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10 Dec 02:32

Your Monday Morning Dose of Doom & Gloom

by Stephen Green

I fell behind on Friday and didn’t have a chance to go over the jobs report, but Jim Pethokoukis did. Unfortunately, underneath the headline numbers (204,000 new jobs, 7.0%) lies a lot of suck:

1. There are still 1.1 million fewer employed Americans today than right before the recession started, despite a potential labor force that’s 14 million larger. And there are 3.6 million fewer full-time workers than back in 2007.

2. The employment rate, the share of Americans with a job, is 58.6% — exactly where it was in November 2009.

3. If the labor force participation rate were where it was a year ago, the jobless rate would be 7.9%, not 7% (and 11.3% if the LFPR were at prerecession levels, though closer to 9% if demographics-adjusted).

4. More than 4 million Americans remain out of work for 27 weeks or longer.

5. Overall, according to the Hamilton Project Jobs Gap calculator, it will take another five years to return to 2007 employment levels even at the improved job creation pace of the past four months.

We do still have an employment crisis in this country. If it really is getting better, then I’m as relieved as anyone. But I get the feeling 2014 is going to be a another rocky year.

10 Dec 02:24

Zone Defense

by Stephen Green

ADZ

As East Asia tensions increase to perhaps the highest since the 1953 Korean War armistice, it’s good to know Joe Biden is on the case.

10 Dec 02:22

You Got My Brother But You Didn’t Get Me

by Richard Fernandez

Seymour Hersh’s expose in the London Review of Books, which the Washington Post allegedly refused to publish accuses Barack Obama of lying about the Syrian chemical weapons attack which nearly triggered a US attack on Assad.  Hersh makes two key assertions:

First, Obama retroactively cooked up the narrative that the Assad regime was responsible for the infamous sarin attack on civilians in Eastern Ghouta. Second, that the rebel al-Nusra Front, a jihadi faction of the rebel alliance, might plausibly have been the real culprits.

Obama altered the sequence of what he knew and when he knew it, making it appear as if he was following an unfolding atrocity instead of reconstructing it from hindsight, in order to add to the drama. More importantly, he minimized the possibility of that al-Nusra and the other Jihadi factions might have been the actual perpetrators in this case because, Hersh strongly suggests, he was eager to frame Assad.

A former senior intelligence official told me that the Obama administration had altered the available information – in terms of its timing and sequence – to enable the president and his advisers to make intelligence retrieved days after the attack look as if it had been picked up and analysed in real time, as the attack was happening. The distortion, he said, reminded him of the 1964 Gulf of Tonkin incident, when the Johnson administration reversed the sequence of National Security Agency intercepts to justify one of the early bombings of North Vietnam. The same official said there was immense frustration inside the military and intelligence bureaucracy: ‘The guys are throwing their hands in the air and saying, “How can we help this guy” – Obama – “when he and his cronies in the White House make up the intelligence as they go along?”’

Hersh might of course be entirely off-base, his sources misinformed; or perhaps the veteran journalist is making up his expose out of whole cloth. But that is what the news cycle of the next few days will focus on: the question of whether the president lied to the world — to the point of using military force on false pretenses — in order to advance a political agenda.

If the past is any guide, Hersh’s accusations will be overtaken by whatever new scandal is waiting in the wings. The president seems to have an endless supply of them. It will join the long list of unsolved mysteries, including but not limited to the puzzle of Benghazi, the IRS crackdown on conservative political organizations, the wiretapping of an entire AP press bureau; the inexplicable billion dollar Obamacare website that still doesn’t work; the question of whether his deal with Iran is just a setup and much, much more.

But while it lasts the Hersh expose is interesting. The most striking thing is what it says about the presidential decision making process.  Obama apparently begins with a narrative for which facts are found a posteriori. The narrative then turns into a runaway freight train that drags all along with it.

On 30 August it invited a select group of Washington journalists (at least one often critical reporter, Jonathan Landay, the national security correspondent for McClatchy Newspapers, was not invited), and handed them a document carefully labelled as a ‘government assessment’, rather than as an assessment by the intelligence community. The document laid out what was essentially a political argument to bolster the administration’s case against the Assad government.

In the case of Syria insiders began to worry about where this was going. One overt worrier was the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs. “There is evidence that during the summer some members of the Joint Chiefs of Staff were troubled by the prospect of a ground invasion of Syria as well as by Obama’s professed desire to give rebel factions non-lethal support. In July, General Martin Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs, provided a gloomy assessment, telling the Senate Armed Services Committee in public testimony that ‘thousands of special operations forces and other ground forces’ would be needed to seize Syria’s widely dispersed chemical warfare arsenal, along with ‘hundreds of aircraft, ships, submarines and other enablers’.”

Those worries only slowed but did not stop the train. The refusal of the British parliament provided another speed bump but the juggernaut had still not stopped.  Then something happened, whose character puzzles Hersh so much that it is the key riff in his piece; something that changed Obama’s calculus over the entire Syrian sarin incident. Hersh writes that after being so eager to attack Obama then changed direction so swiftly the evolution seemed to come almost from nowhere:

The administration’s distortion of the facts surrounding the sarin attack raises an unavoidable question: do we have the whole story of Obama’s willingness to walk away from his ‘red line’ threat to bomb Syria? He had claimed to have an iron-clad case but suddenly agreed to take the issue to Congress, and later to accept Assad’s offer to relinquish his chemical weapons. It appears possible that at some point he was directly confronted with contradictory information: evidence strong enough to persuade him to cancel his attack plan, and take the criticism sure to come from Republicans

Was Obama deflected from his attack on Assad by the refusal of the UK to go along? Or was there something else?

