Archive for the ‘Clash of Worldviews’ category

THOSE INTERESTING CORPORATIONS

March 26, 2014

The U.S. Supreme Court heard arguments on the Hobby Lobby case yesterday. Hobby Lobby is a closely held (family owned) for-profit corporation. If you’re unaware or only vaguely aware of it, this case concerns whether a for-profit business corporation or its owners can claim the protection of the federal Religious Freedom Restoration Act (RFRA).  Specifically, the question to be decided is whether RFRA permits a corporation to avoid compliance with the so-called HHS Mandate requiring businesses to supply cost-free contraceptives, sterilizations and abortifascients to their insured employees under the Obamacare law if compliance would offend the religious sensibilities of the owners of the corporation.

The for-profit corporation is our ubiquitous legally created “servant” but I believe that the unique nature of this type of servant is little understood. Most Americans see these servants rather as oligarchs and overlords.   According to the 1919 Michigan Supreme Court case, Ford Motor Company v. Dodge, the nature of the corporation and its governance can be described as follows:

A business corporation is organized and carried on primarily for the profit of the stockholders. The powers of the directors are to be employed for that end. The discretion of directors is to be exercised in the choice of means to attain that end, and does not extend to a change in the end itself, to the reduction of profits, or to the nondistribution of profits among stockholders in order to devote them to other purposes.

There is committed to the discretion of directors, a discretion to be exercised in good faith, the infinite details of business, including the wages which shall be paid to employees, the number of hours they shall work, the conditions under which labor shall be carried on, and the price for which products shall be offered to the public.

It is pretty simple according to the law, a corporation is a “good man of business” which is the term used by Ebeneezer Scrooge to describe his late partner Jacob Marley in Charles Dickens’s A Christmas Carol. Corporations are our servants because we have created them to serve our needs. Corporations were conceived of as a method by which men could accomplish economically desirable ends for society which would otherwise be impossible or exceedingly difficult to achieve. Corporations are empowered to accomplish these economically desirable ends by means of a fictional personhood which permits organization of large amounts of capital and numerous employees.  In contrast to humans as owners, who have inherent limitations chief among them being their mortality and other human frailties, corporations renew themselves with fresh blood whenever necessary and they can do so eternally.  Corporate investors are provided with limited liability and, for this benefit, they surrender the control of the details of the business to a board of directors who themselves can be replaced whenever necessary or convenient. The limited liability aspect of the corporate ownership facilitates accumulation of large amounts of capital since the investors are not generally liable for anything other than their original investments. The corporation’s employees and customers can work for it and contract with it as if it were a person in its own right. In concept the corporation is just that simple. We shall see, however, in upcoming installments that there are unintended and un-envisioned complications of utilizing the corporate form including the possibility that a family like the one which owns Hobby Lobby, can be forced to use its money is ways which would clearly violate the “free exercise of religion” clause of the First Amendment and the Religious Freedom Restoration Act if the family owned the business other than through the use of the corporate form.

December 8, 2012

After reading Professor Baker’s excellent post please have a look at my comment to Professor Baker’s interlocutor, Frederick.

WELCOME TO A NEW WORLD?

November 28, 2012

The 2012 election is over. Barack Obama will be president for four more years. The Democratic party still controls the U.S. Senate and the Republican party still controls the House of Representatives. Not much will change, right? Not so fast.

The Obamacare law, the fate of which was explicitly placed into the hands of the electorate by Chief Justice Roberts, will be implemented and the federal government will now slowly or maybe not so slowly take over the entire health care industry here in the good old U S of A. The Dodd Frank Financial overhaul bill will be implemented completely with a host of already written and a further host of as yet unwritten regulations including provision for another bailout fund and procedures to provide explicit governmental access to records of your credit card use (only to be used for good purposes of course). The EPA will be free to regulate greenhouse gas emissions as well as oil and gas fracking procedures. Large automatic cuts will be made to the U.S. defense budget and many taxes (including income, Obamacare and estate and gift varieties) will be going up substantially. Also, President Obama will be able to use his newly acquired flexibility to reach constructive agreements with Mr. Putin and Russia to say nothing of China and its new leadership. The Catholic Church will probably either have to abandon its outreach to those in need or decide how it can provide direct funding of abortions and still be Catholic. Two conservative justices who were born in 1936 will hopefully find themselves to be healthy 80 years olds in Mr. Obama’s final year in office. Yes, I observe that many very important things can and will change over the next four years even though the political parties are in essentially the same political juxtaposition that they occupied coming out of the 2010 elections.

I’ll tell you this though. If in the coming biennium the economy gets better in terms of the real unemployment rate (currently well over 15%) and there is a significant increase in real after-tax per family income, I may have to start believing in Keynes’s idea that it is animal (or other) spirits which move our economy. I will also be forced to stop believing that capital formation matters to economic growth as well as in the baseless and outworn concept that a free people prefer economic freedom to the illusion of economic security. I may even come to believe in flying monkeys in the next few years since I will be in such a state of flux.

