Wednesday, February 13, 2013

SOTU

Our modern penchant for turning common phrases into acronyms, abetted by the Internet and the ubiquity of the cell phone, has struck this institution at last. I can only wish it had struck it more lethally.

In case you're wondering what makes this annual trial of Congress's patience "mandatory," here's the only phrase from the Constitution that bears on it:

He shall from time to time give to the Congress Information of the State of the Union, and recommend to their Consideration such Measures as he shall judge necessary and expedient;...

Note that it doesn't say "annually," but rather "from time to time." (Neither does it say "submit bills," another presidential usurpation few persons have deigned to expound on, but rather "recommend to their Consideration.") This is in keeping with the political state of the nation when the Constitution was written:

  • News traveled either on foot or on horseback;
  • The president was the only elected federal official "on duty" continuously throughout the year;
  • Congress was an assembly of men with other trades, most of whom had to travel considerable distances and endure forbidding conditions to reach the District of Columbia;
  • At that time, only the president had anything resembling a working staff capable of gathering information about "the State of the Union" or anything else.

It made sense in those circumstances that Congressmen should look to the president for information. Today it's a laughable conceit, especially given the sizes of Congressmen's staffs and budgets. And so the "annual State of the Union address," which was nowhere specified to be either annual or a public address festooned with the pomp and circumstance of a grand gala, has descended into presidential self-glorification, partisan bloviation, and anesthetic lavage for the public's ears.

I can't bear to listen to SOTU speeches, no matter who gives them. I might have listened to one, long ago...but the memory, if not wholly false, is encrusted with so many garish, bizarre, and disconnected images that I'm probably imagining the whole event. Besides, we never had a president named Alfred E. Newman, did we?

With The Won at the lectern, knowing his proclivities and agenda, there's less point to the SOTU than ever. Barack Hussein Obama is incapable of admitting to error, adjusting his priorities, or telling the truth. And while it would be tempting to wallow in some of the more lurid rumors about his non-political conduct -- if any of them are true, they would certainly help to explain his venomously irrational nature and his hatred toward freedom and capitalism -- the damage he's doing politically has left me incapable of viewing him as anything other than an enemy of the United States: a "Manchurian Candidate," put into his position specifically to engineer America's destruction.

The mystery of Obama's elevation to the presidency will fascinate historians of future centuries...if the havoc he's wrought, and continues to wreak, upon the grandest and most glorious sociopolitical undertaking in the history of Man leaves any historians alive and free to ponder him. Barring impeachment and conviction or a most fortunate accident -- hopefully one that claims Joseph R. Biden's life at the same instant -- we'll have him to "enjoy" for four more years.

Sigh. Sometimes the only recourse is to drink. Pity I gave it up for Lent.

Monday, February 11, 2013

Quis Custodiet Ipsos Custodes Dept.

By way of WRSA comes this remarkable report:

“Didn't know the Marines had to take the bolts out of their rifles for the Inaugural,” an email forwarded to Gun Rights Examiner from a United States Marine Corps source observed. “Wonder if someone can explain why [they] would be marching in the inaugural parade with no bolts in their rifles!”

The email linked to a YouTube video of the 57th Presidential Inaugural Parade, embedded in this column, featuring Bravo Company Marines from the Marine Barracks Washington. Sure enough, the observation in the email is confirmed by watching the video, with screen shots provided in the photo and slide show accompanying this article....

Wondering if this may be an inauguration policy of long standing that transcends administrations, Gun Rights Examiner made a cursory search and found something even more curious. In the 2009 Inaugural Parade, the United States Navy marched with rifles that had not been so disabled (see 1:24 into that video plus the final slide).

There can be only one reason why the Marines in the inaugural parade were compelled to disable their rifles. Considering that the White House is alive with military personnel from the oldest service -- the stewards are Navy and the external guard staff is Marines -- I cannot help but wonder why Obama and his henchmen fear Bravo Company so greatly as to insult their integrity in so blatant a fashion.

But after a moment's sober reconsideration, I have to say that I'm not really surprised.


The great hazard to every tyrant known to history has emanated from those clustered closely around him. How could it be otherwise? To rise high in a tyrant's service, one must demonstrate absolute amorality and complete ruthlessness, which are seldom found apart from overwhelming personal ambition. The armed men he requires for his protection have more often than not been the instrument of his removal. That's more than sufficient to explain why dictators have so often left office "feet first:"

The moral dimension of arranging the assassination of a popular politician didn’t trouble Wriston at all. Living in the public eye had always entailed increased risk. Historically, whenever some troublemaker had roused the rabble to a greater pitch than the Establishment of that time and place could tolerate, it had disposed of him with no compunction and extreme prejudice. There were parts of the world where that was still the inevitable price of rising to power—places where a dismissal from high office was always administered with high-velocity lead. Power seekers in such lands arrived in their palaces with their death warrants already signed and sealed; they merely awaited delivery. [From Shadow Of A Sword]

As aggravating as our men at arms must find it to serve under a commander-in-chief who openly despises America's armed forces, the likelihood of a Marine firing at Obama is smaller than our finest instruments can measure. Thus, Obama's insult to Bravo Company was gratuitous; he was in absolutely no danger from the Marines in his parade. Were he a rational human being and a man of good will, he would have known that...but we're speaking of Barack Hussein Obama here, so that premise lacks credibility.


The larger context surrounding this incident is entirely consistent with it. Tyrants always fear their subjects, no matter how much success they've had at suppressing opposition. Obama and his advisors are desperate to eliminate all possibility of a popular uprising. The administration's most recent initiatives -- incursions on Second Amendment rights; domestic drone flights; destruction of used military brass; massive purchases of weapons and ammunition by nominally non-military federal agencies; compilations of lists of "potential domestic terrorists" heavy with cohorts known to lean to the Right -- one and all suggest that Obama fears an uprising and, if he can't prevent it aborning, is preparing as best he can to defeat it.

Ironically, as such measures are made known to the public and their implications assessed, the probability of such an uprising increases. Indeed, many commentators have already noted the huge surge in weapons and ammunition sales to private citizens. If the likelihood of a popular revolt is increasing, so also is the likelihood that it will succeed.

Perhaps Obama should fear his guards.
But those guards are merely the uniformed segment of a greater threat.
Americans have begun to realize what Obama's covert agenda must be.
And to say the least, they don't like it.

Pray.

Saturday, February 9, 2013

Snow Day

Hey, guess who was completely socked in by the Blizzard of 2013? Yeah, you got it.

A snow day is like a page scissored out of reality. It exists in a universe of its own, divorced from anyone's schedule or timeline. For me it seems to hang weightless, floating above mundane concerns, an interval in which I can do as I please, regardless of what anyone else thinks about it...and I indulge myself to the fullest.

And because I'm feeling rather self-indulgent just now, I'm going to...what's the phrase? Ahh...lay a rather heavy trip on you. One you might regret having taken, Gentle Reader. So gather up your courage if you want to take this ride. I don't plan on being gentle.


I am sixty-one years old. I'm also rather badly afflicted with one thing and another -- mostly maladies characteristic of old age -- but, to my disadvantage through my unquenchable vanity, I've managed to retain the strength I had when I was young and completely hale. I can still bench-press two hundred sixty pounds and military-press two hundred twenty-five, and I'm rather proud of that...too proud, as the sequel will demonstrate, but that's the way I am. So when something like this blizzard falls upon my neighborhood, I don't wait for some hireling to come to clear my driveway; I don my cold-weather togs and attack it myself.

But strength isn't everything. There are other considerations to be respected in addressing an onerous task like clearing several tons of snow from an oversized driveway. One of them is endurance. Another is pulmonary capacity. Another is pain.

Being a pigheaded sort, I tend to press myself beyond my limits heedless of certain danger signs. I did that this morning. The price was a spasm of agony of the sort that says in tones beyond all misinterpretation, "Jackass! You're sixty-one years old! Leave the heavy lifting to younger men with sound hearts and healthy spines!" It sent me to the ground, gasping for breath and wondering if I'd finally tempted Fate just a millimeter too far.

Strong hands closed on my arms and hoisted me away from my unintended intimacy with the asphalt. It was my neighbor Richie, about twenty-five years my junior, who'd seen me at my follies. He helped me back to my feet, steadied me, and said, "Time to go inside, Fran. I'll take care of this."

Richie wouldn't relent; at least, I couldn't persuade him that I was perfectly all right. He shook his head, saw me back into my house, picked up where I'd left off, and finished the job himself.

Yes, it was a wee bit embarrassing. But the C.S.O. was spared having to call the local funeral home.


Richie is an exceptionally good neighbor with a wonderful wife and three delightful young daughters. I've never known a better or more considerate person. I could give you the full litany, but it would be beside the point. Suffice it to say that he watches out for me and the C.S.O., an undertaking above and beyond his other obligations as a husband, father, and homeowner, to an extent I and many others would find embarrassing.

I would do anything for Richie and his family. Anything. That there's so little I can do for them is occasionally a thorn in my flesh. To have a neighbor like him is a blessing beyond all accounting.

