoping for a bailout since he intends to do nothing about this, let me take you back in time to the Jefferson administration.

Since the 14th century, the Barbary pirates of present day Tripoli have preyed upon shipping in the Mediterranean Sea. By 1793, a dozen American ships had been taken, their cargoes seized and their crews sold into slavery despite Jefferson's envoy in 1786 to Tripoli as Secretary of State in which he promised to pay $1 million annually to buy off the pirates.

When Jefferson was inaugurated, the Pasha of Tripoli demanded $225,000 ($1,088,763,657,000 in today's dollars) in tribute. Jefferson refused. The Pasha declared war on the United States, followed shortly by Algiers and Tunis. In August of 1801, the schooner USS Enterprise defeated a 14-gun Tripolian corsair in the first battle of the war. Jefferson commissioned six frigates to help aid US naval operations in the region, the USS Argus, USS Chesapeake, USS Constellation, USS Constitution, USS Enterprise, USS Intrepid, USS Philadelphia and USS Syren.

In 1804, Lt. Stephen Decatur led the Marine Corps in action to retake the USS Philadelphia which had been captured, which is what the "shores of Tripoli" references in the USMC anthem. He would later lead an overland force under General Eaton in 1805 overland to take Tunis, ending the first war.

After the war of 1812, we returned our sights to Tripoli. Now Commodore Decatur went back with the fleet and bombarded Algiers into submission (1815).

There have been no major interpolations in American shipping since then, until today. The issue is that these men are terrorists, Muslim pirates, who are in it for the money and the glory at the expense of the industrious. Not that there are not good Muslims in the world, but there are no good Muslims among the Tripolitanian pirates, their militancy evident in the brazen overtures with which they encountered an American freighter.

This morning, the intrepid crew of the Maersk Alabama retook their vessel and put the pirates adrift into a liferaft where they hold the captain hostage. What would I do if I were the president?

I would have immediately ordered the USS Constitution to set sail under escort for Northern Africa. She is the only ship in our navy that has sunk another vessel in ship to ship action and the only ship afloat in the world that has sunk another ship with cannon balls. Let her return as a symbol to let them show that we cannot and will not be intimidated. They cannot have forgotten Old Ironsides which sank five british warships in the war of 1812.

I think that one wooden sailing ship ought to be enough to patrol the waters off that coast and turn back these petulent pirates. Meanwhile, we have forces in the region sufficient to handle these ruffians. I would not tolerate such a brazen act of war.

I look forward in October to the opportunity to step aboard this vessel in Boston Yard. I encourage you to avail yourself of the same opportunity.

Keep faith with our fighting men. No aid or comfort to the enemy.

07 April 2009

Chain Reactions

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My sister came home last night and told me about a chain reaction she saw on the freeway. A highway patrolman pulled behind a woman with his lights on and made known to her that she should pull over. In the course of her maneuvers, this woman forced another car to careen and crash into the median. So, adding to her previous infraction, she caused, under the watchful eye of the highway patrol, an additional infraction that inconvenienced another person.


Policies of the envirostatist do the same thing. Where they are not overtly harmful, even if inadvertently so, they are at least an inconvenience. They solve one problem without answering the entire issue, and by so doing they create more problems than they solve.


In attempting to solve climate change, which is in itself a red herring, they have produced all the problems they now decry. They forced automakers to build cars Americans don't want and can't use. How many groceries can you cart home in a smart car? How many kids can you transport to school? How many trips does a smart car necessitate to Home Depot for the same payload as a Suburban? What of the tax revenue lost in sales tax on the cheaper (but not per capita) smart car and on the fuel it saves? What about jobs lost when Americans stop buying gas or the cars GM and Chrysler build? What about the homes lost as a result of those lost jobs?



Unintended consequences of our actions cause a lot of pain. My parents used to always ask me what I was thinking, and truth was that at least in part I wasn't thinking about anything but myself. I didn't calculate in all the putative repurcussions that might occur as a result. Yet, Pavlovian politicians pursue a pedagoguery no matter the cost or collatoral chaos they create.