While I believe that miracles can and do happen, I doubt that I’ll have to make these changes to my worldview between now and 2014 or even 2016. I doubt that the world as we know it will change. Therefore I am deeply concerned about what will happen. Destruction of our economy and way of life is one thing but in particular I pray, as the father of two strong young men, that our program of military disinvestment which is likely to be taken by our adversaries as a show of weakness, does not lead us into an unwanted and unnecessary war sometime during the next four years. Yes, while I seriously doubt that we will enter into a whole new world on January 21, 2013, here’s hoping in Hope for a Change in human nature.

IS THE GOVERNMENT THE ENTIRE SOCIETY?

July 19, 2012

I’m sure that you all remember the giant brouhaha which ensued after the President said:

While I agree with the actual words which the President used, I profoundly disagree with his unspoken agenda.

The government of the United States was organized to protect the society, not to change or manage it. This seems to be entirely lost upon our President. He suggests that we owe something for the opportunities which we have had. I couldn’t agree more. He implies that we should be prepared to pay more in taxes in order to discharge this obligation. I could not disagree more. Taxes are the price we pay for a government to protect and serve us as a nation, not to serve us as individuals. It is only as a collective that our government is intended to provide for the general welfare. Otherwise the term ‘welfare’ would not have been modified by the adjective general. Our system, the one which the President actually says is so great, is based upon freedom. We are free to cooperate and compete among ourselves as we see the need. The government was not formed in order to mold our society or we as citizens, it is this free society within which free individuals thrive which is to be protected by the government.

The apparent source of the disconnect is that President Obama equates the government with American society generally. Therefore, he concludes that if we owe something to society we pay for it in taxes. The dual nature of our free society, one which fosters both cooperation and competition as the people see fit, is the very foundation of the system. It is not a part of the system to be redesigned or overcome. It is not a good which the government provides and which should therefore be taxed, it is something which the government protects and is obligated so to do. It is the sort of spontaneous and informally organized caring, sharing and cooperating which is at the very heart of our national character and will remain so so long as freedom reigns. It is fostered by the very freedom we have to either share or not share, as we ourselves see fit. It is not fostered by the heavy hand of the government. In fact the heavy hand of government will tear it apart.

Read this account in which a fellow blogger tells of one informal and voluntary association and a transfer between a businessman and a young student as told by the student. Had the businessman been required by the government to provide money or a job for the student it would likely have engendered resentment on the business owner’s part and the student would have taken it as his due. The results would have been wholly negative other than that the money would have ended up in the same place. Resentment and entitlement are not emotions to be fostered. Generosity and gratitude are. I wonder whether the President sees this or whether he is so focused in transferring wealth from one group of Americans to another that he is blinded by the beauty of his preferred ends and is unaware of or unwilling to see the moral questionableness and destructiveness of the means.

Rick Santorum, The Cass Sunstein of the Right?

February 20, 2012

Obama’s Regulatory Czar, Cass Sunstein, wrote this book, “Nudge: Improving Decisions About Health, Wealth and Happiness.” Generally speaking the book explains how enlightening “choice architecture” can inspire decisions which will make people happier. Some such choices are decisions about broccoli consumption, increasing retirement savings and reducing strip mining inter alia. Says Sunstein to an interviewer:

A nudge is a small change in the social context that makes behavior very different without forcing anyone to do anything. The concept behind libertarian paternalism is that it is possible to maintain freedom of choice–that’s libertarianism–while also moving people in the directions that make their own lives a bit better–that’s paternalism.

What does this say about the “nudgeability” of the new regulation making contraceptives, abortifacients and sterilization free of charge to the recipients? On the other hand, Santorum says:

Sunstein believes that it is right to nudge folks into being happier and he expressly wields the federal government’s nudge powers in order to achieve that result. Santorum believes that generally taking more care with respect to the procreative power of the sex act will make people happier and will be better for our society to boot. Santorum emphasizes that he would not eliminate the availability of contraceptives for anyone who wishes to obtain them but would only deny the federal government the power to make people of faith subsidize contraceptives His aim, I suppose, is to nudge people into being less promiscuous by driving up the cost. (Of course, contraceptives are pretty inexpensive anyway so the expense of birth control would seem to be rather minimal in that decision-making calculus). According to Sunstein though small “architectural” changes can have a big impact. Maybe Santorum is just using Sunstein as his model? In any event, what is the difference, if any, between these guys? We’ll get to that in a minute.

Another enlightening exchange between his interviewer and Sunstein is this:

Q. Paternalism implies that there’s some notion of what “good” is. How does anyone determine what ‘s “good”?How do we determine what is good for the environment?

