it uses busses for rollerskates! when it stands up the sun goes out! it uses bowling balls for earrings!
Or, in the more measured words of the Republican Pledge To America:
Our plan stands on the principles of a small, more accountable government
Sounds great. Ain't gonna happen. Details at 11.
OK, introductions first I guess. "singingbone" is "russell". At some point I'll figure out how to make it use my actual name. Or, everyone will just get used to the fact that "singingbone" is "russell". Whichever comes first.
Next, many thanks to the kitteh for the the very kind invitation to post. I will do my best not to be an idiot, and will try not to blow anything up.
Next after that, if you want to save yourself a few minutes, you can skip this and read sekajin's comment here. It's crisp and to the point, and pretty much says most of what I'm going to say here in fewer words. I'm just going to add detail.
If you're still with me, more after the jump.
Conservatives of virtually all stripes are united in their belief that the federal government is too large. The founders, they will say, never intended or envisioned a federal government of the size and scope we have now.
IMVHO, they are correct. At least about the founder part. The entire federal budget in 1800 was $11M. That is more or less the annual budget for Congressional franking expenses today. Even Hamilton would freak.
How'd this happen?
Here is a snapshot of the world of the founders, circa 1800:
US population, about 5M. Exactly 33 cities or towns with population greater than 2500. Biggest city in NY, population 66K.
94% of the population lives in rural areas. The normal form of "employment" is agriculture. The typical location of production for all goods and services is the household. "Specialization of labor" means you make barrels or rope, or are a blacksmith.
Barter and/or payment in kind is normal. Travel for pleasure is a bizarre, alien concept. Travel is freaking dangerous. People mostly live their lives within a few miles of home.
People lived extremely self-sufficient lives. By "self-sufficient" I mean they acquired the necessary stuff of life directly, by their own effort. They grew, raised, made, or built what they needed. They might purchase china, or tea, or sugar, or an occasional luxury item. Maybe cloth.
Government was very, very small, because there was damned little for government to do.
Today: we are 300-plus million. 80% live in urban areas. Large cities have populations in the millions of people. "Specialization of labor" means you might be an HR consultant whose niche is outplacement for lawyers who are looking for a lifestyle change.
A friend of mine does that. No joke. She does a good business.
In the vast majority of cases, people acquire the necessary stuff of life by working for somebody else, getting paid, and buying what they need with money. Except in "chi-chi" contexts like farmers markets and artisanal pottery shops, folks are many, many steps removed from the people who produce the things they buy and use.
We live in an integrated international economy. We live, all of us, vulnerable to the weather in the Ukraine, to internal political feuds in Nigeria, and to the whims, egos, and incompetencies of investment bankers working in a couple of city blocks in lower Manhattan.
Let's see, is there an institution of sufficient scale to keep the wheels on in this environment?
Conservatives will tell us yes, that institution is the market. But like government, the market has changed since Adam Smith first hypothesized the Invisible Hand.
When Adam Smith said "capital", he mostly was talking about "stuff". I have sheep, I need to turn their fleece into wool. I have wool, I need to turn it into cloth. I have cloth, I need to turn it into a shirt.
Nowadays, "capital" is money. Or, not even money. It's a piece of a bet on what the increase of the price of a ton of wool will be in New Zealand a year from now, hedged against the Chicago Board of Trade price of whatever it is that sheep eat six months from now, divided by the spot market price of the oil needed to ship it next week, times the cost of converting all of that to Euros.
It's not 1800 anymore. We need more from the feds than what they brought to the table in 1800.
If you want to talk about not wasting money, that's great. Nobody, least of all me, likes to see good money p*ssed away. Bring some specifics to the table, we'll run the numbers, and we'll see where we stand.
If you want to talk about Scaling Back The Heavy Hand Of Government and Unleashing The Creative Potential Of The Market, please excuse me while I go count the silver.
And crap, but this is long. My apologies. I hope the "after the jump" thing worked.
“At some point I’ll figure out how to make it use my actual name.”
What do you need to know? Have you tried clicking on “Account” on the top right, after signing in to your Typepad account, then where it says “Account Information,” enter what you want in “Display Name”?
I’ve never looked at this before. I simply looked at the dashboard, and those seemed like the first things to try. Does that work? If not, the Help button is right next to the Account button.
cool, done. thanks gary!
“But like government, the market has changed since Adam Smith first hypothesized the Invisible Hand.”
As it happens, Mark Rosenfelder has just finished a read-through and analysis of Wealth of Nations which is kind of a nice counterpart to this post.
russell, cool! *terrorist fist bump*
But remember — you got to put “by russell”, in italics, at the top of your post or the locusts will getcha.
And remember that you have to pay the blogger tax of 5.5% of your monthly word-count to the blog front page.
It’s a problem, not only in the US but a host of other countries (france and Japan spring to mind) that there is some notion that the country is still rural when it is nothing near it. France has to deal with stuff like this and Japan still has a system where a rural voter is equal to at least 3 or so urban voters (down from a high of 5 or 6 in the early 80’s). However, being the American exceptionalist that I am, I will say that we do a lot better in getting urban folks to think of themselves as rural and get all bent out of shape about urban elitists.
(btw, boo-yah on getting russell to post. I’m thinking it is going to feel like Christmas morning to click on the blog when I get up)
Russell is a front-pager now?
Okay, I’m redundant. Because the vast majority of the time I comment here, anything I have to say could be more efficiently summed up as “what russell said”.
In fact, aside from one single nitpick:
It’s just “Ukraine”. No “the”.
Other than that, “what russell said”.
Nowadays, “capital” is money.
Well, that’s the whole point of capitalism. Feature? Bug? Inherently fatal contradiction?
Like Chou-en-lai famously remarked, perhaps it’s too early to tell.
I wouldn’t say the use of the article is so much wrong as out of fashion.
Another element of this problem is that many people entertain the idea that “non-free” markets create distortion in the information that the market can transmit.
But information theorists will tell you that you need some level of predictability in your communications, or you can never have any confidence in what’s being transmitted. Optimizing that level of predictability is a constant struggle; but there’s no way that a) a completely unregulated market actually transmits more USEFUL price signals than b) one that has regulations that one can tell, in advance, will have certain impacts on the communications one receives about the market.
Congratulations, russell!
You’ve been top of my wish-list (sorry, Gary) to see on the front page for some time now. Nice to see it happen.
(Now I need to check and see if that pony’s come.)
Abuse of a close italics tag. Ten years in the cubes, citizen moonbat.
“Optimizing that level of predictability is a constant struggle; but there’s no way that a) a completely unregulated market actually transmits more USEFUL price signals than b) one that has regulations that one can tell, in advance, will have certain impacts on the communications one receives about the market.”
Well, I suppose that, as a theoretical matter, if the effect of the regulations is well behaved, and you know in detail exactly what they are, you could deconvolute the prices you see, to get the pre-regulation prices. Those, of course, aren’t every safe assumptions, especially the latter, so in the real world it IS noise.
But really all I’ve got to say, is that, if you want hip metaphors for “big”, you need to mine Weird Al’s “Fat”:
“Government so big that, when it sits around the house, it really sits around the house!”
Glad I don’t have to choose between Gary & Russell – y’all have made my blogging month!
It never fails to amaze me that NO ONE talks about Smith’s intended audience: the landed nobility and the commercially wealthy, who were already colluding so effectively against the populace (think Enclosure Acts, and Blake’s “dark, Satanic” cloth-goods mills, which were well on their way to destroying the ability of common people to provide for themselves).
The fruits are so tasty, too: a HIDDEN aristocracy, no longer needing direct power (hire people to run things for you – call them elections, and make sure everyone knows who has the money…no need for anything as sordid as visibility); a populace so duped by lies and threats (real and imaginary) that they will fight hard for their masters and against their own interests in the hopes of becoming a master themselves one day (ha – as if!).
Add this to our domestic terrorists’ stock-in-trade of ‘plausible deniability’, and you have the recipe for these last 30-40 years.
Yes, yes, blame “the government” – ignore the fact that THE ONE THING REQUIRED to be IN government is for the wealthy to continue issuing checks to the politicians along with their marching orders; throw the bums out for being ‘soft on people’ and install another scary bunch of ideologues who are intent on riding feudalism-by-proxy until the wheels come off…and if they don’t funnel enough money to the shadow-feudalists, cook up a scandal, “stand on principle”, throw them out…and do it all again.
Lather. Rinse. Repeat.
I would have a vastly easier time taking “conservative” positions seriously if the proponents (yes, Brett, GOB, McKinney – I’m talking about you guys) didn’t work so damn hard trying to pretend that the obvious just isn’t happening.
Russell is a front-pager now?
Okay, I’m redundant.
You are hardly redundant, Catsy, but Russell as a front pager is indeed welcome.
Along the same lines, it has been pointed out in ways better than I can do, but bears repeating, that it’s not necessarily size of government that matters, but what it does and how – whether we, as taxpayers, are getting our money’s worth. Size is an arbitrary criterion; I notice that ‘conservatives’ tend to complain about size only when they don’t like something in particular. You don’t hear complains from them about the size of the ‘defense’ apparatus (enormous and out of control) or drug enforcement (ditto). But the relatively dinky Dept. of Education, for example, which must dance backwards in its attempt to improve educational standards? Big gubmit!
Reagan’s moldy legacy lives on: sentimentality and nostalgia, not reason, shape our ideas of government.
italics begone!
“Government so big that, when it sits around the house, it really sits around the house!”
FTW.
Seriously, the world needs a rimshot emoticon.
I propose this: @!
It never fails to amaze me that NO ONE talks about Smith’s intended audience
Or context, which was explicitly mercantilist.
“Free market” as compared to what is always a useful question.
Thanks all for the kind words, I’ll do my best not to be a dope.
Russell, perhaps you could fix the broken italic tag Posted by: dj moonbat | September 28, 2010 at 12:04 AM?
Also, if you might email me your email address, at gary underscore farber at yahoo dot com, we can have these conversations without boring everyone. 🙂
Hey, nobody told me troubleshooting HTML tags was part of the deal! 🙂
Should be good now.
I am quite flattered that something I wrote was cogent enough – for once – to be meaningful, as brevity isn’t my strong suit.
To reiterate: the point of my screed wasn’t that government can do everything. Like any mechanism, it too needs maintenance and an occasional overhaul. The point is that people in government have to be accountable to their constituencies to a degree that management in the corporate world aren’t to their employees, and that what makes government a better mechanism for social and economic policy than the market is that it is shepherded by people you can get rid of at the ballot box. That’s why we have these messy, inconvenient things called elections.
If Apple employees don’t like Steve Jobs, but really want to stay and feel they can make a difference in the company, they have to stage nothing less than the corporate equivalent of a palace coup, or a Potemkin. Is that really what anybody wants as a model for the changing of the guard anywhere?
Of course, I’m naive. I actually believe in crap like representative government, and elections and stuff like that. But no matter how ineffective people think all that is, it is far preferable as a model for a civic polity to feel empowered by compared with say, Bush’s Ownership Society, where the only thing you have to your name is a pile of debt.
