Crashing Fences

“Crashing Fences” is from G.K. Chesterton’s The Thing.  The piece presents a word of caution to reformers before they start smashing traditions, institutions, and norms.

G.K. Chesterton

Parents beware.  The curriculum in our schools is replete with all manner of “reform”, or the crashing of fences.  It’s in the Science Departments in the form of climate change and the haranguing about humanity as the pillager of nature, the eco craze.  It’s in the Math Departments as new means are concocted to make girls more comfortable with numbers and to further the mania to make everyone feel better about coming up with the wrong answer.  It’s in the English Departments in the attempt to erase the cultural hallmarks of western civilization.  It’s in the Social Studies Departments’ staff training and textbooks as they beatify the new secular saints of “experts”, FDR, and everything that can be forced into the tent of civil rights.  In short, it’s everywhere.

The kiddies are in a finishing school to manufacture Progressives.  Progressivism is all about surrendering to faculty lounges and government – a ripe source for their future employment – the power to decide what is to be done. No more is life to be left to the old and “stodgy” and the “chaos” of free markets and citizen republics.  Omniscient technocrats will lead the way.

Adolescents are trained to crash fences … or accept the transfer of power to those who will do the crashing.

Most bothersome is the certainty in which all this is presented.  One can’t question this or that tenet of Darwin or the UN’s IPCC without being indicted for war crimes against “science”.

I’m reminded of the ideological pestering about any of the chic calls to change our ways. “Gender fluidity” is a demand to repeal chromosomes.  “Climate change” is an exorcism to drive out the last vestiges of limited government. Say goodbye to the Constitution.  “Social justice” is the seizure of an older term for the purposes of smashing nearly any unevenness in human relations.  In an earlier time (19th century), “social justice” was the restraints exercised by civil society to control anti-social behavior.  No more.  The nomenclature for crashing fences is almost endless.

This isn’t education.  It’s propaganda.  Along the way the kiddies get a little knowledge, but it’s wrapped in the garb of a constant revolution.  Few in Russia, October 1917, knew that they were embarking on the descent into death pits and concentration camps.  Fewer still knew that after breaking a few eggs to make the utopian omelet the hell would persist for 80 years, and not a shining collectivist heaven at the end of the long dark tunnel.

The words attributed to Jesus on the cross in the Gospel of Luke (23:34) have much relevance for today: “Father, forgive them, for they do not know what they are doing.”

RogerG

Disinformation Within Disinformation

Adams Schiff (D, Ca.), Chairman of the House Intelligence (?) Committee, and key champion of impeachment.

Are you as tired as I am of the endless incantation of “Russian attacked our democracy”?  I was going to write about the Dems’ call for a takeover of healthcare or Romney’s Trump-bashing.  Instead, I talked myself into this topic after running into the hackneyed charge for the zillionth time since before Trump placed his hand on the Bible, Jan. 20, 2017.  I feel like the Peter Finch character in “Network” when he shouts, “I’m as mad as hell, and I’m not going to take this anymore!”.  Enough; please, enough!  Put it to bed.

The reason is obvious.  This is disinformation about a commonly-used disinformation campaign.  The Russians have been at it for a long time, and so have we.

The ex-veep Dick Cheney fed the monster of overheated rhetoric by calling Russian campaign interference an “act of war”.  But the monster had already been unleashed in the interregnum between the Obama and Trump presidencies (more about this is likely to come from the “investigation of the investigators”).  It became the established Democrats’ tag line to explain Hillary’s loss.  From the gitgo, it was a ruse to muddy the winner and exonerate the loser.  Apparently, the Democrats aren’t supposed to lose elections.

Do I really have to recount the long roll call of Russian attempts to influence western electorates?  The tactic was done through espionage by comrades in the various national chapters of the Communist Party (“Witness” by Whittaker Chambers) and “agents of influence” in the chancelleries of the West (Research our government’s Venona Project).  It was done by financially feeding fellow-travelling activists in the anti-nuke, anti-war, and anti-capitalist movements west of the Iron Curtain.