A. For most nudges, we’re thinking of people’s good by reference to their own judgments and evaluations. We’re not thinking that the government should make up its own decision about what’s good for people. The environment can fit within that framework to a substantial extent, but it has a wrinkle, which is that often when we buy certain goods or use certain energy or drive certain cars. . . we inflict harm on others, so our own judgment about our own welfare aren’t complete. We want nudges that do help people who are being nudged but also help people who are harmed by those who are not taking adequate account of the risks they are imposing on other people.

Emphasis added.

Isn’t there likewise, to use Sunstein’s language, a ‘wrinkle’ in the idea of contraception which leads to more uncommitted sex which is itself having negative effects on the society as a whole? Shouldn’t this risk be taken into account as well? Or is the difference between Santorum and Sunstein related to the idea that catastrophic and anthropomorphic global warming is now such a firmly established scientific principle that there can be no legitimate debate about what behaviors cause this result? But isn’t there also scientific evidence that a major cause of the breakdown of the family and society can be laid at the doorstep of contraception, promiscuity and over 40 million abortions? Why can’t the freedom to be promiscuous be somehow nudged against in the same way that it is apparently okay to nudge people against driving certain cars or buying too many appliances? It is certainly not about disagreement about the nudging itself, both men are open to that. In fact Sunstein espouses it much more forthrightly than Santorum. For his part Santorum takes pains to deny that he would refuse the right to purchase contraceptives to anyone.

The new HHS regulations must have been approved by Czar Sunstein, the President’s regulatory Czar. What nudging was he engaging in with these HHS requirements requiring employers/insurers to provide free birth control, abortifacients and sterilizations to their employees? Was he attempting to nudge more people to act more freely with respect to sharing their sexuality? To be fair he, Sunstein, may believe or at least hope that making contraceptives, abortifacients and sterilizations free will have no effect on increasing promiscuity? If he’s wrong in his belief and hope, won’t “nudged” promiscuity impact the institution of the family, the raising of children in an intact home, and the general breakdown of society? And what would he penalize by reason of the counter-nudge? Sunstein, of course, is okay with burdening the opposite side of the “free contraceptives” argument who refuse to financially contribute to this culture of sexual freedom. In fact, he would financially destroy those who would take a principled stand against paying for things which their religion tells them are damaging to the dignity of individual men and women and to the society itself. And his mandate for employers is not a “libertarian nudge” but an devastating attack against those who are religiously motivated to refuse to comply.

What we have here is an example of nudging in favor of the secular morality which advocates for “free love” (pun intended) coupled with enforcing a destructive mandate which can only harm those holding a principled religious morality. And, as indicated, Santorum wouldn’t even ban contraceptives or sterilizations yet he is the one who stands accused of wishing to deny contraceptives to women and men who wish to use them. On the other hand Czar Sunstein is not even accused by the media of trying to ‘nudge’ an increase in uncommitted sex and general promiscuity. Sunstein and Obama seem to be making a political decision to support an increase in uncommitted sexuality while reducing fecundity because it is politically popular. Secular morality, because it is political, enhances a tendency to do what feels good even if it is actually bad for people and their society in the long run. Why is one of these men called mainstream and filled with wisdom while the other is labelled as being out of the mainstream and laughable? Has anyone else read “The Brave New World?”

The Secular Morality of Population Control

February 16, 2012

Is there such a thing as a ‘secular morality?” Where does it come from? Is it something we vote on? Is it something we universally or nearly universally agree upon? Is this secular moral code something so important that someone could choose to die for it? Is secular morality something we can be compelled to act as if we agree with or do we just need to obey it? Is the highest and best secular moral value based in politics or the conscience? If it is politically based doesn’t secular morality amount simply to that which seems easiest or most appealing to the human animal? If these morals are politically arrived at can they be changed by a mere change in the political climate or by what party is in charge?

Assuming that secular morality is something we collectively agree upon politically, what should the government do to instill or enforce secular morality? This is an important question. Once secular morality is adopted, is it the proper role of government to see that these ‘morals’ are force-fed to our children thereby becoming self-reinforcing? In fact, a set of ‘secular morals’ are already being force fed to our children in government schools like the “moral” ideas about global climate change, virulent anti-capitalism, population control and Johnny having two dads. Similarly the government has already done for us what is apparently morally correct; things like levying a trade ban against South Africa to stop the clearly repugnant apartheid (I’m not saying that everything they do is bad), redistributing wealth from one set of U.S. citizens to others ‘who need it more’, the provision of abortion on demand and mandating that there be “health care” for all.

