Archive for July, 2009

The Recession Has Made the World Suck Less

Tuesday, July 21st, 2009

Environment's Doing GreatAnd Cracked has managed to come up with six ways how

6. The Environment is Doing Great

Ever since Al Gore became the boogeyman who springs up from the back seat every time we gas up the Hummer, environmentalism has been big on everyone’s mind. We try to recycle, carpool and eat less bald eagle. But is any of that enough? Well, probably not, no. But don’t worry, where your personal efforts fail, global economic crisis excels.

5. Great Deals on Whores

It says something about the power of the current economical crisis when even the oldest profession in the world feels the cold, uncircumcised sting of the recession in its rear end. Sadly, times being what they are, many conservative politicians and hard working fathers had to cut down on teenage-runaways; instead spending their meager extra dollars on things like grandma’s medication and HBO.

4. Tons of New Junk Food, and Fine Wine to Wash it All Down

If you tend to watch lowest common denominator shows, such as America’s Got Talent, Cops or anything on the FOX network, and the commercials that cater to the audiences of said shows, you probably already heard about KFC’s new grilled chicken despite the fact their very name makes this new idea look completely ridiculous. It’d be like Gary’s Fisting Emporium suddenly offering non-fisting services, like firm handshakes and hugs.

3. Old Media is Dying Faster

Let’s be honest: All of us have dreamed about making money off the Internet, but generally only the ones with a handful of undiagnosed manic disorders who undress in front of a camera for sweaty middle-aged men have made that dream a reality. Many companies still refuse to treat this series of tubes as anything serious, writing it off as some whippersnapper fad like Frisbees or Polio shots.

2. People are Forced to Grow Up

They say the rich get richer and the poor get poorer. And while that may be true, it doesn’t really mention douchebags who are poor but have rich parents. Where do those young men and women who wear knit scarves in the summer and wax philosophical over frappuccinos fit into the equation? Nowhere anymore.

1. You are Living Healthier and Feeling Better

Research by Stanford University and the University of North Carolina has shown that when times are good people tend to not take care of themselves. We eat bacon-wrapped bacon and drink Thunderbird while we shower. We eat out at restaurants, we neglect our families and drop the responsibilities of raising kids on stoned teenagers and crooked daycare centers because we are also usually overworked and overstressed when the economy is booming.

Wow…I really like the picture of that environment-lady…but the sentiment involved in these bullets has the faint whiff of, oh I can’t quite place it…+++sniff-sniff+++ That’s it! Now I got it! Liberal douchebag anti-human self-loathing claptrap.

In fact, Number One kind of reminds me of our Treasury Secretary’s asinine comments from a week ago.

Oh well. There’s something to be said for seeing silver linings in every cloud, anyway.

Braveheart Wept II

Tuesday, July 21st, 2009

Blogsister Daphne has had all she can stands and she can’t stands no more —

Prometheus’ Rock

The fight was lost before most of us were even born, now we howl at the wind to retain the last straggling vestiges of our cultural heritage, thinking we’ll be reassured by these spectral semblances of freedom if we can only keep our guns, teach our children as we please, express our views and get a slippery grip on changing social constructs…Brave men died to give Americans the power to control government, craven bastards freely gave it away for soft pats and false promises.

I can already hear the choir winding up for a stream of stuttering buts. But we’re so much freer than so and so, our standard of living is comfy fine, we have rights, a free press, a system of law, religious freedom, we can abort, buy organic and vote! Yes, we’re freer and better off than most of the world. No doubt about it, we’re still blessed to be Americans compared with numerous harsh places populating the marginalized corners of our globe.

But these blessings are a pale shade of our founding father’s true vision…We’ve created an insatiable, fanged beast that’s forgotten [its] original role of servitude and stewardship.
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We can’t cross the goddamned street in the middle without facing a ticket or argue with the implacable ignorance of IRS auditors without incurring steep bills. The constitution lists only three federal crimes — treason, piracy and counterfeiting, but we’ve somehow managed to rack up around 4,450 offenses for the books, with fifty new ones added every year. The states have grown into monster fiefdoms, regulating every last move we make from our food consumption to yard art.
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The victories we win feel hollow because they are; the barbarians we’re fighting aren’t at the gate, they already hold the keys…

We’ve become a nation of stunted pygmies ruled by rapacious moles. The founders would weep witnessing our self imposed chains to a rock of implacable misery known as the United States government.

By the way, I gutted that thing like a fish and I probably made a real hack job out of it. Do yourself a favor and go read the whole thing, with the comments underneath too. What’re you waiting for, permission from someone? Is the point achieving that much clearance as it goes flying over your pointy little head?

“It’s all for nothing if you don’t have freedom.” — William Wallace, Braveheart (1995)

An Exciting Friday Evening for Buck

Tuesday, July 21st, 2009

Pretty interesting. Go read the narrative.

Our friend in New Mexico thinks we need an editor; our writing gets repetitive and parts of it sag into the depths of being expendable. Well, criticism is easy. Examples are a bit more impressive and therefore more persuasive. We’ll take what’s behind the link as an example even if it wasn’t intended as such, because it does a fine job of capturing the apprehension that was involved with that awning ratchet jamming. Yeah, we can take criticism. Of course we can. Who do ya think we are, President Obama?

Capturing emotion is a tricky thing when one does one’s writing. Perhaps it comes naturally when the emotion is of the “Omigaw!!” variety and has only moments ago finished its job of rattling you senseless. Either way, the product is worthy of linkage. And it’s probably a worthy model for our aspirations…

…okay, don’t go piling on now. We know we’re wordy. Read Buck’s sordid tale and watch his captivating movie — that’s the subject.

Two Governments, Two Directions

Tuesday, July 21st, 2009

Michael Barone writing in RealClearPolitics with some edifying thoughts on the international scene…specifically, contrasting Great Britain with the United States. We, here, are rushing headlong into a direction from which we see our birth mother running away back the other direction, arms flailing over her head, screaming. Perhaps this should be telling us something.

Barack Obama is trying to move America considerably to the left, while David Cameron, whose Conservative Party is leading Prime Minister Gordon Brown’s Labor Party by wide margins in the polls, may be aiming to move Britain some distance to the right.

It’s not clear now whether Obama will succeed or what precisely a Prime Minister Cameron would do. On Capitol Hill, the labor unions’ card check bill looks to be dead, the House cap-and-trade bill seems to be foundering in the Senate, and the Democrats’ health-care bills are in some trouble.

One reason is that American voters are wary of the prospects of vast deficit spending. Britain faces an even bigger budget deficit, about 14 percent of gross domestic product. The Blair and Brown governments in good macroeconomic times slowly raised government’s share of gross domestic product from 37 percent to 47 percent by enlarging the public payroll with teachers, nurses, diversity counselors and the like. Yet Britain’s financial sector suffered a collapse worse than ours, and in a country where it is a significantly larger part of the total economy.

Up to this year, Cameron and his team have pledged not to cut public spending significantly, while opposing tax increases. The current fiscal situation makes those pledges inoperative — Cameron has even accepted Labor’s 50 percent tax on the rich. So while Democrats struggle to make American government larger, Conservatives are pondering whether they can make British government smaller.

The lesson that seems to emerge consistently, is that socialism is strongly appealing to those who haven’t tried it yet, or haven’t tried it in awhile. It’s a little like that freaky girlfriend with the incredible long legs who just rocks your world under the sheets — but keeps losing her cool, yelling at you in the middle of the night, calling you at work to yell at you some more, throwing your clothes on the lawn, setting them on fire, running up your credit cards, shaving your dog’s ass and keying your car.

It just has a way of wearing out its welcome, but by then it’s too late.

Picky With Words

Tuesday, July 21st, 2009

Dot those eyes and cross those tees, folks. Neal Boortz has an editor’s red pen in one hand, and a dictionary in the other

Why do I refer to the Democrat attempt to take over our health care system as “fascist?” Just being picky with words, I guess.

Republican National Chairman Michael Steele yesterday called Obama’s medical plan “socialism.” Steele is wrong. He probably doesn’t know it, but he’s wrong. Under a socialist economic system the government both owns and controls industry, financial institutions and business. General Motors is now a socialist enterprise, as is Citibank. But when the government merely controls private businesses without actually taking ownership the proper definition is “fascist.” Obama, it seems, is all-too comfortable with fascism; that is, until he can turn it into socialism.

