The right-wing liberal

Low-tax smart-ass since 2006

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2 Authors

  1. rightwingliberal (95.5% — 1,354 posts)
  2. D.J. McGuire (4.5% — 64 posts)
    1. Items


      Republican, Jeffersoniad · International Affairs, WBK war

      The right-wing liberal · “Freedom flotilla” falls flat with Turkish voters RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

      It’s been nearly two months since the Gaza “freedom flotilla” captivated and divided the world.  Now, for the first time, we have an idea of what the Turkish electorate thinks – and for the governing Justice and Development Party (AKP), the answer is not good.

      Amidst the discussion of Turkey becoming the newest jihadist haven (and Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan becoming the next jihadist leader), yours truly noticed that Erdogan’s AKP was in political trouble.  What was not known was the effect of the flotilla fallout.

      Well, now we know.  Sonar Aristrima conducts monthly polls on Turkey.  Angus Reid and Bloomberg reported on its July figures.  Compared to May (before the flotilla raid), the opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP) has gained a point, while the AKP is flat.  Among other things, this put’s CHP’s lead outside the margin of error.

      Meanwhile, the third place Nationalist Movement Party/Nationalist Action Party (MHP) easily clears the 10% threshold needed to remain in Parilament – meaning the CHP and MHP can still block the AKP from returning to power.

      Bloomberg has some other details which are none too promising for the AKP:

      Erdogan received the lowest rating for trust of any Turkish leader or government branch listed in the poll, at 33 percent. The most trustworthy was the armed forces, with 78 percent. The poll also shows 46 percent of respondents had a negative outlook on the economy.

      According to the poll, 77 percent said unemployment was the country’s most important problem.

      I reiterate two things I said last time: the election is a year away, and the CHP, while secular, is a left-wing party that will give Washington some headaches.  Still, two months after Erdogan was basking in the glow of an international spin campaign par excellence, the people who actually determine if he’ll keep his job are as unhappy with him now as they were then.

      The rest of us need to keep that in mind.

      Cross-posted to BD


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      Republican, Jeffersoniad · Energy, International Affairs, Scandals, U.S. politics, government incompetence

      The right-wing liberal · CRU is at it again RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

      One would think that after the numerous findings and reports of data fudging and other shenanigans (since this past November, I have been posting on the slew of errors, data manipulation, and other shenanigans that have been plagued cliamte change alarmism; including today’s post, we are now up to thirty-one of them), the fplks at East Anglia’s Climate Research Unit would know better than this (Steve Goddard at WUWT):

      HadCrut released their January 1850 through June 2010 temperature data yesterday, and something “interesting” happened. Their temperature anomalies from January-April jumped up from their published values on June 3.

       . . .

      HadCrut still shows 1998 hotter than 2010 so far, but they seem to be working on “correcting” that problem.

      Why is it that post facto adjustments always seem to be upwards in later years, and downwards in earlier years? This whole global temperature business looks like a complete joke to me.

      Did they really think we wouldn’t notice?

      Cross-posted to VV


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      Republican, Jeffersoniad · Government spending, Local Government, Taxes

      The right-wing liberal · Hold-the-what? A walk down memory lane RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

      Today we take a look at some local political history here in Spotsylvania.

      One of the things I discovered in my campaign for the Board of Supervisors last year was the rather dubious record the county regarding taxes.  In fact, the county has experienced sixteen property tax increases in twenty-two years (1988-2010).  Now, truth be told, the county has so many recent residents (escaping even higher-tax jurisdictions), that this history hasn’t been highlighted much.  Moreover, a number of the tax increases have come during reassessment years, where the tax rate was reduced, but not nearly enough to counteract assessment increases – and even when assessments fell (as they did this year), the tax rate rose by more than what would have equalized taxes.

      This latter reason has, as one would expect, sparked quite the debate here.  Many (including some Supervisors) have convinced themselves that the equalization concept (i.e., if the tax rate leads to a higher average tax payment, it’s a tax increase no matter what the rate is) is some recent creation of right-wing, anti-tax crazies trying to hamstring local government.  So, I thought it best to take a walk down memory lane to see . . .

      • How the tax rate was treated during reassessment years?
      • What was done with taxes prior to 1988?
      • When was the last time property taxes were actually reduced in Spotsylvania?

      The first question led me to the 1982 reassessment, in which property values rose 30% in the county.  Keep in mind, this is 1982, long before the Republican Party elected any Supervisors in Spotsylvania (although Buford Carr was rumored to be one back in the day), let alone allegedly hijacked the tax rate discussion.

      Yet what do we find as the headline for the budget story in the Free Lance-Star (emphasis added) . . .

      Spotsylvania sets hold-the-line tax rate of 65 cents

      Cutting the budget to avoid raising the average tax bill, the Spotsylvania Board of Supervisors last night approved a $28.7 million operating budget for 1982-83 that drops the real estate tax rate to 65 cents . . .

      Hold-the-what?

      As an added irony, none other than Emmitt Marshall (who in recent years has tried to wave off the equalization idea) made the initial motion for the 65 cent rate (county staff had proposed 68 cents).  So clearly, the idea that assessments can make a rate “cut” an actual increase has a long tradition in Spotsylvania.

      Meanwhile, I found that, somewhat surprisingly given the nature of the spending debate, that even though the 1970s and 1980s had faster growth in population than the later decades (from 1970 to 1990, population grew over 350%, compared to 212% for 1990-2010), they also saw fewer tax hikes (seven versus fourteen).  Lest we forget, this is also despite the 1970s having two double-digit inflation spikes.

      But what about a tax cut?  Well, after looking at Board meeting minutes and a slew of FLS stories (the archives going back 80+ years are on-line now), we find that the last genuine act of tax relief for Spotsylvania homeowners came in June of 1975.  Since then, we’ve had nineteen property tax hikes (and six presidents, nine governors, four sheriffs . . .)

      Oh, and the overall budget has grown over 3600% in nominal terms since then (890% in real terms).

      Cross-posted to VV


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      Republican, Jeffersoniad · Energy, International Affairs, On the Blogosphere, Scandals, U.S. politics, government incompetence

      The right-wing liberal · The data cannot be questioned . . . because it doesn’t exist RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

      Steve Goddard details (and debunks) another piece of the anthropogenic global warming facade – temperature “smoothing” at NASA’s Goddard Institute for Space Studies (WUWT, emphasis added):

      The GISS map below shows the geographic details of how they believe the planet has warmed. It uses 1200 km smoothing, a technique which allows them to generate data where they have none – based on the idea that temperatures don’t vary much over 1200 km. It seems “reasonable enough” to use the Monaco weather forecast to make picnic plans in Birmingham, England. Similarly we could assume that the weather and climate in Portland, Oregon can be inferred from that of Death Valley.

      For those of us on the eastern time zone, think Cleveland and Savannah, GA.  They certainly have the same temperature all the time, right?

      Among other things Goddard discovers . . .

      • The closest temperature station to the North Pole is over 500 miles away; most are over 600 miles distant
      • Even using a 250km “smoothing” technique, almost all of Africa, nearly all of the Arctic Circle, and most of South America have no measurable temperature data
      • A Brazilian “hot spot” is literally created out of thin air

      I’d also note that there are data-less swaths over Siberia, which is all the more interesting given the earlier reports of Russian data being ignored (for those interested, here are other posts I have written detailing the errors, data manipulation, and other shenanigans that have been just the last eight monthsIncluding today’s post, we are now up to thirty of them).

      As Goddard himself puts it, “Pay no attention to that man behind the curtain.”

      Cross-posted to VV


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      Republican, Jeffersoniad · Bob MArshall, Government spending, Republican Party, Taxes, Virginia politics

      The right-wing liberal · Way to go Bob Marshall (and Chris Beer) RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

      After I bang on against the manufacturer’s tax hike that was snuck into the Virginia budget, Delegate Bob Marshall proposes a constitutional amendment to prevent that sort of thing, cites that very tax as his justification . . .

      . . . and I miss it.

      Self-fail.

      Thankfully, Chris Beer (Mason Conservative) did not.  He slaps up Marshall’s missive (excerpted here):

      Barack Obama is now facing Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli in federal court because my HB 10, the “Healthcare Freedom Act,” passed in Virginia this year.  Its purpose is to protect you from having to buy Obama approved “backroom deal” health insurance policies or face jail and heavy fines.

      But today I am writing to you because similar tactics were used to slip almost $130 million in new fees and business tax credit cuts into Virginia’s budget at the last minute with little discussion or visibility.

      . . .

      The Virginia Manufacturers Association called the tax credit elimination a business income tax increase and said cutting the business tax credit would cost Virginia companies $105 million in profits by 2014, and 6,400 jobs in the next two years.

      My 19 years in the Virginia General Assembly tell me that the $130 million this year will double and triple next year and the year after unless you and I, “we the people,” say no!

      . . .

      I’m drawing a line right here against allowing Washington tax extortion tactics to continue in Richmond.  But I need help from you and other Virginians to pass a permanent fix to stop Richmond lawmakers from slipping fee and tax increases into the budget.  

      The only remedy is to pass a Constitutional Amendment in the 2011 Assembly session barring this practice.  Here is my “Taxpayer Protection Constitutional Amendment,” H. J. R. 496 which I introduced today, July 19.

      “Any law that appropriates funds shall not contain any provision that imposes, continues, increases, or revives any tax, fee, or fine, nor shall any such law contain any provision that reduces or eliminates any credit, deduction, or exemption associated with any tax, fee, or fine.” 

      Virginia citizens need this Amendment to block secret tax hikes from passing as part of the Virginia Budget.  No other legal means can prevent this.