So, is population limitation a high tree or even the highest tree in the secular morality forest? This question is at the heart of the new administration policy requiring nearly all employers, including religiously related ones, to provide health insurance for their employees and in so doing provide “no cost” contraceptives, abortifacient drugs and sterilizations to their employees. In fairness to the government, in its most recent proposed regulation the government will only require ‘the insurers for religiously affiliated groups’ to provide these benefits for free and the insurers must do so without charging the religiously related institutional employers anything for it. This “compromise” supposedly takes advantage of the concept, expressed by the president’s new chief of staff, that the government will require(?) insurers to accept the profits generated by not having to pay for “accidental” pregnancies and that these profits/savings will more than offset the cost of the free “birth control.” If this concept, as explained by the chief of staff on last week’s Sunday public policy shows, is actuarially correct why would insurance companies, well known for finding profits anywhere they can, have failed to do this of their own accord already? Will this logic apply equally to all sorts of questionable “preventive care” for fertile women or are these other savings actually the money left from not having to pay for the medical care for 18 years after the birth of an unwanted child? What has this all to do with secular virtue and secular morality anyway? According to secular morality are children bad or good? Or is secular morality a situational morality based upon the perceived circumstances of the parents and/or the apparent desirability of the infant/fetus? Or is it choice itself which is the highest moral good in the secular moral universe? If so, why do we limit this choice to a time prior to birth? What about the choice to engage in sexual relations in the first place, isn’t this a choice? What is so ‘morally’ different about a newborn and a fetus which are both 32 weeks of age (from conception that is)? Morals are just such slippery things.

Next question: does the administration’s rule about free birth control to be provided by insurers impact the freedom of religion of Roman Catholics and other religiously motivated individuals? Whether they run religiously affiliated hospitals, social service agencies or educational institutions aren’t they moral actors? Under Catholic religious principles these people are required to refrain from participating in or providing abortions or contraceptives except in highly limited situations. Requiring participation in this sort of activity is an imposition upon the consciences of religiously motivated individuals who are responsible for these and any other health insurance-purchasing entities. And what of Roman Catholic insurers, the “compromise” unambiguously destroys these businesses altogether.

Next question: Is there any provision in the secular morality which provides for people’s religious rights? In response to press questions concerning this violation of the consciences of Catholics, Jay Carney clearly enunciated Obama administration policy, to wit: after “careful” consideration the administration decided that the secular morality of the “need” to increase the availability of preventative services to women outweighed the secular morality which protects religious consciences and that this is the right balance(?) to strike. How do you weigh the secular morality of allowing religious liberty versus the secular morality of actively providing free birth control to all who have any inclination to use it? Only one of these secular morals is embodied in the constitution. But the president clearly has decided that the one moral good is not as worthy as the other moral good. Doesn’t this kind of mean that the government is deciding between the ‘moral good,’ as defined through the political process, that of providing free birth control pills and abortifacients to women and the Catholic/Christian moral good of respecting the dignity of the life of every fetus/zygote.

Well that’s it I guess. “Private” conscience is one thing and will be “indulged” if there is no substantial impact on the achievement of important secular moral aims. In this context the secular moral objective is plainly to limit the procreation of American women (or it could be to increase the amount of sex which American men have available with a greatly reduced chance of unwanted parentage). Limitation of procreation is apparently a very high goal of this administration and its allies in Congress. On Wednesday a group of Democratic party senators made this public announcement.

Have we reached the point in this country where a secular code of morality has displaced religious morality? Is unfettered liberty rather than principled liberty the highest political and moral end?

Let me ask a couple more loaded question before I go. Is it not in your experience, as it is in mine, that it is men, not women, who are the more powerfully motivated in their desire for intercourse? If this is so, whose freedom are we really talking about, men’s or women’s? At this very moment in this country, women are able to exercise either their right “not to engage in intercourse” or alternatively to obtain free contraception from Planned Parenthood or elsewhere virtually any time. What is more free than that? And what of Sen. Boxer’s list of other conditions which contraceptives treat? Well, why should these drugs, even if they are contraceptives used to treat these conditions, be provided free of charge when the rest of us must pay at least the deductible for drugs which treat our illnesses and conditions? Methinks she doth protest too much!!!

In sum, we know that in this administration’s opinion the secular morality of women’s health (sexual freedom) trumps the first amendment’s requirement that the federal government not burden the people’s free exercise of their religion. I would propose that what we really know is that constitutional rights just aren’t what they used to be. Secular morality must be provided for somewhere in the penumbra of the bill of rights and, stupid me, I just failed to see it there. Has this secular moral code now actually reached the status of a state religion? If not, it seems to me that we are getting closer and closer to that point. If it has, what do you think is the difference between a religious moral code and the secular moral code in terms of the Establishment Clause of the first amendment to the U.S. Constitution, to wit:

Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion . . . .

Bill Moyers Gives Me Hope

February 5, 2012

As you may recall, I’m a big proponent of dialogue, civil dialogue, between people who disagree. I recently complimented Steven Attewell of the Realignment Project blog as a progressive willing to engage without labeling or demonizing his opposition. My idea that our current politics amounts to nothing more than a clash of tightly held world views underlies much of my thinking and my advocacy of a more civil dialogue.