And in my more contemplative moments, I wonder just how many Americans, whatever their ages, sexes, and stations in life, enjoy the feeling of being looked after that comes from having a neighbor like Richie. Somehow I doubt that the fraction is all that large.


Long Island isn't the sort of place a soon-to-be-retiree wants to "make his last stand." It's terribly expensive; for one without the sort of income that goes with regular employment, it's more likely than not to be unaffordable. The C.S.O. and I have been pondering where we might move to; there are many places, even in the Northeast, the C.S.O.'s preferred habitat, that are less expensive than Long Island, and less intrusive upon the privacy of a common citizen than New York State.

But we surely couldn't take Richie and his family with us.

And that has besieged me with many second thoughts about the desirability of hauling stakes for some less expensive clime.


After Richie had shooed me back into my house, I went to my little office, sat before my computer, and dialed up some hoary old music:

  • The Seekers: I'll Never Find Another You
  • Stan Rogers: Lock-Keeper
  • Journey: Foolish Heart
  • Stephen Bishop: It Might Be You
  • Toto: I'll Be Over You
  • Critters: Mister Dyingly Sad
  • Four Seasons: Dawn
  • Tremolos: Silence Is Golden
  • Cyrkle: Red Rubber Ball
  • Circus Maximus: The Wind
  • Double: The Captain Of Her Heart
  • Del Shannon: Runaway

...and a few other tunes I've already forgotten. Thirty years old if not older, all of it too sentimental for words. I sat here and let it pour over me, and I wept.

Yes, I know why. I wouldn't dream of telling you otherwise. I wept because the world that gave us those wonderful old songs is dead and gone. More specifically, the nation that gave them to us, and to the world, is dead and gone. We killed it.

We killed it with our unprecedented self-centeredness.
We killed it with our unbridled cupidity.
We killed it with our unforgivable laziness.
In that world, people like my neighbor Richie were the rule rather than the exception.
And there is little, if any, hope that it can ever be brought back to life.


I will die. All of us will, someday, but I'm nearer to the one-way door than most.

For many years, I hoped to be part of a great movement back toward freedom, justice, and a wholesome, virtuous civil society. A society in which my neighbors would be like Richie, rather than the distant, indifferent types who've characterized most of the people I've known these past four decades.

My hopes have been dashed by developments. As American society has vulgarized and the American economy has crashed, people have turned inward rather than outward. They've sought to build fortresses around themselves, rather than trying to construct and fortify communities with those around them.

When Nature turns against us, such that all the forces of meteorology, geology, and physics mass to thwart the aspirations of men not merely to flourish, but just to live, is when one begins to take stock of one's neighbors, and one's dependence upon them and debts to them.

And that's when someone like me begins to wonder whether, when I and my coevals have departed this vale of tears, among the blessings our progeny might never know will be the comfort of neighbors upon whom one can rely without the slightest twinge of doubt. Without thought. Without even having to call upon them.

The sort of neighbors who, whether or not they'd recognize the playlist above, would groove to it just as happily as fossilized old me.

Neighbors like Richie.

Piers Morgan – giving immigrant nitwits a bad name.

Friday, February 8, 2013

Words Fail Me Dept.

If you haven't seen the Dodge commercial from the Super Bowl, featuring one of Paul Harvey's most poignant monologues, here it is:

...and once you've seen and sniffled over that one, you absolutely must see this one:

Genius need not promote itself. It need only stand where others can see it. Thank you, Sooper Mexican!

Bellwethers Everywhere: The Celebritarian Revolution

Apologies, Gentle Reader. This is a crucial topic about which I've written extensively in the past. Therefore, this post will be partly a reprint of material that previously appeared at Eternity Road, and partly a handful of new observations about the bellwether / celebritarian phenomenon in this year of Our Lord 2013.


1. Beautiful Bellwethers.

[This piece first appeared at Eternity Road in March of 2006.]

One of Harlan Ellison's better short stories, "The Face Of Helene Bournouw," focused on a (seeming) woman of unexampled physical beauty, who by the exploitation of that beauty deliberately led various culturally influential persons to their destruction. The conclusion of the story revealed that Helene Bournouw was actually a golem designed and built by a race of demons, whose intention was to induce Mankind to commit suicide. It was a striking fictional illustration of a point that had also been made by C. S. Lewis in "Screwtape Proposes A Toast:" many, many people will follow a bellwether wherever it might lead them, even unto death and into Hell.

The Bellwether Effect has become one of the strongest influences on popular opinion in our time. It's not possible to tell whether it's reached its maximum. Yet the emergence of bellwethers, and how they rise to command their legions of followers, are under-addressed phenomena, even today.


Your Curmudgeon's first duty is to be clear about his subject matter. A commentator who puts forth a rational analysis -- even an incorrect one, or one whose conclusions might seem inflammatory -- is not a bellwether. Bellwethers do not persuade by reason; they attract their followers by their allure. The follower does not follow the bellwether because he's said to himself, "This person is knowledgeable and smart, and his conclusions and proposals make good sense." Rather, he follows due to the attractions of the bellwether's glamor, charm, popularity, wealth, or some other characteristic unrelated to facts or reason.

A bellwether's attractions operate below the rational level of our minds. He does not offer analysis; he seduces his followers into eschewing analysis.

Thus, in keeping with the oft-heard and multiply attributed observation that you cannot reason a man out of something he did not reason himself into, the Bellwether Effect is absolutely proof against rational counteraction. Detaching a follower from his chosen bellwether requires other tools, when it's possible at all.


The Bellwether Effect is made possible solely by mass one-way communications and entertainment media. It was born of the modern Celebrity Culture, and will be coterminous with it.

The Celebrity Culture was born when it became possible for us to "invite singers and movie stars into our living rooms," by the graces of television. Television in the Fifties emphasized pre-existent forms of entertainment; the model for "new" programs was vaudeville, as illustrated by The Ed Sullivan Show, Amateur Hour, and similar offerings. Nevertheless, broadcasters were short enough of material that they had to rebroadcast movies to fill in their many unoccupied hours. Thus, television multiplied the effective audience a movie and its stars could reach. This relatively cheap diversion that was accessible to most Americans and required nothing of them but a few cents' worth of electricity, allowed many an entertainer to reach a large multiple of the audience he would have commanded otherwise.

The emergence of made-for-television dramas and comedies pyramided on top of the already established foundations of the celebrity culture. That is, it merely added "small screen" celebrities to those of the "big screen" and the stage. The later explosion of televised sports and other concatenated effects extended but didn't change the underlying model. Television was the mechanism by which people became famous, even beloved, for attainments that had previously been ranked alongside more ordinary trades.


The sort of person who becomes famous through television will almost always be an entertainer. The sort of person who makes his living as an entertainer is emotion-oriented, unlikely to be gifted with large rational powers. Thus, many of our most conspicuous bellwethers follow bellwethers of their own: gurus and cultists, some of whom actively court the attentions of media celebrities. These, though less well known, wield enormous influence over us through the intermediation of their more famous disciples.

The Church of Scientology has been much in the news because of its participation in the Bellwether Effect. Prominent Scientologists are almost exclusively from the entertainment world; indeed, your Curmudgeon cannot name an exception. Yet so great is their sway that thousands of ordinary, un-famous Americans have been seduced into investigating Scientology on that basis alone. Fortunately for the country, the church's doctrines are so bizarre, and its demands on its adherents so extreme, that few sane, stable persons succumb to its pitch.

Emotion-oriented persons are unlikely to analyze what they've been told. Rather, they'll normally gauge how it makes them feel, and accept it or reject it accordingly. If it "feels right," they'll be unabashed about promulgating it. Other emotion-oriented persons will accept it from them. Thus, one who wants to have a large impact on popular opinion can do so by crafting an emotionally seductive message and first infecting a cadre of entertainers as his bellwether-lieutenants. The multiplier provided by their mass-media exposure, and the large number of persons susceptible to their allure, will almost always reward the remote, unseen bellwether-guru handsomely.

Interestingly, on those occasions when the bellwether-guru presents himself to the cameras and the microphones, he usually experiences a sharp fall-off in his influence. He's insufficiently attractive to do what his entertainer-lieutenants do for him, and often quite zany enough to turn off many of those he might have seduced had he remained in the shadows. This suggests a possible counter to the Bellwether Effect to which we shall return presently.


Emotion is quicker-acting than reason; it is also much shorter in range. Thus, the emotion-oriented person is seldom concerned with the more distant effects of his actions, or the courses he recommends to others. It made him feel good when he said or did it; the rest is for the janitors and the maintenance crew.

We observe this aspect of the Bellwether Effect repeatedly when entertainers hold forth on economic matters. Time and again, we've heard entertainers recommend statist and quasi-statist redistribution schemes that would utterly destroy all the conditions required for productive effort. Even the seeming charitableness of one such as Bono, lead singer of U2, is fundamentally destructive, as decades of experience with international "aid" to Africa has shown. But to grasp before they're implemented how these things would work out requires that one set aside the warm glow anticipated from their proposed charities and think through the effects those nostrums would have on human incentives. That dampens the glow, which makes it unpalatable to the emotion-oriented bellwether.