We now know that Obama, even as he beat the drum of war against Assad, was secretly negotiating with the Iranians on a deal to roll back the sanctions. He was talking to Assad’s patrons even as he was presenting his war talking points to journalists against the Syrians. “Israel found out about the existence of secret talks between the United States and Iran months before they were officially informed of the negotiations by the U.S. government, a senior Israeli official told Haaretz.”

The back door contact was set up even before Iran’s June presidential election, the two reports said. Deputy Secretary of State William Burns led the talks on the American side and the first meeting was held in March, while Mahmoud Ahmadinejad was still president, according to the Associated Press.

How could he do both at once?

Two possible explanations suggest themselves. Either the hue and cry over the sarin attack was part of some deep strategy to affect his negotiations with Iran or it represented another track that the president was pursuing in parallel  without being aware of the conflict.

That is not entirely impossible. Recently the crown Prince of Bahrain complained that the administration was “schizophrenic”. “In an exclusive interview with The Telegraph, Sheikh Salman bin Hamad al-Khalifa, the Crown Prince of Bahrain, warned that Barack Obama’s administration would lose influence in the region if it persisted with what a ‘transient and reactive’ foreign policy.”

Certainly some elements in Iran regard Obama as so toxic they don’t even want Rouhani in the same room with him. “The funeral service of Nelson Mandela could be a “trap” for Iranian President Hassan Rouhani because he could run into US President Barack Obama, a hardline Iranian daily warned Sunday.”

Hardline newspaper Kayhan warned in an editorial that if Rouhani attends it could bring him face to face with Obama, “head of the Great Satan government”.

“Some domestic and foreign media outlets are using the funeral ceremony as a pretext to push Rouhani towards a meeting with the head of the Great Satan government,” Kayhan said.

If so, the surprising about face that so puzzles Seymour Hersh may simply another Obama screwup. In that scenario, he drew a Red Line in a moment of absentmindedness, got carried away into thinking he might gain politically by attacking Assad, nearly got started on it but remembered he was negotiating with Iran, and when shocked back into wakefulness by the revolt of the British parliament decided to become best buddies with Rouhani.

All in a day’s work for the president who designed Obamacare.  And now he’s got a “deal” with Iran and getting ready to destroy some chemical weapons.

The supreme irony in all this however, is that in recompense for his deal with Iran he gets destroy or at least announce the destruction of Assad’s chemical arsenal when it may turn out that al-Nusra was guilty all along. “But what difference, at this point, does it make?”


Did you know that you can purchase some of these books and pamphlets by Richard Fernandez and share them with you friends? They will receive a link in their email and it will automatically give them access to a Kindle reader on their smartphone, computer or even as a web-readable document.

The War of the Words for $3.99, Understanding the crisis of the early 21st century in terms of information corruption in the financial, security and political spheres

Rebranding Christianity for $3.99, or why the truth shall make you free

The Three Conjectures at Amazon Kindle for $1.99, reflections on terrorism and the nuclear age

Storming the Castle at Amazon Kindle for $3.99, why government should get small

No Way In at Amazon Kindle $8.95, print $9.99. Fiction. A flight into peril, flashbacks to underground action.

Storm Over the South China Sea $0.99, how China is restarting history in the Pacific

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10 Dec 02:20

Required Reading

by Stephen Green

Dr. Milton Wolf…

Dang, I was trying to pick an juicy excerpt for you, but it’s all good. Go read the whole thing right now.

10 Dec 02:16

Who’s in Charge Here?

by Stephen Green

Barack Obama

Remember when Professor Wiggleroom could at least claim a sort-of non-partisan and cool competence? Good times:

CNN political analyst David Gergen gave a scathing review of White House operations Sunday, saying recent reports about the president’s lack of interest in the Obamacare rollout borders on malfeasance.

The conclusion drawn about Obama’s signature health care plan stems from a Government Accountability Institute report released last week that said the president met privately with Department of Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius on only one occasion prior to implementation of the program.

“I don’t think this is simply sloppiness on the part of the White House,” Gergen said. “What seems to me is there’s a case of near malfeasance here.”

Near?

10 Dec 02:13

Bottom Story of the Day: ObamaCare Costs More

by Stephen Green

PREMIUM

Leave it to the New York Times to take a story ObamaCare opponents have been reporting for four years, and call it “news.”

09 Dec 01:24

WHAT THEY TELL YOU: Top prosecutor faces ethics case over racial remarks that derailed murder trial…

by Glenn Reynolds

WHAT THEY TELL YOU: Top prosecutor faces ethics case over racial remarks that derailed murder trial.

The top prosecutor in a southern Illinois county is facing a legal ethics case because of racial remarks he made that derailed a murder trial.

Williamson County State’s Attorney Charles Garnati violated four legal ethics rules and “tends to defeat the administration of justice or to bring the courts or legal profession into disrepute,” contends the the Illinois Attorney Registration and Disciplinary Commission in a Nov. 6 complaint (PDF) that was made public on Wednesday. The defendant, who is black, was tried before an all-white jury in July 2011 and sentenced to 85 years before his conviction was reversed on appeal, reports the Chicago Tribune.

What they don’t tell you: Prosecutor Garnati is a Democrat.

09 Dec 01:23

They are coming for your retirement and college savings

by noreply@blogger.com (brian wang)
USA Today has an article calling the mass affluent the new rich. This relabeling seems to be spinning it so that this group is a suitable target for redistribution (ie higher taxes). The mass affluent generally do not consider themselves to be rich and have just executed the lifeplan that all financial people tell people to follow.

They tell people
- get a good education
- get a good job
- save your money for retirement and college for your kids

UPDATE - I updated the title from "Mass Affluent are political and economic target" to "They are coming for your retirement and college savings". In Google+, someone accused me of being a troll for the Koch's, so in for a penny then in for a pound. I would disclose that I am in what is described as the mass affluent class. I knew when Bush 2, congress and Obama was running up the big deficits where the taxes and money would be coming to pay it. It was immediately obvious that those who are already paying taxes would pay more taxes. The only other alternative would be to have massive spending cuts at least back to Clinton level (and presidents prior for decadesChart below from the Congressional Budget office) spending.