There can be no truly small government in America given our size, outreach, and global influence. There can only be, in the end, competing conceptions of government – one, a robust, proactive, stewarding kind of leadership that sees the excesses of economics run amok and hems in the damage we’ve seen it be capable of, and the other, a do-nothing, outwardly strong but inwardly soft cadre of managers that sees leadership not as a question of accepting responsibility, but as a shift of risk and blame.
For most of the last 30 years or so, we have had the latter kind of governance. The day that Americans wake up and realize that this is their enemy, not homosexuality or illegal immigration or Muslims or masturbation or any other conjured-up bugaboos, will be the day Americans start being responsibly civic.
Dr. Science and russell added. All Alone In The Night link fixed.
Gary, shouldn’t you be added as an author?
Um…disregard the last question. Done.
That would be nice, Slarti, if you would be so kind.
Um, is this a question?
Now you’re just trying to drive me crazy, aren’t you? 🙂
?
While you are under the hood, the lawyers guns and money blog link goes to the old one, the new one is
http://www.lawyersgunsmoneyblog.com/
Typepad seems to be full of inner turmoil just now. I’ve added Gary but he is invisible (make of that what you will). I’ll try and come back later and fix the remainder of things that I set out to fix.
A-HA!
Pshew.
Barter and/or payment in kind is normal. Travel for pleasure is a bizarre, alien concept. Travel is freaking dangerous. People mostly live their lives within a few miles of home.
Let me be a pedant and note two things. Even in a situation in which barter was somewhat common, there was already a pretty strong cash economy in place. More importantly, your second statement isn’t true. Those who had the money absolutely traveled for pleasure. The notion of the “grand tour,” young English aristocrats traveling around Europe and being debauched, was a background to a whole lot of late eighteenth and early nineteenth century literature.
/pedant
Congrats to Russell, Catsy, Gary, and Doctor
Science as new front-pagers.
Did I miss anyone?
All wise choices by whomever the “bureaucrat” is (see Nate’s excellent rant in the previous post’s comment section regarding the meaning of “bureaucrat”) who’s doing the choosing. 😉
At this rate, EVERYONE will be a front-pager within a few weeks.
Who will be left to comment?
there was already a pretty strong cash economy in place.
This is quite true.
My point (which I hope remains accurate) was that most folks had a degree of independence from the cash economy that simply does not exist these days.
That independence extended quite a bit past the colonial period, I think. My father and my in-laws grew up in rural GA and PA, respectively, and lived in a context where you could get quite a lot of the basics of life directly, without having to participate in a cash economy to get them. I’m talking the 20’s and 30’s.
The history of political economy is not my field (maybe in my next life?), but my sense or intuition is that the move to an almost completely money-based economy was a real watershed event.
It’s both very hard and very unusual for folks to live cash-free nowadays, and that has a lot of consequences for all of us. And its more than just the cash, it’s the dependence on very complex supply chains and infrastructure for even basic things like food, water, and shelter.
Those who had the money absolutely traveled for pleasure. The notion of the “grand tour,” young English aristocrats traveling around Europe and being debauched, was a background to a whole lot of late eighteenth and early nineteenth century literature.
Noted, but I don’t think that was true, or at least was not anything like typical, in the early 19th C US.
From the depths a new breed of commenter will rise. Those who visit here regularly but remain silent, because all the good comments have already been made.
Regarding the size of government, we may not have one after next Tuesday, thanks to Bureaucrat Vermin Dictator Jim Demint.
See Washington Monthly, “A Unilateral Decision to End Legislative Activity in the Senate”.
I don’t want the Republican defeated, I want it dead.
Former front-pagers, of course.
Noted, but I don’t think that was true, or at least was not anything like typical, in the early 19th C US.
It wasn’t common in the U.S., but neither was the concept alien or unknown. And Americans who had the financial wherewithal definitely would travel for fun.
Just noting the difference between “financially out of reach” and “alien concept.”
As flattered as I am that anyone would actually believe that, I am not an ObWi front-pager.
Russell: great addition! And nice to have Gary back. Still lacking much conservative voice. You guys have to stop putting that whole side of the argument on those few (we happy few) in the comments section.
Missing from this discussion is the federalism angle (no, not Sharon Angle; I didn’t say that). To me, perhaps the greater part of the question is what questions should be left to the states.
I generally agree that any government in a pop. of 300 Mill. is going to be “big.” That states the obvious. And, although entertaining, this post is just stating the obvious. We are not in 1801. Got that. So when you say:
Bring some specifics to the table, we’ll run the numbers, and we’ll see where we stand.
I say I agree. Let’s discuss specifics. You start.
“Small” and “big” are relative terms here. What’s wrong with “smaller than it is right now?” Or more responsive? Less beholden to special/corporate/wing nut interests?
Personally, I like to think in terms of efficiency. I don’t mind something bigger that is truly better. I’m not convinced that the growth of the federal government is necessarily better. And ditto on spending. Sure, build bridges (doing that in my area) but a malt liquor/ marijuana study?
Sure, there are some things that simply have to be done nationally. But is going national for those that do not under some warped commerce clause theory really better? OTOH, getting truly local doesn’t always help. I think, having now lived in California for 7 years, that special districts are a special kind of joke. Of course, given how this state is run, I’m not sure letting the state do things would be demonstrably better.
“Specialization of labor” means you might be an HR consultant whose niche is outplacement for lawyers who are looking for a lifestyle change.
I just may need her number.
“As flattered as I am that anyone would actually believe that, I am not an ObWi front-pager.”
I could believe it.
Of course, I’m sorry, but the left section is full now. But if you’ll just be willing to play a conservative, Eric can sign you up today!
Yes, we’re still in the market for sensible C’s/center rightists.
Unfortunately, they’re either too high-profile (Friedersdorf, Larison) or already snatched up (Kain) or sort of unplugged (Djerejian)
“What’s wrong with “smaller than it is right now?” Or more responsive? Less beholden to special/corporate/wing nut interests?”
Well, speaking for myself, I don’t give a crap about the “size” of the federal government in some absolute sense. It’s the results.
I’m all for more responsive, and less beholden to interests with more money than citizens behind them. But that doesn’t require the government to be “smaller”, just better.
If I was going for smaller in an absolute sense, I’d start with a lot of our very wasteful and unnecessary military spending. But when Republicans talk about “small government” they’re not talking about scaling back military adventures, they’re taking aim at the Department of Education, or burdensome food inspections, or infrastructure and jobs for districts besides their own, and other domestic programs they don’t like, which are pretty small on the scale of things we’re dealing with here.
although entertaining, this post is just stating the obvious. We are not in 1801. Got that.
You’re right, it is stating the obvious, and that was kind of intentional.
IMO it can be useful to just lay out the obvious thing. Sometimes that’s because it lets you walk back a discussion to a point that everyone can agree on, and then move forward from there. Sometimes, the obvious just needs pointing out.
Sometimes both are true.
“Small” and “big” are relative terms here. What’s wrong with “smaller than it is right now?”
Smaller than it is right now is fine, as long as the things we want it to do get done.
I’m with Nate, the size specifically doesn’t bug me. Government should be as big as it needs to be to do what we want it to do.
“What we want it to do” is, I think, the more critical question.
Or more responsive?
More responsive is always good.
IMO “large” and “responsive” are, all other things being equal, inversely proportional. Some degree of non-response comes with living in a nation of 300M people.
The private sector is prone to exactly the same effect.
Less beholden to special/corporate/wing nut interests?
You will get no argument from me on this.
My solution on this is simple but nobody likes it:
No protected speech or political participation, either directly or through $$$, for anything other than natural human persons.
I don’t see any other solution at all, let alone a better one.
Personally, I like to think in terms of efficiency.
Me too.
I would have liked to see single payer health care, for reasons of efficiency and for reasons of universal coverage.
Choice of private sector vs public sector quite often favors public sector when it comes to efficiency.
Sure, there are some things that simply have to be done nationally.
My take on this is that the solution needs to be comparable in scale to the problem.
What would make sense to me in a lot of cases would be regional, rather than national, solutions. It’s quite common that a single state is not commensurate with the size of a problem, regional compacts seem like a good middle way between state and federal.
There are probably lots of issues that “New England” or “the Great Lakes” or “the Mountain West” or “the Gulf Coast” can tackle that would be too large for a single state to handle well, but which don’t really require national attention.
But to me the issue is a pragmatic one, rather than one of principle.
Sure, there are some things that simply have to be done nationally.
My take on this is that the solution needs to be comparable in scale to the problem.
Sorry, one final point to bring it back home to the original post.
My point overall here is that *the scale of the issues that government needs to address has grown* since the nation was founded.
More things that touch everyday life occur at very, very large scales. *Vastly* larger scales than were typical even in my parents’ early lifetime, let alone 200 years ago.
Those things need to be addressed. Waving hands and saying that the problem is that “government is too big” seems, to me, to be an act of willful, naive nostalgia.
If we want to discuss ways to decentralize *the economy*, rather than (or at least not just) government, that is a conversation I’d love to have.
Re Nate’s observation (as I was going to say before ObWings ate my previous comments) – another vast difference between the Federal Government of 1800 and today is the size and scope of the military/military-related establishment – which is, after all, a “government program”. Two centuries ago, the nation’s armed forces were a few dozen ships for a Navy; and minimal land forces (?16,000?) meant to be bolstered by volunteerism if needed: volunteerism which was also assumed to be largely localized and self-supplied (as the Second Amendment enshrines).
Not quite the same nowadays – and unfortunately, the issue of controlling the size of the miltary/military-industrial establishment is pretty much a non-starter is virtually ANY context.
Russell — More responsive is always good.
IMO “large” and “responsive” are, all other things being equal, inversely proportional. Some degree of non-response comes with living in a nation of 300M people.
This really does come down to being about what you want ‘responsive’ to look like. I’d rather that the government would have been *less* responsive to the unfocused anger we had after 9/11 for instance. That’s one feedback loop that I think is badly broken and measuring the wrong inputs.
I think the economy is another area where I’d prefer less short term responsiveness for more and broader long term growth. Less amplitude for slower and shallower drops, please.
Not all feedback loops are good for the system.
Welcome, Russell!!
Conservatives of virtually all stripes are united in their belief that the federal government is too large.
And this obsession with size, rather than functionality, is bizarre.
You want to argue that the government shouldn’t be doing X or Y? Fine. Let’s hear it. You might be right.
You think taxes should be cut? Fine, lay out a proposed budget that passes the laugh test and we can talk.
But if you want to argue that there is some magical number which measures the absolute limit of the size of government, then leave me alone.
you got to put “by russell”, in italics, at the top of your post
Can’t somebody update a template somewhere to make it do that automagically? We’re on WP, which I know is different from Typepad, but it does it automatically for us.
Brett:
But really all I’ve got to say, is that, if you want hip metaphors for “big”, you need to mine Weird Al’s “Fat”:
That may be the first time you and I have ever agreed on anything.
When the government goes to get its shoes shined, it has to take their word.
one of you could try faking conservative posts. see if anyone could tell.
