Archive for November, 2008

In the news…

November 30, 2008

Football…

So Plaxico Burress shot himself in the leg, at a nightclub, in a city where guns are supposed to be verboten?Burress should have shot himself in the head; he would have done less damage.  I can’t think of a better poster-person for the NRA, not even Palin herself.

So, TTU beat Texas, which beat Oklahoma, which beat TTU.  Do football games mean anything at all?  Should they?

Which goes to show that games are for statisticians, not for logicians.

Politics…

So the Obamamites will be attending an elite and expensive private school.   Well, hey, hey, Barrack,  one’s principles can only go so far, right?  I mean, principles are one thing, but reality is…real, right?

Fixing the Economy

November 26, 2008

It’s sick, they tell us.  We need an infusion of capital and credit to get back to the good old days of a steadily growing GDP, of booming sales on Thanksgiving Friday and Xmas, of low unemployment, and growth in average income and standard of living.

We need to get back to spending and spending and borowing and spending, to support all the products and services that are being offered.  Consuming is good.  Consuming is patriotic.  We can measure the success of our lives by the quantity of waste we deposit in the land fill, of items bought and income earned.

“Here lies Joe Blow, a Good American Consumer.  Old Joe bought 17 cars in his lifetime, 26 television sets, 237 pairs of shoes, 32 square yards of newsprint, 21 lawn mowers and snow blowers, three houses including one valued at 175,000 1986 dollars, and he raised his family to consume at a rate above the average.  R.I.P. Joe Blow, a Patriotic Consumer.”

Is something wrong here?  Are the most fundamental assumptions of our lives messed up? 

Before we try to “fix” the economy, shouldn’t we be asking what kind of economy we ought to have?    Someone, Socrates or Plato, said that the unexamined life is not worth living.   Don’t we owe it to ourselves and to future generations to examine and test the assumptions underlying our lives and our economy?

Is a consumption-based economy good?  Do we really want to go all out to stimulate a consumption frenzy?  Or–should we chuck it all and get off here and try something totally different?

Remember:  economists don’t tell us what is best or good;  they look at the mechanics of what is, and assuming a set of parameters that are defined as desirable, try to tell us how to get there from here.  They are not concerned with morality or goodness or human worth.  They value things and people based on dollars and productivity and consumption.

New = Old in New Clothes

November 23, 2008

Back when Jimmy Carter was president-elect, the word was put out that Carter was interviewing a huge number of candidates for appointment.    The late Ham Jordan said that “if you see Zbig Brezinsky at National Security and Cy Vance a Secretary of State, then I’d say we have failed [to bring change and new ideas].”  Well, guess what.

Obama is stocking his new administration with all the usual suspects, and throwing political bones to the already high and mighty in the Democratic Party.  Probably the worst example of this will be Hillary Clinton’s appointment as Sec/State.  Her only qualification is her high profile in the party and her connection to Bill Clinton.  Talk about political favors. 

Yes, there will be ethnic diversity in the Obama administration.  But ethnic diversity and quotaism should be a by product and not a goal.

The Big Three Losers

November 23, 2008

It was apparent this week when the CEOs of America’s big three car companies flew on their respective private jets (no plane-pooling there) to beg for government welfare that said CEOs are a big part of the problem.

Certainly any loans or other band-aids should contain a requirement that all executive compensation agreements be cancelled.  No silver or golden parachutes and sell off the limos and the executive condos.

All of these executives ought to be willing to work for a base salary of no more than $100k plus a bonus calculated on the company’s bottom line.

Not that I agree that there should be a big-three aid package. 

Failure is not a bad word.  Businesses come and go.  Those that have survived across generations and become American institutions are not sacrosanct.  Many times, companies and nations deserve to fail.  Clear the decks and let new ideas and greater flexibility come in.  The future does not belong to the unweildy.