Fed government spending at 20% of GDP was what was done for decades prior to 2000. Reducing by 6% GDP is possible. I think massive defense spending cuts can be done without harming long term US interests. The active enemies of the US are weak and the US will not fight the bigger militaries (Russia and China). The US still has nuclear weapons. Retirement age can be increased 3-4 months per year and other developed nations spend half the US level as a percentage of GDP on healthcare.

About 20% get to some degree of success. Although even if they save 1 million

Fully 20% of U.S. adults become rich for parts of their lives, wielding outsize influence on America's economy and politics. Made up largely of older professionals, working married couples and more educated singles. The "new rich" are those with household income of $250,000 or more at some point during their working lives. That puts them, if sometimes temporarily, in the top 2% of earners.

Even outside periods of unusual wealth, members of this group generally hover in the $100,000-plus income range, keeping them in the top 20% of earners.

In a country where poverty is at a record high, today's new rich are notable for their sense of economic fragility. They're reached the top 2%, only to fall below it, in many cases. That makes them much more fiscally conservative than other Americans, polling suggests, and less likely to support public programs, such as food stamps or early public education, to help the disadvantaged.

The AARP (American Association of Retired Persons) has a retirement calculator. Entering in 1.06 million in savings at retirement means that even with social security for a husband and wife they drop to just under $100,000 per year in retirement income. The $1 million savings level is what many are targeting.


Obama signals more efforts to redistribute out of the mass affluent

Last week, President Obama asserted that growing inequality is "the defining challenge of our time," signaling that it will be a major theme for Democrats in next year's elections.

New research suggests that affluent Americans are more numerous than government data depict, encompassing 21% of working-age adults for at least a year by the time they turn 60. That proportion has more than doubled since 1979.


Read more »
09 Dec 01:23

LAW ENFORCEMENT: Kansas City Police Allegedly Threatened to Shoot Homeowner’s Dogs if He Refused …

by Glenn Reynolds

LAW ENFORCEMENT: Kansas City Police Allegedly Threatened to Shoot Homeowner’s Dogs if He Refused to Let them Search his House Without a Warrant. Being whipped naked through the streets, followed by a few hours in the stocks, seems an appropriate punishment for such behavior. I mean, as long as people are talking about bringing back corporal punishment. Humiliation seems a key part of successful punishment for the abuse of power — those who abuse the power with which they are entrusted come to see it as their own power, not power that is delegated, and supposed to be used fairly. Public humiliation, or even the fairly remote prospect of public humiliation, might change that.

Alternatively, we could fire the public-employee-union police and replace them with privatized police who would not enjoy qualified immunity.

09 Dec 01:21

ADDING TO THE JENNY MCCARTHY BODY COUNT: Measles Cases Triple in U.S., Vaccine Refusal Here and Els…

by Glenn Reynolds
09 Dec 01:18

WHEN REAL LIFE IS BEYOND PARODY: Man Doesn’t Know How Parents Ever Going To Pay Off Massive Stude…

by Glenn Reynolds

WHEN REAL LIFE IS BEYOND PARODY: Man Doesn’t Know How Parents Ever Going To Pay Off Massive Student Loan Debt. I mean, this just reads like a news story. “Recent Wesleyan University graduate Zach Wallace confided to reporters Thursday that he has no clue how his parents are supposed to earn enough money to settle his $40,000 in student loan debt. ‘My God, they’ll be lucky if they’re able to pay this off while they’re still in their 70s,’ said the 23-year-old film studies major and unpaid intern, noting the minimum monthly payments his father and mother will need to make just to keep their heads above water.”

09 Dec 01:16

Iran’s Nuclear Weapons Program Speeds Forward

by John Hinderaker
(John Hinderaker)

Reuters reports that Iran is proceeding with tests of more advanced, more efficient nuclear centrifuges:

Iran is moving ahead with testing [of] more efficient uranium enrichment technology, a spokesman for its atomic energy agency said on Saturday, in news that may concern world powers who last month agreed a deal to curb Tehran’s atomic activities.

As we have argued repeatedly, the claim that the Geneva agreement significantly “curbs” Iran’s nuclear program is a fantasy.

Spokesman Behrouz Kamalvandi was quoted by state news agency IRNA as saying that initial testing on a new generation of more sophisticated centrifuges had been completed, underlining Iran’s determination to keep refining uranium in what it says is work to make fuel for a planned network of nuclear power plants.

Although the development does not appear to contravene the interim agreement struck between world powers and Iran last month…

That is correct, it doesn’t.

…it may concern the West nonetheless, as the material can also provide the fissile core of a nuclear bomb if enriched to a high degree. …

Iran’s development of a new generation of centrifuges – machines that spin at supersonic speed to increase the ratio of the fissile isotope – could enable it to refine uranium much faster.

Which will shorten the already-brief time Iran will require to produce nuclear weapons. John Kerry didn’t bargain for any limitation on Iran’s ability to advance its centrifuge technology.

In the Geneva agreement, the West gave up its bargaining chip, the stringent sanctions that have dragged down Iran’s economy and made the ruling mullahs unpopular with many Iranians. John Kerry and others agreed to relax those sanctions, in exchange for concessions by Iran that were virtually meaningless, as we have seen repeatedly since the agreement was announced. The agreement, even assuming it is followed by Iran for the next six months, will have little impact on Iran’s accelerating nuclear weapons program. The agreement seems to have been intended mainly for cosmetic purposes, to create the false impression among Western electorates that the U.S. and European governments are doing something about the Iranian nuclear threat.