There's little doubt that most such persons really do mean well, but there's just as little doubt that most of them lack both the rational resources and the inclination to work out the consequences of their actions. Those that possess the necessary knowledge and intelligence are usually uninterested in using them. When more rational, better informed persons dare to challenge them, their usual response is emotional: "You don't care about the poor / the downtrodden / the oppressed / the victims of racism, sexism, ageism, etc." Whether the riposte is merely tactical or sincerely meant, it averts the unpleasantness that would come from confronting their rational shortcomings, and the damage they could do (and often have already done) by the exploitation of their allure.


Combatting the Bellwether Effect is one of the imperative tasks of rational persons of our time. The problem is stiff: rational persons prefer to work with reason, to which those susceptible to the Bellwether Effect are generally numb. Our opportunities lie in our ability to reason out the opportunities for and applicability of emotional counteraction.

To be sure, "an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure." Thus, if it's possible to ward a friend or loved one against the Bellwether Effect ab initio, it's always the best course. Raising rational, sensible children, determined to be well informed and to follow the dictates of sound logic, is a primary duty for this reason among others.

But not everyone within one's orbit can be shielded in this fashion. In dealing with those who are susceptible to the Bellwether Effect, one must accept that what's done is done. The emotion-oriented person is seldom re-educable, even when it would be right and proper to try. He must be approached on the same level as did his chosen bellwether: his emotional reactions to what he's been told and shown.

Excepting some short-term effects, the consequences of bad policy are always bad. Those consequences are the rational man's tools for dealing with the emotion-oriented: he must start from the emotional impact of the consequences and work backward.

Does emotion-oriented Smith favor massively increased "foreign aid" to Africa? Rational Jones must work backward from the consequences of the aid to date: the empowerment of dictators, the slaughter and oppression of subject minorities, and the intensification of poverty and misery throughout the Dark Continent. The consequences provide the emotional spearhead; if they penetrate Smith's preconceptions, and if he can be led to associate them with the "aid," Jones has a chance of swaying him.

Does Smith favor a cessation of the American liberation efforts in the Middle East? Jones must work backward from the consequences of other American withdrawals from similarly plagued trouble spots: Iran in 1979, Vietnam in 1973, China in 1948-49. The horrors that followed might lead Smith to question his stance; if so, and if Jones can show that American engagement on behalf of oppressed and threatened peoples doesn't have even worse consequences, Smith might be won over.

Does Smith favor the institution of a Canadian-style nationalized health care system? Jones must work backward from the consequences of those systems already in place: the long delays in obtaining needed treatment, the political favoritism involved in the dispensation of such treatment, and the decline in the quality of care available to all. The notion that persons who would have been capable of buying a high-quality hip replacement in a week must wait two to three years for a replacement of questionable soundness might jar Smith out of his groove.

But your Curmudgeon's focus is not entirely on persuading others to abandon bad policy prescriptions; it's more on the importance of the mechanism by which they attached to those prescriptions: the Bellwether Effect. The follower is emotionally attached, not merely to the policy prescription, but to the bellwether who urged it on him. This attachment is seldom easily severed; indeed, it's questionable whether one should attempt to do so.

If Smith is firmly attached to bellwether Davis, rather than attempting to weaken or destroy that attachment, Jones might prefer to suggest limiting its scope. Glamor, popularity, etc. are assets applicable to particular, limited purposes; they are inapplicable to politics and economics. Perhaps after he's reversed himself on a few specific issues, Smith can be led to see that. Perhaps the ultimate source of Davis's preachments can be dragged out from under his rock and held up to the light; few can withstand such scrutiny. But above all, it's vital that Jones never attack Davis's sincerity; if Smith is to reach the conclusion that Davis is insincere, he must do so himself.


There's nothing inherently wrong with an interest in celebrities, as vapid as they usually are. It's a bit disturbing that so many Americans, particularly young people, revere them as demigods, yet can't be bothered to learn the names of their local legislators or stay abreast of political developments. But this malady doesn't require completely re-engineering the mindsets of millions; it only requires that we broaden their focus.

When Dan Quayle suggested that Candace Bergen's "Murphy Brown" character was hardly the typical pattern for an unwed mother, he was engaging the Celebrity Culture frontally, and received a vicious collective rebuff for it. His experience indicates the power of that culture, its willingness to offer bellwethers to the country, and its displeasure at being depicted as a negative force. Quayle was absolutely right, but he gained no ground for responsible parenthood or role-modeling; indeed, he might have lost some.

Perhaps the effort properly belongs to those of us who have the assets the bellwethers don't possess: the advantages of proximity and the solidity of real life. After all, Murphy Brown didn't really have to raise a baby. Sharon Stone doesn't have to negotiate with the terrorist-insurgents in Palestine, Afghanistan, and Iraq. Bono doesn't have to cope with the consequences of the well-meant money river drowning Africa, whose volume he's worked to increase. None of these celebrities makes house calls to push his point of view.

Gentle Reader, don't suggest it to them, would you please?


2. The Celebritarian Revolution.

It's one thing for a political movement to enlist celebrities as bellwether-spokesmen. It's quite another to put them forward as candidates for high office.

It started quite a while ago, of course. Nor is the phenomenon of celebrities-as-public-officials entirely noxious; after all, we did have Ronald Reagan. But it says something about our political discourse that's quite unpleasant.

It's never been perfectly clear what the qualifications for public office should be, apart from the age / residence / citizenship requirements stated in the Constitution. Obviously there's quite a lot of disagreement on the subject, or we wouldn't have empty-headed pseudo-feminist twit Ashley Judd plausibly bidding for a Senate seat, or the vicious and ignorant Al Franken actually occupying one.

As I noted in the essay above, this sort of development arises entirely from one-way mass communications. The celebrities of the entertainment world are pushed upon us by the mass media. (These days, persons with even less plausible claims to our time and attention get a great deal of it; anyone familiar with the Real Housewives phenomenon will immediately concur.) When a well-known celebrity manages to identify himself with some political cause du jour, he acquires an "entering wedge" into the political sphere. Should he, or his handlers and promoters, decide that that would be a profitable direction to purse, he's likely to address other political subjects, such that his fans think of him ever more as a political figure. Over time, that can build him a spurious resume as a political thinker -- spurious because the typical celebrity does about as much actual thinking as a kumquat.

But what matters in the sequel isn't the amount of hard thought or study the celebrity puts into his political stances; it's his personal attractions, the extent of his media exposure, and the size and responsiveness of his fan base. These things, entirely divorced from what stances he promotes or how he reached and rationalizes them, are occasionally sufficient to put him into public office.

The master strategists of the Democrat Party are aware of this. They've gone out hunting for media figures to promote as candidates for high office, and have pushed them as if their screen credits / Billboard ratings / batting averages should be qualifications enough for anything. And a substantial fraction of Americans who lean leftward are buying into it.

(Yes, batting averages count too. Consider how frequently prominent athletes, including quite a few who've never previously spoken about politics in public, are solicited for their political views by interviewers. That's bad enough; what's worse are the many who respond to such questions in full seriousness, instead of modestly changing the subject.)

In a sense, Barack Hussein Obama is the icon of the Celebritarian Revolution. After all, he had no resume when he ascended to the United States Senate, and he had damned little more when he was elected president. His most important personal assets are dark skin, moderately good looks, and a winning way of reading from a teleprompter. In a rational society, that would make him a waiting-list candidate for a sportscaster's position; in the United States of 2013, it's put him in the Oval Office.

Al Franken already sits in the Senate. If Mitch McConnell and the Kentucky GOP aren't careful, Ashley Judd might soon join him there. And remember that success evokes emulation: every time a celebrity attains a public office, it persuades other celebrities to attempt the same. Some of them will succeed.

If the prospect of a majority-Celebritarian political elite doesn't frighten you half out of your corn flakes, Gentle Reader, check your pulse: you may have died and not noticed. But then, if the awareness that the finger on the Big Red Button belongs to Nobel Peace Prize honoree Barack Hussein Obama hasn't already scared you translucent, you might just be a celebrity yourself.

Thursday, February 7, 2013

The "Obvious" And Calls For GOP Unity

One of the hazards involved in being highly intelligent -- what, you didn't think there could be a downside to it? -- is the temptation to become irritated when others demonstrate lesser cognitive capacities. In some cases the offender possesses plenty of brain muscle, and might use it fully at other times; in others, the poor soul is just a bit weak between the earphones. But on all such occasions, it's a requirement that I restrain myself from exercising my penchant for evisceration via sarcasm.