Senator Edward Kennedy of Massachusetts addresses pro-freeze demonstrators on Capitol Hill, 1981 or 1982 (?).

Reagan faced a full fusillade of these “acts of war” in the 1980’s when he moved to counter the Russian medium-range nuclear missile threat in Europe.  Anti-war sympathizers went nuts in Congress, the media, and the streets.  Thank God he stuck to his guns … er, missiles.

Shenanigans in western elections were, and are, a staple … and it includes us.  Our interference in Israeli elections is less than unusual.  Obama sent some of his campaign veterans to Tel Aviv to assist Labor.  The smell of hypocrisy is rich in the air.

Jeremy Bird, a former Obama campaign organizer, who assisted the Left-leaning parties’ effort to oust Benjamin Netanyahu, 2015. (Melina Mara/Getty Images)

We could do much worse for humanity than doing more of this in places like Iran, Venezuela, Nicaragua, and Cuba.

The Democrats are desperate to remain politically relevant by any means at hand.  The means at hand, though, are patently ludicrous.  The crazy plot requires a god-like omniscience on the part of the Russians.  Russians are seemingly more adept at electioneering than Robby Mook, Hillary’s campaign tsar.  Maybe that’s true.

The scheme demands a Russian crystal ball to foresee how to precisely calibrate their phone bank of basement bots and Facebook ads to tilt the election to Trump.  But there’s a fly in the ointment.  They don’t need a crystal ball or time machine if their goal is to sow discord regardless of who wins.  Their objective was to sully the winner, who everyone, including the Russians, expected to be Hillary.

They succeeded beyond their wildest imagination.  The winner was falsely covered in mud.  Shockingly, it happened to be Trump.  If it had been Hillary, the story would end up in the same place as the Ark at the end of “Raiders of the Lost Ark”.

The place of storage for the collusion plot if Hillary had won? (“Raiders of the Lost Ark”)

The only successful part of the subterfuge was the Hillary-Steele-Russians element.  The product of the cabal – the Steele Dossier – was fed to the mandarins of the Obama administration, and used and leaked to soil the real electoral winner.  For over two years, the country, the president, his family and helpers, were subjected to a drawn out nothingburger.

A lot of people have egg on the face from their nothingburger (sorry for the mixed metaphor).  The “egg” is ruined reputations and more business for defense lawyers.  The sorry affair was always a Dem disinformation campaign rooted in a Russian one.

“The great enemy of the truth is very often not the lie, deliberate, contrived and dishonest, but the myth, persistent, persuasive and unrealistic.”

John F. Kennedy

RogerG

Representative Gadfly

Rep. Justin Amash (R, Mich.)

Rep. Justin Amash (nominally an “R”) has jumped on board the Dems’ impeachment train.  It shouldn’t surprise anyone.  The guy is eccentric.  He’s an example of the occasional wild consciences that populate the Republican caucus.  Herding felines comes to mind when discussing the task of party leaders.  It probably had a role in driving Ryan into retirement.  They are in striking contrast to the Bolshevik-style discipline of the Dems.  They are the party of government and government power.  They come together with iron discipline when power is at stake.  Not so with the wild hares in the Republican Party.

Amash’s flaming libertarianism, approaching neo-anarchism, has led him to scorch law enforcement and national security.  He’s with the Dems on emasculating ICE.  The guy had run-ins with his fellow Republicans over trade, national defense, immigration, entitlements, the budget, etc.  The guy is really a party of one. (see here)

Here’s what he said about Speaker Paul Ryan: “Right now, in terms of process, we have the worst House speaker in the history of Congress”.  No, this wasn’t Nancy Pelosi at a press conference.

Then-Speaker Paul Ryan.

He’s symptomatic of an all-too-common political phenomena: the politico with a combination of inflated ego, the corrupting influence of power, and heightened irascibility.  He’s hard to get along with.  He’s the loud, opinionated uncle at Thanksgiving dinner who can’t find anyone to sit next to him.  But don’t expect him to get the message.