09 Dec 01:15

News You Can Use

by Stephen Green

BADBOYS

You know cops aren’t supposed to do that, right?

09 Dec 01:13

Not Always What It Seems

by Richard Fernandez

JBS Haldane [corrected] once said “not only is the universe stranger than we imagine, it is stranger than we can imagine.” History is full of surprises.

The Washington Post reports that the FBI has had the ability to secretly activate a computer’s camera “without triggering the light that lets users know it is recording” for years now, according to Gizmodo. The Post says:

The most powerful FBI surveillance software can covertly download files, photographs and stored e-mails, or even gather real-time images by activating cameras connected to computers, say court documents and people familiar with this technology.

But don’t worry. These techniques were only used “‘mainly’ used in terrorism cases or the ‘most serious’ of criminal investigations.” If you’re not any of these you have nothing to hide.  Back in 2006 the Register reported that Google was developing software to play the same game with your laptop microphone. “Technology Review said Google talked about this software in Europe last June, and that it breaks sound into a five-second snippets to pick out audio from a TV, reducing the snippet to a digital ‘fingerprint’, which it matches on an internet server.”

But there’s more in the “now it can be told” department. The “stealth probe” later identified as the RQ-170 which came to public prominence when one crashed, or was brought down over Iran is now discussable. David Axe writes its successor — something called the RQ-180 — has replaced it.  The old RQ-170 it turns out, has been flying missions against China and North Korea for over 10 years.

According to reporters Bill Sweetman and Amy Butler, the new RQ-180, built by Northrop Grumman, is a bigger, longer-ranged and stealthier successor to the Lockheed Martin-made RQ-170, which apparently entered service just in time for the 2003 invasion of Iraq. The RQ-170 was famously outed in December 2009 after being photographed, years earlier, by a journalist at an airfield in southern Afghanistan.

The flying-wing RQ-170, known by its nickname “Sentinel,” spied on Osama Bin Laden’s compound during the May 2011 raid by Navy SEALs that killed the terrorist leader. In December 2011 a Sentinel crashed on the Iran-Afghanistan border and was seized by Iranian officials for display and study.

The true state of the world is often buried under layers of disinformation. Remember the 10 foot tall Soviets who have now been replaced by the 10 foot tall Russians? Published reports allege that the Russian aircraft carrier Admiral Kuznetsov is so decrepit that the Sixth Fleet actually feared she might come to grief.

The Russian Black Sea Fleet is based at Ukrainian ports along the Black Sea coast with the largest concentration of ships at Sevastopol. But this is a disadvantageous position, as the ports are vulnerable to political turmoil in Ukraine—the lease on Sevastopol expires in 2017, but it’s renewable.

Likewise, treaties dating to the 1930s regarding transit rights from the Black Sea through the Turkish-controlled Bosporus Straits are also a bit stifling. But the treaties limit tonnage, which is less of a concern for the kinds of modern, light and unarmored warships used today.

Otherwise, there’s the port of Tartus in Syria. But the Russian pier there has been variously described as little more than a minimally-manned and broken-down refueling spot incapable of supporting larger ships like Admiral Kuznetsov. But the port does have subjective and symbolic importance to the Kremlin.

A Taiwanese report, quoted mainland sources says the Liaoning’s first cruise showed it had inherited many of the defects of the Soviet systems. Focus Taiwan writes:

But it will be some time before the Liaoning is combat-ready due to five major weaknesses, the official newspaper of the Communist Youth League of China said, listing them in order.

First, the Liaoning relies on Russian technology that limits the ship’s range and usefulness in open sea.

Secondly, the carrier cannot match the capabilities of U.S. aircraft carriers, which can launch unmanned fighters with a range of up to 200 nautical miles.

The electronics and weapons systems of the Liaoning and its J-15 fighter jets are far inferior to American carriers and their F/A-18 E/F Super Hornets, and the U.S. carriers also boast E-2 Hawkeye early warning aircraft with a flying altitude and range that outclasses the Liaoning’s Kamov KA-31 helicopter.

Lastly, the paper said that China does not yet have a large-size battle group centered around the Liaoning, and the ability of its warships to take part in coordinated fighting is not yet mature.

Who knows if its true? Deception and self-deception is the handmaiden of state rivalry. The Russians might well be ten inches tall or a hundred. The Chinese may be stronger or far weaker than we suspect. The FBI may or may not be turning on your webcam now.  Who can say?  The true balance of forces may be unknown even to the official intelligence agencies themselves. Winston Churchill once wrote, “In wartime, truth is so precious that she should always be attended by a bodyguard of lies.”

Of course the world is not at war, but in a sense it always is, though at a level of low intensity.

Just recently the Associated Press reported that “the California health exchange says it’s been giving the names of tens of thousands of consumers to insurance agents without their permission or knowledge in an effort to hit deadlines for coverage.”

“You can’t do this,” Blatt, a technology consultant in Ventura County, told the newspaper. “For a government agency to release this information to an outside person is a major issue.” … Lee, the exchange chief … said. “But I can see a lot of people will be comforted and relieved at getting the help they need to navigate a confusing process.”

So many things are being done for your own good that one should either be grateful or very afraid. Maybe one should be both. Anyway if you’re innocent and have nothing to hide, here’s the perfect gift this Christmas. Why not try purchase the Eyebloc webcam cover from Amazon for only $6.99.

You may also wish to consider the Sony tie clip microphone, the pickup end of which can be packed in modeling clay while inserted into your laptop input port. They provide a tasteful way of obscuring your likeness and voice from people who aren’t watching anyway.


media


Did you know that you can purchase some of these books and pamphlets by Richard Fernandez and share them with you friends? They will receive a link in their email and it will automatically give them access to a Kindle reader on their smartphone, computer or even as a web-readable document.