No Higher Office in Sight

Tuesday, July 21st, 2009

Speaking of small men filling offices that are too big for them, which was the subject of my Cronkite send-off…Neo-Neocon has figured out President Obama. She’s had him fingered for some time now.

…Obama has never had to succeed at anything political before except for getting elected, and then ingratiating himself with the leader of the Illinois Senate who allowed him to take credit for the work of other people on legislative bills. After that, all Obama really had to do was give speeches and run a campaign.

Granted, he was very good indeed at that. But a campaign and a presidency are different. I am beginning to think that one of the problems with Obama and his advisers is that they actually believe an administration is merely the continuation of a campaign. After all, Obama has never had to face that hard truth before — each office of his has been useful only as a springboard for the next one. The idea that he is now in office for at least four years, with no higher office in sight, and that people may actually for the first time in his life expect him to produce some actual results in addition to lofty words, is very slow to dawn on Obama and the people around him.

They probably think if he bobs and weaves and spins enough, his chickens will never come home to roost. And perhaps they are correct; perhaps the press will stay in his pocket, partly to avoid admitting its own failure to evaluate and vet Obama properly. But there are signs — and the Politico article is one of them — that even the press cannot deny that this man is not what he appeared (to them) to be.

Taranto Eulogizes Cronkite

Tuesday, July 21st, 2009

We haven’t clambered on to the “Give Walter a Proper Send-Off” bandwagon for a number of reasons. One of these is that the spate of celebrity exits has saddled us with something of a backlog, assuming we want to get into that. We haven’t caught up with Michael Jackson just yet, and we probably never will.

Another reason is that Cronkite deserves a footnote. In one career he managed to epitomize what teevee journalism should, and should not, be. It would be callous to neglect his many contributions, but it would be irresponsible to mention only those, and leave unmentioned the profound injury he dealt to the profession.

James Taranto, we think, has found the appropriate balance:

Being a “straight shooter” means something quite different to a news reporter than an editorialist. The distinction is analogous to that between a judge deciding a case and a lawyer arguing one, or between an umpire and a coach. No one doubts that Cronkite was sincere in his opinion about Vietnam, and the argument over its merits is beyond the scope of today’s column. As a reporter, however, he had a duty to stick to the facts and leave opinions to others.

He almost always lived up to that duty, but the one time he manifestly fell short, it ended up having great and baneful consequences. Do you remember a few years ago when one of the networks declared the conflict in Iraq to be a “civil war”? Neither does anyone else. It was a transparent attempt to do to Iraq what Cronkite had done to Vietnam. It failed because viewers no longer trust newsmen the way they did in 1968. And it is a vicious circle: Without the authority that derives from that trust, reporters get careless about objectivity, weakening the audience’s trust even further.

The glory of Walter Cronkite’s career is that he did more than anyone to earn his viewers’ trust and establish his profession’s authority. The tragedy is that he also did more than anyone else to undermine them.

It was the late 1960’s. The baby-boomers were old enough to consume information and pay attention to what those in authority said about things; but still young enough to know everything. Because of this, everyone who was in any position to be watched, caught a raging case of GoodPerson FeverTM.

And as a direct result of that, as one rounds up the very worst authoritarian decisions made in the history of the United States, a disproportionate representation of them come from the 1960’s.

It is often said that a strong character has to do with doing the right thing when no one is watching. I’ve often noticed that when a vast, mind-blowing number of people are watching, that’s a good test of strong character as well. A man who has it will do things that make just as much sense as whatever he’d be doing in solitude; and a man of weak character will do something that looks just snazzy, but in substance, is unbelievably stupid.

It is the desire for irony, I think, that causes all the trouble. Weak character means your conduct is affected by the size of the audience and who’s in it, and to that crew this seems to be a consciously desirable thing. You should be doing something different to acknowledge the watchers. Your reality should change. And so, if any available option makes too much sense, it’s eliminated from the running; what is ultimately selected is silly and surreal. By design.

A great example of this is when Vice President Biden insisted, last week, that our country has to spend lots of money to avoid going broke. He came up with something nonsensical because that’s exactly what he was trying to find. That’s why I cited the subtle difference between bullshitting and lying, and announced that Biden’s bullshitting was so impressive as to push him across that line. Bullshitting, by definition, means apathy with regard to what is & isn’t true. It means carelessness. And you can’t maintain that while spouting the impressive nonsense that was coming out of Biden’s mouth.

What happened to Walter Cronkite is something of a thinner foreshadowing of this. I think in Cronkite’s heart of hearts, he thought what he was saying was morally virtuous. But with a less dazzling spotlight shining on him, he would have figured out that his opinion should have been checked at the door. He did not so decide; Taranto is right, this was a tragedy for the country as well as for the man. Cronkite was blinded by the light — blinded the way small men sometimes are, when they’re placed in a position that is bigger than they are. And Cronkite’s position was bigger than he was. Electronic news had scaled a mountain and reached a high pinnacle of influence, one that had never before been reached in our society. Cronkite found himself at the pinnacle of that pinnacle. All that glory was too much. He became intoxicated on the elixir, and jettisoned a lifetime of journalistic ethics in the blink of an eye.

Forty years on, the rest of us are still paying the price for it. From here on out, Cronkite himself won’t have to.

Home Renovation Shows

Tuesday, July 21st, 2009

I, too, have often wondered about the reactions of the people actually living in the house.

In fact the one response I’d really expect to see, would be answering the door with a cell phone or cordless held up to the ear. Blah blah blah, oh, hey wait, hang on there’s some kind of a TV camera crew at my front door, isn’t that something? That would be realistic.

Anyway, yeah it’s choreographed. Quite obvious.

The Trouble with Harry

Monday, July 20th, 2009

For years and years, now, it’s been like an itch I can’t scratch. I’m not simply disinterested in Harry Potter, I don’t think; there’s something about the entire franchise that I loathe. It isn’t the occult, and it isn’t the cartoonishness or kid-friendliness or the silly names. It’s something else. Something I have not quite been able to put my finger on.

Until this morning.

Harry PotterTHE TROUBLE WITH HARRY
NO CHALLENGES, NO MORALS — POTTER IS THE PERFECT HERO FOR AN ENTITLED GENERATION

…Harry might be the blandest superhero ever conceived. He simply follows the trail, learns the spells and saves the day. Kids love to be in Harry’s shoes: all zapping bad guys, no taking out the trash.

Compare Luke Skywalker, who has to conquer his own vanity, laziness and anger in order to earn his powers. Harry, like many of his generation, is the Cosseted One from an early age. He’s told that he’s special, that he’s got awesome gifts, that those who don’t understand this are blind to the plain facts. Deploying his powers involves no more character or soul-searching than following a recipe. [emphasis mine]

Bulls-eye.

This is such an important distinction to be made in terms of how an individual goes about recognizing the world around him, and responding to it. That this is a profound disservice being done to the generation just coming up right now, is demonstrated easily through the observation that the distinction pries open that meaningful gap between one half of us and the other half of us, in just about everything that captures our passions.

Let’s take, as just one example, global warming — you’ve heard of it, it’s the doctrine that says the world is in awful danger from human activity and we can only save it by taxing ourselves. Half of us say “you know, that sounds to me like a scam, before we even get to the science part of it.” Sounds like a scam…to those who have been scammed before. Which means they’ve been living life, making stupid mistakes, and learning from them because nobody was around to protect them.

What is the retort from the other side? Who are you to dare to say such a thing? It’s the Harry Potter mindset. We have these designated people who have the “power” to solve the riddle, and everyone else is just a Muggle. All this stuff about what-proves-what and what-leaves-what-question-unsettled, is just a whole lot of static to them, because they’ve been brought up to think of the central question of life as not a what at all, but a who. This guy says that thing over there is good. That guy over there says this thing over here is bad. Those guys over there disagree…but they’re just a bunch of Bible-and-gun-hugging riff raff, pay no attention to them. That’s all we need to know. Put the right guys in the right places and you don’t need to think about anything ever again — sound familiar, Obama fans?

And to figure out who’s supposed to be in charge, you just keep your antenna up to figure out what the “scriptwriter wants to have happen.” Pick up that “vibe”; know the things everyone else knows, that they know because their everyone-else also knows about it.

To be fair about it, I’ve seen very little of Harry Potter. But this does jive with what I’ve seen. From the moment I first saw Dumbledore deliver his most meaningful speeches, he was abusing his schoolmaster authority to take points away from the other kids and give them to Harry & crew…and that was perfectly alright because Harry & crew were supposed to win.