      Nicely done, Bob (and Chris).  Nicely done.

      Cross-posted to VV


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      Republican, Jeffersoniad · Government spending, Republican Party, Rob Wittman, U.S. politics, Virginia politics

      The right-wing liberal · There she goes again RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

      In her desperate attempt to be relevant, Krystal Ball continues to embarrass herself.

      Her latest faux pas comes in a mailer that claimed Congressman Rob Wittman “voted for a plan that would have gutted Medicare, forcing seniors to buy higher cost insurance.”  She cites a vote on “HJR85, 2009.”

      There’s only one problem: there was no H J Res 85 in 2009. One can only assume Krystal was referring to H Con Res 85, the Democrats’ FY10 budget resolution.

      Now, even if one assumes the nonsense that voting on budget resolutions means anything (the president neither signs nor vetoes them, so they have no force of law), let’s take a look at the vote where Medicare is discussed – namely the vote for a substitute budget resolution from Congressman Paul Ryan (R-WI), known as Substitute Number 4.  It includes a provision (Section 301-a-2) that calls for Medicare coverage to be gradually replaced with . . .

      a premium support payment–equivalent to 100 percent of the cost of the Medicare benefit–to purchase health coverage from a menu of Medicare-approved plans, similar to options available to Members of Congress

      In other words, no one would pay a cent more under the Ryan plan than under current law.  If that wasn’t enough, try the sentence right before it: “Preserves the current Medicare program for individuals 55 and older” (emphasis added).  In other words, no senior would see any change to their Medicare, no matter what Krystal Ball says.

      There was, however, one other change in Ryan’s substitute that would be of importance to Ms. Ball.  As noted in the amendment purpose . . .

      The amendment also seeks to provide $5 billion over the President’s budget for Defense; (and) $540 million over the President’s budget for Veterans

      So if Krystal opposed Ryan’s amendment, then ipso facto she also opposed over $5.5 billion in new funds for our military and veterans.  One could even say Krystal Ball is “against our veterans and men and women in uniform.”

      Cross-posted to VV


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      Republican, Jeffersoniad · American History, Economics, Government spending, Taxes, U.S. History, U.S. politics

      The right-wing liberal · Keynesian “multiplier”? Try divider. RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

      One of the mathematical lodestars of macroeconomics is the “multiplier.”  As I have told eager (and not-so-eager) students for many a moon now, the multiplier is a part of Keynesian theory that says, essentially, that $1 in government spending can lead to $3, $4, or even $5 in economic growth (depending upon consumption rates); tax cuts have a similar, though slightly smaller, effect. 

      Nothing has been more corrosive to the cause of limited government and fiscal sanity than the “multiplier.”  It has minimized much of the consequences of deficit spending and debt build-up, while at the same time providing a bias in favor of the larger-government option (spending) over the theoretically smaller-government one (tax cuts). 

      Several economic schools of thought (the Austrians, monetarists, neo-classicals, and the rational-expectations crew among them) have responded by insisting any multiplication is countered by the loss of investment or consumption due to excess government borrowing (known as the “crowding-out” effect), largely to no avail in the political world.

      That may change in the next few years.  For the first time that I can remember, economists are beginning to take a long, hard look at the effects of government spending on the economy to calculate (as best as can be done) the multiplier. 

      The International Monetary Fund came up with . . . 0.7 (John B. Taylor, Wall Street Pit), and the European Central Bank (which looked at the EU) settled on . . . (0.5).

      In other words, the effect of government spending in the economy did not multiply; in fact, it didn’t even increase; it eroded.

      The importance of this cannot be underestimated.  In effect, government spending does not have a greater impact on the economy than letting the consumers and business spend the money on their own (one could even argue a lesser impact).  Questions about government spending, how to balance budgets (i.e., cut spending or raise taxes), etc., without the ”multiplier” bias, can no longer be answer simply by whatever increases government spending.

      In other words, the critics of Keynesianism were right – so much so that “New Keynesianism” now acknowledges the strong possibility of “multipliers” that, being below 1, could actually be called “dividers.”  Just at the moment when Barack Obama is trying to build a social democracy, the economic-theory foundations that make it politically possible continue to crumble under his feet.

      Cross-posted to BD


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      Republican, Jeffersoniad · Democrats, On the Blogosphere, Republican Party, U.S. politics

      The right-wing liberal · PPP buries its own lede RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

      So, after watching Harry Reid and his cronies slam Sharon Angle every which way but loose, Public Policy Polling surveyed the damage, and set the tone with a blogpost highlighting Angle’s horrible performance among moderate Nevadans.  Never mind that “moderates” (unlike independents) usually skew toward the Democrats; the die was cast; the story written: Angle was toast.  Even Dan Foster fell for it at NRO - The Corner.

      Hours later, PPP announced the actual voter preference numbers – and Angle was statistically tied.  Oops.

      The fact is, if Reid can’t get a substantial lead after the month he’s had (and to be fair, other polls say he has), he never will.  If anything, this poll is a testament to Reid’s underlying weakness, not his strength.

      It would have been nice if PPP noticed that, rather than spin their own numbers for the guy who happens to have the same party registration as nearly all of their clients.

      Cross-posted to VV


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      Republican, Jeffersoniad · International Affairs, Media, U.S. politics, WBK war

      The right-wing liberal · Top Secret Denebia RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

      The Washington Post began a three-part series on “Top Secret America,” their detailed examination of the massive federal intelligence apparatus that has arisen as a result of the 9/11/01 attacks.  Yesterday morning was Part One, a description (as best as possible) the size of the intelligence community, the numerous agencies that are a part of it, and how they have combined to create massive bureaucratic balkanization, far too much information for anyone or any group of ones to process properly, and a constant demand for “more” to fix the problem caused by too much in the first place.  Interestingly enough, there was almost no discussion on what something of this size could do to American liberty – largely because by the time one finishes the piece, it isn’t clear that our intelligence community can do much of anything.

      First up, though, one reassurance: it’s abundantly clear that nothing of vital importance to our security was compromised here (the Weekly Standard had Gabriel Schonfeld check that out), although given the main points gleaned from the WaPo piece, even if something was sent out that shouldn’t have been, it may take this crew weeks to figure it out:

      Some 1,271 government organizations and 1,931 private companies work on programs related to counterterrorism, homeland security and intelligence in about 10,000 locations across the United States.

      . . .

      Many security and intelligence agencies do the same work, creating redundancy and waste. For example, 51 federal organizations and military commands, operating in 15 U.S. cities, track the flow of money to and from terrorist networks.

       Analysts who make sense of documents and conversations obtained by foreign and domestic spying share their judgment by publishing 50,000 intelligence reports each year – a volume so large that many are routinely ignored.

      That’s just two pages in (out of 16).  Further along, Lt. Gen. John Vines (ret.), who “once commanded 145,000 troops in Iraq” had this to say, “The complexity of this system defies description.”

      The WaPo then goes on to show how the intelligence balkanization played a role in the Fort Hood shootings and the Christmas Day almost-bombing.  Some concern about the bureaucratic nature of hewing to conventional wisdom and “low hanging fruit” is thrown in for good measure.

      Reassuring it is not.

      There are a few things missing from the piece – namely historical context.  However, the context would not have mitigated the impact, but amplified it.

      In fact, the history of American intelligence is not only wrought with bureaucratic wars, balkanized offices, and counterproductive infighting; it was designed that way.  One of the eye-opening revelations (for me, anyhow, in 1992) in Curt Gentry’s J. Edgar Hoover: The Man and His Secrets was the motivation behind Harry S Truman’s resurrection of the World War II-era OSS as the new Central Intelligence Agency.  Truman created the CIA to prevent Hoover’s FBI from dominating the American intelligence community.  It only worked too well: Hoover and numerous CIA directors were at each others’ political throats for a quarter-century, and his death did nothing to slow down the bureaucratic bloodletting.

      The other shocker (for me, at least in 1996) came from Jay Winik’s On the Brink - a history of the Reagan Adminstration’s foreign policy.  One chapter centers around a CIA analyst who had uncovered a late 1970s bombshell – numerous and conclusive pieces of evidence showing Soviet cheating on arms control agreements.  However, his CIA boss’s – following conventional wisdom, the wishes of the Carter Administration, and the bureaucratic impulses of their leaders and the State Department, hounded him out of the Agency and accused him of espionage.

      The lessons learned was this: the intelligence community could suffer the same maladies as any other permanent bureaucracy – paper-pushing over performance, crushing internal dissent over confronting the enemy, and office power plays over operational success.

      As bad as that is, the politics of 9/11 made things infinitely worse.  One would expect the Bush Administration to push hard for the resources it felt was needed to defend America.  However, the Democrats – eager to present themselves as tough without alienating their left-wing base – found a new way to thread the needle: i.e., redefining the war as one “fought” by law enforcement and intelligence.  Thus, no one had the political incentive to take a hard look at the massive intelligence apparatus and wonder if there was any duplications or inefficiencies.

      So, they were allowed to fester until the WaPo came calling.

      Schonfeld thinks the paper’s headline was overblown, presenting the idea of the massive intelligence community as some kind of secret government.  That would, however, imply (1) a much higher level of secrecy than the Post presents, and (2-something Schonfeld didn’t discuss) a far more efficient manner of doing things.

      As it is, we have is a massively inefficient bureaucracy that just happened to have its problems shielded from view for far too long – long enough to become the closest thing to the mythical Denebian Clusterf**k.  We can only hope that the WaPo inspires the Administration to shake up the whole thing so we can get a less expensive, more efficient, and more effective intelligence apparatus.  We need it now more than ever.