The War of the Words for $3.99, Understanding the crisis of the early 21st century in terms of information corruption in the financial, security and political spheres

Rebranding Christianity for $3.99, or why the truth shall make you free

The Three Conjectures at Amazon Kindle for $1.99, reflections on terrorism and the nuclear age

Storming the Castle at Amazon Kindle for $3.99, why government should get small

No Way In at Amazon Kindle $8.95, print $9.99. Fiction. A flight into peril, flashbacks to underground action.

Storm Over the South China Sea $0.99, how China is restarting history in the Pacific

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23 Nov 02:44

FEEL-GOOD STORY OF THE WEEK: Older hill aides shocked by Obamacare prices. Veteran House Democra…

by Glenn Reynolds

FEEL-GOOD STORY OF THE WEEK: Older hill aides shocked by Obamacare prices.

Veteran House Democratic aides are sick over the insurance prices they’ll pay under Obamacare, and they’re scrambling to find a cure.

“In a shock to the system, the older staff in my office (folks over 59) have now found out their personal health insurance costs (even with the government contribution) have gone up 3-4 times what they were paying before,” Minh Ta, chief of staff to Rep. Gwen Moore (D-Wis.), wrote to fellow Democratic chiefs of staff in an email message obtained by POLITICO. “Simply unacceptable.”

Sauce for the goose.

23 Nov 02:39

Fifty Years On

by Steven Hayward
(Steven Hayward)

Today marks the 50th anniversary of the death of an important person whose reach and legacy has only grown larger with time: C.S. Lewis.  (You thought I was going to say some other name perhaps?)

Abolition copyLots to say about this great man, of course.  I’m teaching his short book The Abolition of Man in one of my courses this semester.  It is perhaps the single best and most artful short critique of the modern modes of moral relativism and nihilism—a book that I sometimes say can be read as a preface to Leo Strauss’s more dense and detailed Natural Right and History.

I still have my first dog-eared copy of Abolition that I read in high school, almost 40 years ago.  (Eeek.)  Among the prescient passages I marked at the time include this extension of Nietzsche:

The last men, far from being heirs of power, will be of all men most subject to the dead hand of the great planners and conditioners and will themselves exercise least power upon the future. . . Man’s conquest of Nature, if the dreams of some scientific planners are realized, means the rule of a few hundreds of men over billions upon billions of men.

And thus, behold the constituency and ruling ethos of the modern Democratic Party.

There’s lots more worth taking in frequently from this great book.  But I’ll just add one more:

A dogmatic belief in objective value is necessary to the very idea of a rule which is not tyranny or an obedience which is not slavery.

Leo Strauss gives the political version of this same thought in his essay “Liberal Education and Responsibility,” where he says “wisdom requires unhesitating loyalty to a decent constitution and even to the cause of constitutionalism.”

One of the most familiar quotations from Lewis for our times is this, from a later essay published in the indispensable collection God in the Dock:

Of all tyrannies, a tyranny sincerely exercised for the good of its victims may be the most oppressive. It would be better to live under robber barons than under omnipotent moral busybodies. The robber baron’s cruelty may sometimes sleep, his cupidity may at some point be satiated; but those who torment us for our own good will torment us without end for they do so with the approval of their own conscience.

Much much more to say about this great man.  Pete Wehner says some of it here.

23 Nov 02:35

Your ObamaCare Fail of the Day

by Stephen Green

And there is no schadenfreude in Mudville today, not with this story from Nicole Hopkins in the WSJ:

My mother is not one to seek attention by complaining, so her recent woeful Facebook post caught my eye: “The poor get poorer.” It diverged from the more customary stream of inspirational quotes, recipes and snapshots from her tiny cottage in Pierce County, Wash.

The post continued: “I just received a notice: ‘In order to comply with the new healthcare law, your current health plan will be discontinued on December 31, 2013.’ Currently my premium is $276 and it is a stretch for me to cover. The new plan . . . are you ready . . . projected new rate $415.20. Now I can’t afford health insurance.”

The unaffordable ObamaCare-compliant plan that her insurer offered in a Sept. 26 letter is not what makes my mother’s story noteworthy.

Since she couldn’t afford the new plan offered by her insurer, she told me she was eager to explore her new choices under the Affordable Care Act. Washington Healthplanfinder is one of the better health-exchange sites, and she was actually able to log on. She entered her personal and financial data. With efficiency uncommon to the ObamaCare process, the site quickly presented her with a health-care option.

That is not a typo: There was just one option—at the very affordable monthly rate of zero. The exchange had determined that my mother was not eligible to choose to pay for a plan, and so she was slated immediately for Medicaid. She couldn’t believe it was true and held off completing the application.

“How has it come to this?” she asked.

Well, when you have maternity and birth control to pay for, those premiums have to go up high enough to cover all the unnecessary fringe. Or, you know, high enough to make you a welfare case. As Glenn is fond of reminding us, They’ll turn us all into beggars ’cause they’re easier to please.

23 Nov 02:29

WISDOM FROM THE DALAI LAMA on farting….

by Glenn Reynolds

WISDOM FROM THE DALAI LAMA on farting.

23 Nov 02:24

Federal agents raid Denver-area medical marijuana shops

by Staff
kenlacrosse

Bastards.

Federal agents from the Drug Enforcement Administration and the Internal Revenue Service, along with Denver police officers, raided Denver-area marijuana shops Thursday, The Denver Post reports. The raids on more than a dozen shops and on two private homes were reportedly the largest such federal action against on marijuana businesses in the state since the legalization of medical marijuana in Colorado three years ago. Colorado voters last year approved the legalization of a small amount of pot…
23 Nov 02:09

Games for the weekend: Sid Meier’s Ace Patrol Pacific Skies

by Geoffrey Goetz

Games for the Weekend is a weekly feature aimed at helping you avoid doing something constructive with your downtime. Each Friday we’ll be recommending a game for Mac, iPhone or iPad that we think is awesome. Here is one cool enough to keep you busy during this weekend.