Is there any commodity that surrounds us in such abundance and has effected for us such mind-boggling damage, that nevertheless consumes such a powerful energy in the manufacturing of an even greater toxic surplus of it, than the entitlement-minded generation?

Hat tip to Webutante.

Update: Didn’t realize this last night…it was just about the last thing I typed in before I went to bed, and the furthest thing from my mind this morning. But there’s a connection here, isn’t there?

The hypotheticals with which readers are challenged, have to do with taking off from work for a year or two. For cryin’ in the sink. For twenty-four months, you think the business concern won’t be facing some kind of a crisis? The prospective female boss takes off, goes home, does that “tough” work [of being a Mom]…Meanwhile, back at the office there’s a crisis. You’re not there. Someone else is. And it’s no fun for them…but there are some tough decisions to be made, decisions that require a real education about what’s goin’ on day to day, and a real personal sacrifice to get that education. Someone will be there to get it all done, while you’re being a Mom…and at the end of two years of that, you just want to show up and take “your” place at the top of the org chart? What. The. Hell.

Jack Welch dares to imply that Mahogany Row is filled up with people who have been learning the trade, doing work, making decisions and being present to make them — you don’t get to catapult yourself into the corner office after taking two years off for Mommy-hood. And for this, the feminists who normally are last in line to form any kinship with Mommy-hood, engage in their well-practiced screeching and How-Dare-You and Help-Me-Hate-This.

Perhaps it never was about motherhood at all. Perhaps it’s all got to do with Harry-Potter-ness. Nice to see everybody after two years, well done all you Muggles; now I’ve hired a Nanny, and I’m here to take my place.

Kinda gets back to What’s Wrong With The World, ya know? That whole thing I went on about, being-over-doing. Some of us think our value is in the things we do, and others seem to think the doing isn’t all that important because we’re all here just to fill some kind of role…to be, and not to do. Throughout all age brackets, these Harry Potter wannabe folks have a special hatred they can, uh, “conjure up” at a moment’s notice. Not just at the implication they should do some actual stuff, and/or be measured by the presence or absence of records of things done…but toward any statement to the effect that anybody else should either. Nope — the only thing being done is that Obama is gonna clean up Bush’s mess, and the rest of us are all gonna watch Him do it. That’s enough of this infernal “doing” for anybody. We’re just pieces on a chess board, without a game in play, just standing in our designated spots and being something.

No Such Thing as Work-Life Balance

Sunday, July 19th, 2009

You know how feminists work. Just listen to a fair sampling of them argue any one of a number of things, for a few minutes. “I find this thing over here reprehensible; help me abhor it.” That, when you snip off all the meaningless trivialities and throw ’em in the gut bucket, get down to the bare essentials, is an accurate illustration of all modern feminist argument. About anything.

This week Ann at Feministing got all twisted off about a rather frank comment from former General Electric CEO Jack Welch about women taking off from work, raising kids for up to a year or so, coming back and having a shot at being The Boss way up tippy top. Ann’s pretty cranky. She calls the comment “pretty astounding,” and in feminist parlance you know exactly what that’s supposed to mean. Well I guess she should be somewhat torqued. Welch pulled no punches; none at all.

…Welch recently declared that moms who take time off to stay at home with their children don’t have a chance at becoming CEOs when they return to work.

“There’s no such thing as work-life balance,” Welch told the Society for Human Resource Management’s annual conference in New Orleans on June 28. “There are work-life choices, and you make them, and they have consequences.”

A Wall Street Journal article offers up a summary of Welch’s words that day:

Mr. Welch said those who take time off for family could be passed over for promotions if “you’re not there in the clutch.”

“The women who have reached the top of Archer Daniels, of DuPont, I know these women. They’ve had pretty straight careers,” he said in an interview with journalist Claire Shipman, before thousands of HR specialists.

“We’d love to have more women moving up faster,” Mr. Welch said. “But they’ve got to make the tough choices and know the consequences of each one.”

Taking time off for family “can offer a nice life,” Mr. Welch said, “but the chances of going to the top on that path” are smaller. “That doesn’t mean you can’t have a nice career,” he added.

Now if you actually click open that WSJ article, you find a fair sampling of educated opinions about this…and a plurality of them agree with Welch.

Sandra Brangan, vice president of administration at Accountants International, a unit of staffing firm Randstad Holding NV, says Mr. Welch’s comments are realistic. “When people are not visible, it does hurt,” she says, praising his bluntness. “That’s not the popular thing to say.”

Kim Ruyle, vice president of leadership and talent consulting at executive recruiters Korn/Ferry International, agrees. “I think it’s absolutely true,” he says. “You can bet that people don’t get to the corner office unless they make some tough choices.”

My own thoughts? I’m not moderate. Quite to the contrary, I’m just completely aghast that there can be any disagreement about this, political-correctness or not.

The hypotheticals with which readers are challenged, have to do with taking off from work for a year or two. For cryin’ in the sink. For twenty-four months, you think the business concern won’t be facing some kind of a crisis? The prospective female boss takes off, goes home, does that “tough” work, the “most important work there is” — and hey, in all seriousness I’m a big fan of that line of thinking. It’s true. Being a Mom is the most important work there is.

But still. Meanwhile, back at the office there’s a crisis. You’re not there. Someone else is. And it’s no fun for them…but there are some tough decisions to be made, decisions that require a real education about what’s goin’ on day to day, and a real personal sacrifice to get that education. Someone will be there to get it all done, while you’re being a Mom…

…and at the end of two years of that, you just want to show up and take “your” place at the top of the org chart? What. The. Hell. That is precisely the kind of personal disrespect that is tolerated only because it is targeted at the “correct” groups of people.

Unless, of course, you’re talking about some business that can go 730 days without any kind of a real crisis. I’m sure there could be some of those, somewhere. But then, what kind of prestige is supposed to be commanded by being the boss of a company like that?

But be that as it may. Your mission is clear. Log in. Help Ann get mad at Jack. She needs you. Again.

His Blank Slate V

Sunday, July 19th, 2009

Most of the promises He’s broken, don’t count because they were never made. Never had to be. He’s always been just so awesome…

The question for the Obama supporters at this point, is simple. Are you admitting your mistake and hopping off now, or are you one of the hardcore types riding this thing straight into the ground?

Hat tip: Rick.

Braveheart Wept

Sunday, July 19th, 2009

Just a fine piece of writin’, with some observations that really make you think. Especially as your yard-ape moseys out the door to his first day of school, be it public or private, in a few weeks…it’s got about six weeks of dust on it but it’s well worth pondering, whether you’re in the eighth grade on in your eighth decade.

Nowhere have we seen such an accelerating atrophy of our freedom as in K-12 public schools where recent decades have witnessed far more books banned, and not some print version of Debbie Does Dallas. No, literary classics like J.D. Salinger’s Catcher in the Rye and Mark Twain’s Huck Finn are verboten — required reading in those decadent days of my ’70s high school. But educrats with the backbone of a large worm now avoid anything controversial.
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So many laws have eroded our Second Amendment gun rights that, as P.J. O’Rourke notes, if Massachusetts had the same gun laws in 1775 that it has now, we’d all be Canadians.

Even political campaign speech is constricted. The Obama administration argued at the U.S. Supreme Court that the McCain-Feingold Act can ban books about ongoing election campaigns. Yet Justice Hugo Black warned that:

The freedoms of speech, press, petition, and assembly guaranteed by the First Amendment must be accorded to the ideas we hate, or sooner or later they will be denied to the ideas we cherish.

Almost half of all U.S. income is taxed today which means we’ve lost about half our economic freedom. With record government spending and soaring debt, we’re set to lose a lot more. And to think the Boston Tea Party was waged over a three-cent-a-pound tax on tea.

Government regulations on business cost us well over $1 trillion a year in higher consumer prices, and there are exactly 26,911 government words policing the sale of a head of cabbage.
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We also have endless media-savvy professional grievance groups contending that every erosion of freedom is imperative for our safety. But, as Justice Louis Brandeis warned:

Experience teaches us to be most on our guard to protect liberty when the government’s purposes are beneficent. Men born to freedom are naturally alert to repel invasion of their liberty by evil-minded rulers. The greatest dangers to liberty lurk in insidious encroachment by men of zeal, well-meaning but without understanding.

How does this start? It starts with a lazy intellect that believes one more rule can always solve everything.

