Saturday, November 23, 2019

Returning to the Days of FDR


That crazy comic duo of Sanders and Ocasio-Cortez are calling for the Democratic Party to return to those halcyon days of Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s administration where the party in power was able to do almost anything it wanted because those evil-industrialists, bankers, and the Republican’s had started a global depression.  Having grown up in Franklin’s hometown I was indoctrinated with all the wonderful things he, his closest advisors and Eleanor did to save America and the world.  But I approach this latest call for a return to those days of essentially a single-party government with some trepidation.  I am older now than when I was in grade and high school, and I’ve seen a number of things in the world, which cause me to question the role of big government and the abuses they are capable of inflicting on the individual. 
Today, while I enjoy the fruits of the socialist policies started under the Roosevelt administration, and greatly expanded under LBJ’s arm-twisting of Congress, I’ve begun to wonder just how long it can be sustained before the Chinese come storming the gates of DC seeking repayment of all the monies they have invested?
Here are some interesting things to consider about FDR’s 3+ terms of office.
When the stock market collapsed and the people made a run on the banks, seeking to get their dollars back and into a safe place (like their mattresses), the government under Hoover sat on its hands.  It was the government under FDR who intervened to stop the run.  They declared a “bank holiday” where all the banks were closed and no one could get their money.  Before they reopened FDR and the Federal Reserve had new authorities passed by a unanimous Congress that allowed them to decide which banks would reopen, and which would come under government scrutiny.  In his soon to be familiar style, he came on the radio to assure the American people that the Government would take care of them.  It was a positive move to reinstate consumer confidence in the banking system.  A modern equivalent would be the crash of 2008 where the government loaned billions of dollars to businesses and banks “too big to fail.”  A bunch of new legislation came out of Congress at that time, among them the Glass-Steagall provisions of the 1933 Banking Act.  Glass-Steagall separated banking from investment.  The intent was to provide greater security to the individual accounts held by a bank, and not let them speculate with small investor’s money. 
In the years since that calming decision the government has played an ever-increasing role in running the lives of the average citizen and we’ve happily played along.  On a selfish level, I think we all like to believe our government is thinking of our best interest when they propose new entitlements (or free stuff for us), but I believe that is hardly ever the case. For example, the provisions of Glass-Steagall have been eroded by the efforts of the banking industry with the Congress, and with the approval of the Federal Reserve.  The reductions in those separations were claimed to be a contributing factor to the collapse in 2008, but I would say the decisions by the late 20th and early 21st century Congresses to let even the most unsuitable candidate secure a home loan and then default was the bigger trigger.
As part of his plans to reshape our society, FDR and his administration began creating new agencies, organizations, and programs that greatly expanded the power of the Executive Branch.  When the Supreme Court began striking down New Deal programs like the National Recovery Act in 1936, FDR considered ways to reduce the power of those in the Judiciary who opposed him.  It was a miscalculation on his part and his ideas for packing to courts to get favorable rulings soon died.  But the influences of the socialist and unconstitutional agencies he created long outlived him and the justices who found them in violation of the Constitution.  The NRA made unions a strong political entity for the decades that followed the closing of the agency itself.
Since the 1930’s unions have played an active political role in local, state and federal politics.  Usually on behalf of the Democratic party.  But one has to ask, what have the unions actually done since the mid-1930s to enrich their membership?  Have they actually protected jobs, kept their members on a path to financial security, or just made the union leadership rich and influential from the wealth of union dues?
Those of my generation will recall the scandals of the Teamsters Union, Jimmy Hoffa, and organized crime.  The question still remains today, which part of the Giant’s end zone is Jimmy buried in?  Unions seem to be great at vilifying management, but not so great at figuring out a win-win solution that keeps a business alive to provide long term employment for the membership.  For the record, a lot of business management deserves to be vilified for their own stupidity but that’s for another rant.
I love this video from economist Milton Freedman talking about unions.  In it, he points out the two most successful unions (as of 1980), if we assume the primary role of a union is to enrich their members, were the Air Line Pilots Association and the American Medical Association.  He also talks about the inherent problem with municipal unions and those they bargain with.
We, as voters, would be far better served if we understood under our current rules politics is purely a game about power and control and has next to nothing to do with making the lives of the average citizen better.  To support this hypothesis, I only need to look at the principle positions of the two parties.  Show me in either party’s platform where the average citizen comes out ahead?  On the Democratic side, it is all about centralizing and maintaining power by letting anyone they think will vote for them cast a ballot, on the Republican side it is about allowing the big corporations a free reign.  Of course, religion gets thrown about as a useful tool because on the one side they’ve chosen to abandon their faith, or at least give it only lip service, which opens the door for the other side to be the defenders of it.
For me, the most amusing things I’ve read are the party platforms.  Each contains about 10-pounds of BS stuffed into a 5-pound bag, but I’m sure they’ve paid good money to have them written and published.  Historically, their use can best be described as a tool to say it’s the other party’s fault when things go south.
Let’s take one example for each party and see if I can prove the point.
In the section titled Government reform, the RNC platform lists about 17 things it says are important.  They range from “Making Government Work for the People,” to “Preserving the District of Columbia.”  In the first, and I assume the most important section they suggest we should return power to the states and reduce the federal government.  When the Republicans were in complete control of the Congress and the Executive has there ever been any fundamental changes to our government that even slowed just a little bit the growth of a central bureaucracy?  In the words of John Pinette, I say “nay-nay.”
One the DNC side, we see a section called Raise Incomes and Restore Economic Security for the Middle Class.  In that section, they talk about everything from “Raising Workers’ Wages” to “Revitalizing Our Nation’s Postal Service.”  The funny thing about this section is it is really about making the unions strong again and offers the approach they should do this through Executive Orders or some other mean. That sure sounds like an endorsement of a dictator (as long as it’s the right dictator).  Today we have record low unemployment, does that work for the Democrats?  Apparently not!
So my bottom line remains one of skepticism and distrust of a large all-powerful government regardless of who is in charge.  Those who advocate for the DNC version of Government I can only offer this advice.  Be careful what you wish for.  If it comes it may come in the form you don’t like.  (Kind of like Trump winning in 2020).