      Cross-posted (under a different title) to BD


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      Republican, Jeffersoniad · Government spending, International Affairs, Republican Party, Rob Wittman, U.S. politics, Virginia politics, WBK war

      The right-wing liberal · Krystal Ball: Dishonest? Or Just Plain Dumb? (UPDATED) RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

      One would have thought that Krystal Ball – the Democrat running against Rob Wittman for Congress – would be more careful with her words (and her funds) after planting her foot so firmly in her mouth last month. Amazingly, one would be wrong, as her latest mailer reveals.

      Ball claims that Wittman “repeatedly voted against our veterans and men and women in uniform.” She cites five of Wittman’s “no” votes: HR1105 (2009), HCR85 (also in 2009), HCR 312 (also 2008), and two on HR2642 (2008). There’s only one problem: some of these votes had nothing to do with our veterans and in the case of two of them, “no” was actually the pro-vet vote.

      Let’s take these one at a time, shall we?

      HR 1105: This was the Obama Omnibus Budget for FY09, basically a roll-up of nine appropriations bills that hadn’t been passed when they were supposed to be passed (September 2008), because the Democrats in Congress wanted then-President Bush to have as little a role as possible in the actual budget. Never mind that this bill including runaway deficit spending (including double-digit percentage increases in some agencies), and focus on this – none of the nine funding areas included Defense or Veterans Affairs, which were funded in separate appropriations bills. (UPDATE: The only affect the bill had was a rider that froze pay for federal workers called into active duty). In other words, Krystal Ball defines a vote against reckless spending that has no impact on the overwhelming majority our troops . . . as a vote against our troops.

      Onward, to HCR85 and HCR312. These were the Democrats’ budget resolutions for FY10 and FY09 respectively. They reveal the priorities Congress will set for the coming years, including DoD and DVA. However, they do not appropriate a single dollar of government funds. They are nothing more than political statements that can (and usually are) ignored by Congress when it sees fit. Once again, Krystal insists that votes for a bunch of politically-driven numbers that will become irrelevant as sooned as they are passed (as resolutions, not bills, the President cannot sign or veto them) and have no impact on our troops . . . are somehow votes against our troops.

      Wait, it gets better; here comes HR2642. This is the only legislation cited that actually affected our men in women in uniform – it was the 2008 WBK War supplemental (WBK War = Wahhabist-Ba’athist-Khomeinist War: my term for the War on Terror). Wittman voted against two amendments to the bill. Now hears the kicker: one of the amendments demanded a withdrawal from Iraq beginning in 30 days and a “goal” of complete withdrawal in 18 months, while the other included a boatload of unrelated domestic spending. As President Bush promised a veto of any bill with these amendments, voting “yes” in either case meant delaying funding for our troops in battle.

      So now, Krystal would have us believe that votes against amendments that would effectively delay crucial funds for our troops on the front . . . are somehow votes against our troops.

      I had hoped that Ball’s last missive was a simple rookie mistake, but after this fiasco, I’m not sure if she is patently dishonest or just transmogrifyingly dumb. Either way, she is clearly not qualified to represent me in Congress.

      Cross-posted to VV


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      Republican, Jeffersoniad · Government spending, Taxes, Virginia, Virginia politics

      The right-wing liberal · On that budget surplus RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

      Governor Bob McDonnell, in a press release that was the closest a piece of paper or an HTML page can come to being giddy, announced that the $1.8B shortfall he inherited became a $220M surplus by year’s end (fiscal year’s end, in this case being June 30).

      Finance Secretary Richard D. Brown was just as happy in talking to the press, but there was one comment of his, reported by the Richmond Times-Dispatch that led Norm @ TQ to raise on eyebrow:

      Buried in this RTD write-up of the state’s “surprise” $220 million budget surplus is a key to understanding why the state is suddenly flush with cash:

      Sales tax collections for the most recent month doubled what they had been in June 2009. In a bid to generate a cash boost, the state accelerated the schedule for retailers to turn in taxes collected on sales. But Brown said the accelerated sales tax generated less than expected and did not boost the final surplus figure.

      If they did nothing, then there’s no reason to keep collecting the accelerated payments through 2013, is there?

      Indeed, Norm, and while they’re looking at the “accelerated payments” nonsense, the Governor and Legislature may also want to look at junking the manufacturer’s tax they snuck in.

      Cross-posted to VV


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      Republican, Jeffersoniad · Afghanistan, Economics, Government spending, Taxes, U.S. politics

      The right-wing liberal · So what caused the string of federal deficits? It’s not what you think. RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

      The greatest obstacle to a Republican recovery is the domestic performance of the Bush II Administration – particularly regarding government spending.  That said, there is a myth that has grown regarding Bush’s policies and how each one affected the federal government’s fiscal standing – a myth Brian Riedl partially debunks in the Wall Street Journal.

      The myth is that Bush sank the budget surpluses through tax cuts and wars:

      Sen. John Kerry (D., Mass.), for example, has long blamed the tax cuts for having “taken a $5.6 trillion surplus and turned it into deficits as far as the eye can see.” That $5.6 trillion surplus never existed. It was a projection by the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) in January 2001 to cover the next decade.

      . . .

      The projected $5.6 trillion surplus between 2002 and 2011 will more likely be a $6.1 trillion deficit through September 2011. So what was the cause of this dizzying, $11.7 trillion swing?

      That’s the important question.  Riedl goes through the numbers and breaks it down thusly:

      • “economic and technical revisions”: 33% ($3.9T)
      • “other new spending”: 32% ($3.7T)
      • Bush tax cuts of 2001 and 2003: 14% ($1.7T)
      • “net interest on the debt”: 12% ($1.4T)
      • Obama stimulus: 6% ($702B)
      • “other tax cuts”: 3% ($351B)

      Reidl, just looking at the tax cut effect, declares Bush acquitted:

      If there were no Bush tax cuts, runaway spending and economic factors would have guaranteed more than $4 trillion in deficits over the decade and kept the budget in deficit every year except 2007.

      There’s a little more to it, though.  Added net interest on the debt, for example, is really caused by everything else. After all, new spending requires new borrowing, and new interest payments.  This is especially true given that interest rates were relatively stable for much of this decade before falling during the Great Recession.  So, one should really increase each remaining category by 14% (12/88), which bring us to . . .

      • “economic and technical revisions”: 38% ($4.4T)
      • “other new spending”: 36% ($4.3T)
      • Bush tax cuts of 2001 and 2003: 16% ($1.9T)
      • Obama stimulus: 7% ($798B)
      • “other tax cuts”: 3% ($399B)

      I would also add “other tax cuts,” given that most were probably under Bush’s watch.  Thus, the tax cuts turned $5.6T in accumulated surpluses into . . . $3.3T in accumulated surpluses (keep in mind, this is with “static scoring,” i.e., we assume no benefits to the economy – and federal revenues - due to the tax reductions).  So, in the worst case scenario, cutting taxes this decade didn’t even reduce surpluses in half – let alone knock the federal government into deficit territory.

      Ah, say Bush critics, but what about Afghanistan and Iraq?  A fair question, which Riedl doesn’t address.  As it turns out, the Congressional Research Service has compiled numbers for the cost of the war through FY10 (save the $37B in supplemental funds soon to be approved) – $1.08T.  Assuming the $37B goes through, and the spending in FY11 stays on the same course (FY10 war spending, supplemental included, was $25B higher than FY09), the total comes to $1.32T – $1.5T if interest is added (using the aforementioned 14% factor).

      So . . . the tax cut and two wars, which the Democrats insist set us careening into red-ink land, turned $5.6T of accumulated surpluses into $1.8T in accumulated surpluses.  On average, this would have $180B a year – higher than any budget surplus but one: FY2000.

      So what happened?

      For starters, spending happened.  For a defense of Bush’s domestic spending spree, go somewhere else.  In total (including the Obama stimulus), spending hikes took a $3.3T bite out of the fiscal picture – larger than the wars or the tax cut, and just $500B lss than both combined.

      However, even that comes in second to “economic and technical adjustments” – a fancy way of the CBO saying: ya know about those numbers we gave you earlier?  Never mind.

      To wit (Reidl again):

      It assumed that late-1990s economic growth and the stock-market bubble (which had already peaked) would continue forever and generate record-high tax revenues. It assumed no recessions, no terrorist attacks, no wars, no natural disasters, and that all discretionary spending would fall to 1930s levels.

      To recap, since the CBO’s $5.6T surpluses-over-the-decade projection, we’ve seen two recessions, 9/11/01, the denoument of the tech bubble bursting, and the housing bubble building and bursting.

      In other words, while the left accuses the former President of ruining the fiscal health of the nation with tax cuts and wars, and the right accuses him of ruining the fiscal health of the nation with runaway spending, the reality is that our federal government was far “sicker” from a fiscal perspective than we let ourselves believe.

      The left will still slam the tax cuts and wars, and the right (including yours truly) will still slam the domestic spending, but let’s all acknowledge that when it comes to the effects of all of the above on the budget, we’re building our arguments on foundations of sand.

      Cross-posted to BD


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      Republican, Jeffersoniad · Baseball

      The right-wing liberal · George Steinbrenner, RIP RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

      New York Yankees owner George Steinbrenner has passed away this morning.  He was 80 years old.

      Because he owned the Yankees for so long – since 1973, the year after I was born – so many of us are completely unaware of the state of the Yankees before he bought them.  They were a mess.  From 1965-72, the team was a complete disaster.  He rescued them, and through a combination of money and moxie brought the Yankees back to the pinnacle of baseball in just five years (his first Yankee championships were in 1977-78).