Bizarro Gary say me no consider cleek’s bad idea.
Or perhaps that would be clean-shaven Gary.
That doesn’t work. Fake conservatives usually end up compromising and give the whole ruse away.
Since everyone is always wondering, aside from those who claim they KNOW what we think, we the Founders speak just this one time from the grave and hereby declare that since the States (50? No one asked us about that! Alaska? I think Jefferson knew that would be trouble, but we didn’t listen)) and municipalities have been in most cases so woefully and willfully deficient in providing for the general welfare, that the Federal Government in 2010 is just about the right size in scope, expense, and personnel.
Lose a weapon system or two and pay your bills through taxation instead of debt would be two suggestions we might make, but you idiots do what you want.
We frankly and collectively wish that our fellow corpse Abraham Lincoln would have liquidated the Confederate South when he had the chance (look what treatment he received for pulling his punches) to make the Nation, umm, more manageable and humane, but there you go.
Nowhere in the Constitution does it state you people can’t have TWO Civil Wars to settle the original problem, though I imagine some whining Confederates will claim those words exist in the document as they get their as@ses kicked once and for all.
Catch you later. Here’s to f8cking it up.
Now leave us out of it from now on.
Barvo! Barvo! Encroe!
Damn the Republiturds!
Kill all the Confederates!
I stop paying attention for a day, and what happens? Russel turns front-pager! As welcome as that is, it raises this question: who can possibly replace Russell in comments?
On the substance of the post: Bring some specifics to the table, we’ll run the numbers, and we’ll see where we stand.
“The numbers” presumably have dollar signs in front. Politics, and governance, is about MONEY. Good thing, too, because the other thing it can be about is … what? Blood?
Some things, some people seem to say, are more important than money. If you think abortion is murder, no amount of money can change your mind, right? If you think life ain’t worth living unless you get to own a gun, could we possibly give you a big enough tax cut to persuade you otherwise?
If the answer to such questions is “Hell, no!” then I suggest politics — the horsetrading that shapes governance — comes to an impasse.
Now, consider such notions as “it’s unfair to tax rich people more than X%” or “it’s unfair that some people can’t afford health insurance”. These are moral sentiments. Not as passionately held, maybe, as moral sentiments on abortion or guns, but moral sentiments nonetheless. Can even these moral sentiments be reconciled by “running the numbers”?
I worry that no, they can’t be. I worry that even if we could, for instance, run the numbers and show that we could provide health care to everybody without raising anybody’s taxes, the “unfairness” of “undeserving” people getting something they have not “earned” would still be objectionable to some self-styled conservatives.
–TP
Using the BLS, in 1960 all government employees were 15.6% of the total workforce, in 2000, they were 15.8% and in 2007 they were 16.1%.
As a note, in 2000, the total workforce was 131,785K and in 2007 it was 137,598K.
So, over the last 50 years the relative size of government, as far as employment is concerned, hasn’t really changed that much.
Between 2007 and 2009, the workforce shrank by almost 7 million while government employment actually increased slightly so the %age of the workforce has increased to 17.8%.
Sort of analogous to the decline in federal revenue in 2009 to less than 15% of GDP.
“As welcome as that is, it raises this question: who can possibly replace Russell in comments?”
The union has negotiated hard on this point, and the contract clearly outlines our right to both post and comment, now that we’re a union shop.
Russell: “that is a conversation I’d love to have.”
Russell, you are a mensch and one fine, reasonable voice, among a few others, attempting conversation with a howling sh*tstorm of zombie insanity.
By storm, I don’t mean Obsidian Wings, which is now a lone telegraph key with a paperweight fallen against it signaling from a destroyed planet on the other side of the universe, I mean this moment in the history of the United States when the internal mortal enemies of this country are doing their worst to destroy their own government and a sizable majority of civilized American society.
Outside Obsidian Wings and few other lone outposts, there is no conversation.
Let’s take TARP, for one imperfect but necessary example, promulgated by the Bush White House, though the raging blonde sexbomb vermin (I wonder if the fascist FOX blondes can shoot real bullets out of their D-cup paps) leading the fascist sh*tstrom would have us believe differently.
After witnessing the thieving oligarchy on Wall Street enrich themselves at taxpayer expense after their institutions and their livelihoods were saved with my tax dollars and my grandchildrens’ debt dollars because the oligarchs themselves got down on their $5000 suited knees at the White House and begged for the support of Nancy Pelosi and Barack Obama, and then turn around and bankroll and make common cause with the ignorant anti-TARP, anti-banker dumbas*es in the Confederate Republican Tea Party lynchmob against Pelosi and Obama, here’s the conversation I want (if possible, which it’s not, so f*ck all conversation).
This Sunday evening, I want President Obama, with the leaders of the Congressional majority alongside him, to announce to the country that not only is TARP canceled (let’s get rid of the stimulus too, for good measure, in fact blow the projects up that it funded, preferably while lying vermin Republicans cut the ribbons at the openings) canceled as of midnight, but every cent of both programs must be returned to the Treasury no later noon on the same Monday, and most importantly, every single banking and financial transaction, stock trade, bond trade and including all banking mergers and FDIC takeovers of failed banks, since the moment Treasury Secretary Paulson dropped to his knees and FED Chairman Bernacke delared “If we don’t act, we may not have an economy on Monday morning,” will be canceled.
We go back to status quo ante on that weekend during the Bush Presidency.
The government will do nothing, as the murderous Republicans want, to alleviate or ameliorate the situation as ….
.. every large bank and most small ones who destroyed the Glass-Steagall wall, insurance company, money market fund, mutual fund, stock exchange, mortgage loan, and savings account in the industrialized world flatlines at zero, as the Republican Party desires, and FOX Business News and CNBC (Maria Bartiromo torn to pieces by Tea Party mobs in New Jersey) go black because good-looking, well-coiffed anchors are slitting their own throats on camera, and the same Republican vermin (led by FOX filth, airhead murderer Mike Pence, goatf*cker Erick Erickson, venom-mouthed anti-American traitor Mark Levin, the pale fascist Glenn Beck, and cracker confederate vermin Jim DeMint and their acolytes storm the gun stores throughout America and whine and howl about the effing gummint not saving their worthless, fascist butts..
… and President Obama recalls the military from overseas to “disperse” the raging anti-American Tea Party mob (who have dragged Rick Santelli from his cushy perch reporting on the gummint bond trade and hacked him to pieces for the his mere association with the words “gummint bonds”) with deadly force. ..
When we relive that moment that the Republican party wished we had lived through — that horrible conservative zombie created catastrophe — when they are bloodied and defeated and gone from this Earth .. then .. maybe.. if I’m in the mood .. you, Russell, will be able to make your case in the short-lived eye of the sh*tstorm.
But, what the hell, carry on. Maybe reason can eke out a stinking three percent increase in the high marginal tax rate.
But, come January, the Republican Part will resume murdering children with pre-existing conditions.
TonyP:
See my next post, and tell me why that kind of unfairness, undeserving people, and unearned stuff doesn’t seem to count …
Gary:
Sing it, brother.
“Conservatives of virtually all stripes are united in their belief that the federal government is too large.”
Conservatives of virtually all striped like to say that they believe this, but few conservatives objected when Bush increased government spending at a faster rate than any president since Lyndon Johnson.
This Matt Taibbi piece touches on that
The individuals in the Tea Party may come from very different walks of life, but most of them have a few things in common. After nearly a year of talking with Tea Party members from Nevada to New Jersey, I can count on one hand the key elements I expect to hear in nearly every interview. One: Every single one of them was that exceptional Republican who did protest the spending in the Bush years, and not one of them is the hypocrite who only took to the streets when a black Democratic president launched an emergency stimulus program. (“Not me — I was protesting!” is a common exclamation.)
As someone once said, read the rest.
Russell, a welcome addition indeed. Very welcome. FWIW, it isn’t just the size, it’s the cost of government and the weight.
You write:
If you want to talk about not wasting money, that’s great. Nobody, least of all me, likes to see good money p*ssed away. Bring some specifics to the table, we’ll run the numbers, and we’ll see where we stand.
If you want to talk about Scaling Back The Heavy Hand Of Government and Unleashing The Creative Potential Of The Market, please excuse me while I go count the silver.
Not having time to do a bunch of research: specific dollars wasted by the Feds: earmarks. No, not a huge amount of money but emblematic of Washington’s attitude toward money. As for gov’t’s heavy hand, there is (1) the 1099 requirement being dropped on all businesses with 25 or more employees to account for every purchase over $600 (making adding that 25th employee a very real cost factor, but good going, wise and beneficent gov’t, this will surely boost private sector growth), (2) the new banking reg that let’s banks lend only against receivables that are 60 days old or younger, regardless of other securitization (you know, because businesses who are current on their AR need lots of money whereas businesses getting slow paid have excellent cash flow–again, good thinking, gov’t, you’ve really solved a problem there) and (3) other banking regs that impose higher capitalization requirements on fully securitized and performing loans when cash flow falls below current loan obligations (such as when a guarantor makes loan payments due to short term cash flow interuptions)–the happy result here is that the bank, rather than increase capital behind the loan, calls the notes, otherwise the bank loses money. It’s a lose-lose all the way around, yet it’s your gov’t at work.
As for the efficacy of big gov’t, I give you the the efficiency and effectiveness of the executive branch after the BP oil spill (no more offshore drilling, so the rigs move away and people are out of work, but hey, at least gov’t capped the well, or not).
As noted by another commenter, gov’t has grown to 17% of the work force while the private sector has been shrinking. As the proponent of big gov’t, Russell, what is the justification for this? Or any of the above?
MKT: funny how you get big-picture when you want to ignore crucial facts and details…and how you erupt in dissociated factoids when you want to avoid dealing with someone else’s big-picture argument.
Playground behaviors like this lend themselves to beatings, torn clothing and detention, but not to better arguments, better governance, or a better life for anyone; therefore, I have to ask:
WHY ARE YOU HERE?
Since I’ve been away from the tubes for the most part for the last day and a half, which is like an eternity around here, and don’t want to delay expressing the following sentiment by trying to read through the comments and somehow adding, minimally at best, to the discussion, I just want to say, belatedly, “RUSSELL!!!”
(Sorry for yelling. I got a little excited.)
There’s more than a little supposition, there, I think.
Not having time to do a bunch of research: specific dollars wasted by the Feds: earmarks. No, not a huge amount of money but emblematic of Washington’s attitude toward money.
How, precisely — and please show your work!! — is the money spent on earmarked projects “wasted?” I don’t want one specific example of a ridiculous project, or even two; I want something showing a general trend of “waste,” as distinguished from “I do not want money being allocated in this manner or for these things.”
the new banking reg that let’s banks lend only against receivables that are 60 days old or younger, regardless of other securitization (you know, because businesses who are current on their AR need lots of money whereas businesses getting slow paid have excellent cash flow–again, good thinking, gov’t, you’ve really solved a problem there)
It seems this needs some unpacking, but I’m not in a position to do so. Obviously, companies with poor cash flow might need to borrow in order to meet payrolls, keep their own A/P current, etc. — all laudable goals — but a) I’m sure this law wasn’t passed for no reason whatsoever, so I’d like to know the background, and b) perhaps if you have cash flow problems, increasing your own collection and debt reduction efforts should be a larger priority than borrowing. As you’re so fond of pointing out when it comes to government, anyway.