RogerG

Trump’s Goofy Ideas on Trade

Trump speaks at his Sept. 2018 West Virginia rally.

Trump may be a great real estate developer but his understanding of trade stops at the water’s edge.  It’s almost childlike, as it probably is for most people.

In recent rallies, Trump talks like a Democrat in his boasts of the prospect of $100 billion for the US treasury from his tariffs.  The Dems do the same when trying to jack you with tax increases.  It’s advertised as more money for “investment” – i.e., government spending out the wazoo.

The reality is different. If you want less of something, tax it.  So, the Dems get less money to transform America into the image of their frenzied imaginations as people scurry about to escape Bernie-bro policies.  Trump gets less money from his tariffs as they drive up prices which leads to less imports, fewer sales, and less dough for Uncle Sam.  It’s elementary.

Of course, Trump might be guilty of good ol’ hucksterism.  He’s been known to do that.  Remember his crowing about his inaugural crowds.

He routinely bellows about the “trade deficit” sucking out the life blood of the nation.  Each quarterly $124-billion hole is treated by him as a debt. It ain’t that simple.

In fact, it’s not the whole trade enchilada.  The thing hawked by Trump is one third of the “balance of payments” super stat.  Add the capital and financial accounts to the mix.  Jury-rig one of the trio and you unexpectedly alter the other two.  Anyway, ignoring the other two makes them as optional as sight for a driver’s license test.  There’s a good chance in both instances that you’ll end up in a bad place.

The trade hole isn’t even a good barometer of the health of the economy.  It’s ups and downs appear to be mostly irrelevant.  Of the 120 months of the 1930’s and the Great Depression, 102 were trade surpluses.  Being in the black in trade didn’t make a dent in industrial collapse and 25% unemployment.  (See here)

Good times and trade surpluses don’t necessarily correlate.  Policies intended to create trade surpluses can backfire. No best-laid-plans are immune.  A blowback can erupt with nearly all policies, including globalization.

Globalization isn’t a golden brick road either.  Nothing is.  Costs and benefits aren’t evenly distributed in whatever economic tack is taken.  The rich do get richer despite the Lenin-style attacks of Bernie and the congresswoman from the Bronx.  There’s just a greater likelihood that enough of the blessings spillover to everyone else.

Socialism isn’t a prettier alternative.  It lodges benefits in the growing numbers of meddlesome government workers while the costs show up as everybody else descending into a worsening mediocrity.

Take your pick: richer government workers and malaise for the masses, or the filthy rich getting filthier and the masses living marginally better.  My money is on the latter.

With socialism, either of the national or international variety, a nation’s vitality is smothered.  With globalization, the financial centers of megalopolis USA ride a wave as flyover country sinks into depopulation and a meth epidemic.  Bernie bros bewail an inequality of wealth in the vertical dimension.  They’re blind to an inequality of the geographical, horizontal dimension.  It’s real and troublesome.  It’s the only justification for Trump’s trade demagoguery.

This goes to show that cocooned knowledge in real estate doth not translate into hyper-wisdom on everything any more than an inside-the-beltway existence ensures good sense.  The crooked timber of humanity is evident everywhere from the administrative state to party hacks to zealots of the left, right, and center.

A classical understanding of economics would help.  Is anyone delivering it?  Kudos to the few who are trying.

RogerG

Bastardizing the Language

U.S. workers are seen next to heavy machinery while working on a new bollard wall in El Paso, Texas, as seen from the Mexican side of the border in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico September 26, 2018. REUTERS/Jose Luis Gonzalez.

Too much heat can destroy things.  The same is true of political heat.  It wreaks havoc on the language.  For instance, take the word “old”, like walls being “old technology”.

I was thinking this morning of the amazing things that we are doing with technology.  I bluetoothed my phone with my bedroom radio/receiver for the umpteenth time to listen to Pandora.  It’s wonderful to know that we have crammed so much capability in a cellphone smaller than a chest-pocket notepad. In the end, though, the cellphone functions as a radio of days of yore.  All the Bluetooth and Wi-Fi capabilities are just radio signals.  It’s “old” in today’s corrupted parlance.