      The 80s were lean years, when the game changed an he didn’t seem able to change with it (and then there was the Spira-Winfield thing), but he adapted in the 1990s, and the rest is history.  In his tenure, the Yankees have more than twice as many championships (seven) as any team in Major League Baseball.

      As a Yankees fan, I feel this more acutely than most.

      Fans of other teams may be tempted to blame Steinbrenner for messing with “competitive balance.”  With all due respect, spare me.  The 1980s were chock full of “competitive balance,” and by the early 1990s, people were wringing their hands at baseball’s decline anyway.  I am still convinced that what brought the sport back from the 1994 strike (and BTW, Steinbrenner was not one of the hard-line owners during that fiasco) was the Yankees-Red Sox 1999 ALCS, which nationalized a previously regional rivalry by giving millions of Yankee haters a team to root for.

      I would also note that in this decade, the supposedly uncompetitive sport of baseball had the most diversified list of Champions (8 from 2000-9, compared to 7 for the NFL and 5 from the NBA) – not the Steinbrenner or any of us are happy with that.

      As for me, as much as I will mourn Steinbrenner (and a younger version of me would be shocked at how much I will), I can take some comfort that as he and Bob Sheppard shed their mortal coils, the team to which they gave so much was right where it should be: the defending MLB champions with the best record in baseball.

      Cross-posted to VV


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      Republican, Jeffersoniad · Energy, International Affairs, Republican Party, Scandals, Virginia politics, government incompetence

      The right-wing liberal · Ex-UVA climatologist expresses support for Cuccinelli Climategate probe RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

      Wow.

      At the tail end of a very cogent criticism of the latest Climategate whitewash, Fred Singer – who, as Norm at TQ notes, was a former professor at UVA – has some interesting and supportive things to say about our Attorney General’s attempt to find out what Michael Mann was doing in his tenure at the university.

      First, though, in order to understand the context, let’s take a look at Singer’s comments (over at WUWT) on the latest report (Muir-Russell or MR) on Dr. Phil Jones, the man at the center of the scandal in Britain:

      I have several major criticisms, mostly connected to the fact that the MR team had no in-house competence in the relevant science (atmospheric physics and meteorology) . . .  As far as one can tell, they consulted only supporters of anthropogenic global warming (AGW), i.e., supporters of the IPCC.

      As a result, they could not really judge whether Phil Jones (head of the Climate Research Unit at UEA) manipulated the post-1980 temperature data, both by selection of weather stations and by applying certain corrections to individual records (emphasis added).

      But wait, it gets worse . . .

      . . . the Team must realize that the CRU deals only with land data (covering, imperfectly, only 30% of the Earth’s surface) and that sea-surface temperatures (SST) are really more important. Weather stations and trees tend to be land-based.Also, the Team never bothers to inquire about the atmospheric temperature record from satellites, the only high-quality and truly global record in existence. They seem unaware of the substantial disparity between satellites and the CRU record.

      . . . and worse . . .

      In defense of the MR Team, they consider science to be outside of their charter and within the remit of the Oxburgh team. [See Item 5 on p.10] (Having seen the Oxburgh report, however, some might consider this a joke.) Yet the Team feels empowered to speak with authority about conclusions that depend on climate science. In fact, none of the investigations so far have had a serious look at the crucial science issues.

      As a result, the Team doesn’t seem to realize [p.23 and 32] that “hide the decline” and “Mike’s [Michael Mann] ‘trick” refers to a cover-up (emphasis added). Mann’s 1000-yr temperature record (from proxies) suddenly stops at 1980 – not because there are no suitable post-1980 proxy data (as Mann has claimed in e-mails that responded to inquiries), but because they do not show the dramatic temperature rise of Jones’ thermometer data.

      This gets to the heart of the matter: the data behind AGW is problematic, at best.  To see what I mean, here are all of the posts I have written detailing the errors, data manipulation, and other shenanigans that have been revealed during just the last eight monthsPlease keep in mind, there are twenty-nine of them.

      So, clearly, there are questions left unanswered, and that – acording to Singer – is where Cuccinelli comes in:

      It is ironic then that the real post-1980 global temperatures may be closer to the proxy record than to the thermometer record (RWL Note: see above on post-1980 proxy data not showing temperature rise). We will find out when we learn what data Michael Mann discarded.

      In this connection, the legal demand for all of Mann’s data by Virginia’s Attorney-General Ken Cuccinelli assumes additional significance. Based on his own statements, one suspects that Jones has deleted some crucial e-mails. It is likely that these may be discovered among Mann’s e-mails, now held by the University of Virginia. It might put a new light on the whole Climategate affair (emphasis added).

      So a leading academic in environmental sciences - he taught at UVA for over 20 years – is looking forward to the Cuccinelli investigation and what it might uncover.  That will be news to the MSM types who are convinced it’s all-hands-on-deck for “academic freedom.”

      Cross-posted to VV


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      Republican, Jeffersoniad · American History, International Affairs, U.S. History, U.S. politics

      The right-wing liberal · Miloslav Djilas’ lesson returns in Venezuela RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

      Amidst the whirlwind over LeBron James and what has sadly become the usual nonsense in Washington, a lesson in the painful reality of socialism or communism (not to be confused with Europe’s social democracies – which have their own problems) has arisen in Venezuela (Washington Post):

      As in all major government takeovers of private companies in Venezuela, President Hugo Chávez declared that seizing beer-and-food giant Polar’s facilities here would mark another victory for the poor in the country’s march toward socialism.

      . . .

      Except this time, the president’s plans went badly awry, exposing mounting national opposition to a policy under which oil companies, supermarkets and factories have been taken over by the state, only to founder under the control of government functionaries (emphasis added).

      Now, it will come as no surprise to the folks in the rightosphere that socialized or nationalized firms don’t do so well once politicians are put in charge, but there is a deeper lesson here that first popped up in what was once Yugoslavia, of all places.

      In 1950, Yugoslavia was under the rule of Communist Josip Broz Tito.  Unlike Stalin, Tito’s anti-Nazi credentials were unvarnished, and unlike everyone else in Eastern Europe, he had ensured the post-Nazi regime was home grown with deep local roots.  In fact, Tito’s loyalty to his country led to a falling out with Stalin and his expulsion from the Communist bloc.

      So it came as quite the surprise when Miloslav Djilas – Vice President of Yugoslavia – wrote The New Class, a damning account of how the “vanguard of the proletariat” had become a corrupt and self-absorbed elite.  Djilas noted that once the Communists controlled all property within their reach, they themselves become the propertied class, and in short order, any concern for using their newfound power to help the less fortunate devolves into a greedy clique that values power – and the wealth that comes with that power – above all else.  In effect, Djilas extended Marxist theory beyond the revolutionaries’ victory – and turned it on the Marxists.  That Djilas was fired, disavowed, and forced into exile showed that even in Western-friendly Yugoslavia, a Communist regime could handle neither the truth nor anyone from within who tried to show it to them.

      Djilas’ lesson resurfaced dramatically in this paragraph describing Chavez’s attempt to seize part of Polar Industries.

      Not only did Polar fight back by taking its case to the Supreme Court, but its employees have risen up, too, rallying in opposition to Chávez’s edict and holding all-night vigils to prevent a takeover . . . employees said they oppose the government intervention because they think workers have fared badly at nationalized companies, where they have faced reduced wages and been unable to bargain collectively (emphasis added).

      So in Venezuela, the triumph of the workers comes with lower wages and a ban on unions.  I doubt that’s what most leftists have in mind when they envision a socialist paradise.

      Yet Venezuela is not the first example of this, only the most recent.  The Chinese Communist Party established a government-run union to represent the workers - and banned all others.  The CCP is now the largest strikebreaker in the world.  Even in the United States during World War II, Communist-controlled unions emasculated their workers so badly (all to ensure more material for the Soviet military) that business actually preferred them to non-Communist labor (see Richard Gid Powers: Not Without Honor – The History of American Anticommunism).

      In short, the “triumph of the workers” doesn’t prevent exploitation of the very same workers; it ensures exploitation of the workers.  Venezuela is merely the latest example of Djilas’ painfully acquired wisdom.

      Cross-posted to BD


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      Republican, Jeffersoniad · Basketball

      The right-wing liberal · In defense of LeBron James RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

      After reading, watching, and listening to an avalanche of criticism aimed at LeBron James for a decision he has yet to make, which will be announced on an hour-long program  we have yet to see, I decided enough was enough – and since I post on a few blogs, I can actually do something about it (however miniscule).

      At this point, the possibilities are that James (1) stays with Cleveland, (2) goes to Chicago, (3) goes to New York, or (4) goes to Miami.  I’m sticking with my prediction of Chicago, although much of yesterday’s buzz was with the Knicks and nearly all of today’s centers on the Heat.

      What I can no longer tolerate is the if-LeBron-leaves-Cleveland-he’s-the-devil meme that seems to have dominated the discussion (full disclosure: I’m a Knicks fan).

      Let me get this straight . . .

      Assuming the decision is New York or Chicago: when someone in America “votes with his/her feet” – i.e., changes locales to improve career and financial prospects – (s)he is exercising his/her God-given right to the American Dream . . . unless his name is LeBron James.

      Assuming the decision is Miami: when an athlete decides winning a title is so important they are willing to take less money and share the spotlight, (s)he is a hero for emphasing the true nature of the game . . . unless his name is LeBron James.

      Really?  C’mon now.  Let’s all admit it.  We’re fans, and on some level, this isn’t about James; it’s about us.  I came to that realization when I recognized how upset I was initially when the Knicks started to fade (again) from view as a likely prospect; that told me my view on this was more about my views as a fan than his decision as an athlete.