As for the efficacy of big gov’t, I give you the the efficiency and effectiveness of the executive branch after the BP oil spill (no more offshore drilling, so the rigs move away and people are out of work, but hey, at least gov’t capped the well, or not).
PRIVATE OIL COMPANY CATASTROPHE DISPROVES NEED FOR GOVERNMENT FILM AT 11.
(And, frankly, in my limited experience, if you’ve got a sufficient number of accounts that are 60+ days old that it’s endangering your ability to operate, when nearly every business I know is net 30, you’re kind of a f*ckup as a business operator.)
I think one of the main divides is between people who are more worried somebody might get something they didn’t “earn” in some sense (which, yes, doesn’t seem to apply to inherited wealth and the like), and people worried that somebody won’t get opportunities, through events they didn’t earn.
The absolute number of the federal civilian workforce, including the U.S. Post Office, has remained steady since 1950. When expressed as a percentage of the total American population since 1950, federal civilian employment, including postal workers, has fallen precipitously.
Throw in the military – same trend.
Nearly all of the growth in government employment since 1950 is at the State and local levels, mostly concentrated in public education, which I conclude reflects population and school enrollment growth.
Here’s a couple of cites — feel free to drill down and find more.
http://wiki.answers.com/Q/What_percentage_of_americans_are_government_employed
http://books.google.com/books?id=v4U0dImzX7YC&pg=PA310&lpg=PA310&dq=total+government+employment+as+percentage+of+workforce+in+1960&source=bl&ots=_9–FGA6HZ&sig=akpjf7oYoQG_O_JR8CZbk-qeEgk&hl=en&ei=PUajTLX-CISBlAfuuoXRBA&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=7&ved=0CCwQ6AEwBg#v=onepage&q=total%20government%20employment%20as%20percentage%20of%20workforce%20in%201960&f=false
Scroll down to pages 308-311 for the relevant charts in that second cite.
I’d review historical marginal tax rates since 1950 as well (91% at the high end in 1950 into the 1960s) versus 36% today, but those also proved to be useless facts scattered like leaves in the howling sh*tstorm of zombie insanity.
WHY ARE YOU HERE?
To make friends and to enlighten.
I don’t want one specific example of a ridiculous project, or even two;
No problem: travel the great state of West Virginia and make a note every time something is named after Robt. Byrd.
perhaps if you have cash flow problems, increasing your own collection and debt reduction efforts should be a larger priority than borrowing.
Check. You’re right, sort of: you first work on expense containment and collections. You can then either borrow to cover rent and payroll or lay people off.
And, frankly, in my limited experience, if you’ve got a sufficient number of accounts that are 60+ days old that it’s endangering your ability to operate, when nearly every business I know is net 30, you’re kind of a f*ckup as a business operator.
I suspect the operative phrase here is “limited experience”. In a recession, people pay slowly, particularly individuals and small businesses who are struggling. This cohort makes up about 20% of my practice. I could fire my struggling clients, or wait to get paid. In the meantime, I need to service those accounts, which requires employees, and I need to pay those employees, which requires a temporary line of credit. I don’t get paid during lean times and, as is currently the case, I have put back a lot of what I thought was my savings into the business. That’s the way it goes.
But if we’re going to have a gov’t worship service, it’s fair game to point out that gov’t certainly can be the problem and not the solution.
“But if we’re going to have a gov’t worship service…”
Seriously, McKinney? Would you like a little more straw with that?
Besides, it’s definitely not a real service, we haven’t even broken out the robes or the FDA approved Good Silver!
Alright, The Founders, that second cite got screwed up. I’ll try to find the right one for you.
it’s definitely not a real service
Fair point. More of an informal prayer meeting.
No problem: travel the great state of West Virginia and make a note every time something is named after Robt. Byrd.
I may be ignorant, but I’m not stupid: What does that, [i]specifically[/i], have to do with “earmarks” as a general proposition, how many of those things were paid for via earmarks, and are they all actually “wasted?” Does each and every one actually have no genuine function?
Just so we’re absolutely, positively, 100% clear, you’re telling me, via shorthand, that all of these things were a) paid for by earmarks, and b) are wasted money. Is that about correct?
In the meantime, I need to service those accounts, which requires employees, and I need to pay those employees, which requires a temporary line of credit.
Right, and I said that those are appropriate things to be borrowing for. But, again, this law didn’t arise out of nowhere. Can you link me to some background? What was the impetus for it?
The Founders second cite turns out to be good.
I mean, Robert C. Byrd Visitor Center at Harpers Ferry National Historic Park. Did they just throw his name on an existing building, or build a whole new one? How much did it cost? Was that paid for by Federal tax money, or by National Park user fees? Was it accomplished via an earmark in some other bill? I don’t know! But I bet McKinneyTexas doesn’t, either!!
Robert C. Byrd Cancer Research Center at first glance seems to me to not be a waste of money, but I don’t know exactly what research it does, what it is, or what its relationship to “earmarks” is. And I bet McKinneyTexas doesn’t, either!!
Robert C. Byrd High school in Bridgeport . . . I just — well, I think you get my point.
But, again, this law didn’t arise out of nowhere. Can you link me to some background? What was the impetus for it?
I cannot give you a cite. I’ve asked my banker and two clients in banking what the hell gives and they tell me it’s just part of the new stuff they are seeing under Obama. The theory is that if loans are only made against AR at 60 minus, the chances of a loan going bad are significantly reduced. This is true, as far as it goes which isn’t very far. If you don’t make any loans, you have a zero default rate. What is bad is that the regulators will not let a bank look at the other security the bank has on the loan. The only allowable metric is AR minus 60. It’s stupid and arbitrary. And has nothing to do with the meltdown.
no more offshore drilling, so the rigs move away and people are out of work, but hey, at least gov’t capped the well, or not
Ah, the BP spill was a testament to government inefficiency, because BP is the government?
Interesting.
Incidentally, there is no ban on offshore drilling and never was, so, no, the rigs aren’t moving elsewhere. And, besides, the oil is where the oil is. Rigs can’t just move somewhere else and get the oil anywhere.
PS: Chmood, keep it civil please!
‘And, frankly, in my limited experience, if you’ve got a sufficient number of accounts that are 60+ days old that it’s endangering your ability to operate, when nearly every business I know is net 30, you’re kind of a f*ckup as a business operator.’
The limited experience is really showing. It’s less than useless when comments emerge from sources based solely on ignorance and bias. If you actually know something about small business, with employees and good customers who slow pay, please enlighten us.
Not having time to do a bunch of research: specific dollars wasted by the Feds: earmarks.
I think it’s valid to have a concern that earmarks might tend to be corrupting to a legislator (certainly a debatable point), but it doesn’t make sense to think of earmarks as something which necessarily add waste.
Earmarks are not extra spending. They simply designate some of the appropriated money to specific things. They can be bad things (‘Bridge to nowhere’) or worthy things (drinking water for NOLA after Katrina), but they don’t change the size of the appropriation, they just specifically allocate a portion of it. I don’t see how, on balance, disallowing earmarks makes much of a difference in anything. Phony issue – perfect for a phony like McCain.
I’ve asked my banker and two clients in banking what the hell gives and they tell me it’s just part of the new stuff they are seeing under Obama.
Blargh. Given how many insurance companies and healthcare consortia tried to blame a bunch of crap on “the new Obamacare law” before it even went into effect, I’m going to take that with a grain of salt. (Obama tends to get blamed for a lot of things that are Bush-era holdovers.) Without a link to the specific regulation in question, and knowing where it came from, when it was proposed and for what reason, there’s just no signal in this noise.
the BP spill was a testament to government inefficiency, because BP is the government
No, because gov’t, as in Katrina, is supposed be able to swoop in and fix things through its well known efficiency and focus. And, yes, there is a ban. It’s called a moratorium. That was the gov’t response.
I hope everyone took their Benadryl today. With all the straw flying around here, Hay Fever Alert is high, repeat, high.
How come Ford is doing so much better than big Gummint Motors?
No, because gov’t, as in Katrina, is supposed be able to swoop in and fix things through its well known efficiency and focus.
As opposed to the private sector’s response to the BP spill and Katrina? Which was…what exactly?
And, yes, FEMA can operate pretty well, when you put someone in charge who has a clue. As for “Brownie” he had no relevant experience, and severely botched it. But that’s true even if Brownie was heading a private company.
And, yes, there is a ban. It’s called a moratorium. That was the gov’t response.
No, the moratorium is a slight pause on certain deep sea drilling (not all drilling) and it only affects new rigs, and even then, not all of them.
Really, it’s not much of much.
Interestingly, are you chiding the government for doing too little here? If so, I agree, but that kind of cuts against the grain, no?
How come Ford is doing so much better than big Gummint Motors?
Clearly it’s the government’s influence!
As if GM was doing great before, but then the government stepped in and ruined it all. Or something.
God, that doesn’t even approach making sense. Even The Economist admitted recently that they were wrong, and Obama right, and the auto-bailout has been a huge success.
The Economist. Not exactly a bunch of Commies.
Leaving aside the vast engineering differences between evacuating a city, providing clean food, water, and housing to residents, and fixing failed levees, and capping a blown out leaking well under almost a mile of water, I thought the Republican response was to blame the government for interfering with the private sector, not blame the government for not interfering enough.
(Which isn’t to say the BP spill was handled as well as possible, way too much leeway was given to BP, and estimates of the amounts spilled and the damage were way lowballed, and the use of the dispersants made oil disappear from the surface, but sink to the bottom and spread under the surface. For more on the science, see here for university of georgia scientists who were in the area the whole time.)
are you chiding the government for doing too little here?
No, pointing out that gov’t doesn’t do what you think it should.
My offer to pay for both your and GOB’s plane tickets to Somalia is still open btw.
Or Liberia. I don’t want to limit your freedom of choice.
“How come Ford is doing so much better than big Gummint Motors?”
Because Ford was in a better place than GM to begin with, because they’d started making transitions to the cars they made and their production processes years ago?
Or, y’know, evil inefficient government must have turned the vibrant, growing, creative GM into a soulless husk. Or something,
No, pointing out that gov’t doesn’t do what you think it should.
But Clinton’s FEMA did what I think it should. That Bush’s didn’t is more an indictment of Bush putting clueless cronies in charge than the notion that FEMA can’t do things right.
As for Obama, there was no way to cap the well. The science/tech was not available.
Now, I do agree that he showed too much deference to the private sector in letting BP try to do that, and handle the clean-up, but again, that is an argument against letting the private sector take control, not against government involvement.
No, pointing out that gov’t doesn’t do what you think it should.
And, in turn, BP’s failure to cap the well is an excellent example of private sector not doing what you think it should.
Further, the fact that BP (and its partners in Deep Horizon) cut safety corners in myriad ways is yet further evidence that the private sector doesn’t do what you think it should.