Today on the Bill Moyers program, Moyers and Company, we were introduced to a bright social psychology scholar named Jon Haidt, Ph.D. of UVA’s Department of Psychology. I am impressed and amazed that Moyers invited him. I am impressed and amazed that Moyers conducted the interview with a general air of civility and without obvious (other than his facial expressions) rancor.*

I’ve got to say that I await Haidt’s book, “The Righteous Mind: Why Good People are Divided by Politics and Religion,” with much anticipation. Anyone who espouses the twin ideas that human beings are are all hypocrites and that the human brain is first and foremost a rationalization generator, has my attention. Moyers almost swallowed his tongue when Haidt said that we should stop idealizing his holy ‘reason.’This interview with Moyers just whetted my appetite for more.

By the way, here’s a link to Haidt’s home page if you care to look into this guy and it appears to contain a link to the Moyers interview.
See Haidt’s homepage at: http://people.virginia.edu/~jdh6n/.

At the end of the interview Haidt expresses some pessimism with our ability to make political changes which would encourage a more civil dialogue. He points to the practical difficulty of changing systemic electoral mechanisms in a world where both parties have incentives for keeping them as is. Nevertheless he pronounces two prescriptions to improve our present political situation which we can individually adopt. First he recommends that we, as a matter of personal morality, refuse to demonize or to impugn the motivations of those who oppose us on policy grounds. Second he suggests that we develop a complete intolerance for political corruption, whether it be on our own side or on an opponent’s side. We need to abandon the idea that, “Sure he’s a scoundrel but he’s our scoundrel.” Who knows but this could even bring an end to the truthfulness of the common Washington quip, “If you want a friend, get a dog.” I couldn’t agree more strongly with Haidt’s proposals. If the book lives up to the promise of the interview, I hope that people across the spectrum of ideas and ideologies will really listen to him and internalize his ideas.

*There was one moment during which Moyers could not keep himself from demonizing Republicans. Haidt was using the recent conflict over raising the debt limit to characterize the difficulty the parties had in reaching a compromise over the debt ceiling. Haidt was explaining that there are certain things which have been “sacrilized” (made sacred) for each of the parties. In posing a question about this situation, Moyers described it in this manner: “So John Boehner and the Republicans find it immoral to compromise and President Obama finds it immoral not to compromise.” This was hardly Haidt’s point, but I think that it was a stark shaft of light illuminating the interior of the Moyers brain.

CLASH OF WORLDVIEWS — EXHIBIT 1

September 9, 2011

Have a look at this exchange between Rick Santelli and Tom Friedman on CNBC. Santelli is very focused on the fact that social security is a pyramid scheme requiring constantly increasing numbers of participants over time in order to support those who got in the system, the scheme, ahead of them. Such schemes were apparently originated by Charles Ponzi beginning in the early 1900’s. Friedman is focused on the “out of order idea” that a “popular” government program could be associated with a situation otherwise characterized as criminal conduct. The two of them, Friedman and Santelli, then proceed to cross talk for a couple of minutes instead of carefully delineating what they agreed about and what they did not agree about. Have a look. It looks for a moment that Friedman will begin to reach across and agree with Santelli about the pyramid scheme when Rick removes the criminal connotation from contention but that moment passes and they get back in their corners and fight it out.

This is so very instructive as to what happens in America in the 2010’s. These two men, both very smart, are so invested in their own worldviews that they do not seek points of practical and factual agreement, they seek only points of disagreement.

Who was right? A Ponzi scheme, according to the SEC’s government website, has the following characteristics.

What is a Ponzi scheme?
A Ponzi scheme is an investment fraud that involves the payment of purported returns to existing investors from funds contributed by new investors. Ponzi scheme organizers often solicit new investors by promising to invest funds in opportunities claimed to generate high returns with little or no risk. In many Ponzi schemes, the fraudsters focus on attracting new money to make promised payments to earlier-stage investors and to use for personal expenses, instead of engaging in any legitimate investment activity.

Why do Ponzi schemes collapse?
With little or no legitimate earnings, the schemes require a consistent flow of money from new investors to continue. Ponzi schemes tend to collapse when it becomes difficult to recruit new investors or when a large number of investors ask to cash out.

Santelli and Friedman could have agreed on the fact that Social Security requires an ever-growing pool of funds from newer workers over time to pay the mandated benefits of retired workers. This certainly meets at least one of the criteria specified in this government website description. Likewise, as with the Ponzi scheme there is no investment activity which goes on with social security, the money is used to pay people who joined the system earlier. Any money not so used is placed into government IOU’s with very low interest rates which, when they are redeemed, will have to be paid out of other government tax monies. They could have agreed that the available funds must meet the mandated benefits over time and that this can only be achieved, in the context of Social Security, by: 1. Cutting mandated benefits; 2. Quickly increasing the numbers of those paying into the system; or 3. Increasing by some means the per person amount that the newer folks, those still working, are required to pay in. The latter solution was tried and is the one alluded to by Friedman which occurred during the Reagan administration in 1984, the last time social security came close to running out of money to pay mandated benefits. Santelli’s implied criticism of this “solution” is that the 2.4 Trillion dollars in taxes which exceeded the benefits actually paid out between 1984 and 2009 was gobbled up by federal government which spent the money as if it were ordinary tax money and the government left a bunch of IOU’s in the till. In terms of the description of the Ponzi scheme, these funds may legitimately be viewed as having been used for the personal expenses of the scheme promoters, in this case the U.S. government. This fact, Santelli’s argument implies, made the government the equivalent of Charles Ponzi, the criminal, who raked off some of the proceeds from the new “investors” for his own use rather than to pay the early investors. It appears to me that just the label, Ponzi scheme, angered Friedman greatly. No real attempt at rational discussion was made after this charge was leveled by Santelli. Pehaps had Santelli chosen the less judgmental term “pyramid scheme” it would have seemed less offensive to Friedman?