      The other dimension to all of this is, of course, Cleveland.  Hardly any sports fan (well, except perhaps hockey fans) know of some painful Cleveland sports story.  The Drive.  The Fumble.  The Shot.  The Indians.  The Move.  Sure, The Decision will be painful, but lest we forget . . .

      . . . the Drive (1986 AFC Championship Game) doesn’t happen if Mark Gastineau doesn’t get called for roughing-the-passer one week earlier in the NFL Division Playoffs (full disclosure, I’m a Jet fan, too).

      . . . without the Fumble (1987 AFC Championship Game), Cleveland only ties Denver, and with over a minute left in the game to boot.  Elway had just moved Denver down the field to take the lead before the Fumble.  Are we really saying he wouldn’t do it again, at home no less?

      . . . the Shot (1989 NBA Playoffs) ended a first-round series, in which the winner (Jordan’s Bulls) still lost the Conference Finals to eventual NBA Champion Detroit.  One could easily call the Knicks just as star-crossed for the mauling of Charles Smith at the end of Game 5 of the 1993 Eastern Conference Finals against the Bulls – except that nearly all Knick fans (including yours truly) are still trying to figure out why Smith even had the ball in the last half-minute of that game.

      . . . the Indians . . . hey, I’m a Yankee fan; we have no sympathy for anyone.

      . . . the Move? It spawned a league-wide effort to get Cleveland a new team, which it got in four years.  Name me another city that moved so quickly to the front-burner after a team moved away.  Talk to fans in Oakland, Houston, Washington in baseball, Seattle in basketball, Winnipeg in hockey, and yes, Brown fans, Baltimore.  Los Angeles lost two NFL teams in less than five years, and still has no replacement (although in part because Los Angelinos refuse to tax themselves to subsidize an NFL owner, for which they deserve high praise).

      In all seriousness, I know Cleveland fans will be upset if James announces tonight that he’s going somewhere else.  I’d advise them to get over it and get on with the business of building a decent basketball team – 28 other non-James teams will be doing just that (including four that went deeper into the playoffs than the Cavs last year).

      As for James, all we know so far is that at least one organization – the Boys and Girls Club – is a sure winner tonight.

      . . . and that’s a bad thing?

      Cross-posted to VV


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      Republican, Jeffersoniad · American History, Democrats, Economics, International Affairs, On the Blogosphere, Republican Party, Taxes, U.S. History, U.S. politics

      The right-wing liberal · Why time has not run out for 2010 Democrats RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

      It is becoming hardened conventional wisdom that the Democrats are headed for a cataclysmic mid-term election.  Jim Pethakoukis pretty well sums up the consensus in Reuters.

      More and more, the political cake looks fully and thoroughly baked. Oh sure, perhaps congressional Democrats can sidestep the coming Republican wave through clever campaign tactics. Perhaps they can de-nationalize the November midterm elections by successfully waging dozens of bloody, up-close-and-personal knife fights coast to coast. Make every Republican a controversial Sharon Angle or Ron Paul with a radiation vibe.

      Yet for that “fight them on the beaches” approach to really work, Democrats probably need a bit of breeze at their backs. They need some some help from the economy, the dominant issue with American voters. As last week’s miserable jobs report made clear, however, help does not appear to be arriving anytime soon.

      Given the importance of the economy in the minds of voters, I can understand Jim’s certainty.  I just don’t agree with it.

      First of all, as Jim notes, there are still three more jobs reports out there.  Moreover, given the extreme fall-off in the labor force this month, the unemployment rate has lost much of its political importance.  Unlike last year, when a summer job spurt enticed hundreds of thousands back into the labor force to drive up the unemployment number and make the news politically meaningless, a major increase in jobs in any of the next three months could carry more political punch.

      More importantly, however, each of the last five mid-terms (1990, 1994, 1998, 2002, and 2006) have had the turning points that were neither expected nor part of the prevailing political narrative.  To wit . . .

      In 1990, President Bush broke his word on tax increases, all-but-ensuring angry Republicans would refuse to show up and badly damage his party.  Then Saddam Hussein invaded Kuwait in August; foreign policy re-emerged as a critical issue; and the GOP base came back.  The 1990 midterm election became a de facto stalemate.

      In 1994, voters entered the summer angry about the slow recovery and unhappy with “Hillarycare.”  However, in August, the House seized up on a procedural rule regarding a major crime bill due to divisions among the majority Democrats.  Voters turned heavily against the Dems even as the economy continued to grow (and a little faster) and Hillarycare was shelved.  What was expected to be a decent but not tremendous Republican year became the revolution of 1994.

      In 1998, it was all Lewinsky, all the time.  Despite Bill Clinton’s best efforts, independents and moderates abandoned the Democrats in droves in November.  However, the Republican Congress – eager to capitalize on “Monicagate” – tried to neutralize everything else by passing a bloated budget and getting out of town.  Conservatives and Republicans were furious, and turnout among both plummeted, ensuring the Dems avoided punishment by centrist voters (the Dems held serve in the Senate and cut the GOP House majority in half – a historic first for the party in the White House).

      In 2002, the question of Iraq seemed paramount, until the Democrats split in half like a ripe melon and let the authorization for war sail through Congress (the Dems had a two-seat majority in the US Senate).  Without an overarching issue, the Democrats wrote the narrative with an extralegal candidate replacement in New Jersey and the Wellstone funeral in Minnesota.  The resultant Republican anger turned a likely status quo election into one with GOP gains (including enough to capture control of the Senate).

      Finally, in 2006, Iraq, the economy, and Katrina were leading the way to a bad Republican year, but it wasn’t until the Mark Foley scandal blew up that voters painted big targets on just about any Republican they could find.  The House dramatically changed hands, and the Democrats gained six Senate seats (enough to take control of the chamber) despite already having 18 seats to defend (they won a whopping 24 that year).

      So, I would humbly submit that not only are the 2010 elections four months away, but that there is at least one major event between now and then that will reshape the playing field.

      In other words, GOP candidates and volunteers shouldn’t get too cocky – yet.

      Cross-posted to BD


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      Republican, Jeffersoniad · Basketball

      The right-wing liberal · Wade and Bosh Miami bound RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

      Oh my.

      Based on that, I am all but certain LeBron James will not stay in Cleveland (having fervently believed he would stay until, oh, about 15 minutes ago).

      I also don’t think Miami can afford LeBron James now (but I could be wrong; I’m not a capologist).

      James will announce his decision tomorrow night.  At this point, I genuinely believe the Bulls and – of all people – the Knicks are the only teams who have a shot at him.

      As much as I’d love to see him in a Knick uniform, and can make the argument for it, I can’t quite think of anything to match the Bulls’ counter-argument.

      Are the Knicks-plus-Amare-Stoudemire better than the Bulls?  I’m not sure, but I do know the Bulls were much better than the Knicks last year (without Stoudemire).

      So, as of 8:15AM, I’m saying it’s a 53% chance James goes to Chicago.  My apologies to Bulls fans if this prediction goes the way of my political ones.

      Cross-posted to VV


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      Republican, Jeffersoniad · Uncategorized

      The right-wing liberal · July 6, 1854 RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

      One of the most turbulent political years in American history was 1854.

      The Democrats, in complete control of Congress and led by President Franklin Pierce, rammed through the Kansas-Nebraska Act, which allowed slavery north of the 36° 30′ line for the first time in over thirty years, destroyed the near-sacrosanct Missouri Compromise of 1821, and infuriated slavery opponents nationwide.  As Dixie Whigs crossed over to support the Democrats and expand slavery, Whiggery in the North fell to pieces.

      In New England, angry voters followed the lead of Massachusetts – itself mired in political convulsion caused by the supposed defeat of a reform constitution by Irish voters – into the anti-Catholic Know-Nothings (who were smart enough to loudly oppose K-N and slavery).  In the “lower North” – that wide swatch from New Jersey to Illinois, the two parties lost voters to each other and various third-party off-shoots (in the latter, anti-slavery Democrats scored an upset in the election for a US Senator when the Whig candidate – Abraham Lincoln – stunned everyone by withdrawing in their favor as the legislature was voting).  Only in New York did the Whig Party – which had been placed squarely in the anti-slavery camp by Senator William Henry Seward and his Rovian aid, Thurlow Weed (my fourth-great-grandfather), survive.  In fact, 1854 was the party’s best year ever in the Empire State, as the Democrats split into three different factions.

      However, history was occurring in upper Midwest (the part of the old Northwest claimed by both Virginia and New York waaaaaaaaaay back when), particularly Michigan, where 156 years ago today, the first Republican state convention was held.

      For the details, check out Grand Old Patisan.

      The rest, of course, is history: the Republicans scored huge victories in the Michigan and Wisconsin; Salmon Chase scored a shocking victory in 1855 as the Republican nominee for Governor of Ohio; Lincoln moved the Illinois Whigs into the GOP; and finally, my ancestor (Weed) adroitly took his Whig machine and renamed it the Republican Party of New York.

      No one knew any of this, however, in the summer of 1854.  The Republicans in Michigan were taking what they feared was a last stand against the Slave Power.  We would do well to remember their (political) courage today.

      Cross-posted to BD


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      Republican, Jeffersoniad · Afghanistan, Barack Obama, International Affairs, On the Blogosphere, Republican Party, U.S. politics, WBK war

      The right-wing liberal · Afghanistan: why we must stay – and win RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

      While I was decompressing over the weekend, Michael Steele set off a firestorm with his less-than-hawkish comments on Afghanistan.  Bill Kristol (Weekly Standard) and Andy McCarthy (NRO – The Corner) – among many others – called on Steele to resign; Dr. Ron Paul came to his defense (Frum Forum).