The summer heat in Sacramento tops out at around 110. You can beat it by galavanting off some hundred miles East or West, to spend your weekend up in the mountains or down in the surf. But if you want to do right by your home city’s efforts to become a fun place and not California’s belly-button of drudge and debt — we have the river. With rafting. Get out of your air conditioned cocoon, expose your kids to the great outdoors the way the Good Lord intended, and have ’em assault each other with water cannons so they don’t grow up to be pussies.

Ah, but there’s a problem. Hooligans have been drinking, horsing around, bringing harm to themselves and others, and littering. What to do?

Sensible answer: Cite them for disorderly conduct. With escalating fines for repeated offenses. Punishment based on individual identity.

Bureaucrat answer: Ya kiddin’? Blah blah blah budget cuts blah blah blah police manpower. Yard-duty teacher mentality. If I make one exception I’ll have to make a thousand. It’s a shame we all have to go without something because of the bad behavior of just a few…but…that’s the way life is.

We’re taught that from the first grade onward. Our parents allow us to learn that, and then we allow our kids to learn it, and we mistakenly think of that as the glue that holds a “civilized” society together, rather than recognizing it as the anti-American toxic sludge that it is.

We think of this as the only way a people can be properly governed. There is some truth in that; it’s the only way sensible rules can be enforced, by a bureaucracy starved for quality thinking and starved for cash. Financially strapped because the tax base is wilting, dying on the vine. Starving to death because all the businesses are leaving. Because once it’s Saturday morning, everyone’s left town so they can be someplace they want to be. Where they can do things they want to do.

In Sacramento on a Friday afternoon, the freeways are clogged. People get the hell out of dodge, exactly the way schoolkids get out of school when that dismissal bell rings every day. For the same reason. So you see, the financial straits about which we hear so much, so often…and freedom…they’re connected. They are not separate issues.

Daphne, Her Husband, Roissy, Alphas, Betas, Builders, Destroyers

Saturday, July 18th, 2009

She must do some re-thinking, and she does it as only she can. Some good, deep thinking about the relationship between the sexes over there.

My thoughts are very sensible as well, and as usual, trump everything else in line-of-sight in the contest of common sense. But they’re already on record at her place.

Memo For File XC

Saturday, July 18th, 2009

I was over reading in “The House” and I ran across the line “Republicans don’t need to broaden their base…”

and I thought to myself….

No…. they need to deepen it.

Blogger friend Phil.

I just heard Joe Scarborough on the radio, and I guess he has a book out about how Republicans can get back into the swing of things. To his credit, he does not belong to the Meghan McCain camp of “Keep The ‘R’ But Lose Everything Else”; but from his comments, I don’t think he is altogether correct either. I view him as a tent-embiggener, and I think the former Congressman Scarborough would agree with me on this.

This is not to say I think all his points lack merit. Quite to the contrary: Some of what he says really has to be taken seriously. His emphasis seems to be on localizing control as opposed to keeping the decision-making power at the higher levels and then pushing for “morality policing”; on this point, I agree. He pushes for a moderation in tone, a less cantankerous tone of discourse, which I also think is a good idea. On this point though, he’s drinking kool-aid. As I pointed out earlier, it has emerged as a favorite left-wing tactic, both in cloakrooms at capital buildings and in water-cooler chats among ordinary wage slaves, to declare the conversation has become uselessly heated and then falsely blame the conservative for starting it…either the discussion itself, or the inferno of unfriendly remarks that erupts within. (More often than not, the liberal has taken the initiative in both of these.)

So Scarborough’s advice is a mix of the healthy and the not-so-much. What I think he has done, is construct a house with some good architectural ideas and a sturdy foundation, on a site of shifting sand.

Scarborough argues that right-wingers seeking to recapture Ronald Reagan’s box office mojo need to embrace environmentalism (they should be “Going green for God”); acknowledge the permanence of troubled entitlement programs like Social Security and Medicare (“Everyone is going to have to give until it hurts”); and pursue a humble foreign policy (except when they don’t: “Most Republicans, including myself, were steadfast in their support for the war” in Iraq).

On contentious social issues like abortion and gay marriage, the heirs to Edmund Burke and William F. Buckley Jr. should push for decisions to be made at the state level — not necessarily because localized decision-making provides better answers but because “that is the only way to protect the advances conservatives have made over the past generations.” Most of all, Scarborough counsels, conservatives need to channel their inner Gipper by “following the advice of Jesus and the example of Reagan, by trying more often to turn the other cheek” during fractious policy debates.

So he’s been duped into a lot of things here. That it has become antithetical to Republican-ness to “turn the other cheek” infers, or at least implies, that we have a lot of Republicans out there seeking revenge against perceived slights, and doing the party harm by being seen seeking this revenge. That may be happening here and there, but if one is embarking on a quest to find vengeful people who never heard of turning the other cheek, one can hardly do better than making a bee-line for the nearest gathering of hardcore left-wing liberals. On the radio, I hear him implore the conservative movement to show better support to the New England intellectual-snob set; we should be asking ourselves how welcome Buckley himself would feel in modern conservative ranks.

Again: He’s drinking kool-aid, without knowing that’s what he’s doing; and in so drinking, he takes the defensive prematurely. Conservatives need to make people feel welcome? Conservatives do? How ya figure? Take a look at what I need to do for liberals to show me contempt, and engage their blizzard of “You’re So Stupid” attacks. Some would say I have an unusually natural way of attracting such an onslaught; and in some ways they could be right. But from all I have managed to observe, it really doesn’t take much. I’m a six-foot-tall straight Protestant white guy who hasn’t served in the military and still possesses all his limbs.

From that starting point I don’t need to do an awful lot to bring on pit bulls. Failing to support fully-taxpayer-funded abortions on demand from sea to shining sea — that is plenty enough to throw the feeding frenzy into high gear. Or, I could fail to get behind an initiative to forever banish intelligent design from all schools public & private. Or…I could support these things, and just be a little bit pokey about it. It’s not that I’m placed under a magnifying glass for being a white male; I can see from the experiences of Clarence Thomas, Alan Keyes, Condoleeza Rice and Sarah Palin that my white-male-ness in fact spares me from some of the worst of the viciousness. But my point isn’t the intensity of viciousness, it’s the ease with which one becomes a target of it.

America has a party that is obsessed with properly qualified membership, and once that party’s decided you’re on the outs, you’re on the outs for good. That party is not the Republican party.

Republicans need to confront some phony “truths” that Scarborough, judging from what the former Congressman has seen fit to bring to my attention, is failing to confront.

There is no need to prove that conservatism has something to do with a “big tent.” Conservatism is a big tent by its very nature. The notion that some among us possess a group membership that makes them better than anyone else, is a hallmark among those other guys who want to sieze control of the tax code so they can loot from the undesirables and ply a bunch of phony “government program” benefits onto the desirables. True, conservatives would like to do something similar with businesses — to the extent you think it’s a phony-government-program-benefit to lower taxes, that is true. But what color is a business? Anyone of any color, gender or sexual preference can start a business.

Conservatives need to confront some mistakes in the national thinking that even the Great Ronaldus failed to confront. That the guy who wins, is the guy who can show off a veneer of patience, cheerfulness, good humor and cheer, for example. Reagan won that one by being that guy.

You want some “rising star” to emerge in 2012 and pull that one off against Obama?

Best wishes to ya. You won’t see my weekend-beer-money in the kitty. I’ll be sitting that one out.

No…the thing that has to be challenged, is this notion that a position on the ideological spectrum makes you cheerful and patient. This profound absurdity has been allowed to endure plenty long enough, I’d say. We’ve got to get rid of it. NOW. If we don’t, someone is going to come up with the bright idea that we have to stop the women from voting in elections — they are, without a doubt, the demographic that predominantly finds this appealing — and I don’t want to see things diminish to this point. Women should be allowed to keep voting. And to make sure they don’t lose this right, it has to be shown that they can be allowed to vote, without the country being condemned to repeating some terrible, awful mistakes. And let’s be honest, that has yet to be demonstrated.

Not that a whole lot of men aren’t also falling for it. But it doesn’t matter. It’s just a fact: Your decision to support Cap-n-Trade, or Universal Healthcare, or a Second Stimulus — or to oppose those things — none of this makes you a Good PersonTM. Nor do such declarations of ideological positioning make you a rotten nasty person. These are debates about policy, and they should be treated as such.