What purpose did this exchange serve other than entertainment for CNBC viewers? Who comes off well? Until we get to the point where we can stop calling each other liars or “idiots” because the other’s worldview is different than our own, we’re not going to get very far in bridging the differences between us. We will remain at drawn daggers over every issue. And that is not good since the existence of a country, this country, which is a multicultural country, must necessarily be based upon reaching some type of a broad based agreement across the generations and the classes and the races and the cultures as to what this country’s government should be about.

They could have agreed on all of the facts. But they chose instead to fight out a war of terminology which predicably degenerated into calling the other a belittling name. The different assumptions which each makes underly this argument. The distinction is whether the government is viewed as a benevolent father figure seeking only the good of its citizens or as a self-interested participant whose actions benefit some of its citizens at the expense of others. There you have it, a concrete example of the clash of worldviews.

SHEILA JACKSON LEE AND INTOLERANCE

July 15, 2011

This is what Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee (D – Tex) says about Republicans who disagree that raising the borrowing limit of the federal government is a good idea no strings attached. To my mind she labels it as outright racism.

Is she in disagreement with Hillary Clinton on the right to debate and disagree with an administration? While it is possibly true that Hillary was overstating her own opinion while stating that we all, as Americans, have a right to disagree with any administration, to wit:

I could use the word hypocritical in relation to Lee’s outburst but as I’ve said in an earlier post, just because a person acts hypocritically does not make her wrong. Unfortunately, other than pointing out the idea that the forces against raising the debt limit have aligned during the term of President Obama as never before, she provides no detail about her reasoning. Therefore, it is hard to assess the correctness of her charge as a matter of fact. Without more we’re left with a charge unsupported by any evidence other than half the race of the current president. I wonder what Rep. West (R -FL) would have to say about the charge of racism in regard to his own vehement opposition to the president’s proposed policy regarding the debt ceiling?

Left in the air is a salient question. Why would people choose to disagree with a president over a budget issue solely in relation to the president’s race? I just can’t see it no matter how hard I try. Perhaps if Rep. Lee provided more background, like Rep. Clyburn did when he went after Sarah Palin in the wake of the Arizona shooting in January, we’d have more to go on. As it is though I am unable to determine whether there is an issue of different worldviews in this matter, as was the case with Clyburn’s charge which I addressed here, or whether this is just an instance of a powerful federal politician harshly speaking out against political opponents. In the last analysis it appears to me that Lee may very well just be in disagreement with Hillary Clinton on a fundamental issue of rights. She may disagree that all Americans have the right to disagree and debate with a black president if the history of their group (a group of nearly all white Republicans) somehow makes them suspect of having done so purely on racial grounds.

In an interesting twist, given her own race, it is theoretically possible that Rep. Lee is agreeing with the president solely on the basis of identity politics and therefore is actually the pot calling the kettle black (relax, this is just a saying not a negative comment on Lee’s or Obama’s race). Without more information it’s hard to know what the truth is on the matter. It is not hard, however, to label Lee’s position, stated as it was on the floor of the House of Representatives, as intolerant!!!! In fact in the future, every time I hear a charge of racism being made without the necessary groundwork having been laid by the person levelling the charge, my response will be an equally impassioned – “your intolerance is showing!!!!” How is that for a progressive comeback?

FREE SPEECH AND THE CLASH OF WORLDVIEWS

January 18, 2011

Before I have my say about the political aftermath of the tragic shootings in Arizona let me address the human aftermath. I pray for the repose of the souls of the dead. I pray that the Lord’s healing grace touch each of those injured. And finally, I pray that the Lord’s comfort and consolation embrace the families of the dead and injured.