Sid Meier’s Ace Patrol Pacific SkiesSid Meier’s Ace Patrol Pacific Skies ($4.99 Universal) is a turn based strategy game that takes place during World War II. In it you command a squadron of pilots in an attempt to change the outcome of the war in the Pacific.

You start out the game by choosing sides. You can be a naval or army pilot for either the U.S. or Japan (but not the Air Force). Keep in mind that the Pacific phase of WWII did not actually end until September 2, 1945 and the United States Air Force was not founded until September 18, 1947, some two years later. I point out this fact since throughout the game facts about WWII are part of the game. Once you have selected the nation you will fight for, you move on to selecting your first pilot. Then it is time to take on your first mission.

Sid Meiers Ace Patrol Pacific Skies

Taking turns like chess pieces on a board, the planes that are in the sky have a limited number of moves they can make. These moves are limited based on the type of plane being flown, the capabilities of the pilot, and of course the position of the plane in the sky. No matter how great of a pilot you think you may be, each plane can only go so high, and there is an obvious limit to how low you can go. When it is your turn to move one of your planes, the available moves will be shown by blue arrows on the hexagonal battle field. You will have time to contemplate before committing to each move.

Sid Meiers Ace Patrol Pacific Skies

As you approach the enemy you will see green arrows that will indicate an attack move. It will even show you how much damage you can expect to inflict on the enemy with that move. The amount of damage varies greatly based on the angle of attack. Often times it will take more than one approach to take down an enemy. And that is where you start to learn each plane’s strengths as well appreciate each pilot’s abilities.  Early on with lesser skilled pilots you will find that the dog fights will require several moves to turn and attack again.

Sid Meiers Ace Patrol Pacific Skies

Managing your own squadron of pilots, you can decide which pilots to send out on each different mission. At the completion of each mission, the members of your squadron that flew in the mission can earn equipment upgrades for your planes, and your pilots can learn new aerial maneuvers. You can lose your pilots during a mission, as they can be shot down. As a configurable difficulty option in the game, they will either die or just be injured. If you lose them over your own territory, they will be injured but you will see them again. On the other hand if you lose them over enemy territory they will be taken prisoner. Depending on the difficulty level chosen, you could be lose one of your best pilots for a single battle, until you rescue them or for the rest of the war.

Sid Meiers Ace Patrol Pacific Skies

With four different starting points, there are over 180 different missions to fight in the game in single player mode. However, if you feel up to the challenge of taking on one of your GameCenter friends you can play in two-player mode. In two-player mode, you can elect to play either a networked game or opt to play head to head by passing the device back and forth. The two-player mode will make playing the gem a pleasure for quite a while, but there is plenty of content to keep you busy on your own for a decent amount of time.

While the actual war in the Pacific took years, your mission is to bring it to a swift end this weekend.

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    23 Nov 02:05

    IMAGINING THE POST-ANTIBIOTICS FUTURE. Five years after my great-uncle’s death, penicillin chan…

    by Glenn Reynolds

    IMAGINING THE POST-ANTIBIOTICS FUTURE.

    Five years after my great-uncle’s death, penicillin changed medicine forever. Infections that had been death sentences—from battlefield wounds, industrial accidents, childbirth—suddenly could be cured in a few days. So when I first read the story of his death, it lit up for me what life must have been like before antibiotics started saving us.

    Lately, though, I read it differently. In Joe’s story, I see what life might become if we did not have antibiotics any more. . . . Before antibiotics, five women died out of every 1,000 who gave birth. One out of nine people who got a skin infection died, even from something as simple as a scrape or an insect bite. Three out of ten people who contracted pneumonia died from it. Ear infections caused deafness; sore throats were followed by heart failure. In a post-antibiotic era, would you mess around with power tools? Let your kid climb a tree? Have another child?

    Indeed. We need to move faster on new antibiotics, and especially on phages and other antibiotic alternatives, discussed here.

    23 Nov 02:05

    Congratulations on Your Loss

    by Stephen Green

    US taxpayers will no longer be involuntary owners of GM shares by the end of the year:

    The Treasury Department on Thursday said it planned to sell its remaining 31.1 million shares in the Detroit auto maker by year-end, the final step in winding down the 61% stake it took with taxpayer money at the height of the global financial crisis.

    In the final tally, the deal will have cost taxpayers about $10.4 billion, based on the company’s current $38.12 share price. The U.S. so far has recouped $38.4 billion of the $50 billion initially invested and the coming sales would raise another $1.2 billion at the current share price.

    Such a deal.

    18 Nov 17:52

    “It’s On Me”

    by Richard Fernandez

    The Washington Post’s Sarah Kliff writes that Obamacare’s planned fix “is about to create a big mess”. “It’s just a big mess right now. . . . I don’t know what to tell people,” Kansas Insurance Commissioner Sandy Praeger told The Washington Post.” Apparently it’s about to get worse.

    For insurance regulators and health insurance carriers, though, this supposed glide path is about to create a whole bunch of headaches. They have been expecting, for years now, that these insurance plans would be phased out of the market in 2014 — and have planned accordingly….

    Here’s how Robert Laszewksi, an insurance consultant, put it in a note to clients earlier this morning:

    This means that the insurance companies have 32 days to reprogram their computer systems for policies, rates, and eligibility, send notices to the policyholders via US Mail, send a very complex letter that describes just what the differences are between specific policies and Obamacare compliant plans, ask the consumer for their decision — and give them a reasonable time to make that decision — and then enter those decisions back into their systems without creating massive billing, claim payment, and provider eligibility list mistakes.