The identity politics is also something Scarborough seems to support, or at least, fails to oppose with the level of vigor I’d find encouraging. If you’re from Delaware, a conservative spokesman from Missouri can support your interests just fine and dandy, better than our Vice President Mouthy Joe. If the Delaware guy somehow can’t see that, the problem belongs to the Delaware guy. Any conservative kingmaker who’s got some say in making-or-breaking the spokesman from Missouri, needs to stand up for that principle rather than trying to soothe the agitated feelings by embarking on some journey to find a New Englander saying the same stuff.

Why? Because that’s called prejudice. And conservatives are supposed to be united in opposing it, in all its forms. That means opposing identity politics in all its forms.

Scarborough’s examples do little to highlight this critical distinction. So here’s another one: Voter ballots printed up in Spanish.

That is a pickle. The easiest way to embrace the Scarborough-big-tent-ism is to select a path identical to Meghan-McCain-big-tent-ism: Crank up the presses por favor! Because pushing for a truly conservative point of view would be excluding people. Conservatism has to waver. Perhaps this is why I’m not hearing of Scarborough highlighting this particular issue. There’s a lot of heat there, so who could blame him?

But the kind of conservatism that is really on the line here, has nothing to do with excluding people. It has more to do with an intellectually honest argument about what equality really is. What’s being discussed is a country’s right to have the one thing that has been best proven to make all countries strong, and to weaken them when it is taken away: A culture. France has a culture. Spain has a culture. Lots of countries in Africa have a culture. Great Britain and Canada could have a culture…if they wanted it…

Why can’t the United States have one? That’s the question that should be asked. And even in these racially-sensitive times, it shouldn’t be that tough of a point to argue. I asked, a few paragraphs ago, what color is owning-a-business? Well, what color is English? Other countries get to define, and defend, their culture; the United States should be able to do this too.

Gay marriage, that’s another one. The lazy, predominant, wafting, prevailing theme is that it’s some kind of a civil rights issue. We all have to bless same-sex marriage or else people are being denied their constitutional rights to love each other. Just a little bit of honest, responsible thinking will reveal this is wombat-rabies bollywonkers crazy. The issue is the civil rights of the churches, who would surely be litigated into non-existence in an all-gay-marriage nation for refusing to conduct same-sex wedding ceremonies. What if we take the “don’t do it, and say we did” route in legalizing same-sex marriage? Those who want to get married are denied nothing. Marriage is all about elimination of options for the individuals who enter into it; it doesn’t grant anybody any “rights.” What it does is eliminate the rights. Like any other declaration of something in front of a community of witnesses, just like any other signature, it exists for that very thing — to eliminate options that would otherwise be open to one party, for the benefit of other parties. In the case of marriage it is a mutual exchange, but that doesn’t mean someone’s been deprived of civil rights just because the state hasn’t been muscled into re-defining something.

With regard to Phil, I don’t know if he agrees with all my points here — they aren’t my most politically-correct ones, some of them could be quite controversial. But I’ll definitely place my stamp of approval on what he said. In fact, broadening the tent is not only different from what Republicans need to do, it does great harm. These ideas about embiggening, far too often, result in a subtle collapse of some of the principles conservatives are supposed to be defending.

Clearly, from the lesson that was taught last November, the goal should be how to define that line that separates conservatives from liberals. Perhaps that’s why it rankles me so much to hear people talk about letting more people in. If you do that just to make the tent bigger, without safeguarding the principles, that’s when the tent pole snaps. I think the message needs to be “no, conservatives aren’t eager to include more people, but we aren’t eager to exclude people either; it’s those other guys who are passionately engaged in doing both of those.” That really is the point that has to be made. Anyone, regardless of place of birth, color of skin, sex or creed can adopt the right principles and be a conservative. But you must adopt them.

You have to adopt the right principles to be a liberal too. But nobody notices that, even though the challenge is stiffer on the liberal side because it’s enduring. Be a liberal, so that liberals will let you in their “big tent,” say all the right things so that they let you in…and you’ll get in. But thirty seconds later you have to prove your devotion all over again. It’s never enough. Deep down, they know it to be true. Listen to them argue sometime. Even the ones that run things, even Barack Obama Himself, they never have any confidence that their Good-person-ness has been validated with any permanence and the whole thing’s a done deal. The sloppy, obsequious arrangement has always looked to me rather like eating egg drop soup with chopsticks, with your pants on fire. The desperation to keep on proving inner personal decency over and over again, persists, becomes cyclical, then dizzying. It’s beyond distracting. It’s how they manage to stumble upon their very worst ideas.

Do we need an example of that? Look no further than the idea of supporting Sotomayor. There’s nothing to recommend her to the Supreme Court, and contrary to popular belief, she has speechified about the “Wise Latina” not just once, but repeatedly.

It’s not a silly idea to argue that this is racism. It is the very definition of it. What’s a silly idea is to seat her on the Supreme Court. There’s no reason to do it, none whatsoever, except to “prove” that whoever’s making the decision possesses some streak of innate personal goodness, that that person himself doesn’t really believe is there.

Prove it. For thirty seconds.

This Is Good LXI

Friday, July 17th, 2009

One last Palin cartoon…

Hat tip: Gerard.

And then a Palin column. We’re about to slam the door on all this stuff, but fellow Right Wing News contributor William Teach is speaking truth eloquently:

Palin Really, Really Scares The Left, Doesn’t She

And, too be honest, some of the Palin haters on the Right, too. But, let’s deal with the Left for the moment, shall we? Nate Silver at FiveThirtyEight shows that the Palin hatred (this story isn’t quite in the PDS region) will drive them to use any rational to demean Palin

Sarah Palin’s political action committee — SarahPAC — raised $733,000 in the first half of the year and is set to push past $1 million in the wake of the recent attention she’s gotten herself. On the one hand, this isn’t that impressive. Mitt Romney, for instance, has raised twice as much. Kay Bailey Huthcison, Palin’s sometime rival who is now running for governor in Texas, raised nine times as much. For somebody with a political celebrity dwarfed only by Barack Obama’s, that’s just not all that much cashflow.

But, Palin isn’t actually running for Federal office, hasn’t announced she is running for Federal office, and obviously isn’t running for Governor of Alaska. Furthermore, SarahPAC is not about raising cash for a federal run.

To give Nate his due, though

What is impressive about Palin’s fundraising haul, however, is who it came from: the grassroots. Based on her FEC disclosures, I identified 406 donations worth $200 or more, which are worth a combined total of $289,932. That’s nothing, really: Home Shopping Club can bring in that much in 15 minutes selling vacuums. That leaves, however, $443,608, or 60 percent of SarahPac’s total, which came from small donors. That is a very high percentage — higher than for any of the ’08 presidential candidates but for Ron Paul — as you can see from this chart where I’ve colored Palin’s total in Misogynist Pink.

What that means is Palin is reaching out to, and reaching, the core of the Conservatives, those who will give $5 here, $20 there, $50 on the flip sides, the small donors that drove Dubya’s two elections. Those small donors are who we are. We may have the cash to drop, but, we will nickle and dime the politicians we are rooting for, to make sure they stay on track.

I’m pretty sure I haven’t seen a politician scare a faction of activist groups this badly. Ever. That cartoon says it all. Palin picks up a dinner fork to eat her salad and…just damn. The ensuing din can rupture your eardrum. Desperation personified.

Not the way people act when they think their enemy is truly ineffectual.

Gardening Tool and Pleasure Seeker

Friday, July 17th, 2009

Aahhh…that’s a good one, Neal.

Benny Hill

Friday, July 17th, 2009

Now that I’m old…time for some nostalgia.

Twits and Bookies, Bookies and Twits

Friday, July 17th, 2009

So sometime a few months ago, I caved in and set up a Twitter account just to see what all the fuss is about. Like many others out there…I’m still waiting to find out. I think.

Some of my blogger friends seem to have gotten a lot of meaning out of this thing that I can’t quite see, and some of them have even taking to blogger-bitching that I’m not using Twitter properly. I concede this point by default. I’m pretty sure I’m not doing it right. I’m a bad twit.

So I hole up in my little cave and continue to do my blogger thing, and meanwhile the Facebook invitations are piling up and piling up. My girlfriend was getting into Facebook pretty heavy, getting into some kind of cartoon farm planting contest with some other bookies. I don’t know what this thing’s called or where it is, I just know it has this annoying virtual cow.

One night I figured it out: It’s the chat. “My God!” I said to her one night, while she chatted away with her sister-in-law…or girlfriend from New York…or whatever. “Is that what the fuss is about? You people are discovering chat?” And she nodded. “Do you realize I’ve been arguing with liberals over chat since 1986? You non-computer-people are just learning about chat now that it’s called ‘Facebook’?”