      Meanwhile, the bruhaha has led at least one right-of-center blogger close to home (Chris Beer – Mason Conservative).  To date, no one else has picked up on this within the Virginia blogosphere, but Jim Bowden and Jerry Fuhrman lodged their criticisms earlier.  As one would expect from the rightosphere, their arguments are cogent, probing, and require an answer.

      Unfortunately, save for Furhman (more on him later), their conclusions come from an appalling disregard for the facts on the ground.

      Most acknowledge that al Qaeda’s presence in Afghanistan is minimal at most and nominal at least.  Unfortunately, far too many have forgotten about the role the Taliban has played in all of this.  To hear it from some people (almost all on the left), the Taliban were absentee landlords, bamboozled ideologues, or even innocent bystanders.

      Nothing could be further from the truth.

      Lest we forget (as so many apparently have), the Taliban didn’t ignore al Qaeda; nor did they condone it.  They embraced it.  They used al Qaedites to enforce their brutal rule over Afghanistan (New York Times).  According to some reports (relayed by the BBC), Taliban leader “Mullah” Omar and bin Laden are now related by marriage.  It was common knowledge that the Taliban relied on a funding stream from al Qaeda to continue controlling Afghanistan (UPI via Newsmax).  Mere weeks before 9/11/01, the Taliban appointed bin Laden as their military commander-in-chief.

      Unless and until the Taliban is defeated, the Afghan theatre of the WBK War is neither won nor finished, period.  The growing chorus of war critics on the right appear to have forgotten that.

      So, with all due respect to Chris, that’s why we’re in Afghanistan.  Regarding Jim, if any of the factions we have to appease include the Taliban, then the war is not won (to be fair to Jim, he does not name the Taliban as a faction worthy of bribery or payoff, but by my reading of his post, he leaves the door open). 

      Or, as Mark Steyn so painfully put it (Macleans):

      If the Taliban return to even partial power in Afghanistan, the unctuous State Department spokesmen will make the best of it. But the symbolism will be profound, and devastating in what it says about American will.

      As for Jerry, I really have no response for him.  It is clear to me he understands fully that the Taliban must be destroyed; he just doesn’t trust this Administration to do it.  The closer we get to the arbitrary July 2011 withdrawal deadline, the more I will be compelled to agree with him.

      For now, though, I hold out hope that, like just about everything else that has come from the Obama campaign or Administration, that withdrawal, too, will have an “expiration date.”  We shall see.

      Cross-posted to VV


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      Republican, Jeffersoniad · On the Blogosphere, Republican Party, U.S. politics

      The right-wing liberal · Um, define “undermine” (UPDATED: this qualifies) RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

      As of 1:30 PM this afteroon (EDT), confusion reigns across the rightosphereon just what House Minority Leader John Boehner and his number two (Eric Cantor, the Congressman from a district neighboring mine) had in mind when they put their names to two discharge petitions (one from Steve King, the other from Wally Herger) for bills purporting to repeal Democare.

      To hear Eric Erickson (Red State) tell it, the two-bills-is-better-than-one move was a clever bait and switch designed to prevent repeal, rather than enhance its prospects:

      Notice that Cantor and Boehner were absolutely silent on Rep. King’s efforts until they had Wally Herger’s discharge petition ready to go. Why? Because they want to bully Republican House members into signing the Herger petition and undercut the repeal effort with a “replace and replace with lame legislation” effort. In effect, this undercuts a unified repeal effort and muddies the waters.

      Now, yours truly has been leery of Messrs. Boehner and Cantor ever since they rolled over for TARP two years ago.  Additionally, the muddy-the-water-with-multiple-bills move is hardly unprecedented or unbelievable.  Finally, Herger’s “replacement” could very well be as weak as Erickson says it is.

      There is, however, one problem, namely coming straight from the Hill article to which Erickson himself links:

      King’s petition would repeal parts of the healthcare reform law that originated in the Senate, while Herger’s petition would repeal all of the healthcare law and the reconciliation bill.

      Wouldn’t that make Herger’s bill closer to genuine repeal?

      I don’t ask that rhetorically.  I’d really like to know.  My eyes say yes, but a blogger I trust says no.  They can’t both be right.

      Cross-posted to BD

      UPDATE: Ramesh Ponnuru weighs in on the subject in The Corner.  He doesn’t question motives, but he argues – convincingly – that Herger’s replacement bill gets in the way of King’s repeal bill.  Just as importantly, he explains why King’s bill doesn’t repeal the reconciliation side-car (it was introduced before the sidecar passed).  I’m not ready to say Cantor and Boehner deliberately damaged King’s petition, but I now agree that Herger’s bill distracts.


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      Republican, Jeffersoniad · International Affairs, WBK war

      The right-wing liberal · Have Turkish voters had enough of the AKP? RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

      In all of the outrage, counter-outrage, and the rest of the discussion surrounding the “Gaza flotilla,” one group has gone largely unnoticed – the Turkish electorate.

      It has become conventional wisdom that the rise of the Justice and Development Party in Turkey (AKP) has been an inevitable result of Turkey’s transition from a military-dominated secular republic to a more democratic one, and as such, the AKP has carte blanche from the Turkish people to move in a more Islamist and anti-Western direction.

      There’s only one problem: the voters have’t weighed in yet, and if recent polls are any indication, they are not happy.  In order to understand why, we have to go back to how the AKP was elected in the first place.

      The 2002 elections in Turkey (AKP’s first win) were held amidst a revulsion against elite corruption.  Of the five parties who held seats in Parliament (the smallest had 85 seats), none elected a single MP.  Under Turkish election rules, a party must win at least 10% of the vote to get seats, which are than allocated basically under proportional representation.  Only two parties passed the threshhold in 2002 – the AKP and the Republican People’s Party (CHP), the party of secularist founder Mustafa Kemal Ataturk.  Thus, the AKP was nearly two-thirds of the seats despite scoring less than 35% of the vote.  Given the freakish nature of the election, most assumed it was a one-off.

      However, the AKP, apparently well aware of its precarious position, played their cards close to the vest in government.  Any movement away from secularism was portrayed as a move toward religious freedom, not the imposition of Wahabbist-like Islam.  While the Turkish parliament refused to allow the American military to launch the liberation of Iraq from Turkey (whether due to incompetence or design, the AKP MPs split on the measure, allowing the CHP to defeat it), the use of airspace was OKed.  In 2007, the AKP got the mandate it wanted, scoring an impressive 47% of the vote.  While its majority in MPs was reduced (the nationalist MHP became the third party to get more than 10%), the AKP also had far more political capital – which it has since used to move away from the West (culminating, so far, in the Gaza flotilla) and to crack down heavily on the Turkish military.

      However, while all this was going on, the CHP changed leaders, picking corruption battler Kemal Kilicdaroglu to lead them.  Almost immediately after that decision, the CHP became more competitive.  Three polls taken after the change showed that the CHP and MHP would have enough support to block the AKP from power (Angus Reid, Fresno Bee, and Zalman); Sonar Arastirma (cited by Angus) even had the CHP in the lead.

      Now, the next election isn’t for a year, which is several lifetimes in politics.  Moreover, while the CHP is a secular, Western-oriented party, it is also a left-wing one which led the opposition to the liberation of Iraq.  It is clear however that, for now, the new direction in which Turkey is headed does not yet have the support of the people in whose name it has been taken, and come this time next year, another election may lead to a swift reversal.

      Cross-posted to BD


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      Republican, Jeffersoniad · On the Blogosphere, Taxes, U.S. politics

      The right-wing liberal · Thank you, Joe Biden RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

      My search for a new tagline has ended (LA Times).

      Cross-posted to VV


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      Republican, Jeffersoniad · Afghanistan, Barack Obama, International Affairs, On the Blogosphere, U.S. politics, WBK war

      The right-wing liberal · Why I cannot join the optimists on the Petraeus appointment RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

      I do believe President Obama should have accepted General McChrystal’s resignation, and I agree with the near universal assessment on the right that there can be no better replacement than General David Petraeus.  However, that does not mean I am more confident about the fate of Afghanistan today than I was yesterday.  The reason is simple: President Obama.

      Amidst the praise for General Petraeus – which he certainly earned from his performance in Iraq – we have almost entirely forgotten the importance of the civilian who appointed him, as if having Petraeus as the military commander makes the president a better Commander-in-Chief.  It doesn’t.

      Lest we forget, when Petraeus was commander in the Iraq theatre, then-President Bush had his back every step of the wayand he set the tone for everyone else in his Administration: the Vice President, the Secretary of Defense, other civilian appointees, etc.  Even Ambassador Ryan Crocker, who couldn’t have agreed with the general every second of every day, kept his contentions (and attempts to resolve them) private.

      Contrast that with Obama’s treatment of McChrystal, who was not only appointed by Obama but was on the president’s side politically (no one knows to this day what Petraeus’ political affiliations are): civilians from Vice President Biden on down could and did brief against the general’s strategy – even though it was supposed to be the president’s, too.

      Nearly everyone assumes Obama et al will avoid that sort of thing with Petraeus.

      I have my doubts.

      The only thing we knew about President Bush’s view on the WBK War was that he wanted it won.  The only thing we knew about President Obama’s view on the WBK War is that he wants it over.  That’s not the same thing, as I fear Petraeus is soon to discover.

      Consider the President’s own words (SF Headlines Examiner):

      So make no mistake:  We have a clear goal.  We are going to break the Taliban’s momentum.  We are going to build Afghan capacity.  We are going to relentlessly apply pressure on al Qaeda and its leadership, strengthening the ability of both Afghanistan and Pakistan to do the same.