Could you possibly try constructing an argument on this thread that does not rest on a foundation of pure straw?
And it was absolutely the appropriate response. When an incident exposes a previously unknown level of risk, and in the process exposes previously unknown limitations in your ability to mitigate that risk, you put a halt to the activity until you can properly reassess the risks. That’s true in the abstract, and it’s particularly true in the specifics of this case.
I own a number of systems at a major e-com site. Let’s say I have a server in a cluster fail, and when it does, it causes massive customer impact that we simply can’t mitigate in any timely fashion. Worse, the cluster was designed by a team with a reputation for cutting corners, and it quickly becomes obvious that any other server in the cluster could fail the same way–and any one of them failing could cause this massive level of customer impact. I would be on the phone with the VP of our org telling him that we have to disable this system immediately until we can ensure we are not at unacceptable risk simply by continuing to run it.
We are /still/ at unacceptable risk from deepwater drilling. Does anyone really think that we are any better equipped to deal with another similar blowout a mile below the surface?
The point is that during this crisis we gained new information about the scale of the risk posed by deepwater drilling, and–more to the point–learned that the mitigation plans drawn up by the supposed experts were largely complete BS that failed in practice, and that we /cannot/ effectively deal with a crisis like this.
The /only/ responsible thing to do is to stop the risky activity until we are actually capable of effectively dealing with it when it goes wrong.
Yeah, Ford was doing much better than GM before the financial crisis. Which is why the gummint didn’t get involved with Ford! The government only bailed out GM b/c the other option was to let it fail, and that was deemed unpalatable. Ford wasn’t staring into the abyss.
I personally was mildy anti-auto bailout, but if it’s going well, great.
But Rob, how could GM have been doing poorly when GM was in the…private sector? Does not compute.
Jeez, could we just once have a conversation where “government is good at some things” doesn’t draw the response “oh, so you think government is the bestest at everything?”
“How come Ford is doing so much better than Big Gummint Motors?”
I don’t know, goodoleboy. Over what period of time? You bring your facts and I’ll bring mine since Americans are the only folks on Earth who each possess their own individual set of facts — 310 million sets of facts and growing despite the high marginal “fact tax”.
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/38539282/ns/business-autos/
I don’t know. How come Big Gummint Audi, taken over and 100% resurrected by the U.S. taxpayer via the big gummint Marshall Plan after World War II, has gone on to be the private sector success it is?
Here’s private sector efficiency for you, McTexas: the short period of time it took for the BP well to go kablooey after every warning sign was ignored by BP, Transocean, Halliburton, with a little help from the bought-off enablers at MMS.
I think only the American military and maybe al Qaeda are more efficient in the time lapse between mission assessment and the resulting explosion.
“But Rob, how could GM have been doing poorly when GM was in the…private sector? Does not compute.”
Wow, that is dramatically unfair to the argument. I’m relatively sure that most understandings of the private sector are perfectly capable of allowing for the idea that some companies do better than others. In fact I don’t even think I’ve come across a proponent of free market competition that doesn’t have that idea firmly in hand.
“some companies doing better than others” is not the same thing as “a company doing poorly [to the point of failure],” so long as we’re being pedantic. I’m not aware of any business model which requires competitors to go bankrupt if they don’t lead the market.
Wow, that is dramatically unfair to the argument. I’m relatively sure that most understandings of the private sector are perfectly capable of allowing for the idea that some companies do better than others. In fact I don’t even think I’ve come across a proponent of free market competition that doesn’t have that idea firmly in hand.
Wow, Seb, could that be as dramatically unfair as pointing to one example of a government-aided company not recording enormous levels of profit?
My response was in kind, equally unfair to illustrate a point.
Ironically, however, GM is doing much better post-bailout than pre. In other words, the Gummit helped. Big time.
As with TARP, I now wish the auto bailout had not occurred.
Another million or so unemployed auto workers along with whatever number of unemployed parts suppliers would have been fertile ground for the anti-American Tea Party to swell its angry ranks and add to the howling sh*tstorm of stupidity whirling around us with probably armed, pissed-off auto workers angry that the black man in the White House was going to attempt a gummint takeover of their Medicare, Medicaid, unemployment benefits, and pension guarantees.
You can convince stupid anyone of stupid anything in 1932 Germany.
The only thing we’re lacking is the moustache and the funny walk.
Give it time.
“”some companies doing better than others” is not the same thing as “a company doing poorly [to the point of failure],” so long as we’re being pedantic. I’m not aware of any business model which requires competitors to go bankrupt if they don’t lead the market.”
Huh? I’m pretty sure that every understanding of competitive markets that I’ve been exposed to allows for the idea that some competitors will end up bankrupt either through their own incompetence, through their inability to keep up, or some combination of those two.
“Ironically, however, GM is doing much better post-bailout than pre. In other words, the Gummit helped. Big time.”
Anyone can do much better if they shed a huge portion of their debt through bankruptcy. And the major fear of the GM bankruptcy was that debtor in possession financing wouldn’t be available. A proper remedy for that could have easily been that the government provided that financing or the backing for it–which would have been a much less disruptive method. But we’re getting deeply afield in the discussion I suppose.
“Wow, Seb, could that be as dramatically unfair as pointing to one example of a government-aided company not recording enormous levels of profit?
My response was in kind, equally unfair to illustrate a point.”
Sorry I don’t really see what you’re responding to even now where that makes sense, but I guess if that is what you were doing, great.
Late to the party, but I’ll try to catch up.
McK, I disagree that earmarks are inevitably wasted money. I can see an objection to earmarks as a process for distributing funds, but the money itself often goes to useful stuff.
The Robert C Byrd highway / bridge / library / water fountain does carry cars / ford rivers / lend books and dispense drinking water.
I agree that the new 1099 requirement in the HCR is going to be a PITA for a lot of people. Tax enforcement, which is what it is, is generally a PITA, because people do their best to avoid paying.
Everybody wants that free ride.
I’m open to finding other ways of raising revenue, which place less of a burden on productive efforts.
In the meantime, HCR will also expand coverage to a lot of people who don’t currently have it. Which is the Democratic agenda for HCR, as opposed to the Republican agenda, which was to cut cost. The D’s had the votes, so at least for now it looks like we’re trying it their way.
I can’t comment on the banking regs because I can’t find any documentation on what they are or who is imposing them. If you can provide a source, I’ll appreciate it.
To my eye, a moratorium on deep water drilling post-Gulf-spill is nothing more than simple sanity. Yes, there was a financial impact, but the ground reality was that we were drilling deeper than was safe given current technology.
Yes, that sucked, but I’m not sure that can be blamed on an “ineffective government response. The freaking well blew up, and nobody knew how to fix it. Not just the feds, nobody.
Regarding the relative growth in the federal workforce, I suspect that has as much to do with the tanking of the private employment picture as with anything else.
Maybe we could just fire a bunch of government folks to keep the ratio even, but I’m not sure what problem that would actually solve.
My overall point here is not that government is perfect, or even that efficient. It’s that government has grown because *the scope of what government has been required to do has grown*, and that in turn has been driven by the increasing scale and complexity of, basically, modern post-industrial human life.
In the vast majority of cases, we don’t grow our own food, we don’t make our own clothes, we don’t build our own houses, we don’t pump our own water out of our own well. We don’t learn our professions by finding somebody who already does them and following them around for a while.
And we don’t because we can’t. It’s no longer really feasible, and won’t be unless we make lots and lots of other changes to our social organization.
Government is larger in size and scope because the complexity of life is larger.
Conservative calls for “smaller government” utterly fail to address that.
Sorry I don’t really see what you’re responding to even now where that makes sense, but I guess if that is what you were doing, great.
Seb, read GOB’s comment that Ford is doing better than GM, in which he implied that Ford is doing better than GM because GM is no run by the government/influenced by the government.
It was a foolish statement. I responded by showing how deficient the reasoning was by inverting the public/private players.
Anyone can do much better if they shed a huge portion of their debt through bankruptcy. And the major fear of the GM bankruptcy was that debtor in possession financing wouldn’t be available.
Yes, which made GOB’s comment particularly inane.
I could have a decent conversation with you on the best course for the government to aid industry – if needed, and on a limited basis.
But in doing so, I must first move past comments like GOB’s which are of little actual value and are conducive to responses in kind.
Jeez, could we just once have a conversation where “government is good at some things” doesn’t draw the response “oh, so you think government is the bestest at everything?”
No. No, you can’t. Having read and commented on this site for a couple of years now, I have concluded that this is, in fact, impossible.
Every OW thread about tax rates will inevitably (and rapidly) devolve into endless discussions around the question “Who the hell came up with this whole “taxation” thing, anyway? What gives you liberals the right to take MY MONEY?!?”
Similarly, any discussion of the proper role of government will devolve into a debate over the proposition “Government* is incapable of doing anything but pissing your money away for absolutely no reason.” All of it liberally (heh) seasoned with the suggestion that “liberals” just love government for its own sake, or because they love telling people what to do, or something.
That’s what you get. There are lots of interesting topics that get bandied about in interesting ways on OW, but taxes and government are not among them.
*Obvious disclaimer: this is that peculiarly American definition of “government” that excludes the military, the defense industry, and law enforcement.
Also:
Ford’s doing better than Gummint Motors because it’s a better run company. It was before the bailout, and still probably is.
That’s why GM, and not Ford, is “Gummint Motors” in the first place.
Seb, yes, our economy allows for poorly run companies going out of business. In the context in which the auto bailout occurred, we decided to intervene so that GM did not go out of business. We did so because, net/net, we figured the cost of intervening was less than the cost of not intervening.
Lots of folks disagreed with that analysis, and disagree with it still. You win some and you lose some. We’ll see how it turns out.
In the meantime, a lot of folks who would be unemployed still have their jobs. And, we’ll probably get paid back. So, IMVHO, it’s kind of a win.
If you want an interesting discussion of government power I have a post on Obama claiming the right to assassinate citizens without the possibility of any review anywhere.
“now run by…”
If you want an interesting discussion of government power I have a post on Obama claiming the right to assassinate citizens without the possibility of any review anywhere.
I read it, and you’re not going to get any argument from me.
Me: I’m not aware of any business model which requires competitors to go bankrupt if they don’t lead the market.”
Sebastian: I’m pretty sure that every understanding of competitive markets that I’ve been exposed to allows for the idea that some competitors will end up bankrupt
And, going further, “requires” is not the same as “allows for.”
You’re free to move goalposts all afternoon if you’d like, but I’m turning 41 in two months and tire fairly easily.
‘If you want an interesting discussion of government power I have a post on Obama claiming the right to assassinate citizens without the possibility of any review anywhere.’
Does not bigger beget more power? And power corrupts. Not much difference between the politicians and the business moguls, political power for one, money for the other.
Russell, this is fundamental to the usual position of the Right in this country regarding the size and range of power exercised by Washington. For me, personally, ‘big’ has an inherent ‘badness’ about it.