Today, GM unveiled a new kind of smart cars that will swerve to avoid accidents. How many of these will cause accidents trying to avoid them? When one car swerves, the others will have to as well, and the more things that move the more things there are to go wrong. You cannot reduce danger without changing human nature, yet that is exactly what government wishes to avoid. Instead of instilling character, they want to enforce behavior and thereby keep us all safe. Man often meets his destiny on the road he takes to avoid it. As a result, our population will be less safe, less happy, and less prosperous.



My philosophy remains the same. Let Americans alone and we will feed the hungry, right the wrongs, and fight the battles that need to be fought. Let people choose. Let them win or lose no matter who comes and tries to turn their way about. You cannot be an individual if you buy into the notion that technology or government will solve your problems. Yet, people in an attempt to be individuals consistently sacrifice it under a false premise that it will save the world.




The only surefire way to eliminate automobile accidents would be to ban the automobile. That would be tyranny. If you cannot have peace without tyranny, I do not want it, and neither should you. Every man who eagerly sacficies freedom under the premise that it will do the world some good is he of whom Franklin spoke when he said, "Those who trade liberty for a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety." What's worse, they put the rest of us at risk. That's irresponsible.

06 April 2009

Plastic Makes Possible

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On my jog Monday morning, I noticed a lot of paper bags out for the trash man. Many shoppers think mistakenly that paper bags are better for the environment than plastic ones. I remember ads for water filtration systems that criticize bottled water because the bottle is in the gym for 30 minutes and in a landfill forever. The crusade against plastic has to end. What would the world be like without it? More dangerous and less prosperous.

During the 2008 election, I vainly searched for an ad on plastics I remember from years ago. The ad questions what life would be like without plastic and then takes the viewer on a tour to see what would change without it. You see computers fade away, cars disappear out from under their operators, police Kevlar vanish, pens vaporize, buildings collapse, etc. etc. etc. The bottom line is that plastic makes it possible.

Plastic is cheap, light, and malleable. This means that compared to previous means of manufacture it can bring goods into the hands of people who otherwise couldn’t afford, life, or engineer things to be like consumers demand or have come to expect. Using other materials would be cost or space prohibitive. Many other materials cannot be molded like plastic. Plastic means that computers, like the one on which you’re reading this, can sit in the palm of your hand instead of taking up 4000ft2 of office space.

Every modern convenience and every advancement in technology has been facilitated or hastened by the use of plastics. Scientists use them, doctors use them, you drive them in your car, push them on your remote, and interface with them at the bank. We need more plastic.

To that end, we also need more oil, which is from whence plastic comes. As our politicians crusade against oil, restrict drilling, cancel contracts, and regulate for more environmental protection, remember that if they succeed, many other things will cost more money or vanish entirely. OPEC has cut production, and while prices for oil have fallen and stabilized near $50/barrel, new taxes and fees will cost jobs, reduce investment, and hurt availability during a time of unemployment and stretched budgets and energy insecurity. We have plenty of oil in our own country if they let us go get it. We have the capability to not depend on OPEC for it if government gets out of our way. Yet, they will continue to impede and restrict in the name of the children or the environment or fairness ad infinitum, trading our well-being for the well being of people we don’t know and places of which we’ve never heard.

Human beings are the only species of which I know that facilitates the survival of other species at the expense of its own. Obama's energy policy is premised on the assumption that someday soon we won't need oil. Even if we stop burning it for fuel, oil gives us a lot more than that. Ergo his premise is flawed and the policy predicated on that premise promises poverty to the people. Mark my words.

05 April 2009

Climate of Control

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The President wants to install smart devices in our homes under the guise that it will help us control energy use. Under the guise that we consume too much energy and that in order for the rest of the world to know peace and prosperity we know less, he wants more and more control over our lives. Ten years ago, nobody knew who in Halifax this man was, but now he knows how to do everything better than anyone else.