I have to admit, I don't always succeed at that. It's particularly difficult when persons "old enough to know better" spout pointless bilge as if it were the discovery of the Higgs boson:

At the federal level it is obvious what needs doing. Slash and burn. Departments of education, interior, energy, health, labor, commerce, and transportation should be eliminated asap, as should the EPA and USAID. Yes, completely eliminated. The Department of Justice needs to be radically reduced in size and power; eliminate the ATF and DEA, for starters. The FBI has completely overstepped its original mandate and needs to be reined in. The State Department can be cut by one-third almost immediately, and closer to one-half in a couple of years. DOD needs to focus on its mission and shed programs, offices, and employees that have nothing to do with defense. Lawyers. My God, does DoD have lawyers. Slash and burn. Get rid of all the environmental nonsense in DoD. Drop the vast, corrupt, and bloated domestic PX network. In a time of WalMarts and Targets, why have a PX? Negotiate a discount for military personnel. The same with VA hospitals, most of which are substandard; get veterans a voucher system they can use at private hospitals. The CIA? A complete overhaul and reduction in the massive stateside bureaucracy which interferes with and stifles CIA's proper role overseas. NASA? Privatize as much as possible of the space program, keeping in government hands only the most secret and sensitive operations. Don't get me started on Homeland; it needs a radical downsizing or even a splitting apart.

"Obvious?" Perhaps to the Diplomad, whoever he is. But why is it "obvious" to him and not to others? And if it really is "obvious," what need is there to repeat it? Has this "long-time US Foreign Service Officer" ever asked himself those questions?

The matter became even more irritating when I saw hearty concurrences from two longtime favorites: Silicon Graybeard and Mike Hendrix. But then, Sean Hannity finds a comparably frustrating political condition equally "obvious." At least, he made it seem so yesterday afternoon in his pleadings for the Republican caucus in the House of Representatives to be "united."

God be with me! Gentlemen, use your noggins for something besides a hat rack! Why do you think Republican elected officials can't see what's "obvious" to each of you?

Give that a moment's thought, Gentle Reader, while I endeavor to deflate my blood pressure.


We get so accustomed to labeling and categorizing people, especially people in the public eye, that we can cause ourselves to forget that a man is not the labels we hang on him. This is of particular importance in political analysis.

Let's consider the case of the Honorable Smith, a Republican Congressman. There, that's three labels already. What have we told ourselves, correctly or incorrectly, about Smith by labeling him thus?

  • Smith sits in the House of Representatives, and therefore has a constituency somewhere that preferred him to his opponents in the last election.
  • Smith was the nominee of the Republican Party in the contest for the seat he occupies.
  • Smith is honorable.

"One of these things is not like the others; one of these things just doesn't belong..."

Yes! Thank you, you in the back row. See me after class for an extra-credit project. To call a man "honorable" is a character assessment. The other two statements are objectively verifiable, but an enduring assessment of a man's character is no better than a guess...especially if that man has accepted a mission that compels him to sit surrounded by scoundrels.

It would be honorable for Smith to be explicit and honest about his priorities, both personal and political. We'd certainly hope for that from a Republican. But we allow ourselves to be surprised, even shocked, when Smith, or someone who wears the same labels, demonstrates by his actions that his priorities aren't what we want and have been led to expect from a Republican Congressman -- because we've allowed ourselves to forget that thrice-labeled Smith is an individual human being with his own convictions, priorities, and ambitions.

  • Smith might harbor unexpressed convictions that clash with particular elements of the nominal Republican platform.
  • Smith might regard certain aspects of public policy as being more important than the ones we regard as primary.
  • And Smith might have personal ambitions that would be disserved by taking the stances we expect from Republicans in his position.

Imagine that Smith is far more of an environmentalist than we deem suitable for a Republican in these times. If we were aware of that, would it be reasonable to be surprised if Smith were to support the perpetuation and/or expansion of the ruthless and grasping Environmental Protection Agency?

Imagine that Smith is specially concerned with some quasi-eleemosynary aspect of federal activity, perhaps financial support to single mothers of minor children. If we were aware of that, would it be reasonable to be surprised if Smith were to vote for a funding increase (or against a funding reduction) for Temporary Assistance to Needy Families?

Or imagine that Smith harbors ambitions for higher office, as many Congressmen do. If we were aware of that, would it be reasonable to be surprised if Smith were to hedge on a great many of his nominal stances as a Republican to pander to non-aligned voters -- and to demonstrate his ambivalence on those stances by his votes in Congress?

Smith is not his labels. We cannot afford to delude ourselves that his maneuverings will always be consistent with those labels. What's "obvious" to the Diplomad might be equally so to our imagined ideal Republican...but it's Smith, not that figment of our imagination, who sits in Congress.


One of the most insightful statements ever to come from the late Milton Friedman was his observation that in politics, it's less important to "elect good people" than to create conditions in which "bad people will be moved to do the right thing." Whether that's currently more practicable than searching out good people and putting them forward for office is open to discussion...but here's something that's not:

Power corrupts.

A bad man surrounded by good people in an ethically praiseworthy environment might be moved to shed some of his wickedness due to the influences of those around him, but a good man surrounded by bad people and multifarious temptations is virtually guaranteed to compromise his ethical standards in response to the influences around him -- and politics is the natural inclination of bad men.

Really, how could it be otherwise? When and where has it been otherwise? Have we been so completely detached from history that we've forgotten not merely Lord Acton's dictum but all the practical examples pertinent to it?

Too many of us think electing Republicans is all that matters -- all we have to do to restore the Republic to its Constitutionally mandated order. Too many of us are surprised and irrationally aggrieved when the Republicans we succeed in electing fail to hew to their supposed commitments. And far too many of us harp on what's "obvious" as if the convictions, priorities, and ambitions of individual officeholders could somehow be excluded from the political dynamic of our time.

When Sean Hannity, a reasonably bright man if not a Certified Galactic Intellect, goes on for forty-five minutes about how the Republicans in Congress need to demonstrate "unity," he's spouting irrelevancies. What "need" does he have in mind? That of the Republic at large? Some specific public-policy passion? Or the ambition of various Smiths to become senators, governors, or president?

Our Brobdingnagian federal government, with its vast powers, its millions of employees, and its trillions of dollars in annual spending, is the exact opposite of the sort of environment in which "bad people will be moved to do the right thing." It presents a temptation to arrogance and evil that only Jesus of Nazareth is guaranteed to resist...and He has yet to stand for public office.


I get really tired of having to make points like the above over and over. They're wearisomely "obvious" to me; I'd hope that they're clear, at least, to anyone who can bring himself to step past the labels we so easily apply to persons in public office.

It's been frequently said that "personnel is policy." As true as that can be, it's critically important always to bear in mind that personnel is a collective noun. It subsumes a group of individuals whose priorities, interests, and ambitions must not be assumed to be uniform. Indeed, the larger the group designated "personnel," the more certain it is that a subset, and perhaps a very large subset, will depart from the "policy" we expect of it. That should be "obvious" to anyone who's known human beings as individuals...but "should" is a word I try not to use.

When the fatigue begins to get the better of me, I remind myself of a fundamental fact about human perception:

"Obvious,"
Both etymologically and in practice,
Means "overlooked."

It's an effect that even the most powerful minds are capable of neglecting.

Wednesday, February 6, 2013

DHS stockpiling of guns and ammo.

The most chilling aspect of this, the part that tells you that the Republicans are spineless and without the least concern for the liberties of the people and the old Constitution, is that Mitt Romney never raised the issue in his campaign about Obama’s wanting an unconstitutional civilian police force and the massive DHS ammunition buy (among others).

Not one word. Not from ANY Republican.

Some champions of the liberty and security of Americans.

Nowhere in the Constitution is there any provision for the president to have at his disposal a civilian police force that is well funded as the military. If it had been Bush '43 who'd proposed this, the headline of the New York Times would have been "GESTAPO! GESTAPO!"

Since it's Obama who's talking about this, however, the corrupt leftist press would discuss it in terms of the Mayberry Police Department, if it even mentioned it at all. Just Andy and Don planning a little target practice. Relax!

Read Joseph Farah's thinking on these issues here: "J. Farah: Why is government stockpiling guns, ammo?" World Net Daily, 2/3/13.

Heart-warming story.

A home invasion "gone wrong" but in the "right" way.

For your reading pleasure here.

H/t: Yer Ol’ Woodpile Report.

The Water Is Getting Warmer

I'm a fan of Ann Barnhardt. She's undeniably courageous and properly morally centered. She founds her arguments on objective evidence: events that have taken place in plain sight. She minces no words about her views, with the consequence that there can never be any doubt about where she stands or how she got there. All the same, some of her recommendations have been hard for me to follow, possibly because they've involved learning to distrust institutions I've trusted for decades.

One of those recommendations, perhaps the most difficult of all for anyone to follow, is to get completely out of dollar-denominated investment vehicles, including any in a tax-deferred account such as an IRA or a 401(k). The difficulties are twofold:

  1. Many 401(k) plans involve a matching contribution by one's employer, which employees are understandably reluctant to surrender.
  2. The tax bite on a significant withdrawal from an IRA or 401(k) account can be quite severe, especially if one is under the age limit and/or is still earning a significant income.

The latter consideration has paralyzed a lot of us who see things as Miss Barnhardt does. Consider: If you have $500,000 in a 401(k) account and are currently in the 35% federal tax bracket, you're guaranteed to lose more than $175,000 if you pull it all out at once. More, because there's now another, higher tax bracket above 35% -- thanks, gutless GOP Congressvermin -- and because of state and municipal income taxes, for those unlucky enough to be subject to them. $325,000 might be the actual, realizable value of that half-million in the account, but it looks like a lot less. That's enough to bring many of us to a screeching halt.