I am not anti-government and I am not anti-tax. I understand that we no longer live in a primitive world and that there are many societal interdependencies that all individuals face. But this does not make the individual disappear. My starting premise is that all freedom, liberty, sovereignty, or whatever word one wants to use, starts with the individual.
I find it practically impossible to think politically in group terms. It just has no meaning to me.
The result is that I would like the federal government to be big enough to govern those things that lower levels of government cannot govern. So my momentum will always be toward decentralization and opposed to consolidation. Functionality, as posited by Bernard Yomtov on another thread, means little to me if the governance has moved to an unnecessary level. To some, functionality is just another word for ‘do what works’ and often will trample on individual rights ‘in the process’ and process is an important aspect of living life, and something that has always been important to Americans.
BTW, is Obama delivering ‘functionality’ in the actions described in Seb’s post where the trampling on individual rights is almost unanimously rejected here?
What amazes me is the willingness of the Left to give greater political power to Washington when witnessing the behaviors, not defined by party, described in the post by Sebastian.
Cool — small government, no taxes, no masturbation, keep assassination, no Sharia Law and now, ladies and gentleman … stoning:
http://www.dailykos.com/storyonly/2010/9/29/906308/-OOPS!-Graysons-opponent-tied-to-Biblical-Stoning-movement
Never mind .. these folks don’t participate in the conversation at OBWI.
They’re too busy running for the highest offices in the land.
Russell, this is fundamental to the usual
positionrhetoric of the Right in this country regarding the size and range of power exercised by Washington.Fixed.
The Right in this country has never shown the slightest inclination to shrink the size or reduce the power of government when they’ve had the opportunity to do so. Certainly not in my lifetime, anyway, and I’ve been around since LBJ.
BTW, is Obama delivering ‘functionality’ in the actions described in Seb’s post where the trampling on individual rights is almost unanimously rejected here?
That’s an easy one: No.
But I must admit that “As government gets bigger it inevitably gets more likely to commit things like torture and assassinations” is an intriguing proposition. Preposterous, but intriguing.
‘Never mind .. these folks don’t participate in the conversation at OBWI.
They’re too busy running for the highest offices in the land.’
I hope that anyone here who gives credence to Countme?’s commentary will go to DailyKos and then listen to Fred Thompson’s interview of Dan Webster and to Anderson Cooper’s news report condemning Grayson’s ad trying to portray Webster as a religious extremist. Webster is well regarded in his district and has a substantial lead on Grayson in polls recently conducted. Grayson, who I understand has financial resources available to him, is getting desperate and is the extremist resorting to lies (again).
Thank you, Countme?, you sent me to Webster’s website to make a contribution.
McK, I’ve spent almost 30 years working for banks, mostly collecting loans from companies that get in trouble. There is no regulation that has been recently imposed limiting banks to advancing only against A/R under 60 days old.
As so many changes that occur in a down cycle, advancing against A/R under 60 days old is called a good underwriting practice. I can give you a lot of examples of managements telling me how their past due A/R is really quite good if I would only give them more money today.They would gladly have paid me Tuesday except I shut them down.
Also part of good underwriting is looking at the individual A/R, dilution, returns and any other factor that can mitigate delinquency. But regulation? No, you and the friends who told you that are telling whiner stories.
Aw shucks, if it weren’t for them Democrats, my bank would give me free money! You know what? Most of those banks died in 2008 (since 1985 about 7,000 banks have vanished)and they won’t be back for a while, so you better get collecting from your deadbeats.
“You’re free to move goalposts all afternoon if you’d like, but I’m turning 41 in two months and tire fairly easily.”
Honestly I have no idea why you insist that I moved goalposts. Whose argument turns on the difference between ‘require’ and ‘allow’ in this context?
Instead of attacking my honesty every single time you write to me, you could just go away. In fact that would be very pleasant.
What amazes me is the willingness of the Left to give greater political power to Washington when witnessing the behaviors, not defined by party, described in the post by Sebastian.
But GOB, the Left does not want to give greater political power to Washington to do those things. There are differences.
Ironically, or not, the Right DOES want to give Washington those particular political powers.
Phil: It would help if you kept it more civil, with less accusations and questions regarding Seb’s honesty.
Please.
I hope that anyone here who gives credence to Countme?’s commentary will go to DailyKos and then listen to Fred Thompson’s interview of Dan Webster and to Anderson Cooper’s news report condemning Grayson’s ad trying to portray Webster as a religious extremist.
What part of that DailyKos post do you think is untruthful? Do you have evidence to disprove anything it says?
Webster is well regarded in his district
Possibly true, utterly irrelevant.
and has a substantial lead on Grayson in polls recently conducted.
Ditto.
As for listening to Fred Thompson’s interview, I’m confident he gave Webster a no-holds-barred grilling, intrepid journalist that he is, but I’ll pass, thanks.
I believe this is true:
‘ the Left does not want to give greater political power to Washington to do those things.’
and this is untrue:
the Right DOES want to give Washington those particular political powers
and neither is relevant because,sooner or later, as more power accrues to the central authority, the abuse will emerge, regardless of professed political views.
This is what I believe.
Honestly I have no idea why you insist that I moved goalposts.
Because you changed the word “require” to “allow,” when they’re two utterly different concepts.
Whose argument turns on the difference between ‘require’ and ‘allow’ in this context?
Beats the hell out of me. You’re the one who decided to run interference for GOB’s inanity.
Instead of attacking my honesty every single time you write to me, you could just go away. In fact that would be very pleasant.
Uh, Eric, can we get a ruling on this, please? Isn’t this a little out of line for a front pager? (AGAIN?!)
You know what? Actually, I’m not going to go through this with this jacktard again, and I’m certainly not going to take it to the kitty and get ignored again, so go ahead and ban me, Eric. Screw Sebastian Holsclaw sideways, and f**k Obsidian Wings both for keeping such a mendacious idiot as a front-pager for so long and for letting him personally attack commenters with impunity while clutching his pearls and falling to the fainting sofa anytime anyone dares to suggest he’s anything but pure.
See y’all in the funny pages.
[A few characters asterisked out so as to pass various filters, but the rest of the tantrum left for posterity, and so we have something to point to that represents a blatant, willful posting rules violation. – Ed (Slart)]
This:
What amazes me is the willingness of the Left to give greater political power to Washington when witnessing the behaviors, not defined by party, described in the post by Sebastian.
and this:
…sooner or later, as more power accrues to the central authority, the abuse will emerge, regardless of professed political views.
seem awfully fuzzy to me. There is power, and there are powers. It’s not as though, say, the health care reform made it any more likely that the president would attempt to claim the power of assassination.
I wouldn’t advocate any increase in the types of powers that are at all related to the circumvention of the criminal process in dealing with accused or suspected wrong-doers. And what that has to do with potential jobs guarantees, government-provided health care, education funding or the like, all of which can be said to expand government or government power, I honestly don’t know. It makes no effing sense to me to connect these things.
So where does that leave us, GOB? Are you vaguely connecting what seem to me to be unconnected things, or are you making some other point that isn’t apparent?
‘So where does that leave us, GOB? Are you vaguely connecting what seem to me to be unconnected things, or are you making some other point that isn’t apparent?’
My theory is that the more the federal government provides job guarantees or actual jobs, health care, education funding and other spending and services for the ‘general welfare’, the greater the number of adherents it will gain and the more those adherents will begin to look the other way when the federal government begins encroaching on human rights.
Bush did it, now Obama proposes moves in that direction. I hear the strong objections coming from everyone commenting on Sebastian’s post, but what happens when those objecting can no longer carry the day?
I don’t like big, because big means power, and power does everything possible to increase itself, whether government, business, or extremely wealthy individuals.
Again, what really puzzles me is that the liberals here seem to understand that when talking about private wealth, but not when talking about political power.
My theory is that the more the federal government provides job guarantees or actual jobs, health care, education funding and other spending and services for the ‘general welfare’, the greater the number of adherents it will gain and the more those adherents will begin to look the other way when the federal government begins encroaching on human rights.
This explains why Scandinavian countries have become such human rights hellholes…
‘This explains why Scandinavian countries have become such human rights hellholes…’
I prefer to cite Venezuela. Very similar to the arguments going on here.
GOB, I’m going to ask again: What part of that DailyKos post do you think is untruthful? Do you have evidence to disprove anything it says?
You suggested that nobody should give “credence” to that post, without saying why. Are you going to back that up, or just let it hang there?
I prefer to cite Venezuela.
Yes, I’m sure you do.
Very similar to the arguments going on here.
How so? What’s the similarity? What makes Venezuela a better comparison than, say, Sweden?
For that matter, who here is making “arguments” that call to mind the situation in Venezuela, and in what way? Has anybody here has cited Hugo Chavez as a model for good governance? Please point me to it, because I missed it.
‘Yes, I’m sure you do.’
This has a certain cryptic quality. My statements will remain that way for you, unless, of course, you can figure what they mean all by yourself.
GOB, logically if you have one counterexample, it should suggest that your thesis is flawed. Saying that you prefer to cite Venezuela defeats the purpose of logical argumentation unless you are ready to explain why Scandinavian health care, job guarantees, etc are not the same as Venzuelan instances of the same.
“WHY ARE YOU HERE?
To make friends and to enlighten.”
Somewhere, Bill Buckley’s ghost is weeping….
‘Somewhere, Bill Buckley’s ghost is weeping….’
Yeah, and I was watching the night he got all he could stand of Gore Vidal.
But he and John Kenneth Galbraith could have a civilized martini together.
Now, of course, we learn that the first thing Hitler imposed was health care for all, which meant lice removal, perhaps a little trip to the country on publicly funded railway transport, and a good shower at the end of the trip, otherwise called Obamacare.
William F. Buckley was in the end a gentleman.
He held some reprehensible views, in my opinion, but I hope to shout that if he rose from the crypt this moment, he would spit the salt his mouth was sewn shut with in the faces of the of the current crop of no-nothing ignoramus vermin the anti-American Republican Party has vomited up for election.
But you never know with zombies.
Sometimes you need to nuke from space and abandon the planet.
Gore Vidal? More current cultural points might be better, but I don’t think it would help you much.
This has a certain cryptic quality. My statements will remain that way for you, unless, of course, you can figure what they mean all by yourself.
So, my questions will remain unanswered. Apparently you don’t feel the need to bring anything to the table besides breezy, evidence-free assertions and innuendo (“Very similar to the arguments going on here.”). Good to know.
William F. Buckley was in the end a gentleman.
IMHO, he was nothing of the sort. This was a man who seriously proposed in the pages of the New York Times that HIV-positive “buggerers” (his word — how deliciously erudite!) be forcibly tattooed on the buttocks by that small, limited, circumscribed government that all liberty-loving people on the Right in this country yearn for.
He was a bigoted thug with a carefully crafted schtick.
ISTR that Trent Lott (yes, I’m aware that he’s a Republican) once earmarked money for a Navy project that the Navy did not want, and asked to have killed.
That’s the kind of thing that I don’t appreciate too much.
In general, my objection to earmarks is that it tends to put money-spending decisions in the hands of individuals with a lot of clout in Congress, so that some states get to build lovely things as the expense of other states.