    What happens when one sixth of the US Economy goes from Full Ahead for three years to all astern emergency? A Napoleonic era military maxim gives a hint. “Order, counter-order, disorder.”

    Kliff’s essential argument is that the insurance companies, having spent three years scrambling an egg, must now unscramble said egg. They will have to revive contracts they canceled, pursuant to a law which required their cancellation, yet without any legal leg to undo the do. Hence the lawsuits that will arise, the confusion which will ensue, the absolute chaos which will reign can only but be dimly imagined. It will probably be a humdinger, the Chinese Fire Drill to end all Chinese Fire Drills, the Goat Rope Maximus, the Mother of all Snafus.  And that’s only for openers.

    Nor is the return fire coming only from insurance companies. Kliff describes how the Left has declared war on any attempt to withdraw a single inch; to make any concessions which might erode their progressive “gains” in another article.

    I covered the National Association of Insurance Commissioners for about two years really closely. … One thing you quickly learn covering the NAIC is that it has a wing of really progressive, liberal insurance commissioners, about five or six regulators who regularly work together…. It does feel a bit weird to have one of the most liberal regulators be the first out of the gate to oppose Obama. At the same time, it also makes sense: What Kreidler is doing is a full-throated defense of the Affordable Care Act.

    The whole reason insurance policies are getting cancelled right now is because the Affordable Care Act wanted these plans – which have less robust benefit packages – to go out of business. [itals mine]

    That’s why Washington is among a handful of largely Democrat-led states that specifically bar insurers from offering “early renewals”: Plans that start in December 2013 and dodge health law requirements. This includes some really big states, too, like California and New York.

    The president probably knew — though he may once again declare himself to have been misinformed — that the liberal commissioner’s game plan all along was to cancel existing health care plans.  And he went along until public outrage forced him to backtrack. Now he’s caught between an irate public, an irate insurance industry and an irate Left Wing.

    He lied to somebody. Maybe he lied to everybody. Where have we heard this before? In foreign policy. Only a few days ago Haaretz reported that “Israeli officials say U.S. misrepresented the concessions offered to Iran and that the current direction of talks would undermine sanctions while allowing Iran to proceed with nuclear development.” Perhaps Obama had been playing the same game with Saudis; telling them one thing about Syria while telling Iran another.  That would account for why they are so wroth with him that they’re buying nukes from Pakistan. Obama has put himself in the position of a groom who has promised to marry three different brides on the same day and is wondering how to weasel out even now.

    Can it get worse? Yes it can! Think Progress reports there are now four different plans to save Obamacare.

    At least the President will have the consolations of his foreign policy achievements. What laurels may he rest on you may ask? Today the Telegraph reported that Russia is sending a mission to Egypt to try and pry it from Washington. “Russia is launching a new front in its attempt to wrest power in the Middle East away from America, dispatching a high-level delegation to sell arms and influence in Egypt.”

    Up for talks are the “possibility of establishing a Russian naval base in Egypt.” Obama’s achievement may consist in undoing Jimmy Carter’s one legacy, the governor’s pride and joy, the work of many sleepless nights, the single bright spot in Jimmy’s otherwise dismal presidency. Jimmy Carter’s shining glory — gone faster than a donut at a cop convention. If that don’t beat all then what does?

    Obama can make up for it by reaching an agreement with Iran. But recently the president issued a warning to himself not to threaten Teheran.

    Rejecting charges of appeasing Iran, President Barack Obama cautioned Thursday that tightening the economic vise on Tehran could be counterproductive and bluntly warned that going to war will never guarantee that the Islamic republic abandons its suspect nuclear program….

    The notion might seem heretical in Washington, where successive presidents including Obama have professed that “all options are on the table” (including war) to force Iran to abandon what the United States and its partners regard as a covert effort to get the ability to build a nuclear weapon.

    Iran now knows the Obama administration’s limits. Obama cannot even bluff, having pre-emptively forbidden himself from doing so. Of course he can always say, “I lied about not bluffing”. Full Ahead, Full Astern, Full Stop. Full Ahead. Hard a-Port. Hard a-Starboard. Damn the torpedoes! Full impulse power Scotty!! Who knows but something may work?

    Iran is not bound by these limits. Recently Hezbollah chief Hassan Nasrallah threatened war in the region if Washington failed to strike a deal with Teheran.

    The Telegraph attempts to explain somewhat unnecessarily that “the rapprochement between Egypt and Russia, four decades after President Anwar Sadat threw out the Soviet advisers cultivated by his socialist military predecessor, Col Gamal Abdul-Nasser, is part of a crunching shift in the geopolitics of the Middle East.”

    And what caused this crunching geopolitical shift?  The White House isn’t saying. However, the president did say of Obamacare’s shortcomings in his press conference that “it’s on me.” He must be mistaken. It can’t be on him. It is never on him, except metaphorically. He’s not going to pay for it. Somebody else always does.

    Those who are interested can watch the Laurel and Hardy insurance company try to deliver Obamacare.


    Did you know that you can purchase some of these books and pamphlets by Richard Fernandez and share them with you friends? They will receive a link in their email and it will automatically give them access to a Kindle reader on their smartphone, computer or even as a web-readable document.