Radio and its signals weren’t understood until a nerdy and inventive kid, Edwin Howard Armstrong, figured out how it worked and came up with the components in the 1910’s-1930’s to make AM and FM radio, and television for that matter, possible.  Apple and Android are riding on his back.

Armstrong explaining the superregenerative circuit, New York, 1922.

The cellphone has a lot more of “old” in it.  Thanks to the gang at Bell Labs and Robert Noyce and his band of lusty fellows at Fairchild Semiconductor of the 1950’s and 1960’s we have the semiconductor and planar process.  Without these things, no cellphone … and our kids would be normal.

“Old” is all around us.  It seems foolish to call them “old” because they are as fundamental as gravity. It sounds jarring to speak of gravity as “old”.  Newton and Einstein didn’t invent gravity.  They attempted to understand it. Armstrong didn’t invent the EM spectrum.  He just found a way to use it.  Bell Labs and Robert Noyce didn’t invent silicon or electricity.  They just found ways to use it for sending electrical signals (the integrated circuit).

Noyce and Gordon Moore in front of the Intel SC1 building in Santa Clara in 1970.

“Old” is everywhere.  If it wasn’t for another “old” process, we wouldn’t be here … if we escaped the clutches of Planned Parenthood and our parents ignored the loony congresswoman from the Bronx (AOC).

“Old” is one of those words facing disfigurement by our partisan hotheads.  Trump wants a wall; the Dems want power.  Power to do what?  Power to remake America. “Old” is attached to “walls” to frustrate efforts to limit and manage the human tide crashing our borders.  Walls do work; ask any celebrity seeking privacy.  The Dems, in their heart of hearts, don’t want anything that really works.  That’s because they are predisposed to be more comfortable with open borders than they are with controlled borders.

Of course, the Dems need an alternative or surrender the field.  Their favorite rejoinder is to attach “more” and “new” to “technology” and “more” to “personnel”.  Sounds great, and is.  The only problem is that the other side has long wanted this stuff … and walls.

The gambit of only “new technology” and “more personnel”, though, serves the Dems’ interests in two ways.  First, the tech stuff can be easily turned off and the personnel moved away from the border if the political winds should blow their way.  Secondly, it’s a hot opportunity to funnel some taxpayer cash to their rich donors in Silicon Valley.  Construction companies and their workers building a wall aren’t likely to be a rich source of support anyway.

Sometimes such words are combined with others to produce nonsense, as in “diversity” combined with “is our strength”.  What football team achieved BCS ranking by allowing the offensive line to be “diverse” in their blocking?  It’s balderdash.

Bastardize is defined as “change (something) in such a way as to lower its quality or value, typically by adding new elements”.  “Old” and “diversity” have been bastardized beyond recognition.  Simply by affixing “old” to anything has convinced the Dems that they have won the argument.  No, they’re just playing fast and loose with the language.  Now there’s a scandal, a linguistic one with disastrous consequences.

RogerG

California Taxes and Gas Prices, Part II

Substitute Gavin Newsom for Brown. Gavin’s got more hair, and its gelled, but the straitjacket fits just as snugly.

I’ve previously posted about the new federal tax law’s possible effects on California and the rest of the deep blue states.  Ditto about California’s astronomical gas prices.  More has come to light, so the need for “Part II”.

I. California and Blue State Taxes.

April 15 has come and gone. Many Californios – of which I used to be one, like millions of others scattered throughout the country – and others in deep blue states are cutting checks to the IRS instead of receiving refunds.  Curtailing SALT (the federal tax subsidy to high-tax states, the Hillary electorate) and the home mortgage interest deduction (HMID), and a few other tax changes, have wreaked havoc with their expectations.  Now, they really know what it means to live in a high-tax state.