Why can’t the states fund these things, if they’re needed and wanted?
Uncle Kvetch:
Begin nuking.
Oh, here it is:
Or not. Get the hell off my lawn.
Feel free to write to the kitty expressing contrition, or to just stay away. Anger and contemptuousness are simply not winning any arguments for you, and really never have. If you can’t abide by the rules for commenting, don’t comment. It really is just that simple.
GOB: I don’t like big, because big means power, and power does everything possible to increase itself, whether government, business, or extremely wealthy individuals.
There are major problems with “big”, so we certainly share that concern; however, “power” is not the biggest or most damaging of those problems: issues of SCALE are critical to the growth of government that alarms so many on the ‘Right’ – just as they have enabled the growth of today’s corporations (alarming as they are to those on the ‘Left’), and are sadly resistant to the usual political ‘fixes’. Yet matters of scale have also enabled the destruction of genuinely small businesses (and small communities), the systematic corruption of government at every level, yet there’s been no outcry from the ‘Right’ *except* about size (and, of course, ZOMG!SOSHULZZUM!!!1)
So here’s a question, if you think you have an answer: if “big” is the problem, why is it we only hear about big *government* from the ‘Right’?
GOB: Again, what really puzzles me is that the liberals here seem to understand that when talking about private wealth, but not when talking about political power.
And it puzzles ME mightily that ‘conservatives’ here & elsewhere (all over, really) seem to understand this when talking about the corrosive influence of government, but go suddenly blind to the BIG WEALTH that pays for and staffs the campaigns, pays for the attack ads, writes the legislation, spins the corruption, shifts the blame from private to public and in all other ways makes sure that they get what they pay the politicians for: unfettered access to legislators, to judges, to natural resources, to kick-backs from the public treasuries.
So my next question to you GOB (and I don’t mean to pick on you – anyone with a real answer is welcome to play) is: why do you love feudalism so much that you’re unwilling to recognize how wealth creates power – and owns those who wield that power on their behalf?
oh, come on, Slarti – if you’re gonna land on Phil for getting frustrated w/ Sebastian’s weasel-dance, then at least ask Seb to answer a bloody question straightforwardly. And call HIM on it when he won’t.
Every now & then. Just for practice.
Sebastian’s behavior is not, by any stretch of the imagination, a violation of posting rules. Not as far as I can see.
Outside of posting rules adherence, my inclination to ban folks or even admonish them for what they do or don’t do is pretty low.
That’s the kind of thing that I don’t appreciate too much.
The operative word in my comment being “often”.
Lots of earmarks are boondoggles. Boondoggles grow, like mushrooms in poo, wherever large sums of money are to be had.
Public sector, private sector, same/same.
Net/net, I think that this is right on the money:
In general, my objection to earmarks is that it tends to put money-spending decisions in the hands of individuals with a lot of clout in Congress, so that some states get to build lovely things as the expense of other states.
Just to briefly re-emphasize my overall point here:
I’m not claiming that government is perfect, or even always good. I’m not claiming that big government is preferable to small government.
I’m saying big government is *necessary*.
What we need government to do has grown, a lot, since we started this whole experiment, and conservatives calling for “smaller government” almost uniformly fail to explain how *the things that government does now will get done* in their brave new world.
Which strikes me as some combination of naive and sentimentally nostalgic.
Or, their explanation is “the market will do it”, which strikes me as not merely naive but Candidean. Or, perhaps, the voice of Mr. Fox addressing the hens.
In short, I don’t believe them, because they’re not accounting for reality. Whether they’re being naive, or whether they’re selling my @ss down the river, I have no idea, because I’m not a mind-reader.
But long story short, I don’t find them credible.
GoodOleBoy:
Since you’re in the giving vein this election season, I’d send Carl Paladino his payment soon, if I were you.
http://tpmdc.talkingpointsmemo.com/2010/09/paladino-fights-reporter-ill-take-you-out-buddy-video.php?ref=fpa
Have a good weekend!
GOB, you said this:
and this is untrue:
the Right DOES want to give Washington those particular political powers
Can you point to the significant swathes of Republican or Conservative leaders that want to deny the government’s right to torture, indefinitely detain without trial, repeal the Patriot Act, outlaw warrantless wiretapping? etc.
I can think of one: Ron Paul. Full stop.
So how was my claim untrue?
Again, what really puzzles me is that the liberals here seem to understand that when talking about private wealth, but not when talking about political power.
Of course we understand it when talking about political power. That’s why liberals like James Madison southgt to build in checks on political power in the founding documents (and subsequent interp) have done by creating an independent judiciary.
Read James Madison. He was all about the need to diversify power so as to protect against corruption.
Liberals very much want an active and powerful judiciary to check government excesses in terms of civil liberties.
However, Republicans appoint judges like Scalia, Thomas, Roberts and Alito that steadily peel back civil liberties, and increase the scope of the state secrets doctrine/national security state/unitary executive.
The Republican retort is often about the government’s reach in terms of providing services, such as health care and social security.
I see less potential for tyranny there, then in the govt being able to assassinate, torture and indefinitely detain.
I think McK has a point on the A/R business. I see enough to know that lots of people aren’t paying in sixty days right now. This includes even big companies that don’t seem to be any sort of credit risk. They just like to slow- walk and there’s not much you can do.
You can’t afford to lose the business, and trying to put late-payment penalties on the bill gets you an angry customer who probably won’t pay the penalty anyway.
What I suspect is that this rule is a sort of blunderbuss effort to keep banks from over-extending credit lines – throwing good money after bad.
I would like to know more about it, though, since I’d expect there to be some flexibility based on the examiner’s judgment. Maybe not.
Anyway, McK, if you have some old invoices to GE or Microsoft that nobody will lend against get a hold of me.
As I recall it GE was notorious for paying at 60 days. Just as Bernard writes, a small contractor dealing with a large company has no leverage against this.
Of course, it’s incumbent upon the contractor to keep on top of receivables. I have learned this the hard way. I have experience with law firms that take many months to pay.
I think Phil’s leaving is a damn shame, whether he violated the posting rules in doing so or not.
oh, come on, Slarti – if you’re gonna land on Phil for getting frustrated w/ Sebastian’s weasel-dance, then at least ask Seb to answer a bloody question straightforwardly.
Experience has taught me (and a number of other regular commenters here) that what you’re going to get out of Sebastian isn’t a good faith argument, but rather endless (and I do mean endless) diversionary tactics, hair-splitting, goalpost-shifting, and compulsive contrarianism, with some good ol’ fashioned hippie-punching thrown in for good measure. Always politely expressed and well within the bounds of the posting rules, of course.
I know this sounds harsh but I don’t mean it entirely as a slam. My understanding is that Sebastian is a lawyer; based on what I’ve seen here, he’s probably a damn good one.
My solution has been to no longer attempt to engage Sebastian in discussion, and it seems to work fine for all involved. It’s too bad that Phil didn’t want to go that route, but I fully understand where he’s coming from.
UK,
Banning is a last resort, and nothing is permanent.
But Phil really stepped over the line there, and has repeatedly sparred with Seb in ways that violated the rules.
As you say, if it’s impossible to dialogue with someone without violating the rules, cease the dialogue.
“Banning is a last resort, and nothing is permanent.”
As I’ve said before, my own preference has always been for a completely transparent banning policy, with absolutely fixed, objective, and public terms.
I don’t care about numbers, and am fine with changing the specifics, but my preference would be for fixed and defined terms, along the lines of:
1st offense = warning
2nd offense = 3 day ban
3rd offense = 3 week ban
4th offense = 3 month ban
5th offense = 3 year ban
I’m a great believer in justice being as transparent, open, consistent, non-subjective, and as equal for all as possible.
I’m not a fan of people having to make inquiries to have to find out when their ban is over: it should be absolutely clear, in my opinion, or it’s subjective and unjust.
Given that past bans were not given out with fixed terms, previously banned people could apply for amnesty. DaveC, for instance, could ask for amnesty, rather than thinking he’s sneaking in and out and not being noticed and then able to press the point that the management has been inconsistent.
Others?
DaveC, for instance, could ask for amnesty, rather than thinking he’s sneaking in and out and not being noticed
Yeah, but what’d be the fun of that? 🙂
I think Phil’s leaving is a damn shame, whether he violated the posting rules in doing so or not.
Agree.
Experience has taught me (and a number of other regular commenters here) that what you’re going to get out of Sebastian isn’t a good faith argument, but rather endless (and I do mean endless) diversionary tactics, hair-splitting, goalpost-shifting, and compulsive contrarianism, with some good ol’ fashioned hippie-punching thrown in for good measure. Always politely expressed and well within the bounds of the posting rules, of course.
I’ve been trying to avoid that conclusion for some time now, but he’s been a little breitbartian in this thread: baiting Phil the way he did, I reluctantly conclude that this was the desired outcome.
Strikes me as an exceptionally low bar to set for the front-page posters – especially since so very few *need* it that low – and unnecessarily rough on commentors of quality.
btw, I object strenuously to the ever growing common insult of using the word “gummint” to insuate it is the opinion of stupid people. It is cheap and in poor taste.
Examples, please
btw, I object strenuously to the ever growing common insult of using the word “gummint” to insuate it is the opinion of stupid people. It is cheap and in poor taste.
I don’t think that was the intent, Marty. I believe russell is alluding to traditional “yo mama” jokes. Like:
Yo mama so tall she tripped over the Empire State building and bumped her head on the moon.
Yo mama so short she can sit on the edge of dime and swing her feet.
Yo mama so fat her shadow weighs a hundred pounds.
Y’all so white, you blind people when you move.
Gary,
I think there should be some sort of penalty imposed for pearl-clutching, as well as for giving offense.
Maybe also for technical things like turning the whole damn page into bolded italics. That’s kind of annoying to the general community.
If there are Seven Words You Can’t Use In Comments because some mindless computer somewhere will turn the whole site off for some people, well … I guess we have to comply with that. I’m not sure how you’d publish the list, in pursuit of transparency or objectivity, though. Seems like a universal solvent problem.
But when it comes to “ad hominem attacks” or “personal insults” or “incivility”, I do not think objectivity is possible.
I have said it before and I’ll say it again: there are 4 people currently commenting here to whom I could possibly offer a “personal” insult, because I have met them in person. For better or worse, everybody else is just text to me. Informative, provocative, amusing, heartwarming, or offensive as the text may be, it’s all I know of the “person”. To disparage, ridicule, or denounce the text in even the mildest way is already as “personal” as I can get. Or as IMpersonal; take your pick.
BTW, if some text-generating entity behind my computer screen is offended by the snark implicit in general references to “the gummint”, all I can say is that I, the text-generating entity typing this comment, also frequently refer to “us libruls”. In using either term, it’s not ME who’s asserting (or complaining!) that any particular shoe fits any particular foot.
–TP
I use “gummint” to insinuate that many smart people talk funny.
I was puzzled for several minutes, Tony P., as to why you were addressing me in discussing the Posting Rules, and correctly pointing out that interpretation of them is necessarily subjective.
