Maggie's FarmWe are a commune of inquiring, skeptical, politically centrist, capitalist, anglophile, traditionalist New England Yankee humans, humanoids, and animals with many interests beyond and above politics. Each of us has had a high-school education (or GED), but all had ADD so didn't pay attention very well, especially the dogs. Each one of us does "try my best to be just like I am," and none of us enjoys working for others, including for Maggie, from whom we receive neither a nickel nor a dime. Freedom from nags, cranks, government, do-gooders, control-freaks and idiots is all that we ask for. |
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Monday, August 1. 2011Negative Attitude: The O and the Dems are down on the USAWhen I was in school, it was called "NA", and it wasn't cool. From Ajami, Barack Obama the Pessimist - His lack of faith in American exceptionalism has dashed any hope of a 'transformational' presidency:
Obama suffers from the typically American condescending elite view of life: "America sucks because our retarded citizenry sucks." QQQMan is an exception, whatever else he is. If he is not the image of God, then he is a disease of the dust. If it is not true that a divine being fell, then we can only say that one of the animals went entirely off its head…Man is always something worse or something better than an animal; and a mere argument from animal perfection never touches him at all. Thus, in sex no animal is either chivalrous or obscene. And thus no animal ever invented anything so bad as drunkenness – or so good as drink. G.K. Chesterton, Illustrated London News 1907, from a selection of Chesterton quotes at Anchoress Debt Deal: New Demoralization and New SobrietyThe deal between the Congressional leadership and the President is much ado about nothing, in that – contrary to the kudos, rationalizations or moans – it actually does and will do little to affect the rapidly rising federal deficits and debts. It is less than trivial in the next year that it actually affects and almost entirely a lie over the next decade as future Congresses and presidents work around or ignore it. The deal will cause increased demoralization among the citizenry both over its lack of real content and as politicians wrangle vigorously over scraps treated like whole cloth. It will also cause a new sobriety, already in painful motion, among the citizenry who have lesser prospects than before this deep recession and little reason to believe the future will personally be much better. Consumption will be restrained. It is clear that the status quo is continued, for now at least and likely into the foreseeable future. Spending is not reduced. It only promises a reduction in the present trendline of forecast spending, a fraction of the increases that will actually occur. And, there is little reason to believe that either Medicare or defense spending will be more than trimmed slightly in 2012. Part of that trendline, as scored by the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) is a $multi-trillion increase in taxes as the Bush tax-cuts are allowed to expire right after the 2012 elections. There is little reason to believe that such a drastic increase in taxes will be allowed to occur. Longer term, even if a trillion$ or three-$trillion dollars of spending were most optimistically avoided over the next decade, that’s a hundred to three-hundred $billion per year, a small fraction of federal spending. If, as seems likely, the 2012 elections result in a Republican president and both houses of Congress, there will be more trims to spending, a good thing surely but likely to increase the howls of real and defensive pains and hardly likely to actually reduce the deficits significantly. The Cut, Cap and Balance that the Republican House passed is likely, and decidedly a better thing, yet as tides and lobbies weigh in will be weakened and end-run over time. Fears about the crash of the dollar are overblown, as there is no viable alternative in a euro-myth euro or speciously corrupt Chinese renminbi. Lenders will demand higher interest rates and that will increase the deficits worldwide. Fears about more global conflict are not overblown. Enemies of order or Western civilization will continue to probe and attack. Reducing mental and defense preparedness by the US will encourage such foes and increase the needs to confront, which will be less successful and more costly to servicemembers and foregone goals. So, long story short, the status quo will continue. It will be perceived as or really be painful for all, even under the best of circumstances. One can argue that far more severe governmental actions or changes would reverse this. They are unlikely to occur. There will be more restraints on deepening the hole, but the hole remains. We’ve already dug it by a generation or two of profligacy and excuses. Only a generation or two of serious reduction in personal and government spending, plus economic recovery that must depend upon lessened government regulation and interference, will begin to maybe return us to realistic optimism. I predict that the demoralization will be temporary and the new sobriety will ultimately triumph and set us right. The path will be long and hard to dig out of several generations of delusions that we could spend our seed-corn, requiring perseverance and sacrifice of self and illusions, but it is well marked. BTW, I'm encoraged that the cautious and knowledgeable Mitt Romney is opposed to the debt deal, both as an economic realist and political positioner. The debt deal will pass anyway but he will be demonstrated as correct during the coming election season. That may not win him enough points to score, but does indicate a will among Republican moderates that together with the more conservative and Independent centrists -- as polls presently show -- will lead to the next vital step up with a Republican White House and Congress. The road of a thousand steps begins with the first. We've taken the first and 999 remain.
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Monday morning linksFarewell, Archaeopteryx And yes, birds are dinosaurs Self-confidence: Too high and too low Why the USPS Should Be Privatized Why are Libs so negative on the 2nd Amendment? Other than sex-related activity, it's tough to name one area of life in which Libs want government to have less control over people rather than more Dubrovnik update. I'd go there, gladly. Indian SlutWalk marches amidst conservative concerns It's a crime in India to stare at a lady for over 30 seconds. Obvious solution is Ray-Bans. Why Do Half of Americans Pay No Federal Income Tax? Big incentive there to keep one's reported income low Rush in 1994:
Jonah: The Reagan Playbook No Longer Applies Why We Will Lose This Fight and Every Other Claims we're past the tipping point: too many people relying on government wages or redistributions Failing to Save the Spotted Owl The Goracle Invites You to Connect the Dots As Rush always says, Follow The Money John McCain disparagingly termed the Tea Partiers "hobbits." Not sure how that's an insult: the hobbits were the incorruptable heroes who just wanted to live in the shire and to be left alone. That's a tough one...hmmm...hobbits or Talibans? Our Biggest Budget Issue: Increased Spending on Payments to Individuals, i.e "Entitlement Nation"
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