After the tragedy, U.S. Rep. James Clyburn has become so concerned about the stimulation of latent violence by the speech of his political opponents, particularly Sarah Palin, that he has this to say on the Bill Press Show between minutes 8 and 11 (click or paste link below):

What Rep. Clyburn has not made public, however, is anything specific about what is actually being said that he believes is so frightening and inciteful to violence that it must be addressed by censorship. Rather than giving specifics about the language which concerns him, this is what Clyburn follows up with:

‘Free speech is as free speech does,’ he said. ‘You cannot yell ‘fire’ in a crowded theater and call it free speech and some of what I hear, and is being called free speech, is worse than that.’*

I am confused. What in particular is being said by Palin or any other opposition leader that Clyburn thinks important to restrain? If not concerned about any specific words is Clyburn possibly concerned with the vehemence with which the opinions are stated? Should stating any and all political opinions in emotion laden terms be something which is banned because of its potential to cause a violent reaction in those who hear it? Or is it the combination of the emotional tone and what they say which concerns him? Remember, Clyburn believes that there is something about this political speech which he believes is on a par with, no is even worse than, shouting fire in a crowded theater? I conclude, in the absence of a clear explanation by Clyburn of what concerns him, that everything Sarah Palin, Glenn Beck or Rush Limbaugh has ever said troubles him and, importantly, what they say and how they say it is, in his opinion, calculated to and intended to stir fatal passions. Distilled to it’s basics this appears to be his point.

So it is Palin & Co.’s provocative manner when they state their basic philosophy, a philosophy anathema to Clyburn, which he believes threatens to bring about violence in America. Clyburn apparently believes that those who embrace and vehemently advocate a limited role for the federal government foment thereby a culture of violence and are a clear and present danger. It is her philosophy which resists enlargement in federal government power which is the real reason that he says of Palin that, although attractive she “is just not intellectually capable of understanding” the connection between what she advocates and the potential for violence. Interestingly, however, the dimwitted or sick people to whom she directs her emotional statements understand the call to violence implicitly contained therein or it wouldn’t be dangerous speech, would it?

Rather than engage in careful reasoning from proposition to conclusion, Clyburn says something which he hopes will result in something he really likes, muzzling his political adversaries. He wants Sarah Palin to either keep quiet or change her worldview to one more in line with his own. If anything said by Palin, Limbaugh or Beck created the same clear and present danger that yelling fire in a crowded theater does, it would already be illegal. Without a single citation to dangerous speech targeted at the congresswoman or anyone else (other than the cockamamie idea of the ” crosshairs targeting of Giffords’ district” as politically vulnerable somehow incited violence against her), Clyburn thinks that Palin-speak is worse than yelling fire in a crowded theater. It is pretty clear that speeches and diatribes recognizing the tautology that enlarging the power of the federal government must, by definition, limit the power of other lower governments and the people themselves, just does not create a clear and present danger of violence. If Clyburn believes that the act of speaking in various ways about this basic tautology stirs up potentially fatal violence it is incumbent upon him to quote the words, clearly describe the tone in which they were said and explain how these things together create the equivalent of shouting fire in a theater.

Clyburn can’t and won’t do this hard headed reasoning and connecting the dots. He would rather hide behind the idea that that Palin’s just dumb. If she asks for explanation Palin would be admitting that she was too stupid to get it. The idea that Palin just “doesn’t get it” doesn’t even try to explain his point. It’s like he’s taking the position that the cool kids know something the square kids don’t and Palin will never be cool until she admits that the cool kids are cooler than she ever will be.

Is it ever okay to muzzle a truthteller or someone who is trying to do their best to be a truthteller? One would have thought that people like Clyburn, who is a member of a generation and a group of the people who are rightfully proud of having “spoken truth to power” would celebrate this, right!!! If you ask him, John Kerry is also a man who tried to speak truth to power about a very serious subject.

Was it John Kerry’s free speech which stirred up Bill Ayers to engage in the bombings of the US Capitol or Pentagon? Regardless of what you believe about John Kerry as a truthteller, should he have been muzzled? More recently, should we have made vituperative anti-Iraq war speeches illegal? Remember what Hillary Clinton said about that in a very vehement way indeed:

And how about this typical Keith Olbermann diatribe which you don’t even have to listen to and you still know what’s in it? Should this be banned? Considering the messenger and the ratings I suppose this is a bit less than frightening.

Oh well, they took this Olbermanism down but you know what I mean, don’t you? Maybe it was too much even for MSNBC

I will never agree to turning off or limiting free political speech unless there is a clear and present danger of imminent violence. I am also saying that it is in the nature of strongly held beliefs to express them strongly. The ability to speak out on strongly held beliefs has it’s own benefits in addition to the attempt to convince others. Standing up for what one believes to be the truth is important. It is not wrong, it is right. In fact everything about speaking the truth is important.

I return to this blog’s theme of a clash of worldviews. Clearly Rep. Clyburn formative memories come from a time and place when his opponents were willing and ready to injure him for his demands for social equality. This has clearly etched itself deeply into his character. I cannot and will not blame him for this. He understandably has strongly held beliefs. I will, however, refer back to a poll taken last summer by the Rasmussen organization which gives much insight into this issue. On June 24, 2010 in an article titled, 48 Percent See Government Today as a Threat to Individual Rights Rasmussen reported:

The latest Rasmussen Reports national telephone survey finds that 48% of Adults see the government today as a threat to rights. Thirty-seven percent (37%) hold the opposite view. Fifteen percent (15%) are undecided.
Most Republicans (74%) and unaffiliateds (51%) consider the government to be a threat to individual rights. Most Democrats (64%) regard the government as a protector of rights.