Well, courtesy of the invaluable Charles Hill, we have this compendious article from Maggie's Notebook:

Trying to find sound information on whether or not the U.S. Government wants to manage your private 401(k) and IRA accounts has not been easy to verify. I heard Eric Bolling and Gerri Willis talking about it today with Bolling sitting in for Neal Cavuto – so decided to see what’s new in the Cold War between the U.S. Private Sector and Union Pensions. The government’s story is that they want retirees better protected. Those paying attention see the 401(k) and IRA grab as a way to bail out public sector union pensions.

I find not much is new but am reminded of several startling past events, and warnings to be ready for an assault because it is coming. Note comments by Newt Gingrich below saying Treasury and Labor have already asked for public comment on ‘the conversion of 401(k) savings and Individual Retirement Accounts into annuities or other steady payment streams,” and Obama’s Latina double, Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner, president of Argentina.

The article provides several linked citations about probes at the IRA / 401(k) system. Consider, as an example of the worst of them, this article about a hearing about the IRA / 401(k) accounts' "unfairness to poor people:"

The hearing, held in the Labor Department’s main auditorium, was monitored by [National Seniors Council] staff and featured a line up of left-wing activists including one representative of the AFL-CIO who advocated for more government regulation over private retirement accounts and even the establishment of government-sponsored annuities that would take the place of 401k plans.

"This hearing was set up to explore why Americans are not saving as much for their retirement as they could," explains National Seniors Council National Director Robert Crone, "However, it is clear that this is the first step towards a government takeover. It feels just like the beginning of the debate over health care and we all know how that ended up."

A representative of the liberal Pension Rights Center, Rebecca Davis, testified that the government needs to get involved because 401k plans and IRAs are unfair to poor people. She demanded the Obama administration set up a "government-sponsored program administered by the PBGC (the governments’ Pension Benefit Guarantee Corporation)." She proclaimed that even "private annuities are problematic."...

Deputy Treasury Secretary J. Mark Iwry, who presided over the hearing, is a long-time critic of 401k plans because he believes they benefit the rich. He also appears to be one of the Administration’s point man on this issue....

[National Seniors Council National Director Robert Crone:] "This effort ultimately is designed to grab the retirement nest eggs of America’s senior citizens. This new government annuity scheme, even if it is at first optional, will turn into a giant effort to redistribute the wealth of America’s older citizens," explains Crone. "This scheme mirrors what I expect the President will try to do with Social Security. He wants to turn that program into a welfare program, too."

This isn't just scare-mongering, according to Human Events:

In February [2010], the White House released its “Annual Report on the Middle Class” containing new regulations favored by Big Labor including a bailout of critically underfunded union pension plans through “retirement security” options.

The radical solution most favored by Big Labor is the seizure of private 401(k) plans for government disbursement — which lets them off the hook for their collapsing retirement scheme. And, of course, the Obama administration is eager to accommodate their buddies.

Vice President Joe Biden floated the idea, called “Guaranteed Retirement Accounts” (GRAs), in the February “Middle Class” report.

In conjunction with the report’s release, the Obama administration jointly issued through the Departments of Labor and Treasury a “Request for Information” regarding the “annuitization” of 401(k) plans through “Lifetime Income Options” in the form of a notice to the public of proposed issuance of rules and regulations.

In pondering the threat level posed by such thrusts, please bear in mind, that the Supreme Court has already ruled that though your payroll taxes into the Social Security and Medicare systems are obligatory under the law, the federal government has no obligation to pay you one damned cent, nor to make any particular level of treatment available to you.

Then ponder the trial balloon floated by New York Times columnist Paul Krugman just a few days ago:

Eventually we do have a problem. That the population is getting older, health care costs are rising…there is this question of how we’re going to pay for the programs. The year 2025, the year 2030, something is going to have to give…. …. We’re going to need more revenue…Surely it will require some sort of middle class taxes as well.. We won’t be able to pay for the kind of government the society will want without some increase in taxes… on the middle class, maybe a value added tax…And we’re also going to have to make decisions about health care, doc pay for health care that has no demonstrated medical benefits . So the snarky version…which I shouldn’t even say because it will get me in trouble is death panels and sales taxes is how we do this.

Consider how the Obamunists have flouted Constitutional restraints and legislative rules. Consider how bills hundreds of pages long are being passed by legislators who admit to not having read them, in some cases mere minutes after the bill has been printed and distributed. Consider how federal court decisions have either acquiesced to federal usurpations of power, especially by the executive branch, or have failed to inhibit them. And consider how little any of us can do about it, short of an armed revolt.

It's all too easy to say "Oh, they're not serious."
It's all too easy to say "It's just loose talk."
It's all too easy to say "Not in America!"

A lot of the Jews in Weimar Germany said the same things.

Tuesday, February 5, 2013

Geert Wilders on the insanity of Muslims residing in the West.

Geert Wilders does not phrase his thoughts to make the precise point that I do in my title, but my point is a necessary and unavoidable conclusion from the criminality and insufferable arrogance of operational Muslims and the communities that support them. Nonetheless, Mr. Wilders has made a superb speech pointing out the true Muslim threat to our extraordinary civilization. I encourage you to read the whole speech, from which I have extracted this:
Everywhere, where Islam has had a foothold, it has brought enormous human suffering; for its own followers and their families — and especially for women and for non-Muslims.

In December of last year, in my homeland the Netherlands, a linesman was kicked to death by a group of young players after a football game. The media and the political establishment emphasised that we had a so called “football problem” in the Netherlands. The youths, who kicked the Dutch Linesman to death were not domestic Netherlanders, however, but Moroccans.

Almost every week there are incidents with Moroccan youths. In the Netherlands 65 percent of all Moroccan youths between 12 and 23 years have already been arrested at least once by the police. This is the reason why I emphasise that we do not have a “football problem” but a “Moroccan problem”.

The list of violent incidents in which Moroccans are involved, whether in our streets, our schools, our shopping centres or in our sports fields is endless. Moroccans are the largest Islamic group in my country. But the victims are almost never Moroccans or Muslims.

Four years ago the German Federal Minister for Families Kristina Schröder encouraged, — I quote: “an open debate about racist Muslims”. . . .

* * * *

The dogma that all lifestyles, opinions and convictions have the same value signifies the destruction of Western culture. It heralds the return to barbarism. Everywhere in the West we are now confronted with Islamic men who treat their own daughters, sisters and wives as inferior beings, while Western politicians turn a blind eye. Everywhere we are also confronted with Islamic racism, while the elites refuse an open discourse about it.

~ Geert Wilders.[1]

Islam is the perfect closed system, as Baron Bodissey has put it. Churchill said, "No stronger retrograde force exists in the world." The record of slaughter, plunder, rape, murder, slavery, oppression, hypocrisy, and obscurantism of Muslims is there for anyone to read. Yet, hypocrites whom craven weaklings have elected, supported in the media, and employed as teachers of their children have knowingly and willingly obscured and distorted that record to teach Westerners that Islam is about algebra, architecture, astronomy, and peace when, in fact, it is the perfect distillation of murder, conquest, and instruction on drinking camel milk and urine, locating infidels between feces and camel sweat, and willed spoliation and failure.

Mr. Wilders's understandable need to distinguish between (1) moderate, decent Muslims and (2) fanatical Muslim killers and infidel haters is an unfortunate reminder of the criminal prosecutions that awaits Europeans who run afoul of hate speech laws. Needless to say, they undermine freedom of speech, are enthusiastically employed by native European prosecutors, and are vigorously enforced by European courts.

The reality, however, is that the moderate Muslim is a myth. What is done in the name of Islam is supported by all Muslims and a search for the few to whom this does not apply is like looking for an opponent of the "living" Constitution at the annual meeting of the National Lawyers Guild (or of the American Bar Association).

The ReligionofPeace.com has the penultimate word here on this with this clear-headed formulation of the Islamic "dog that didn't bark" phenomenon:

While rumors of a Quran desecration or a Muhammad cartoon bring out deadly protests, riots, arson and effigy-burnings, the mass murder of non-Muslims generally evokes yawns. In the eleven years following 9/11 nearly 20,000 acts of deadly Islamic terrorism were perpetrated, yet all of them together fail to provoke the sort of outrage on the part of most Muslims that the mere mention of Abu Ghraib or Guantanamo inspires.
Recall the Muslims around the world dancing in the streets on the day of 9/11? There are your moderate Muslims.

Islam needs to be outlawed as a subversive set of doctrines. All imams and muftis need to be deported. All Muslims must be forced to renounce Islam as a condition of being permitted to remain in any Western country and few must be given that choice. No segregation. No peace. Muslims are an existential threat to any and all Western countries in which they can be found. The madness of dealing with savages must end.

Westerners will resist these measures because of their cowardice and intellectual failure to see the mortal threat that Islam is. But the fiscal days of reckoning are coming to us all and the tolerance of Westerners for alien and hostile competitors for employment and resources -- and the treasonous politicians and intellectuals allied with them -- will melt away. In that sad fact -- emblematic of our abdication of simple commonsense and self respect -- will we find our salvation. But not before.