“Pretty much,” she said. My gal. She has such inventive ways of saying “stick a cork in it, putz.”

Then my kid got into it. I got an e-mail earlier this week from his mother saying he was chatting with his cousin and grandfather (on my side of the family). So I sent back this bit of snark:

Wow, so my entire extended family is filled with Facebook bloggers. You computer people, drifting around in cyberspace with all your puffed-up opinions…

I’m as obnoxious as I can possibly get where Facebook is concerned — or at least, I was. It was my way to stop people from inviting me. It didn’t work. And then when your kid sends you an invite, of course you have to accept. So now I’m on it.

I have not been an overwhelmingly successful twit, and I have strong doubts against the supposition that I’ll be a super-cool bookie. On both sites I’m just kinda…there.

It came up in the staff meeting this morning, this phenomenon called Facebook. There were a bunch of knowing nods around the table among the older set, as I explained that you have to join when your kid invites you. But in this “live” round of “social networking,” I came to learn about something else going on: As the gray-beards (me) slowly come trickling into the Facebook pool, the younger crowd is making a mass exodus out of apparent revulsion toward the invading Metamucil set.

I guess it’s part & parcel of being forty-three. I have my first set of liver spots, and the minute I do what everyone else has decided is “cool,” by definition it ceases to be cool. Still waiting for the eyeballs to turn to mush like all the older folks keep telling me should’ve already happened by now. Friends and family insist my hair is thinning more than I’m willing to admit though…so it looks like the next stop is senior discounts at Denny’s.

Condescending and Godawful

Friday, July 17th, 2009

Not sure where to put the hat tip because it’s going up everywhere. But I first found out about it at Cassy‘s place.

This Californian really wants an explanation. What was the intent here? I suppose I should be thankful my hippy-dippy Senator was sufficiently savvy to skirt past saying “this is what your kind of people are supposed to be thinking”…takes some skill to retreat back from that brink, after such a determined and speedy march toward it. Think she got the toothpaste back in the tube? Perhaps. But not elegantly.

It’s nice to see someone pay a price for identity politics. But it’s shameful to see how much damage is done before it happens.

With apologies to William F. Buckley, I daresay we have a more racist bunch of thugs in charge of the really big decisions, than we’d have if we simply went through the first two thousand names of the Boston phone book. And no, that’s not a compliment to Boston. I’m just thinking we put a lot of effort into something with our electoral process and we’ve managed to achieve the exact opposite.

Chuck DeVore 2010.

Barack Obama is a Real Good Public Speaker

Friday, July 17th, 2009

…but have you ever stopped to think…just how many things would normally capture our attention, in a healthy way, that we’re ignoring only because President Obama’s appearance is so polished?

The results of His policies. The policies themselves. Historical evidence, or lack thereof, that these policies might be swell ideas. All the metrics that measure the results of His policies. Who are His friends. Why they are. Who are His enemies, and why that is. In fact, if you’re the type of person who ignores policies & results altogether, and only values people for their speaking ability, wardrobe, mannerisms, gestures, speechifying, et cetera…even you, have been blinded from even your favorite fixation. Go on, which member of the Obama administration apart from Obama Himself, really captures your fancy? Biden. Geithner. Clinton. Holder. Go through the entire cabinet. What one single face, apart from the Big Guy, would you present to a stranger as a symbol of the competence of this administration you helped vote in? They’re all buffoons, and they all come off that way.

But at least the Man On Top really knows how to deliver a speech. At least we, as a country do have that one thing…if nothing else…if no policies that actually work for us. We at least have a likable guy within that cloister of buffoons, who knows how to come off looking sharp. We have that one thing.

Or do we?

Isn’t it interesting how the same people who used George W. Bush’s gaffes as evidence to bolster their claim that he was an idiot think Barack Obama is some sort of saintly intellectual and oratory genius?

Despite the fact that Barack Obama isn’t really so good at the speaking thing.

* He’s shown he can’t function without reading from a teleprompterrepeatedly.
* And the word heard most often in any speech or interview he gives is “uh“.
* He apparently doesn’t know the difference between privacy and piracy.
* He can’t properly pronounce the name of a company he uses as an example to bolster his policies.

There is much, much more beyond that…go have a look.

Take an inventory of the sum total of what our nation has working for it. If you dare.

Sexy Photos of Girls Dressed as Wonder Women

Friday, July 17th, 2009

Sixty-nine of them, courtesy of Conservative Grapevine.

The War Against the Producers

Friday, July 17th, 2009

Victor Davis Hanson, Works and Days:

The Bad Guys

Ponder a simple fact: The Obama administration is dispersing income lavishly to those who do not pay taxes and it will have to be paid for by those who do. For all the talk of that awful percentile who make over $200,000, this administration has not distinguished the hyper-rich 1% that make untold money (e.g., the Buffets, Soroses, Turners, Gateses, Kerrys, Gores, etc), from the much more demonized, larger 5% of the population whose income does not come from investments and insider influence and deal-making, but rather from providing more tangible goods and services — the family doctor, the plumbing contractor, the small lumber company owner, the car dealer, the local family-held insurance company, the airline pilot, the car-leasing firm, the patent attorney, etc.

“Their Fair Share”

Last fall we heard that this percentile was unpatriotic, did not wish to spread the wealth around, and had made off like bandits under Bush. But the fact is, to quote Mayor Gavin Newsome’s “like it or not,” they are precisely those who decide most dynamically whether to hire, fire, expand, contract, buy/sell goods, etc.

And the results of the Obama war against them are threefold: 1) in major key states, the productive minority’s state income taxes will near or exceed 10%; their federal rates will go to 40%; the abolition of caps on FICA will ensure 15% plus of most of their income will go for new Medicare and Social Security bites; and they may well be eligible for a newly proposed punitive health-care surcharge tax of 4-6%.
:
Bottom line

This recovery cannot work, other than a brief spurt that results from trillions in printed money, because we are rewarding unproductive areas of the economy (federal money for more wind farms, federal hurdles for pumping more known natural gas or nuclear power construction; more of the community-organizing model, less of the productive small business model) and punishing the engines of the economy.

To doubt VDH, you have to think it’s likely we’ll get more of the things we’re punishing, and less of the things we are rewarding. Once called upon to produce historical examples of such things, you are cornered and forced to concede defeat or change the subject.

Comes From Working for a Living

Friday, July 17th, 2009

One of the Right Wing News crew asked a question just now, that really should not have been asked. She wants to know why anyone is defending Sarah Palin. Why have the Palin defenders — she invents a paradigm, which I’m challenged to take seriously in light of recent events, that the Palin fans are somehow militant, incurious, uncompromising and just-plain-nuts — not scrutinized her dismal performances? It’s a wonderfully elegant exercise in grokking. That means to observe something while having an effect on what’s being observed, so that it becomes an open question of who is changing the mindset of who. Ms. Cavere offers an illusion of asking a question and being open to whatever information drifts her way as an honest response, but the diligent observer can’t help but think she’s already got her mind made up about things…and is far more concerned with shaping an outcome than learning what she says she wants to learn.

Beating a Dead HorseThis strikes us as a particularly awkward time to be advancing the notion that a slick and polished performance on the teevee, has something to do with what’s generally accepted as good leadership. Our country appears to be finding out the painful way that that isn’t true. We thought there was a parallel; “we” voted for it; now it’s emerged that we gambled and lost. This “Right Wing” person wants to advance that assertion yet again? See, we here look at the elections that took place last year and we see three failures. Exactly three, no more and no less; two committed by the nice folks who voted for Obama, and one committed by the RINOs who thought John McCain would make the best candidate on the other side.

“If we vote for ‘hope,’ we’ll get it.”

“He’ll be a wonderful President because He gives such amazing speeches (There’s just something about Him! I can’t explain it!).”

“The only votes Republicans have a shot at getting, they’ll get by being moderate, friendly, classy, and they’ll lose the votes if they ever go on the attack (or mention Jeremiah Wright).”

All three of those were put to the test. And all three failed the test. But it’s a funny thing about the hoi polloi when they discuss things that fail tests, isn’t it? All they wanna talk about is Sarah Palin’s “performance” when she was interviewed by Katie Couric and Charles Gibson. News flash: “Katie Couric” appears nowhere in the Constitution. Neither does Charles Gibson.