Under Obama's leadership, the nation moves closer to the Envirostatist utopia akin to that in Orwell's 1984. They want to control us. They want to impoverish us. They took advantage of a crisis to strip us of liberty. Well was the warning in V for Vendetta. "I know why you did it. You were afraid...war, terror, disease, and in your fear you turned to [Obama]. He promised you peace. He promised you order and all he wanted was your silent, obedient consent so that where once you had freedom you now have censors and systems of surveillance coercing your conformity..."


Nevada Energy has already signed onto this, and craigslist in Las Vegas has been inundated for days with ads for free digital thermostats. If you can control the temperature in your home from any PC, what prevents anyone else, including a bureaucrat, from doing it from his?
Photobucket




They're already in our homes. We have phone lines, low-flow toilets, code regulations on what we can and cannot do on our own property, how loud we can be, how many cars we can park out front and how many dogs we may own. They already have us register our dogs; how long before they have us register ourselves?



In June 2000, I returned from living abroad in Austria. Austria is a socialist nation where they know who you are and where you live and when you moved and where you've ever lived. As a missionary, I didn't worry too much, but they also pay a minimum 40% income tax to pay for universal healthcare and the like. This means that about half the population doesn't work, living in government housing that is no larger than my office at work, plus a separate bathroom if they're lucky. They sit around all day smoking and playing chess. They never become anything. They think they're free.



Our government wants to follow the blueprint of Europe. I have lived there. It's not a panacea. It's dirty and dark and depressing. I have never been so glad to see the United States. God, it's great to be home. Let them keep their climate of control. Keep your free digital thermostat NVEnergy; I'd rather buy one you can't control from afar.

04 April 2009

Conscientious Capitalism

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When my book Responsible Liberty goes to press later this year, you will see a reference to this phrase. Many people snark on capitalism, which trend is not helped by President Obama’s crusade to sweep achievement from the realm of possibility. The problem is not with capitalism. Capitalism has built everything that we enjoy. What is wrong with capitalism is the people who pervert its principles.

Two weeks ago, I placed an order for a large number of books. One of those sellers, whose name I shall not disclose, elected to cancel the order even though they clearly showed other copies of that same title on their website. These other copies were about $0.25 more than the one I had purchased, but if I feared that if I tried to purchase those, they would cancel orders again and again so as to ablate the combined shipping discount as a way to get more money.

Contrast that to a book I bought last year. Several weeks after shipping, they contacted me to inform me that the book had been lost in the mail and that they would be sending a replacement free of charge. What service!

I have had more problems with individuals in eBAY than with any other media ever. Most companies will make concessions, partial refunds, or send a substitute item, but many of these go unanswered in arbitration and I get nothing back for my money. There are plenty of scam artists out there. Facebook is positively flush with them in the ad section at the right side of the screen, advertising things like “I became rich in 4 weeks being lazy. Read my story and do the same”. However, there are plenty of really good people everywhere you go who are doing their best to do their duty.

I make an effort whenever I can to praise people for good service. Just recently, I received letters back from Southwest Airlines and from Mount Vernon whilst on my trip to DC, after which I wrote positive reviews. Once I even called one of those semi-truck “how am I driving” lines to give positive feedback. The dispatcher didn’t know what to do with it.

Part of the problem is that positive feedback isn’t chronicled well. When some students praised me as their substitute, I asked the professor if I could get that put on my permanent record, but it doesn’t work that way. Mostly, if nobody talks about you, you’re doing fine.

Most businesses are full of normal people who do just fine. Some of the richest men on earth however got there by taking advantage of other people. How many Bernie Madoffs have there been? How many Joseph Rockefellers? How many pyramid schemes? But they are not the majority of capitalists. There are millions of small businessmen in the world and we never hear their names because they do their job and treat people justly. Even if the CEOs are bad, it doesn’t mean everyone there is. Even if the CEO is an angel, it doesn’t mean everyone who works there will be just and true.

If a chain is only as strong as its weakest link, any organization is only as good as the person who works there with the lowest morality. Like GK Chesterton said, the problem with society is that too few people ask what is right, what they ought to do, and then do it. Capitalism, like government, is only as good as the people of whom it is comprised. If you populate its ranks with crooks, it will appear to be bad, but looks can be deceiving.