Then I realized you were at least partially responding to my comment about ObWi’s Banning Policy.
Although both these things are listed separately on the upper left of every page, and were invented and posted years apart, and are completely distinct, they’re obviously tied together, and since you’re the second person to respond today to my having asserted the virtues of having an objectively clear banning policy by noting that we have a subjectively interpretable set of posting rules, it’s clear that it’s perfectly easy to conflate one with the other, but they still remain, in fact, two entirely separate policies and posts.
(The Banning Policy, in fact, wasn’t posted until January 26, 2005, over a year after December 1st, 2003’s Posting Rules.)
These Posting Rules require subjective judgment:
However, having set terms of length for bans, or not, is simply a matter of deciding to do so, or not.
But if no one else cares, I certainly have no intention of agitating about the issue of clarity and consistency in the banning policy.
I object strenuously to the ever growing common insult of using the word “gummint” to insuate it is the opinion of stupid people.
Not only is it in the spirit of ‘Yo Mama’ jokes, but it also happens to be an accepted way to type the word ‘government’ as pronounced by Saint Reagan – and so rather appropriate to the post. Listen to a Reagan campaign speech, Marty – that’s how he said it (and he said it a LOT) I first read ‘gubmmit’ in a history book.
I don’t think it has a thing to do with stupid people. I think Reagan was foolish, but he certainly wasn’t stupid.
If we’re voting, I vote for penalties for use of extraordinarily threadbare cliche, viz. “pearl-clutching”.
Seriously: if we’re penalizing behaviors you don’t like, ObWi would dry up for lack of commentors. So we stick with penalizing overtly offensive behaviors: literally, those behaviors that are attacks on other people.
If (yet unspecified) pearl-clutching offends you so much, there are other blogs to go to where you can blow your stack at any and all slights, real or imaginary. ObWi isn’t one of those blogs, and will not be one of those blogs and still have me participating.
Ironic, this pearl-clutching about the pearl-clutching.
I don’t speak for any of the front-pagers; just for me. Just to be clear about that.
Please, cut this out. This blog is, believe it or not, highly ineffective as a tool for analyzing and rectifying character flaws in other people, and all of the style point-making is unbearably tedious to some of us, not to mention being a distraction to the discussion at hand. Some people are actually interested in the discussion of the topic, as opposed to the discussion of how the discussion of the topic is going.
You want to beat up on Sebastian, there’s always hocb. Knock yourself out.
I disagree that earmarks are inevitably wasted money. I can see an objection to earmarks as a process for distributing funds, but the money itself often goes to useful stuff.
Fair point. There are people and blogs who track gov’t waste, but let’s stipulate that all earmarks go to things that are functional. Let’s further stipulate that all gov’t spending is on functional things: new visitor’s centers, educational guidelines, and on and on. The problem, we are out of freaking money. Out. We are deeply in debt and the time has come to tighten belts. Bigger gov’t is more expensive gov’t. You can’t have one without the other.
why do you love feudalism so much that you’re unwilling to recognize how wealth creates power – and owns those who wield that power on their behalf?
No loaded question here, but it sort of underscores the faultline. Russell’s premise is that because we are such a big country–300 million–we need a big, central government. Chmood’s premise is that the wealthy control the gov’t and instead we need gov’t to control the wealthy. Russell is partly right, we are a large country. Where he is wrong and GOB is right is that large gov’t is very hard to undo and once it gets its hands on something, forcing it to let go is virtually impossible. And, it is damned expensive and getting more so every day.
The Chmood position is partly right and partly wrong. There are special interests, large ones, that work on both ends of the political spectrum. It isn’t just the wealthy, it’s a bunch of others as well. The voters have the final say, and as Russell points out often, some things just kinda suck. Special interest groups are one of those sucky things.
State gov’t, OTOH, is responsive to a much smaller group of people and can tax and spend, or not, as much of people’s money as they are willing to tolerate. Russell’s premise is that we simply have no alternative to bigger and bigger gov’t. We do. We have 50 alternatives. Each of the 50 is free to be as liberal or conservative as they please, as determined by the voters.
There is no endless cornucopia of money to fund new spending and increase the size of gov’t. We are out and it’s time to start paying back what we owe–taxes will have to go up to do that, but the left will never cap spending and reduce debt, so the tax increases will just slow the rate of new debt, postponing the inevitable reckoning which will fall hardest on those least able to absorb the hit. Gov’t must have money to grow. Not the same amount as last year, but more. Every year, forever.
The right is now claiming it will cap spending. From what the polls say, it looks like they’ll get their chance. No breath holding here.
I think Phil’s leaving is a damn shame, whether he violated the posting rules in doing so or not.
I agree. I also agree that Phil and some others personalize their disagreements with Seb and other non-progressives in ways that are inconsistent with the goal of civil discourse that makes this site unusually pleasant. It is vanishingly rare for one progressive here to take another to task for making a bad faith or bigoted argument, i.e. for one to charge another with bad faith. Yet, it is standard practice for some to respond to any non-progressive position as some blend of bad faith, trolling, straw or–my personal favorite–failing to address the substance of the progressive argument (as if calling someone a troll or accusing them of bad faith or throwing up the straw man retort is an on-topic, substantive response). It is also common for many here–Eric, Russell, HSH, Hogan, etc.–to stand up against this practice. Yet, it persists and it only runs in pretty much one direction.
Competing ideologies can and do make for lively debate and discussion. One can seldom debate rationally with an ideologue.
McT, when you approach a conversation with the stated goal of wanting to ‘enlighten‘ the other party, you are claiming implicitly that when the other side disagrees with you and refuses to acknowledge your correctness, there has to be something else going on. Perhaps the asymmetry that you see is because the people you lump together as one homogenous blob in the can of ‘progressives’ don’t have the standing to ‘enlighten’ others, but do have the standing to defend their own point of view. This makes for a much less confrontational back and forth.
To make friends and to enlighten.
LJ, rarely, but apparently on this occasion, I am too subtle. I am here because I enjoy many of the people here, almost all of whom I disagree with. The ‘enlighten’ part was self-parody.
Sure and self parody is probably the best kind of parody of all. But you have to be careful because humor has a certain truth all its own. I’m trying to imagine any of the folks I think you are lumping together as progressives would ever say that. Since you don’t identify them as individuals, I can’t really tell, but the ones who I am thinking of, I really can’t imagine them going with that. But I can think of any number of times this sort of point has been made when we talk about constitutional interpretation and it has not been made by those folks.
Again, sorry with the blog-by psycho-analysis, and I hasten to add that I appreciate you participating here, and am sure that I would not have the stamina to do so were the tables turned.
Again, sorry with the blog-by psycho-analysis
No problem. Like I said, it is unusual for me to be too subtle. I tend the other direction.
and I hasten to add that I appreciate you participating here, and am sure that I would not have the stamina to do so were the tables turned.
Thanks. I came here to engage. I’ve made friends here, friends I hope to meet in person someday. And learned a lot. My friends all think I’m a liberal now. I am not kidding. My wife too.
The problem, we are out of freaking money. Out. We are deeply in debt and the time has come to tighten belts. Bigger gov’t is more expensive gov’t. You can’t have one without the other.
I don’t disagree, obviously, but we also need more revenue. Americans are paying a lower effective rate of taxation than at any time since the Truman administration.
That is not realistic.
Also not realistic: spending as much as the rest of the world, combined, on the military.
Talk about growth in spending!
That is where most of the savings would come from. And it is not “the left” that refuses to cap that spending.
Non-military discretionary spending is a very, very small part of the budget.
The right is now claiming it will cap spending. From what the polls say, it looks like they’ll get their chance. No breath holding here.
But you can’t just “cap spending.” What, are you going to stop paying soldiers? doctors at the VA? providing VA benefits? Social Security? Medicare? SChip? Federal employee salaries?
What the GOP has refused to do is actully name one ACTUAL spending cut.
“Cap” and “Freeze” are great buzzwords, but they mean absolutely nothing in the real world since you can’t actually cap everything – nor would the GOP agree to cap the Pentagon’s budget, or war spending, or foreign aid to Israel, or,etc.
I also agree that Phil and some others personalize their disagreements with Seb and other non-progressives in ways that are inconsistent with the goal of civil discourse that makes this site unusually pleasant.
You are definitely right about this. I’ll try to be more vigilant.
Also, what LJ said about stamina. You got a hard head man 😉
But you can’t just “cap spending.” What, are you going to stop paying soldiers? doctors at the VA? providing VA benefits? Social Security? Medicare? SChip? Federal employee salaries?
Yes, Eric, you can cap spending. You can spend next year what you spent this year. You can do that two or three years running, and you will have surplus revenues that will allow for debt reduction. I’ve said many times, cap spending and then raise taxes on the 250K and above crowd for debt reduction only. It will not be pleasant, but something has to be done. A pissant tax hike isn’t going to do diddly. A big tax hike has more downside than up.
On defense spending–end the wars or, at a minimum, explain what the hell we are trying to accomplish. Demand that the Republicans define “victory” in Afghanistan. Good luck on getting that answer.
As for the rest of defense spending, when are you going to do your opum magnus on threat analysis and force restructuring? It’s one thing to cut spending, it’s another to do so in a way that leaves the country able to respond when the occasion arises, as it inevitably will.
What the GOP has refused to do is actully name one ACTUAL spending cut.
Yeah, there’s a shocker. I am a generic conservative, not a Republican. Last week, in a forlorn gesture, I gave Bill White a grand.
You got a hard head man
Thick, too. And old. And gray.
As for the rest of defense spending, when are you going to do your opum magnus on threat analysis and force restructuring? It’s one thing to cut spending, it’s another to do so in a way that leaves the country able to respond when the occasion arises, as it inevitably will.
I know. It looms. But, interestingly, this is why a cap in other areas is problematic as well: the “freeze” or “cap” has to actually be more targeted than that in order to protect the nation’s vital interests that aren’t defense.
Same phenomenon explains why blunt instrument is not suitable.
Slarti: “baiting Phil the way he did.” Examples, please.
Will do. Give me a day or 2, though: allergy season has finally landed!
You can spend next year what you spent this year.
That’s mathematically true. In practical terms, it means that over time you buy less of everything whose price has gone up, which is pretty much everything. (If they freeze my salary this year but raise my share of the health insurance premium, they haven’t really “frozen” my salary; they’ve cut it.) So then the question is, of what are you going to buy less?
Oh. Good; I’d thought you’d forgotten.
I mean: good that you haven’t forgotten, not good that allergy season is here.
Claritin is what we give our youngest, on days where she’s having trouble.
So then the question is, of what are you going to buy less?
Generally, less of everything over time, in the aggregate. We don’t have the money to do more every year. In McKinney’s Perfect World, we might eliminate some programs and juice Medicaire, or some parts of it. Or bump SS for some folks at the lower end. Do means testing and other things to mitigate the impact and, over time, as debt is reduced and debt service becomes less and less a part of the budget, there is modest room for increases. But, in that same Perfect World, the permanent trend would be toward limiting entitlements, not expanding them.