Left this comment:

The “hostile” interviews with Charles Gibson and Katie Couric are mentioned, but why has Mrs. Palin’s performance in “friendly” interviews not undergone scrutiny among conservatives?

Because conservatives tend to be more worried about what she would do if & when she got elected, rather than how she “comes off.” This is a sharp contrast against Obama fans who, by and large, completely neglected the questions associated with what their Man-God would do in office, opting instead to genuflect before His “wonderful speeches”…which, it turns out, seem to be about all He has to offer. online.wsj.com

True conservatives, it turns out, are a pretty strange bunch — even stranger than people say. They tend to value what’s presented to them for the substance in it, rather than for the appearances. Comes from working for a living.

Mrs. Palin has adamant supporters who will defend her at any cost, but their reasons for this devotion have not adequately been explained. Why is there such vigor in defending her, instead of defending conservative principles?

This statement-disguised-as-a-question presumes a conflict where none exists. It would be far more legitimate to ask why some people seem so much more dead-set on electing someone with the letter ‘R’ after his name, instead of defending conservative principles.

The real question we need to be asking here has nothing to do with television performances. That isn’t even a question. What we need to be asking has to do with time…future and past. We saw last fall the permeating theme that we were voting for a New Tomorrow, for “change.” Here in the following summer, that is looking like a more and more ridiculous mindset with each passing week. You could say we just forfeited the country’s future — mortgaged a future that, as of a year ago, we still had. It’s in hock now. That’s what we get for voting for the future. Ironic, no?

Where is your Hope-n-Change now?

No, as a Palin backer I’d say we are the ones embracing the future — because in 2012, a “back to basics” approach is going to look pretty damn refreshing. Regrettably so. And call me naive if you want, but I have to doubt a flashy presence on the boob tube is going to count for very much.

Like I said. We tend to be rather selective about what’s been run through the “acid test” and is ready to be evaluated for its less than impressive performance, for a possible ranking as an abject failure never to be tried again. We’re choosy about that…because we can afford to be. But that’s changing. We’re losing some luxuries we’ve been enjoying, and that’s going to be one of them. Not that I’m rooting for this — I’m not some “never let a crisis go to waste” type o’ guy — but once people have had their standard of living eroded to the point where continuing survival is exposed to the ultimate exigency of question, their tendency is to become a bit more even-handed in applying tests and evaluating results. That’s what we as a country are facing right now…we’re learning some lessons that we have been needing to learn. Deep down, I believe every thinking voter knows that to be true. Just think back to November…and January 20. Imagine a space alien visiting our planet and watching that stuff, a space alien skilled in logic, reason, somewhat acquainted with different forms of government and how they work — but altogether foreign to our customs, the oddities in our culture, the factions within, and our recent history. Just imagine the questions he’d have for us about this Obamamania!

We, collectively, engaged in a poor exercise of decision-making, placing great weight on things that didn’t matter, and neglecting things that did. We are suffering the consequences, and in three years we’ll have an opportunity to do better. That’s really all there is to it. Couric & Gibson aren’t part of it.

Cap and Trade, Explained

Friday, July 17th, 2009

By Six Meat Buffet.

Tea Party Sign of the Week

Thursday, July 16th, 2009

Via Malkin

Going Bankrupt if We Don’t Spend Money

Thursday, July 16th, 2009

In one of the early jobs many years ago, I was one of two software engineers in a little start-up on Mercer Island that employed us, three-and-a-half salesmen, and nobody else…with a silent partner and ruthless venture capitalist shark thrown into the mix. I swear to fucking God, if I live to be hundred and fifty years old I’ll never forget it. Think Glengarry Glenn Ross on steroids except with the coders as convenient whipping boys, as a replacement for “the leads are shit.” We wrote what the sales guys referred to as “magic code,” and got all of the pressure and none of the authority or ability to do anything to positively impact the situation. No layers between software design and software marketing…none. Actually, there’s a difference between marketing and sales, and this wasn’t marketing. Looking back, that was the number one problem. Lack of buffering layers. Market research…requirements documents…design…project management…all non-existent.

One thing that stands out to me more than anything else, was this plan a couple of them were making together on a Friday afternoon. Wanna go deer hunting? Sure. Hey tell ya what. Let’s leave the rifles at home, and talk the deer into committing suicide.

I think, twenty years ago, I was gaining some insight into the planet on which Vice President Joe Biden lives: Selling things to people that will ultimately hurt them, is a form of sport. The Big Reveal? You’re much better off buying something from someone who doesn’t care one bit about you, than you are buying something from a guy like Joe Biden. And you know why that is? Because the guy who doesn’t give two shits about you, will sell you stuff that will make himself a profit…which may be to your benefit, or it may be to your detriment. It’s random. And because it’s random, there is opportunity for you to jump in there and leverage control of the situation. You can say to yourself, “this guy claims to be representing my interests, but I can tell he’s a bullshitter; nobody else is representing my interests so I’ll take care of that part of it.”

But guys like Joe Biden go a few steps beyond this. I’ve met them before. They aren’t true bullshitters, because they care enough about your interests to sell you things reliably contrary to them. They talk the deer into committing suicide. That is where the sport is, you see.

“And folks look, AARP knows and the people with me here today know, the president knows, and I know, that the status quo is simply not acceptable,” Biden said at the event on Thursday in Alexandria, Va. “It’s totally unacceptable. And it’s completely unsustainable. Even if we wanted to keep it the way we have it now. It can’t do it financially.”

“We’re going to go bankrupt as a nation,” Biden said.

“Now, people when I say that look at me and say, ‘What are you talking about, Joe? You’re telling me we have to go spend money to keep from going bankrupt?’” Biden said. “The answer is yes, that’s what I’m telling you.”

Because talking the deer into running off to live another day, would be boring.

And telling us that yes, the way to go bankrupt is to spend money and the way to avoid it is to save money — that would also be boring. So it’s out of the question. Salesman Joe has to have his fun.

Out comes the irony. Poison is healthy, the way to outrun a monster is to walk really slow, you have to spend all the money you can grab to avoid bankruptcy, and dumping a bucket of gasoline over your head & lighting a cigarette is a wonderful skincare technique. Gotta sell those ice cubes to the Eskimos to have your fun. Leave the rifles at home, talk the deer into offing themselves.

The issue here is the difference between the liar and the bullshitter. As Harry G. Frankfurt wrote in one of our favorite hardcovers, On Bullshit,

What bullshit essentially misrepresents is neither the state of affairs to which it refers nor the beliefs of the speaker concerning that state of affairs. Those are what lies misrepresent, by virtue of being false. Since bullshit need not be false, it differs from lies in its misrepresentational intent. The bullshitter may not deceive us, or even intend to do so, either about the facts or about what he takes the facts to be. What he does necessarily attempt to deceive us about is his enterprise. His only indispensably distinctive characteristic is that in a certain way he misrepresents what he is up to.

This is the crux of the distinction between him and the liar…A [liar is] responding to the truth, and he is to that extent respectful of it…For the bullshitter, however, all these bets are off: he is neither on the side of the true nor on the side of the false. His eye is not on the facts at all, as the eyes of the honest man and of the liar are, except insofar as they may be pertinent to his interest in getting away with what he says. He does not care whether the things he says describe reality correctly. He just picks them out, or makes them up, to suit his purpose.

Joe Biden. Liar. Not bullshitter.

Are you still glad you kept that hockey mom outta there? Have any doubts left that she might, perhaps, maybe, just maybe, have been a tad more economical?

Working on Plans for the Next Forty-Three

Thursday, July 16th, 2009

Well, we’re a workin’ blogger, so we have to get off our fat ass and get our day started here. There is so much more to be said about our wonderful blogger friends all around the innerwebs…a few days ago I awarded a “first place” ribbon to one of them for updating her link to us after we moved our site, and we were going to get a sequenced list going of all the other early-birds.

Blogsister Daphne's Birthday CardIt seemed fair. It’s OUR move; we decided to do it, and how obnoxious would it be if every time someone moved a blog and his buddies didn’t update their links to him that day, he started sending out snotty notes to them to the effect of “Hey goddammit! Update your links!” I’d be all, like screw you pal. So sticks are inappropriate here. Carrots over sticks.

Well it didn’t happen, because the next time I checked everyone apparently had updated their links to this spot, www.peekinthewell.net/blog. It really is true: You can’t fool bloggers.