Notes
[1] "Geert Wilders’ Speech in Bonn." By Baron Bodissey, Gates of Vienna, 2/2/13.

Free World vs. Free Ride




Ladies and Gentlemen, we have a problem. The problem is, Truth has been dis-proven  Now I know that a number of folks here will call BS on me and say that I must be talking about Religion, so it is not a valid argument.

I'm afraid I would answer in the negative. This is not about God. This is about Reality. The problem is-- people have ceased to believe in principles. Not that they don't have them-- they certainly don't believe they have them. The problem is, they don't believe that they are real. That is, they feel they understand the fundamental truth that principals are no different from empty rhetoric and the elaborate sophistry they claim to believe in. So you can make the most logical and well balanced-- even persuasive argument that can be made-- and it will have no effect, because your audience will simply ask, with a sneer-- “So what is truth? 
And, what's in it for me?"

You see, the Enemy simply offers the average person what they want, then asks for what they want in return. All they have to do is say, “Ok, we'll give you a free ride. Now, you give us a vote, and we will make those fools who want you to work-- pay for their insolence. We'll keep you safe from guilt, from necessity, from pain. All you have to do is vote for us, and you don't even have to think for your self-- and you can feel virtuous doing it-- because we know what is best for you, and for all.

The sad part is, because the people don't ultimately believe anything that anyone tells them, the Left doesn't even have to keep their promises.  It is just the promise of the free ride that does all the work.

They already know already that what they use as persuasion is ultimately empty rhetoric. You can see it in the Abortion argument. No matter what side you happen to fall on personally, you can learn quite a bit from it. That is, “So what if we are taking a human life? What are you going to do about it? It's legal and most people agree with us. We are in charge. So there.” It doesn't even have to be a majority anymore. Just enough to count.

THAT is the current core argument for the “pro choice” crowd, who are no longer the pro-choice crowd. Because, now they even admit that what they want you to do is have an abortion-- not have a choice.

Say what you like about my take on this particular argument-- I still say that this winning argument will crop up in other parts of our so-called national dialogue between the Left and the rest of us.

 I'm sorry, we aren't a coalition, and I'm not going to pretend. The only thing that unites us is the knowledge that what is going on here is wrong and that something needs to be done about it. That what the Founding Fathers did was right-- and what is happening here is a flagrant violation of those hallowed principles and ideas. Beyond that we'd fight like hyenas in j-random bar or cafe. But.  At the end of the night, we'd shake hands and go our separate ways. Why? We both believe in America, and our ideas about America are pretty similar, if not identical.

Even so, we can't offer the other side what they want. They don't want freedom, they want free beer. The closest thing we have is free software-- and even that takes work (knowledge and mental effort), so they don't want that either. They don't really understand what we mean by freedom-- and they mostly don't care. Because it's not about getting free stuff, and they don't understand what we get out of what we believe.

That is why universally they have to call us bigots and class oppressors-- because that is the only conceivable benefit they can imagine to our system as we describe it. It must be about power over, because personal power is so much a given that they don't even see it when it is taken away. As long as you don't touch the U-Verse, the endless promise of food, stuff and license-- those laws don't mean squat. After all, someone has to be around to enforce them. If you go to the welfare ghettos, no one really is until someone dies-- and sometimes, not even then.

Who's going to enforce inconvenient laws against those who keep you in office? All the better to extract fines and inconvenience from those whom it is beneficial to harass. We live in a unique period in history where the class that is most protected is the class that is the least important in the grand scheme of things. It is the enemies of Control who are important, and where the attention is spent. As long as they keep sprinkling cash, entertainment and contraception on the throbbing consuming masses they can be left well enough alone. They won't bite the dog that feeds, clothes and protects them from effort.

The Left will not cease to have support until it becomes onerous or inconvenient to support them. Until the point is driven home that their rights are not just vaporous changeable ideas, but things that are profitable to believe in. You know, things that mean something. They have to learn that something means something first, and that's a long row to hoe.

So the only way we are going to make real headway is to come up with the answer that proves false the assertion:

Who wants a free world when you can have a free ride?

I'm afraid they won't recognize the limited nature of reality until it is too late.
This is why freedom is not enough. Or perhaps, I should say, we have to prove that freedom is real. That liberty is a real thing. That sacrifice is not just an empty word. We have to go back to Aquinas-- or perhaps before Aquinas. We can't assume A=A-- that alone is a tough sell these days. After all-- who cares, and why does it matter?

For me, it was all about finding a reason to continue breathing. I discovered that the Leftist paradigm ultimately leads to a futile and meaningless existence in a frustrating perpetual childhood. There is nothing to risk, so rewards don't mean anything. Because you can't believe anything anybody says, there can't be any truth, so even looking is pointless.

But I couldn't stop looking, because deep in my core I knew there just had to be a truth. I wouldn't be breathing otherwise, and there would be no reason not to stop-- save the momentary inconvenience of people who cared for me, loved me and raised me. But my heart screamed that there had to be a bigger reason than that. Don't get me wrong-- despite evidence to the contrary-- I did love them. I had even convinced myself that my being absent would be to their benefit-- and I still loved them. 

But the heart wants what it wants.  We often take on burdens like children for reasons that don't really make sense. That love thing gets in the way of making the sensible choice of living for one's self, and making filling one's gullet and partying until you drop much easier. The problem is-- those sensible things don't satisfy. At the end of the day, you still want more.

NO, I'm still not talking about religion. It is very hard not to, at this point, because that's how I got here. But it's still not where I'm going. But there could be a clue here as to where we might go next to be fishers of the self-motivated.  Because those deeper desires override even laziness, myopia and ignorance-- even the willful kind.

Human beings need reasons. We need concrete things. We have to believe the evidence of our senses, or we become neurotic, reactive and depressed. I believe that the closest the modern child gets to a real risk and reward environment in this day and age-- is the video game. (And, failing that, gang culture. But I digress.) And that is why they are so massively popular-- above and beyond the immersive experience, or the sensation of being in an imaginary world. Because you don't have to use the imagination to get there-- but then, you don't have the freedom to imagine what you want.

Truthfully, I'd rather have a book than a video game. Not only am I old fashioned that way, but I want to control the experience. No one will ever beat the megapixels of my mental images-- no mater how fast our technology grows, nor how reactive to my desires it becomes. It is exactly as real as I want it to be, no more and no less. The fun part is that I don't know where it is going, but I know what the main character looks like. It is even better than a movie, because, while you know only what the author wants you to, you control the camera, and you can blur out the parts you don't want to linger on.

But I am unusual. I don't mind making an effort to get what I want-- even if I am lazy. But knowing that, I can be constructively lazy, and make it work for me. That is what puts me on the nerd/geek continuum.  But there is a reason why the geek/nerd is popular right now-- even among non-geeks. It does relate, to a lesser degree, to human nature.

We all know that the mother of invention is not perspiration or inspiration-- but laziness. It is the latter two that get us off of our couches and into our workshops, so we can spend more time later in our easy chairs. But how will we ever inspire a generation who's biggest accomplishment is collecting a welfare check? Most of these people have never learned to defer gratification for anything more than a twinkie.

Now, I recognize that perhaps even converting a few won't really help us. We also can't really convert those who are at the top, feeding the system either. Because they feed it not only to feel good about themselves, but also to have power over others. They don't believe the rhetoric either. They probably don't believe that truth exists either-- but they will get what they want anyway. Clearly, as they see it, the only way is cheating.

The saddest part of all, is that they don't believe that anyone has the power of creating their own stuff, that the only way to get it is to take it from someone else. That is the grim part behind Obama's “You didn't build that”. Unfortunately, the folks he was actually talking to, believed him and thought he was speaking a profound truth. They don't believe you can build anything. There are whole cultures that revolve around this philosophy, and they tend to get gnarled up in self-perpetuating violence pretty quickly. That is the dark side of most hunter gatherer cultures.

Indeed, I believe that the whole thing is just a ruse-- a fog of talking points to distract us while they take everything away. As long as we are still talking, and we are not doing, they are free to take whatever they want away from us while we do it. We also make ourselves easy targets, and then they know who is too dangerous to live. They can't kill too many of us too soon-- because we feed the system. But some people get impatient-- and making omelets always involves breaking some eggs, right?

Ironically, thanks to contraception and abortion effort, there aren't enough of us to feed the system right now. But as long as no one believes in truth, no one has to see or acknowledge that fact. So the next ten years should be real interesting. Perhaps opportunities will arise for reality to re-establish itself in the minds of man. I just hope we can wait that long.  So I guess, until then, we must demonstrate and try to teach truth as humanity has discovered it.  

The original leftist.