Michael Ramirez / Weekly Standard

First, lower refunds across the country are expected since withholding was reduced in each one of your paychecks.  Paychecks were bigger as the feds took less.  We could go back to the old system of the feds lopping off more from each one of your paychecks and giving a pittance back at the end of the tax year.  Let’s face it; withholding is a scam.

Second, the caterwauling from California about getting less from the feds than they send to DC has reached a fever pitch.  The only problem: it probably isn’t true. George Skelton in the LA Times raised serious doubts, as does Ann Hollingshead with the Legislative Analyst’s Office and the Tax Foundation (see here).

The old wives’ tale was born of a flawed study with gimmicky assumptions.  Among other things, not properly accounted was California’s peculiar demography.  The state’s age pyramid is distorted with a mass of the young and proportionally fewer elderly.  I suspect that’s probably due to massive foreign immigration over the past 5 decades and the hemorrhaging of retirees to other environs.  As a result, the accounting contains less federal Social Security and Medicare payments.  How much of this is due to the policies championed by the state’s ruling party?  Hmmmm, I wonder.

Also, the military draw down since the end of the Cold War didn’t help.  Still, in the end, the accounting gimmicks in the earlier study exaggerated the monies going to DC and undervalued the monies to the state.  It’s just more proof of Disraeli’s old line: “There are three kinds of lies: lies, damned lies, and statistics.”

As for the clamps on the HMID, any adverse effects can be traced to California foot-shooting.  Real estate is very pricey in the state, and getting pricier.  It’s a good bet that much of the state’s middle class have mortgages that greatly exceed the limits in the tax law.  Why is that?  You need look no further than the Leviathan of taxes and regulations smothering housing in the state.  Eco-craziness and taxaholism leaves a hangover.  It comes in the form of homeless encampments – the usefulness of human poop maps (SF, but applicable elsewhere) as a result – skyrocketing rents, and a strangulation of supply.

Aiming a cocked-and-loaded gun at your foot is an appropriate metaphor.

II. California’s Gas Prices.

Self-serve gasoline prices at Chevron in Malibu exceed $4 a gallon mark on April 15. (Al Seib / Los Angeles Times)

Once again, foot-shooting reigns supreme regarding the state’s astronomically high gas prices.  But the mandarins of the ruling party are looking for scapegoats.  A Berkeley prof of Business Administration, Severin Borenstein, gave the goons ammunition by apparently identifying a 24-cent “surcharge”, an amount that he couldn’t account for.  The near-socialist ruling party didn’t need much of an excuse to go on a jihad against capitalism.  Borenstein gave them one.

Prof. Severin Borenstein, UC Berkeley

Well, Severin, here’s one factor that you didn’t think of: the state has so mangled the market for fuel that supply and demand have nowhere to reach but up.  Sorry, Newsom and the other chiefs of the ruling party, you can’t suspend the laws of supply of demand like you tried with immigration law.  There’s no such thing as a sanctuary from supply and demand.  The Soviets took that route to prosperity, and discovered poverty and social collapse.

The peculiar CARBOB blend, cap-and-trade, greenie taxes, and the constant finagling of CARB (Ca. Air Resources Board) have given the state the least consumer-friendly fuel market in the country.  Such markets still have supply and demand.  It’s just that they intersect at a place above almost any red state. Call it the lefty “surcharge”.

A beleaguered California resident?

This postscript to previous posts only makes the plight of blue states bleaker.  The fact that this is democratically-chosen bleakness doesn’t alter the reality.  If you want the clowns, accept what happens when you’re ruled by clowns.

And that includes sending more money to the state, any metroplex in the state, and DC.  And add to it the high prices for almost anything, including gas.  I guess that you get what you vote for.

RogerG

Comey’s Phony “Higher Loyalty”

James Comey, the fired FBI director, has for the past 2 years since his firing been making the rounds as a sage while hawking his book, “A Higher Loyalty”.  Should he be accorded unquestioned esteem?  Rod Rosenstein thinks otherwise.  Take a look.