    The War of the Words for $3.99, Understanding the crisis of the early 21st century in terms of information corruption in the financial, security and political spheres
    Rebranding Christianity for $3.99, or why the truth shall make you free
    The Three Conjectures at Amazon Kindle for $1.99, reflections on terrorism and the nuclear age
    Storming the Castle at Amazon Kindle for $3.99, why government should get small
    No Way In at Amazon Kindle $8.95, print $9.99. Fiction. A flight into peril, flashbacks to underground action.
    Storm Over the South China Sea $0.99, how China is restarting history in the Pacific
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    18 Nov 17:46

    THIS ADMINISTRATION CAN’T RESIST MAKING RACIAL ATTACKS ON ITS CRITICS: Arne Duncan: ‘White suburb…

    by Glenn Reynolds

    THIS ADMINISTRATION CAN’T RESIST MAKING RACIAL ATTACKS ON ITS CRITICS: Arne Duncan: ‘White suburban moms’ upset that Common Core shows their kids aren’t ‘brilliant.’

    To me the interesting thing about the Common Core debate is that the opposition comes from a broad political spectrum, and that any policy that can only be defended by making racial attacks on its critics is probably a policy that can’t really be defended.

    But wait, it gets worse:

    The Common Core was designed to elevate teaching and learning. Supporters say it does that; critics say it doesn’t and that some of the standards, especially for young children, are not developmentally appropriate. Whichever side you fall on regarding the Core’s academic value, there is no question that their implementation in many areas has been miserable — so miserable that American Federation of Teachers President Randi Weingarten, a Core supporter, recently compared it to another particularly troubled rollout:

    You think the Obamacare implementation is bad? The implementation of the Common Core is far worse.

    Now that hurts. It’s almost enough to make you give up on government schools in general. . . . .

    18 Nov 17:44

    HIGHER EDUCATION BUBBLE UPDATE: All of a Sudden Students Have Stopped Paying Their Loans, Again—W…

    by Glenn Reynolds
    18 Nov 17:39

    TAX PROF: The IRS Scandal, Day 193 — Now with Obama-mocking SNL sketches! Video at the link….

    by Glenn Reynolds
    18 Nov 04:53

    The Clattering Train

    by Richard Fernandez
    obama_sinking_quicksand_big_11-16-13-1

    Sinking in quicksand.

     

    The unthinkable is finally happening. A small revolt against President Obama has broken out in Democrat ranks over the Obamacare fiasco. In response, President Obama is “brainstorming” with the insurance companies to find a way out. It’s like Animal House, with the same frenzy but without the humor. “Was it over when the Germans bombed Pearl Harbor? Nothing is over until we decide!”

    He still thinks he “decides.”

    Roger Simon argues that Obama should resign, giving the most old-fashioned of reasons. Shame. “If I were Barack Obama, I would resign as president. Forget all the temporary fixes and limited hangouts, I would be too ashamed of myself for having lied so blatantly to the American people — and on matters of such great significance.”

    But Obama won’t resign, precisely because he lacks the quality of “shame.” But Roger has put his finger on the essential point. Obama is ungoverned by shame, and hence has no self-limiting boundaries. He’s like a runaway train without a driver. Such trains require an external agency to stop them. Obama won’t stop himself, no matter what, no matter how.

    Since Obama will never resign, the Dems may eventually try to persuade him to retire, in the manner of Nixon or Johnson. The political pressures will bear on them until the beams creak and the floor sags. Unthinkable? Bill Clinton has broken ranks already on Obamacare.

    Obama is waist deep in quicksand. The first rule of quicksand is not to struggle; to swim your way out. But Obama won’t. Can’t. The deeper he gets, the harder he thrashes. No shame. No self-control. And therefore this may end in the manner of the Beast of Hollow Mountain.

    After a week spent admitting he broke the healthcare system, he continues to insist that only he can fix it. The dumber he is shown to be, the higher the hand he takes. In a statement, the administration argued that those opposed to the law — a law he intends to nullify himself — intend to “sabotage” ObamaCare.

    “[The bill] rolls back the progress made by allowing insurers to continue to sell new plans that deploy practices such as not offering coverage for people with pre-existing conditions, charging women more than men, and continuing yearly caps on the amount of care that enrollees receive,” the statement said.

    Sabotage! Them’s fighting words. Them’s also Bolshevik words, but never mind that for now. The received wisdom is that the small Dem revolt we are presently witnessing  is caused by the fear of electoral loss. That is only partly true.  It is more than that.

    Charles Krauthammer was correct to say that the stakes are higher than a mere loss of the Senate; that the liberal project itself is now at serious risk.

    At stake, however, is more than the fate of one presidency or of the current Democratic majority in the Senate. At stake is the new, more ambitious, social-democratic brand of American liberalism introduced by Obama, of which Obamacare is both symbol and concrete embodiment.

    But even Krauthammer undershoots. The threat to the liberal project is bigger than Obamacare. The Obamacare fiasco is the mere tip of the iceberg, the harbinger of more … much more. The foreign situation is in freefall, but the biggest bomb is the economy. The most illuminating piece of news is Obama’s proposal to extend unemployment benefits so that the jobless can have a little something over the holidays.

    18 Nov 04:49

    NO, IT’S BECAUSE HE’S A FUCK-UP. YOU’RE NOT HELPING BLACK PEOPLE OUT BY BLURRING THE DISTINCTION. …

    by Glenn Reynolds

    NO, IT’S BECAUSE HE’S A FUCK-UP. YOU’RE NOT HELPING BLACK PEOPLE OUT BY BLURRING THE DISTINCTION. Oprah Winfrey: Americans Disrespect Obama Because He Is Black.

    18 Nov 04:49

    POLITICO: “I don’t know how he f—-ed this up so badly,” said one House Democrat who has been…

    by Glenn Reynolds
    18 Nov 04:48

    MIDEAST: Christians ‘face extinction’ amid sectarian terror, minister warns. “Violence against Chr…

    by Glenn Reynolds

    MIDEAST: Christians ‘face extinction’ amid sectarian terror, minister warns. “Violence against Christian worshippers and other religious minorities by fanatics has become a ‘global crisis’ and is the gravest challenge facing the world this century, Baroness Warsi will say.”