And as with all leftists, the words "atrocious" and "inhumane" aptly describe the effect of their vaporous and fanciful ideas on the lives of actual human beings.
The world has come to a bankrupt, dead end in political economy. The ideas which have prevailed for the last hundred years, can find their origin in the idealistic thinking of Plato, who wrote the most atrocious, inhumane book on political economy back in the 4th century B.C.: “The Republic”. He was the original Leftist. Leftists since his time have learned nothing and continue to present themselves as “idealists”. By “idealists” they mean that they propose a world which would suit them, albeit it means plain slavery for their victims. They are the habitual “improvers”, who want to improve things - using other people’s money, of course.

* * * *

These people have captivated the world’s imagination, in spite of the dreadful results of their ideas in actual practice.[1]

Notes
[1] "Thoughts on gold and humanity." Hugo Salinas Price, Moneda de Plata para México, 1/22/13.

Clear-headed views on the Second Amendment.

Henson Ong's testimony is a refreshing contrast to the mendacity and hysteria of the news media and the politicians on the issue of free people arming themselves as insurance against tyranny:

"If It Saves Even One Life..."

The shibboleth referred to by the title has now been heard enough times to deafen every ear in America. "If it saves even one life, it's worth it." "If it saves even one life, we have an obligation to try." It's the mating cry of the Safety Nazi, the cheerleader for Mommy (or Nanny) Government, whose overriding commitment is to keep us from harming ourselves. And as vapid as it is, that typeset phrase bludgeons many an American who'd otherwise stand and fight for his rights -- rhetorically, at least -- into a sullen silence.

Well, friends, never let it be said that Francis W. Porretto, dictator verborum to the World Wide Web, isn't on the job, standing at the ready with the words you need. In this case, the refutation consists of a single word:

Net!

What I mean by "Net!" in this connection is, of course, a variation on Bastiat's refutation of the Fallacy of the Broken Window:

In Bastiat's tale, a man's son breaks a pane of glass, meaning the man will have to pay to replace it. The onlookers consider the situation and decide that the boy has actually done the community a service because his father will have to pay the glazier (window repair man) to replace the broken pane. The glazier will then presumably spend the extra money on something else, jump-starting the local economy. (For related reading, see Economics Basics.)

The onlookers come to believe that breaking windows stimulates the economy, but Bastiat points out that further analysis exposes the fallacy. By breaking the window, the man's son has reduced his father's disposable income, meaning his father will not be able to purchase new shoes or some other luxury good. Thus, the broken window might help the glazier, but at the same time, it robs other industries and reduces the amount being spent on other goods. Moreover, replacing something that has already been purchased is a maintenance cost, rather than a purchase of truly new goods, and maintenance doesn't stimulate production. In short, Bastiat suggests that destruction - and its costs - don't pay in an economic sense.

In Bastiat's words, the Fallacy rests on "that which is not seen:" what the man would have done with his money had his window not been broken. In the rantings of the Left over gun control, "that which is not seen" comprises the great host of social goods, including lives saved, that arise because Americans are copiously armed.

Gun control proposals of the sort the Obamunists are advancing might result in particular lives being spared, in incidents where the would-be murderer refrains from killing specifically because he lacks a firearm. But it would cost lives that would be saved by the presence of the banned firearms in other circumstances. For public-safety purposes -- i.e., all the arguments about the right to own such weapons pushed to the side for just a moment -- the net change to homicide statistics is what would matter...but the gun-controllers have quite deliberately effaced the lives saved by private firearms ownership from the discussion.

The riposte of "Net! Net! Net!" would put the gun-controllers on notice that the public's grasp of the real situation has defeated their propaganda. Imagine how Barack Hussein Obama, currently the nation's chief Safety Nazi, would have cringed had the crowd responded to his pious posturings at this event with a mass shout of "Net! Net! Net!" He'd have slunk away with his tail between his legs, Gentle Reader. He might never have dared to broach the subject of gun control again.

Needless to say, the "if it saves even one life" cant phrase isn't the only one in our political discourse. Here are a few others:

  • "Assault weapon"
  • "Right to health care"
  • "Reasonable regulation"
  • "A woman's right to choose"
  • "Let the rich pay their fair share"

Typeset phrases, all. Each of them attempts to conceal an important consideration about the issue under discussion -- if "discussion" is the right word for the sort of shouting match that typifies political intercourse today. And each one deserves to be met with the matching refutation.

Let "Net!" be our starting point.

Monday, February 4, 2013

Words of Sanity From Sandy Hook, Conn

Experience the entire video and STEAL IT!!

ΜΟΛΩΝ ΛΑΒΕ!

Why Won't They Stand And Fight?

Perhaps the thing that most confounds me about national politics is the Republicans' reluctance to use what authority they possess.

This article, which is superficially complimentary toward Speaker of the House John Boehner (R, OH). actually indicts him and his GOP caucus in a fashion I'd hate to have aimed at me:

House Speaker John Boehner has shored up his political clout after a shaky month, persuading his Republican caucus to pick its fights with Democrats more strategically.

His impressive rebound, aided by face-the-facts confrontations with colleagues, helped the government avoid a potential default on its financial obligations _ for three months, at least.

It also reassured establishment Republicans who feared the House majority was becoming so unpredictable that it endangered the party.

Let's see, now:

  • The Republican Party is opposed to further increases in federal spending.
  • The Republican Party is committed to reducing, and hopefully eliminating, the federal deficit.
  • No bill can become law without winning the approval of a majority of the House.
  • Both revenue and appropriations bills must originate in the House.
  • The Republican Party has held the majority in the House of Representatives since January 3, 2011.

Have I got all that right? If so, then:

Why has federal spending continued to increase, and the federal deficit continued to fly at stratospheric levels, during years of Republican dominance in the House?

Isn't it a rather simple matter to vote down bills that would increase appropriations? Isn't it an equally simple matter to vote down increases in federal borrowing (i.e., the "debt ceiling")?

Clearly, there must be other factors to consider...other priorities at issue. But those factors and priorities seldom get adequate attention from anyone engaged with national politics -- and never from the sycophant press.


On his weekday radio show, Sean Hannity has several times mentioned a deficit-reduction plan promoted by the Honorable Connie Mack (R, FL): Reduce federal spending across the board by 1% each year for ten years. That would reduce federal spending to slightly more than 90% of its current level after ten years had elapsed. Inasmuch as the federal deficit is now approximately 45% of annual federal spending, I assume Rep. Mack is counting on economic growth to provide sharply increased federal revenues to bring them into balance with federal spending. I don't think we could count on that, nor do I think Rep. Mack can have any greater degree of confidence in that outcome.

Still, give the man credit: At least Rep. Mack is talking about reducing federal spending! Approximately no one else in Congress is doing so.

Yet with a Republican-dominated House, reducing federal spending -- even just holding it at current levels -- is a simple, straightforward matter. A Continuing Resolution that perpetuates all departments' appropriations at current levels, or at levels 1% below current, would do the job. The Senate, though dominated by Democrats, would face a stark choice: accept it or accept a federal "shutdown." All that's required is for House Republicans to stand firm on it.

But they don't.

How much of it arises from regionalized Republicanism and the attendant special-interest lobbying? How much of it is due to Republicans' timidity before the Main Stream Media? What other factors ought to be considered?

This deserves more thought than we usually give it.


The nationalization of essentially every political question, coupled to the nationalization of both print and broadcast journalism, has created an important dynamic that naturally propels ever more federal government and ever more federal spending. It might seem simple. It isn't.

Members of the House are elected by geographically defined constituencies that average about 725,000 residents. Whenever a policy question arises in Congress, each Congressman is expected to weigh both his constituency's interests and the good of the nation. Reduced to the crassest possible terms, if the policy under discussion would bring jobs and/or money to his district, Congressman Smith must weigh the good of the nation against the political consequences of opposing it. This holds equally well if the policy under discussion would reduce the stream of goodies flowing to his voters.

Because the major print and broadcast organs are national in both coverage and distribution, they can wield a powerful influence on the nationwide reputation of any federal official. The evidence suggests that this is of importance even to relatively obscure Congressmen who harbor no higher ambitions...though that might be a smaller number than one would think.

But though the major media organs are national in coverage and distribution, they are regional in their interests, particularly as regards their revenues. The New York Times, for example, gets far more of its readers and revenue from the New York Metropolitan region than from outside it. The same could be said of the various broadcast organs. Each such institution is tied by its survival interests to a particular large city and its surroundings.

If the region from which an organ draws its revenues leans in a specific direction politically, the organ's editorial policy will do so out of necessity, that it not lose readers / viewers and therefore advertisers. And large cities, especially coastal cities, are far more often left-liberal than not. Since left-liberal politics is inherently a politics of centralization, the rest follows.


The current contretemps over gun control has been much on my mind in recent weeks. I'm a gun owner and sport shooter, and I deeply resent the implication that my right to my weapons, guaranteed by the Second Amendment to the Constitution of the United States, somehow poses a danger to innocent others. However, I live on Long Island, an exurb of Gomorrah on the Hudson New York City. Our major media are those of New York City. Over time, they've driven the city's left-liberalism deeply into the mindsets of my neighbors.

Here's the kicker: Republicans who get elected in New York Metro favor more restrictive gun control quite as much as any Democrat. No more than their Congressional colleagues will they stand and fight for what their party's platform proclaims as an individual's perfect right; it would get them turned out of office. That, coupled to Long Island's high tax rates and New York's generally high cost of living, has me seriously considering relocation -- if not immediately, then in two or three years, when I've retired from my trade.