Rosenstein has been muzzled by his official and professional responsibilities as Deputy Attorney General while Comey makes the rubber chicken circuit.  A few days ago in a CNN townhall, the dispatched FBI Director, wrapping himself in a messianic aura, smeared the retired Deputy AG as a person lacking in “strong character”.  Well, Rosenstein is no longer manacled by his job and can fight back.  The self-anointed prophet of God, Comey, may turn out to be a three-card-monte scammer.

Rosenstein presents a Comey who got out in front of his skis, probably due to Comey’s inflated self-regard.  With Comey, investigators are prosecutors.  He did this twice in the heat of the 2016 presidential election when he announced the non-prosecution of Hillary and then publicly resuscitated the investigation of her.  The word “Investigation” after “Federal”, “Bureau”, and “of” will have to be replaced by “Prosecution”.  But admittedly FBP doesn’t have the same ring as FBI.

A higher loyalty?  Comey’s higher loyalty may not ascend much above the person looking back at him in the mirror.  Somehow the ancient Greek story of Narcissus keeps coming to mind.

RogerG

A Little History to Soothe the Savage Beast

Jerrold Nadler (D,NY) on MSNBC, Jan. 09, 2019

The Democrats in charge of the House side of Congress, and their long media retinue, are in high dudgeon over the Mueller Report and the whole Russia mirage.  Their epileptic seizures could be calmed by the application of a little history.

A huge part of the problem is their hatred of Trump which has deluded them into going whole hog on the Trump Manchurian candidate story.  It was always an illusion, but illusions must be kept alive in the quest for power.  Remember John C. Calhoun’s twisted logic in defense of slavery to keep the slavocracy in power in the South?

Remember the 1934 persecution-by-prosecution of William Insull – the man, more than any other, responsible for the creation of the nation’s electrical grid in the 1920’s – by FDR’s Justice Department as the scapegoat for the Depression and to further FDR’s grand scheme to place the economy, and much of life, under bureaucratic control?  If you’re interested, after a 7-week trial, it took a jury only 2 hours to acquit Insull and his 16 co-defendants of all charges.

Examples abound.

Insidious illusions will be always, like the poor, with us, especially if power is at stake.  For the Resistance true believers, Trump has to be guilty for him to be dethroned.  Belief cometh before proof.  So, Nadler and company are issuing subpoenas and contempt charges like a mad counterfeiter, as the media ballyhoo the latest round as Fort Sumter.

But what of Eric Holder?

AG Eric Holder held in contempt of Congress, June 2012.

Obama’s AG refused almost any information and documentation on the DOJ’s still-murky 2010 Fast and Furious operation.  17-21 Democrats in 2012 joined Republicans in approving civil and criminal contempt charges against Holder.  The story barely lasted one news cycle in the mainstream media.  That’s because contempt of Congress claims are essentially censure votes.  These aren’t “contempt of court”.  If anything, the targets are holding in contempt the excitable and riled partisan majority in the House.

And there are differences in the Barr and Holder cases.  Barr released the whole report with the exception of parts falling under long-established rules and laws, like Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure (FRCP) 6(e) regarding the secrecy of grand jury proceedings.  The law’s secrecy mandates were recently confirmed by the Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit (McKeever v. Barr).

The Dems are trying to hang their hat on the exceptions to non-disclosure, but that would stretch “intelligence” and “counter-intelligence” officials to include power-hungry politicos and their staffs as they distort jury deliberations for political ends.  How long would it take for the pipeline to the WaPo and NYT to be turned on and the mud to flow?

By the way, the full unredacted Mueller Report is available to selected House members at the DOJ’s skiff, if they want.  But they don’t want.  They want power and that means Trump’s scalp.  This isn’t about the truth.  It’s about naked, raw power.

In contrast, Holder ignored and dissed Issa’s House Oversight Committed request for information.  Barr gave to Congress and the public almost the whole thing.  Holder is free to go on the lecture circuit and bash anyone with a “R” after their name.  Barr is daily pilloried on CNN, MSNBC, and the rest of the brooding media big sisters.  Go figure.