      Notice what’s missing?  Any references to defeating the Taliban?  Any references to defeating al Qaeda?  Any reference to victory?  No to all three.

      In short, the president has picked the right general, but for the wrong objectives.  He (the president) still wants merely to end the war, not to win it.  That’s a flaw no general can fix, not even David Petraeus.

      Sorry, Riley

      Cross-posted to VV


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      Republican, Jeffersoniad · Economics, Government spending, Republican Party, Rob Wittman, U.S. politics, Virginia politics, government incompetence

      The right-wing liberal · Krystal, Krystal, Krystal RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

      Poor Krystal Ball; she’s thoroughly disoriented after getting a painful smackdown from the Free Lance-StarHer response to stumbling into the hole she dug for herself was . . . to keep digging.

      First, she rips Wittman for being “ineffective” and a “follower.”  Worse, to Krytsal: “He has yet to show any independence from his party.”

      Huh?

      Was Krystal in some parallel universe two years ago, when Wittman broke with President Bush, John McCain, Sarah Palin, Mitch McConnell, John Boehner, and Eric Cantor to vote against TARP?

      Apparently not, because in her same rambling wreck of a statement, she notes that “Big banks and Washington got us into this mess,” without noticing that Wittman voted against both when he opposed TARP.

      Then again, elsewhere on her site, she laments that the courts reduced the broad reach of the EPA, never mind the agency’s record of fudging data right here in our district.

      So Krystal is running for Congress knowing neither what Wittman has done in Washington nor what the government has done to her own would-be constituents.

      At least she’s consistently ignorant.

      Cross-posted to VV


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      Republican, Jeffersoniad · Economics, Republican Party, U.S. politics, government incompetence

      The right-wing liberal · A good night in South Carolina RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

      Gresham Barrett went down in flames to Nikki Haley (he lost by nearly 2-1).

      Equally good news came from the 4th Disrict Congressional Primary where Bob Inglis (another TARP backer) was waxed by Trey Gowdy (the latter winning with over 70% of the primary vote).

      The Palmetto GOP did well.

      Cross-posted to VV


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      Republican, Jeffersoniad · Barack Obama, Government spending, Local Government, U.S. politics, government incompetence

      The right-wing liberal · A perfect metaphor RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

      Obsession over stauts screwing up the machinery . . .

      A label for an unfinished project that’s almost entirely poltential . . .

      A needless waste of taxpayer money . . .

      Is anyone really surprised?

      Cross-posted to VV


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      Republican, Jeffersoniad · Afghanistan, Barack Obama, International Affairs, U.S. politics, WBK war

      The right-wing liberal · Doesn’t anyone just resign anymore? RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

      So General McChrystal has chosen to take his disagreement with the Administration public – very public, in Rolling Stone, of all places (Wall Street Journal via Jim Geraghty).

      Among other things, the general informs us that he really doesn’t like Vice President Biden, is suspicious of the diplomats sent to “help” him, and is disappointed in the president.

      Now, from a policy perspective, I’m generally with McChrystal here (except for Hamid Karzai, who I don’t trust at all).  On the flip side, this is an interview a general in the field simply cannot do (as Doug M points out).

      The more I think about this, the more one conclusion becomes clear: McChrystal is not getting the support from Washington that he needs (and, in my view, deserves); he’s had enough; and he’s essentially asking to be fired.

      That last part’s the pity here.  There was a time when someone in the general’s position would have resigned, and then explained why.  I cannot understand why McChrystal chose not to do that.  It would have freed him to speak his mind, made a much bigger splash than even this has, and would have shown him to be a decent man who was simply pushed too far.

      Instead, for whatever reason, he pushed back.

      I suspect that when the general becomes a private citizen (and like Doug, I see that coming sooner rather than later), I will end up on his side during the painfully inevitable “who lost Afghanistan?” argument.  That said, McChrystal’s method of joining the debate will make things harder for us.  I only wish he’d considered that, and offered his resignation instead of (or at least along with) the interview.

      Cross-posted to VV


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      Republican, Jeffersoniad · Economics, Media, Republican Party, Rob Wittman, Virginia politics, government incompetence

      The right-wing liberal · Krystal’s Ball a little cloudy RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

      I have to hand it to Krystal Ball, nominee for the Democrats running against my Congressman (Rob Wittman). It takes hard work to upset the Free Lance-Star as much as she did.

      The FLS has an annoying habit of leaning ever so slightly right-of-center while ripping any local Republican within their field of vision (as a Republican nominee for Spotsylvania Board of Supervisors, I can speak from personal experience). So, one has to ask what led the editors of the Rappahannock River’s MSM wannabe to come to Wittman’s defense so strongly.

      It turned out to be the nonsense Ball put on her first mailer.

      First off, the editors are unhappy that ball put words in their mouths:

      In her first political mailer of the race, Ms. Ball, a Democrat, didn’t resort to greasy deception–she started out that way. For one thing, the piece cites a Free Lance-Star link beneath the words “Wittman won’t go against the Republican establishment even when voters beg him to be aggressive in what’s going on in Washington.” Neither the words nor the sentiment ever surfaced in a Free Lance-Star editorial–surely a natural inference–nor does the cited link contain that verbiage–though an average reader would conclude that the mailer’s words are a direct quote.

      The citation is of a news story chiefly about Mr. Wittman’s primary race, and reflects a view voiced by a supporter of Yosemite Sam acolyte Susan Crabill (sic), whom Mr. Wittman beat about 4-to-1.

      In other words, Ball is attributing to the paper’s writers/editors a line actually said by a Crabillite (not that the paper did any favors by getting Cathy Crabill’s name wrong). Oops.

      More to the point, the actual line is thoroughly off-base no matter who said it. In fact, in the biggest vote of his career, Rob Wittman opposed his party leaders in Congress – including neighbor Eric Cantor – and even opposed his own party’s President (George W. Bush) to vote against TARP (i.e., the bank bailout).

      As none other that the editors of the FLS actually said: “Rob Wittman, meanwhile, should be every Washington-weary American’s cup of tea.”

      What else upset that FLS crew? In their own words . . .

      Ms. Ball’s mailbox gift to 1st District households also charges, “Wittman was ranked last in effectiveness of all Congressmen from Virginia.” Indeed, Mr. Wittman’s sole “power ranking” by KnowLegis, a lobbying information firm, places Mr. Wittman a pitiable 432nd among 435 House members for the year 2007. But, apparently to hold down typesetting fees, the mailer omits the crucial KnowLegis notations: “Too few terms or years in office in Congress to have significant clout” and “Member has reduced power due to Freshman status.”

      That’s putting it mildly. Mr. Wittman joined Congress on Dec. 13, 2007–four days before it adjourned for the holidays. Of course he had no clout: The congressional year expired almost as soon as he found his office bathroom! Mr. Wittman was a late arriver because he had to win a special election following the tragic death of Rep. Jo Ann Davis from breast cancer. Upon such circumstances does Krystal Ball build her tower of legerdemain.

      The editors next line is as follows:

      Ms. Ball, in fact, has all but disqualified herself from this race. Whatever Washington needs, we’re pretty sure it’s not more clever deception, not more half- and quarter-truths, not more contempt for common decency.

      Ouch!

      How disastrous was Ball’s mailer? Put aside whatever biases you may have – one way or the other – and look at it this way: Ball’s mailer led to a perfect negative ad against her for which the Wittman campaign paid no money, exerted no energy, and therefore risks no blowback.

      A number of people were initially impressed with Krystal Ball’s ability to raise money, but if she keeps shooting herself in the foot like this . . .

      Cross-posted to BD


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      Republican, Jeffersoniad · Economics, Mike Dukakabee, On the Blogosphere, Republican Party, Taxes, U.S. politics, government incompetence

      The right-wing liberal · Getting the band back together RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

      Mike Huckabee is dropping hints that he’ll be running for President in 2012.

      You know what that means.

      Cross-posted to VV


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      Republican, Jeffersoniad · Economics, Republican Party, U.S. politics, government incompetence

      The right-wing liberal · Gresham Barrett, you can not run from your yes vote on TARP RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

      Congressman Gresham Barrett, in his desperate attempt to win the Republican nomination for Governor of South Carolina, is playing the religion card – again (Weekly Standard Blog).

      I will merely repeat what I said earlier this week.  This is a Republican primary.  Gresham Barrett voted for TARP.  He must go down – and he must go down hard.

      No 3-card-monte on religion is going to make your TARP vote go away, Congressman.

      Cross-posted to VV


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      Republican, Jeffersoniad · Economics, U.S. politics

      The right-wing liberal · NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO! RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

      There are many of us who believe the true cause of the panic of 2008 was the disastrous “mark-to-market” rule, which forced banks to turn long-haul performing assets into on-the-spot values.  When it came to things like collateralized-debt-obligations (the securities created out of millions of home mortgages), the effect was to incorporate the panic into every bank’s balance sheets, and thus wiped out $5 trillion – yes, that’s with a “T” – in liquidity.

      Mark-to-market was killed by the very folks that created it – the Financial Accounting Standards Board – last April.  In response, the Dow Jones went north of 8,000 for the first time in months.

      Now, Steve Forbes has learned terrible news:

      Yet, incredibly, the FASB–with the passive connivance of the SEC, the FDIC and others–is set to bring back mark-to-market accounting with a vengeance. This time all loans, not just securities, will be subject to these so-called fair-value rules. The immediate impact will be to crush small businesses. As Wesbury and his colleague Robert Stein observed in a June Forbes.com column: “There is no real market for [individual] bank loans. How does a trader in New York know what price to bid for a loan to a dry cleaner in Burlington, Iowa? In fact, the minute a bank makes a loan to a local small business it will be forced to write down the value because no one else will pay 100 cents on the dollar for that loan, especially in times of economic stress. … When markets freeze up financial institutions must use prices that do not reflect actual cash flow.”