You may rest assured that if I do relocate, it will be well away from the coastal cancers whose media barons have warped so many minds and have terrified so many elected officials out of standing for Constitutionally faithful governance. Somewhere with more and better firing ranges, at any rate.

Friday, February 1, 2013

A Flip Of The Bird, Obama Style

After yesterday's Senate committee interview of former United States Senator Chuck Hagel, Obama's nominee for Secretary of Defense, the prevailing reaction on the Right side of both the Punditocracy and the Internet Commentariat has been stunned incredulity. What was Obama thinking, the talking heads and pixel flingers are saying, to have sent so poor a nominee to the Senate expecting his confirmation?

Come on, boys and girls. Widen your perspective just a wee bit. It's not that hard.

No one has even mentioned that, with Ray LaHood stepping down at the Department of Transportation, Hagel, if confirmed, would be the Obama Administration's "token Republican" Cabinet member. And Hagel isn't just a nominal Republican and former U.S. Senator. Nor is he just an undisguised anti-Semite and hater of Israel. He also opposed virtually every Republican initiative in international affairs throughout his tenure in office, with special emphasis on America's use of its military might. Indeed, Hagel is one of the the best known federal advocates for radically shrinking the nation's armed forces and forswearing their employment as an instrument of foreign policy.

No one appears on Al-Jazeera television to assert that the United States is "a bully nation" by accident. Certainly no Republican.

If the famously incurious, ill-read and ill-educated Barack Hussein Obama had no idea about any of that, surely his advisors did.


In commenting on Geraldo Rivera's ambition to be a United States Senator, our beloved InstaPundit mentioned that Roman Emperor Caligula sent an ass to the Senate. But Professor Reynolds stops short of saying why Caligula did so, or what the parallel is to Rivera's declaration of intent.

Actually, the case of Rivera (or the odious Al Franken before him) isn't as good a parallel as Obama's nomination of Chuck Hagel. Hagel might just be the least suitable, least competent applicant for such a position in the history of the nation. Start with his foreign-policy inclinations, which bear no resemblance to the nominal Republican call for a powerful military and an assertive international stance. Add his antipathy toward Israel, a badly beleaguered democracy surrounded by blood enemies resolved upon its annihilation. Fold in his almost total lack of knowledge of things military. Then sprinkle on his well known personality defects and bake with the klieg lights of a Senatorial interrogation. Does that cake rise?

Obama might have played a long shot here. Even the Senate's Democrats will hesitate before awarding him their votes. However, the probability or improbability of Hagel's confirmation pales before the political importance of his nomination.

Politically, the Hagel nomination does three things:

  • It reassures an important component of Obama's support base that yes, he really does hold America responsible for what's wrong with the Middle East and the world generally;
  • It exerts an intense, unpleasant pressure on the Republican caucus in the Senate, whose members are mostly old-line GOP Establishment loath to criticize a fellow Republican even when he richly deserves it;
  • While adhering cosmetically to the tradition of having one Cabinet member from the opposition party, it simultaneously expresses Obama's contempt for his political adversaries in the clearest possible terms, thereby maddening his opponents and reassuring his more venomous supporters of his intent to destroy all opposition to his rule.

Indeed, that last bit might be the most important part of all in our all-politics-all-the-time milieu.


Obama is no Lincoln. He has no intention of trying to convert his enemies into friends. His overriding aim is to destroy all resistance to his will. Every move he makes, every word he utters must be studied in that light, for they make no sense in any other.

As a divide-to-conquer move, the Hagel nomination is superb. It pits younger, Tea-Party-style Republicans against the older GOP Establishment, widening the gulf and enhancing the prospects for future strife between them. It could only have been more effective if Hagel possessed John McCain's war-hero status.

As a stroke toward solidifying Obama's support on the Left, the nomination is equally splendid. In no other venue is America's international importance quite as important as in the Middle East. It's beyond serious dispute that were America not firmly aligned with Israel -- a status Obama has done his covert best to put into question -- her Muslim neighbors would already have bent all their powers on her destruction. Inasmuch as American Leftists are slaveringly desperate to propitiate world Islam, contriving the downfall of Israel is at or near the top of their foreign-policy priority list. They've been firm in support of Obama's many gestures of disdain for the Jewish state and Benjamin Netanyahu, its prime minister in these troubled times.

Finally, and possibly far more important than one might initially think, the gesture of contempt toward the Republican Party and the one-secretary-from-the-opposition tradition has great potential for eliciting a serious mistake from the Senatorial GOP contingent. Indeed, it might already have committed that mistake by voting to confirm John Kerry -- hey, he served in Vietnam! -- as Secretary of State. Whatever the case, contempt tends to provoke anger, and angry men often act against their own interests.

Obama is no genius, despite the propaganda we've been showered with by his admirers. He might be moderately bright, or he might be the dullest instrument ever inserted into the Oval Office. But somewhere in his circle, even if not in his own person, there's a very shrewd, completely amoral, and utterly ruthless political tactician. The Hagel nomination is just the latest demonstration.

Thursday, January 31, 2013

"Culture Is Upstream From Politics" Dept: An Offer. (UPDATED)

The title is a sentiment often expressed by the late, great Andrew Breitbart. It's been echoed recently by a large number of DextroSpheric commentators, which suggests that Breitbart hit on an important truth that hasn't received adequate follow-up.

What's that, you say? "Follow-up?" Isn't that someone else's job? Someone with money, or a big publishing house, or at least a few 70mm movie cameras?

No, fellow freedom lovers. It's our job. Yours and mine.

And I've decided to take it seriously.


There's a large independent-writers-and-artists movement in progress, made possible by the World Wide Web and a few visionary entrepreneurs. The composition of that movement reflects the American public generally, at least as regards political inclinations. The balance is pretty close to the tallies from the most recent elections. For example, you'll see as many pro-Christian writers and works as anti-Christian ones; as many pro-life sentiments as pro-abortion ones; as many pro-freedom stances as pro-socialism ones.

There's a lot of crap in the indie movement, of course. These days, any thumb-fingered illiterate with a word processor can style himself a novelist; here's a particularly egregious example. But there's a lot of crap coming out of the conventional publishing houses, too -- and because of their editorial alignments, 90% or more of their offerings promote anti-freedom positions, whether overtly or covertly. The balance in the indie movement is much truer to the inclinations of the general populace. More, a lot of the crap is no crappier. It's less expensive on average, too.

Some of the stuff in the indie-writers stream is both quite entertaining and oriented toward wholesome, pro-freedom themes. Here's an example from someone whose name you might recognize. And here's a truly brilliant thriller from someone you might not have heard of before this. If you've been craving good fiction and have had trouble finding books that don't offend you politically or morally, those are two for your nightstand.

I submit to you that getting books of that sort read by a wider audience would be a constructive direction for our efforts. The more people read them and find them appealing, the more people will be moved toward the Right kind of premises and political alignment.

The question, as always, is how to make it so.


Readers generally choose their reading matter according to a small number of influences:

  1. Recommendations from friends.
  2. Prior acquaintance with the author's work.
  3. Really, really eye-catching cover art.
  4. Perceptible similarities to other books they've enjoyed.
  5. Favorable reviews from persons whose judgment they trust.

We of the DextroSphere can't do much about items 1 through 4, but we can help with item 5...if we have the time, the inclination, and the cooperation of indie writers of a pro-freedom, pro-life, pro-Christian, and pro-American bent.

Accordingly, I hereby make the following offer to such writers:

If you believe you qualify
As regards storytelling skills and moral-political values,
Send me a free copy of your book,
Preferably in .EPUB format,
And if I concur with your self-assessment,
I will review it and promote it here.

Moreover, I exhort any Gentle Reader who runs an op-ed Website like this one -- or who participates in Internet radio -- to do the same. The more of us there are touting wholesome fiction, the more of it will be read -- and written.

Sound good to you?


Breitbart was right. Our politics has turned leftward in large measure because our culture has done so. Anti-freedom, anti-capitalist, anti-Christian and anti-American messages pour ceaselessly out of the major publishing houses, Hollywood, the television networks, and the companies that promote contemporary "music." If that force isn't countered, it will continue to have its way with us. But apart from a few brave souls, such as the ones behind Declaration Entertainment, few have picked up the gauntlet.

It's our job.
We who already vent onto the Web.
We can have substantial influence over the culture.
That will morph into political influence.
But not if we sit here idle.

Let's get to work.

UPDATE: For the slow-of-comprehension in the audience:

  • I didn't say "Send me to Amazon to purchase your book." (4 people have done that.)
  • I didn't say "Send me to some Website I'll have to register for and log into to download a PDF file of your book." (2 people have done that.)
  • I did say "Send me a free copy. Preferably in .EPUB format."

Moreover, don't send me a first draft. I'm not interested in subjecting myself to your typos. Send me your final, ready-for-publication work.

If you can't grasp that and abide by it, you'll get no consideration.

Is that clear now?