In some cases, we may have to wait for the afterlife to get justice.  Humanity’s “crooked timber” holds sway in this life.  In the meantime, a little bit of history may help us get beyond the worst that lies within.

RogerG

Neocons

Tucker Carlson of Fox News.

Tucker Carlson on Fox News lately gave his audience another dose of his skepticism of American military “adventurism” – bashing our ventures in Iraq, Syria, Libya, and future ones in places like Venezuela – and couldn’t resist another wack at his favorite whipping boy, “neocons”.  But what are “neocons”?  His definition appears to be a cartoon.

First, his variant of “neocons” has more to do with his need for a label to affix to advocates of something loosely called “nation-building”.  “Neocon” is readily available as it had most recently become the buzzword bogeyman for peacenik groups of the early 2000’s like Code Pink.  To understand Code’s orientation, they couldn’t have chosen a better word than “pink”.

Oh, Tucker’s no pinko.  He’s just got an antifa rendering of “neocon” implanted in his head, or Mick Jagger’s “My Sweet Neocon” on an endless loop.

That’s the cartoon translation of the term.  The reality is quite different.  To be blunt, neocons were liberal idealists of the 60’s who were mugged by the realities of the 70’s.  I’m old enough to remember it.

Many were part of JFK’s “best and brightest”, rolling up their sleeves to conquer society’s worst social problems.  Along came LBJ’s Great Society and within a decade things unraveled.  Crime, family breakdown, out-of-wedlock births, a drug epidemic, lifestyle diseases (AIDS, Hep C, Syphilis, Herpes), etc., hit the roof.

In the international arena, the hopes of “peaceful coexistence” with the Soviets, welfare for the Third World (foreign aid and the Peace Corps), bountiful negotiations, and UN-love were dashed by a Soviet arms buildup, Soviet/Cuban adventurism, the UN General Assembly’s descent into demagoguery, the fall of Saigon, and the frantic attempt by populations to escape the ravages of communism’s advance.  Remember the Boat People and the Killing Fields?

A Cambodian man walks past one of the many killing fields sites.
A group of boat people escaping Vietnam aboard their sea vessel, 1978 or 1979.

On the intellectual side, a grand rethink began. Charles Murray’s “Losing Ground”, James Q. Wilson’s “Broken Windows”, George Gilder’s “Wealth and Poverty”, Charles Krauthammer’s writings, and publications like Commentary Magazine laid out the devastation and what to do about it.  In a nutshell, they advocated a return to older values and institutions.  Sounds like the “con” part of “neocons”.

Internationally, these ex-liberals realized that John Lennon’s “All You Need Is Love” wasn’t a mature foreign policy.  They pressed for a military build up and a stance against the communists and other anti-American actors who would turn the world into their personal playground.  No more American self-doubt.  Sounds like Reaganism … and it is.

Ronald Reagan delivers his historic speech at the Berlin Wall on June 12, 1987.

There’s something to be learned from all of this.  Don’t let cable news personalities be your sole window to the world.  Sometimes they get it horribly wrong.

RogerG

Sports is Increasingly Soiling Itself with Partisan Politics

Alex Cora speaks to the press about the boycott before Monday’s game in Baltimore.

I just learned in “Axios AM” of the Red Sox partial boycott of the traditional White House visit to celebrate their World Series championship.  Let’s be clear: I have my concerns about Trump, but admittedly even more so with the radical lefty lurch of the Democratic Party.  Let’s be clear: I have my concerns about organized partisan political acts by athletes.  Alex Cora, the manager, and some of the players say that they won’t attend.  Well, now I have another team who has muddied itself with partisan politics to avoid.  When will this stop?

Of course, Axios couldn’t help but portray the spat in skin color terms … and so do the boycotting players.  The poison of reducing moral claims to melanin counts, cultural identities, and ritual assertions of victimhood has penetrated the locker room.  Maybe I shouldn’t be surprised.

It’s disgusting.  I’m reminded of an audience’s shout to singer James Taylor when he got political: “Shut up and sing!”  A parallel?

RogerG