So with the gracious accommodations to the blog-move, and the birthday wishes, we have so many shout-outs for so many wonderful folks. We just don’t have time for it all at the moment. We’ll have to remedy that one soon.

But I do have to get by with just one…this virtual birthday card from Blogsister Daphne. What is it about Texas women that makes them so classy and precious? I can hear you all virtually yelling at me “Don’t say it!”…

…that’s one birthday wish I can get behind. Badump Bup Psshhh!! Tip your waiters. Try the veal. I’m here all week.

Gotta go, it’s getting late. After showering and dressing, I still have all those boxes of beer to lug up the stairs…ten of ’em. This weekend we’re going to go out and catch a movie, and then another couple weeks I’ll be making the trip to go pick up my twelve-year-old so he can get ready to start the school year. And then I won’t even have to go out to the balcony to get the next bottle of beer, I’ll have someone I can send. Free labor.

Life is good.

What Problem Are We Solving?

Thursday, July 16th, 2009

NY Daily News dissembles this number of which we’ve heard so, so much…47 million. As in, uninsured. What’s in that number? The answer may surprise you.

Maggie’s Farm, linking to the above, ponders that which tends to go unpondered as these hardcore lefty proposals are debated: Exactly what problem is this bill supposed to be solving?

What a silly question to be asking right now, Maggie’s Farm. You’re supposed to actually pass the bill…watch everything go sour for a decade, maybe a whole generation…and then ask that when it’s far too late. You’re breaking form.

Nevertheless, Boortz has an answer in his latest newsletter, but don’t read it. Not unless you think you can handle it. Remember what Jack Nicholson said about the truth…

The Democrats want to make people more dependent on government. They are going to do this by offering something that more Americans now value above all: stability. Americans think they want freedom. What a crock. Americans will whine about their freedom to choose which sports team to root for or which Hollywood gossip magazine to buy. But when freedom requires any ounce of personal responsibility, people immediately wipe their hands clean and want someone else to do it for them. This is where the Democrats come in .. the Democrats will make sure that the government is there to do the things the people of this country no longer feel is their personal responsibility. The reason why the Democrats are willing to do this is also simple: power. Ensuring votes. Not hard to figure out, is it?

The New York Times has a thought-provoking entry (hat tip again to Maggie’s) about why health care m-u-s-t be rationed:

You have advanced kidney cancer. It will kill you, probably in the next year or two. A drug called Sutent slows the spread of the cancer and may give you an extra six months, but at a cost of $54,000. Is a few more months worth that much?

If you can afford it, you probably would pay that much, or more, to live longer, even if your quality of life wasn’t going to be good. But suppose it’s not you with the cancer but a stranger covered by your health-insurance fund. If the insurer provides this man — and everyone else like him — with Sutent, your premiums will increase. Do you still think the drug is a good value? Suppose the treatment cost a million dollars. Would it be worth it then? Ten million? Is there any limit to how much you would want your insurer to pay for a drug that adds six months to someone’s life? If there is any point at which you say, “No, an extra six months isn’t worth that much,” then you think that health care should be rationed.

Somewhere in the basement of some liberal headquarters, perhaps the DNC, perhaps the Speaker’s Office in the House of Representatives, perhaps the White House, where all the old stuff is stored, someplace between a giant portrait of Sam Rayburn and a stack of unpaid bills…I’m convinced there is a chart, and there may not even be any dust on the chart. I’m thinking across the bottom of the chart, there are days, maybe weeks, marking off the time some bold new initiative like health care has been in the public eye…one…two…three…four…etc. And then on the left side, counting up, there’s a percentage of interested voters who have figured out The Truth. The curve is something that starts out on the left side, a third of the way up that Y-axis, and then snakes up farther north, toward 100%, as you go out to the right. That curve is of pressing interest to your typical democrat politician. I envision a chart that has gobbled up reams of data to verify the accuracy of this curve, one that is revised constantly. So maybe it’s not in the basement after all. Just well hidden, very well hidden.

What is The Truth that people figure out? That some 30 percent of us already know, and that more and more of us learn as we debate back and forth on the latest “gimme”? Simply this: That the government doesn’t really have money; it spends only what it has taken from others, plus what it borrows on the credit of others. Which naturally means that one man’s “right” is another man’s burden. That when we debate these proposals, we aren’t debating how to make life more secure, we are in fact debating how to make our country less free.

Hillary-care was debated for an extended period of time, IIRC. Someone was saying quite a lot about it in ’93, and they didn’t nail the lid on that boondoggle until ’94. That really is what killed it. People talked for awhile about how wonderful it would be when no one “would have to worry about health care.” And then someone mentioned a rule…someone mentioned another rule…before you knew it, there were all these pages and pages of rules, naturally some noise was made about them, and people got concerned. It started to look like what it was: Just another hardcore liberal democrat way of making people dependent on government for their daily needs.

This time, they’re going to do it the right way by golly. Get that reeking shit sandwich sold and shoved down our throats before we even know what we’ve swallowed.

And then hussle down to the basement, and get that chart updated.

No Authority

Wednesday, July 15th, 2009

Just bookmarking it for later, no time to read it now. I’m like that sometimes. Like a spider mummifying a fly without sucking the good stuff out of it, for a midnight snack later on.

Will update later maybe.

Update: Yeah, that was every bit as dumbass as I thought.

Typical liberal thinking for ya. You can’t have an opinion unless you’re “smart,” not genuinely smart, but recognized-by-slobbering-lefties as being smart. Not unless you live in their fantasy land. All others please shut up.

Meanwhile, any putz who makes $20,000 a year or more should live in a six-bedroom house.

Good hands. We’re in really good hands.

It’s Healthy

Tuesday, July 14th, 2009

Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner says the economic malaise taking place right now is healthy.

More hope and change:

“Noting the rising unemployment, Geithner said what the economy “is going through is a very necessary and healthy adjustment as [Americans] go back to living within their means.”

Well at least he didn’t say “Let them eat cake.”

Couple this with Obama saying that his economic plan is working as he intended and you get what this administration is all about.

Obama was for everything that sent us into this recession. Since he took power he’s doing whatever he can, legal or not, to make things worse.

Well, on a certain level Geithner is right: It’s healthy to live within your means, and to be fair about it, America over the last several years hasn’t been a model of this kind of thing.

I just think if the Obama administration was here to deliver us from this kind of prodigal living, it would have been honest of them to promote themselves that way. I think the typical Obama supporter had a vision that the strong leadership of our Holy Administration was going to elevate the national standard of living, not diminish it to make it “healthy.”

There is something else, though. One of the comments on the linked piece brings to our attention an editorial in Investor’s Business Daily which is quite edifying. The subject is why we are in the mess we are in. All together now? WALL STREET GREED! Right? Right?

Wrong-o, dude!

Many Americans are unaware of the causes of the greatest economic calamity of our lifetime. A new congressional report details how government politicized housing, wrecking the economy.

Rep. Darrell Issa of California, ranking Republican on the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, has released a report that every American should read.

The analysis details how powerful Democrats in Congress insisted that government-subsidized housing be geared to serve the purposes of social justice at the expense of sound lending.

Here are some highlights of Issa’s blow-by-blow account:

 • With an implicit subsidy to American homeowners in the form of reduced mortgage rates, Fannie Mae and its sister government sponsored enterprise, Freddie Mac, squeezed out their competition and cornered the secondary mortgage market. They took advantage of a $2.25 billion line of credit from the U.S. Treasury.
:
 • The [Clinton] administration complained that in 1989 only 7% of mortgages had less than a 10% downpayment. By 1994, it wanted that raised to 29%.

 • Reduced underwriting standards spread into the entire U.S. mortgage market to those at all income levels.

 • A complete decoupling of home prices from Americans’ income fed the growth of the housing bubble as borrowers made smaller down payments and took on higher debt.

 • Wall Street firms specializing “in packaging and investing in the lowest-quality tranches of mortgage-backed securities, profited hugely from the increased volume that government affordable lending policies sparked.”

 • Wall Street firms, homebuilders and the GSEs used money, power and influence to block attempts at reform. Between 1998 and 2008, Fannie and Freddie spent over $176 million on lobbyists.

Whoopsie. Yeah, it was greed alright. But greed…for votes…from politicians. The natural forces of the marketplace were defeated, and once again, ya gotta pay the piper later if you don’t pay the piper on the spot.

And once again, once we are obliged to suffer the natural consequences of defeating the marketplace, the blame goes — to the marketplace. In the eyes of the weak-minded, anyway.