Thursday, November 21, 2019

In Conclusion


Or not, because it will never be over.
I guess the public impeachment hearings are over, and Rep Schiff in what can best be described as self-righteous indigitation bemoans the fact the President doesn’t trust the deep state and those partisan Republicans refuse to criticize him for not totally believing the bureaucrats who’ve stood against his election.
For me, the one remarkable thing is how Schiff can look into the camera and feign the outrage when he had no problem defending “his president” when Obama was accused of using the government against his opponents.  I guess this really shouldn’t be remarkable to me, it has gone on with increasing regularity since I’ve bothered to pay attention to the politics of our Federal Government.  It was true during the Johnson years, Nixon, Carter, Reagan and everyone else.  What has changed, and it changed in the 1990s when we removed the sense of tradition and now see impeachment as just another political tool to use to vilify the opposition.
As I said at the beginning of this whole impeachment drumbeat if the President is impeached by the house, he won’t be removed by the Senate.  No matter how sanctimonious Nancy Pelosi and Adam Schiff may sound it is all simply theater.  What this impeachment will do is open the door for every President who doesn’t have control of both houses in the Congress to be investigated with an eye towards impeachment.  Heaven-help the individual who has a minority in both houses for then removal becomes a real possibility.
Neither the deep-state nor the career Washington politicians give a tinker’s dam about the “will of the people.”  It is purely a game of power, not unlike the “Game of Thrones.”