03 April 2009

Assault on the "Rich"

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Obama and his ilk continue their assault on the so-called rich, wanting to prevent people who don't deserve what they have from enjoying their wealth. Today the onslaught covers people who didn't do anything for it, but it only includes some. My friends complain about Paris Hilton who is famous because she is rich but not about Ted Kennedy who is a senator for the same reason.

Some people I know want the government to confiscate Hilton's money because she didn't do anything to earn it. I ask them two questions: What did Ted Kennedy do to deserve his money that you exempt him from the same line of attack? and What did YOU do that makes you think you deserve the money more than Hilton or Kennedy?

Much as I disagree with the stature born of inherited wealth, there can be no doubt that their parents earned a great deal of wealth through work. They passed it on to their progeny. If you want to pass on money to your children, go out, get rich, and pass it on to them. The class warfare has to end.

As for the Kennedy and Rockefeller families, you can only buy your spots for so long before your lack of industry leaves your progeny bereft of what they need to succeed, and then you will lose power. Aristocracy in America is transitory, and successive generations that enjoy wealth without work soon squandor the fruits of labor. Don't you dare however try to steal whatever I earn when I try to bequeath it on my offspring. You owe them the same privilege you enjoy.

02 April 2009

Why I Oppose the HOA

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My real estate agent doesn't really understand why I turn away homes she picks out that have HOAs. She used to work for a builder and sold new homes, and so for the better part of the last decade, she's seen firsthand how basically every builder couples construction to an association. Some of her arguments may be valid, but not at the cost.


Some of the HOAs include a $150-250/month fee. This pays for localized amenities like pools, playgrounds and exercise facilities, but I'm already paying tax money to support these same facilities through city facilities, so I don't feel that it's value added to pay the privilege of having one right outside my door. I understand the HOA trying to help keep home values up, but that's a weak argument given the current housing debacle. Sometimes there's landscaping to keep up or regulations to enforce, and I understand those costs. The agent reminded me I could run for association president and dictate the rules, but I'm disinclined to that. Here's why.


I briefly caught mention yesterday on the KXNT AM840 Casey Hendrickson show a story about a local HOA. Although I didn't catch the locale or many of the details, the basic premise of the article dealth with how the HOA was now enforcing behavior inside the homes of residents. Whereas most HOAs confine their activity to the visible facade and yard, this one is now, like the federal government, reaching into our homes and telling us how to live.


A HOA constitutes one more level of government interferance in my life that I don't need. I don't consider it worth the cost to have someone interfering in my life. The government is in our bathrooms with flush toilets, and now our neighbors are dictating decor. Read Atlas Shrugged or the Giver or 1984. They forshadow coming attractions.


I claim the privilege of living within the confines of my own home according to the dictates of my own conscience and allow all men the same privilege. Let them live where, how, and as long as they wish.


01 April 2009

Worst Day of the Year

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For me, April 1st is usually among the worst days of the year. Of course, there's the obvious April Fools bafoonery, to the point where you almost can't trust anyone who says anything. The second thing is that last Friday was the final withdrawal date for classes.


Every year around this time, I feel overcome by a slight pinge of melancholy. It pains me to watch so many students "fail", having wasted their time in classes they cannot hope to pass with the marks they want. Most of them are intelligent, they just have too many other things going on. Some of them have bad teachers. Few of them don't really belong in the class.


I'm not looking for a bunch of shruffshire sheep who follow where I lead. I don't like rebels, but I feel like most of the 65 students I teach really want to do well in the class as preparation for their chosen career.


I don't know why I care. I'm not paying for it. The ones who don't want to be here probably aren't either. Either taxpayers or parents are footing the bill so they don't vest the effort. Even still, think of the time spent. Not that I believe in regrets; what they experience will shape them. What bothers me is that things could turn out differently for most of them.


My poor consolation is that they ask me if I'm teaching again in the Fall so they can take my class. I do what I can.