      In short, a revised and expanded mark-to-market would be the equivalent of hosing down our credit markets in liquid nitrogen.

      Of course, no one in the Administration is smart enough to notice this, let alone stop it, so it’s up to Congress – who apparently pushed the FASB to end mark-to-market in the first place last year (according to Forbes).

      Every broken clock is right twice a day.  This Congress got it right last year; they need to do it again (same Forbes link):

      Contact your representatives and senators and warn them of this impending disaster. Educate your candidates. It was a much-maligned Congress that stopped the last round of the mark-to-market plague, and it will have to do so again.

      You heard the man!

      Cross-posted to VV


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      Republican, Jeffersoniad · Basketball

      The right-wing liberal · What tonight meant for Kobe Bryant RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

      There are games where the great ones show how great they are by being, well, bad.  Fans and players see something different about them; they see what the great player does when he’s off his game.

      For me, the best example was Michael Jordan in Game 5 of the ’93 Eastern Conference Finals.  The Knicks gave him fits in Madison Square Garden, because they were intensely physical against him.  The Detroit Pistons did the same thing years before and beat him twice before they just got too old.  The Knicks were younger and more talented – and they had the homecourt advantage.  So Jordan swallowed hard, and accepted that Game 5 would have no Sportscenter moments, no dazzling dunks, and no flowery finger-rolls.  Instead, he “brought his lunch-pail,” got knocked around, and did some knocking around himself.  In the end, the Bulls did something no one thought they could do – they out-muscled the Knicks.  Chicago won Game 5, finished the series in Game 6, and went on to win their third consecutive NBA Championship.

      I know this will be controversial to some, but I genuinely think Kobe Bryant put himself closer to Jordan than anyone else with his performance tonight.

      As a shooter, Bryant was awful.  He shot 6 for 24, an abysmal 25%.  Yet he was indispensable on the boards.  He pulled down 15 rebounds – a game-leading 11 on the defensive end (at times, it felt like 50).  He carried his team despite a bad shooting night, and led them defensively.  It was a sight to see.

      Magic Johnson himself called Bryant the greatest Laker.  That should end that conversation.

      Cross-posted to VV


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      Republican, Jeffersoniad · Barack Obama, Economics, Energy, U.S. politics

      The right-wing liberal · How I know Obama’s speech was completely unserious RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

      The president made a lot of noise last night about the benefits of alternative energy.  He talked about being bipartisan.

      Not a word of it mattered.

      How do I know?

      Simple, in his entire speech, one word was never spoken: nuclear.

      Anyone who complains about imported oil and refuses to note nuclear energy’s part in reducing it is not being serious.

      In other words, the president wasted everyone’s time.

      Cross-posted to VV


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      Republican, Jeffersoniad · Economics, Government spending, On the Blogosphere, Republican Party, U.S. politics, government incompetence

      The right-wing liberal · Smear in SC? RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

      William Kristol has the latest on the South Carolina GOP runoff for Governor.  It appears Congressman Gresham Barrett is taking the low road.

      My view on this is clear.  This is a Republican primary.  Gresham Barrett voted for TARP.  He must go down – and he must go down hard.

      Cross-posted to VV


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      Republican, Jeffersoniad · Economics

      The right-wing liberal · I don’t mean to scare anyone, but . . . RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

      . . I’m probably going to end up doing it anyway.

      Today’s “uh oh” economic moment – at least for me; others may have known already – comes from Kevin Williamson, writing in NRO‘s The Corner (and no, it’s not the massive unfunded liabilities headed government’s way, as scary as that is):

      One thing I didn’t include: private debt. The household debt picture is pretty rough, too, and the news there is mixed: The good news is that Americans are actually reducing their household debt. The bad news is that they are not doing that by saving their pennies and paying down their bills, but by defaulting on their mortgages and credit cards.

      There’s about $1 trillion in U.S. credit-card debt out there, much of it securitized. The charge-off rate (the portion of defaulted debt credit-card companies abandon as unrecoverable) doubled from 2006 to 2008, and just about doubled again from 2008 to 2010. Asset-backed securities based on credit-card debt are kind of an interesting creature, to my mind, anyway. Mortgage-backed securities ultimately have a house attached to them: an asset that can be repossessed, held, sold, etc. It’s not like credit-card companies can repossess that $200 bar bill you put on your Visa.

      Read the first sentence of the second paragraph again, “There’s about $1 trillion in U.S. credit-card debt out there, much of it securitized.”  In other words, a large chunk of America’s credit-card debt is being traded on Wall Street in the same manner as our mortgages were, in carved up pieces melded together into tradeable pieces of paper.  If one assumes the underlying debts will be paid, then you can just sit back and wait for the money to roll in (or sell it to someone else who shares the expectation).  If, by contrast, you’re expecting defaults, than we have the housing CDO panic all over again, only this time, without the mitigator of actual homes backing up the debt.  Sure, home values fell, which started the whole CDO fiasco, but they never hit zero, let alone start there.

      In short, the next TARP could be plastic.

      Cross-posted to VV


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      Republican, Jeffersoniad · Afghanistan, Barack Obama, International Affairs, U.S. politics, WBK war

      The right-wing liberal · Memo to my fellow rightists: don’t get your hopes up on Obama and Afghanistan RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

      The big hitters in the American center-right (Weekly Standard and National Review) are calling on the president to make clear that mid-2011 is only the beginning of our withdrawal from Afghanistan, and that we will stay there for much, much longer.  Jackson Diehl echoes the call in the WaPo.

      I humbly submit this piece of advice: don’t hold your breath.

      As I have noted time and time again, the Democrats – otherwise known as the folks who elected the president – have never really committed to the liberation of Afghanistan.  Neither has Europe.  Even Canada’s Conservative government is refusing to even discuss extending its military presence there.  No one that has the president’s ear is telling him he needs to stick it out – while just about everyone in his inner circle has plans for the money currently being spent on our troops and weapons there.

      So expect the drawdown to begin on schedule and without any asterisks.  Expect the president to use the 10th anniversary of 9/11/01 to make a clean break from his predecessor’s wars.

      Do not expect him to commit to seeing Afghanistan through to victory.

      Cross-posted to VV


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      Republican, Jeffersoniad · International Affairs

      The right-wing liberal · Nationalists win in . . . Belgium? RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

      Contrary to popular American belief, the epicenter of transnational progressivism (a.k.a. the “global governance” crowd, a.k.a. the one-world-government crew) is not the United Nations.  It is the European Union, and within the European Union, the physical and inspirational heart is Belgium, the oldest bicultural and bilingual nation on the continent.

      So when a party that calls for the breakup of Belgium wins the elections, it’s big news (Guardian, UK):

      A party that wants to split Belgium won a parliamentary election tonight, a result that could complicate efforts to form a coalition that can deliver reforms of the state and tight budgetary control. Projections and early results showed the Flemish separatist N-VA (New Flemish Alliance), which advocates the gradual dissolution of Belgium, was to be the largest party in Dutch-speaking Flanders and the country.

      Flemish public broadcaster VRT estimated it would win 30 of the 150 seats in the lower house of parliament, from just eight until now.

      Given that all of the N-VA’s votes were in Flanders, it certainly won more than a third of the vote in that region (perhaps as much as 40%).

      The ironies surrounding this are rich, yet telling.  Belgium is supposed to take over the rotating presidency of the European Union next month.  So not only is the EU’s primary economic experiment (the euro currency) running into trouble due to Greece; not only is the Union looking at more Eurosceptical governments in the UK and possible the Netherlands; but now the “leader” of the Union – and the nation that was the blueprint for the entire idea of transnationalism – is a political basket case because the people within it want to break up the country.

      In short, the people who have had the most experience with transnational government are in open revolt.  Elites around the world should take heed.  Then again, if they did, we wouldn’t call them “elites” in the first place.

      Cross-posted to VV


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      Republican, Jeffersoniad · Economics, Sports, Taxes

      The right-wing liberal · In Defense of the Money-Grubbing Universities RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

      There is a lot of discussion surrounding the slow-motion “realignment” of the college sports conferences (a.k.a., the Big 12′s death march). Much of it has been a slew of laments that the institutions of higher learning are looking for the best financial deal they can get from the Big 10 or the Pac-10. “Purists” galore have been slamming the events of the last week.

      I’d love to know why.

      Is it really terrible that our colleges and universities are looking for the best deal they can get? Lest we forget, these are dollars that will go to educating the nation’s children and young adults. More money means more opportunities for students. When did that become a bad thing?

      The overwhelming majority of which are state schools. Would their critics prefer they rely only on currently strapped state governments? Do they think it’s better for colleges to rely on working-class and unemployed taxpayers instead of major TV networks for their revenue?

      Would they prefer UCLA and Cal (part of the PAC-10 that’s trying to seize half of the Big 12) take their chances with the byzantine and bankrupt California government instead of ESPN? Really?

      Not me. I applaud the efforts of college presidents to find new and larger streams of market revenue for their students and faculty. Better they fund their efforts by proving their worth in the business world than by forcibly reaching into our pockets during the Great Recession.

      Cross-posted to Bearing Drift


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      Republican, Jeffersoniad · Energy, International Affairs, Scandals, government incompetence

      The right-wing liberal · Jim Webb votes for EPA power grab RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

      Moron.

      Cross-posted to VV


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