Friday, November 15, 2019

So, Let's Sum Up


What follows is based 100% on hearsay, which is okay since that is the new standard for criminal investigations.  I have watched about seven minutes of the Congressional investigation of President Trump, and none of that was real-time.  I’ve read what others have said and looked at the witnesses’ background, but to determine my position, I’ve watched a couple of news shows, and for the most part, choose as a truth whatever is opposite of what they are reporting
We are entering day-2 of the investigation, which the House leadership would like us to believe is akin to a Grand Jury investigation, although it is public (but only because they weren’t getting a lot of traction on their double-secret investigation).  So far, they've called two career state-department employees who had risen to the rank of Ambassador.   
For those who might not know it, all government service is rank-based.  In the State Department, they have fancy French titles, but for the most part, they are plain old government employees until they reach the equivalent of a full Colonel in the military.  Then they become “ambassadors.”  They’re still plain old government employees, but they just have a little bigger aura of respectability.
Next, we are told they will roll out another Ambassador, one who was appointed by Obama and fired by Trump.  She also has no direct knowledge of the central issue.  I assume her testimony will be as equally damning (from the Democratic perspective), or weak (from the Republican perspective).  At this point, other than pollsters and their 1500 or so subjects, no one really cares what the average citizen thinks.
The two witnesses Representative Schiff called for his opening salvo were at best loyal deep-state partisans.  They had no first-hand knowledge of the phone call that allegedly set this whole shipwreck in motion, but could only report what one of their staff had overheard and speculate on the President’s motives as evidenced by whatever his lawyer Rudy Giuliani was running around Ukraine doing.
In summary:  We can expect the investigation to continue until even CNN drops the gavel to gavel coverage.  I have to wonder what the true agenda for the Democrats is?   The partisan media and all their talking head experts can’t seem to figure it out, and I’m beginning to wonder if the Party Leadership actually has a plan?  Or is this all part of the illusion/diversion while they play three-card Monty with the upcoming 2020 election?

Friday, November 8, 2019

Living in an Age of Ignorance


The United States Government has been involved in funding or directing education in the U.S. since at least the middle of the 19th century.  The current “champion” for education in the government is the Department of Education, a cabinet-level position created in 1979.  Its principal role is to establish educational policies and oversee the disbursement of funds appropriated by Congress to improve education in the United States and its territories.  In 2019, the President asked for $63.2 billion in discretionary spending.  The Congress actually approved $70.8 billion for education.  The question we should be asking ourselves is has the money we’ve spent actually been effective in raising the educational standards across the 50 states and its territories?

It seems each President (Trump excluded) campaigns on how poorly we fund education and how they will make a difference.  I remember President George W. Bush’s promise to leave no child behind, and of course, President Barrack Obama swept into office promising to fix the failures of Bush’s “No Child Left Behind” and fix what he saw as a decline in public education.  Of course, along the way every educational expert seems to have their own view as to what should be done to address the failures and Make American Education Great Again!

Bill Ayers, the 1960’s radical, brought us “Common Core” which, as far as I can tell has done little to actually improve the next generations' ability to consistently get 4 as an answer to the age-old question of what is the sum of 2 plus 2.[1]  What it did accomplish is to stop every parent from helping with their student's math homework.

Today’s educational policies and dialogue mostly center on how to divide up the dollars available to education in such a way that the professional educators get the most dollars for themselves and their organization.  Those who want more $ for education routinely cite the performance of students in other countries, but I see little to actually reflect a debate on why American Education is different than say Finland.  I see little to reflect the decline in social structure and traditional family values as a contributing factor and see little agreement on paths forward to fix the foundational problems we, as a nation of 350,000,000, face as we try and prepare our young to assume the roles of tomorrows leaders.

It seems obvious, at least to my simple way of thinking, higher education over the past 50-years has shifted from teaching our young the humanities and the sciences to a process of “right-thinking” where there is an intolerance for anything anyone wants to define as an injustice.  At one point this used to be referred to as indoctrination, but today I think it is just the educational standard.  Today’s debate in social media over offensive acts and language is just a logical outcome of that indoctrination. 

It is clearly a tool used by those who wish to dominate society, rather than become a part of it.  The result of this shift is a clear move into an age of ignorance where our history is clouded by modern opinion, rather than understanding the times and the opinions of the day that helped write it.  It is reflected in the vilification of opposing views based on emotion rather than fact, and it is highlighted in the belief one side is right and the other is wrong as if the world around us is cast only in white and black.

These facts alone are enough to raise concerns for those who worry about the legacy we, my generation, leave behind, but when it is compounded by the political hypocrisy of politics and the average layperson’s willingness to accept as truth the views of only one side it becomes even more likely the age of ignorance will flourish.

Wednesday, November 6, 2019

Maybe Scientists Shouldn't Tweet

 Especially, when they put their credibility on public display.  Call me old fashioned but scientists used to focus on answering the great questions and discoveries.  Now they know so much they just focus on selfies.


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