Is Clyburn’s reasoning in his attack on Palin’s intelligence not a clear enough example that much of the rancor we find in the debate over public policy is actually no less than an fundamental clash of worldviews?

Free speech and freedom of the press are the most basic protections built into our way of life. Along with freedom of religion these rights are our most basic “civil rights.” These are the rights with which we protect our right to liberty and all of the rights derivative of that human liberty. That fact was crystal clear to the founders in the 1780’s and it remains crystal clear to thoughtful people today. Sarah Palin is just as smart as Rep. Clyburn. They just come from vastly different experiences. The truth as to why Clyburn holds the opinions which he holds is contained in the words of JFK:

We are not afraid to entrust the American people with unpleasant facts, foreign ideas, alien philosophies, and competitive values. For a nation that is afraid to let its people judge the truth and falsehood in an open market is a nation that is afraid of its people.

Rep. Clyburn is telling us in relatively clear language that he is afraid of other Americans, particularly it appears, that he is afraid of white people. He can’t tell the difference between those who oppose his big government agenda now and those who appeared ready to injure him at the time of his civil rights struggle. This is understandable given his formative years and his resultant worldview but it does not mean that the rest of us must sacrifice our inalienable right to free speech to make him feel more comfortable. As a congressman he’s the one in power now and he must at least tolerate, if not actually listen to, the voices of the people he would govern.

* Quotation from a Post and Courier Article, see url as follows: http://www.postandcourier.com/article/20110110/PC1602/301109941.

What’s Important To The American People

November 9, 2010

Have you heard?  We recently had an election.  Although there is disagreement about what the electorate meant by voting as it did, the results are in.  Approximately 25% of the Democratic delegation of the house of representatives was voted out of office.  The Democrats went from a previous 257 – 178 majority to about a 243 – 192 minority.  Likewise of the formerly Democratic senate seats up for election  31% were turned over to the the Republicans.  A number of other Democratic seats in both the house and senate were narrowly retained, mainly in blue states.  Seems like a pretty big “statement” to me but I admit to a a point of view about such things.

The question of why the election turned out this way is, as all political questions are, an open one since the people vote for a whom and are not required to have a valid reason for why they did so.  Is this dramatic swing at least possibly the result of what the Democrats did in ramming through a permanent health care entitlement, a far-reaching financial reform bill and passing a hugely wasteful stimulus bill resulting in spending even more money more quickly than the previous group of drunken sailors?  There are at least two possibilities to choose from.  First, this historic election result could have been caused by a public unnerved and possibly unhappy by the passage of these three major bills which were enacted with virtually no input or support from the opposition party?  Second, this historic result could have been a mere blip on the screen caused solely by a punitive impulse on the part of an electorate understandably impatient for a turnaround in the economy even though the cause of the bad economy was solely the policies of the preceding government?  Which is it?

Speaker Pelosi and the Democrats

One of my favorite political characters already answered this question for herself last Thursday.  After a day or two she finished mulling the meaning of the vote.   Concluded the Speaker, the election represented a mere immature tantrum by the people. Therefore she decided to throw her hat in the ring for leader of the now minority house Democrats.  In a democratically delivered Twitter announcement soon to be former Speaker Pelosi explains her view this way:

Our work is far from finished, . . . .  As a result of Tuesday’s election, the role of Democrats in the 112th Congress will change, but our commitment to serving the American people will not. We have no intention of allowing our great achievements to be rolled back.

Wow, she, in her broad minded and ever forgiving way, will continue to take the part of the immature and tantrum-throwing American people who just put her out of her speakership.  She is really nice, isn’t she?  She wants to be minority leader so she can continue to “serve” the American people.  Her way of doing this is, apparently, to dig in with her Democratic brethren in order to protect  their “vision” of what is best for the immature American people.  She labels these bills, presumably mostly the health care bill, as “our great achievements.”  And according to her, she’s up for the fight to keep it.

Healthcare, once implemented, cannot be undone.  Ms. Pelosi knows this.  The use of the inertia of legislation is what Ms. Pelosi is seeking.  As her “reforms” are implemented insurance policies will be changed.  Insurance companies will go out of business because the model for that business, which requires that the insurers be allowed to design their own policies and choose the people whom they will insure, will pass into history.  People will drop or otherwise alter their coverages waiting for the government to pick them up.  It’s like a bell which cannot be unrung.  When you undertake such a massive and permanent political change in the country and you fail to obtain the the consent of not just a bare majority but of a large majority of the governed to implement it, what is the difference between that and acting the tyrant.  The will of many has not just been ignored but has been permanently thwarted by the kind of activist government represented by Ms. Pelosi’s ‘achievement’ and her intention to engage in guerilla war to protect it. 

But what if she is wrong about the message.  What if an actual majority of the electorate really was sending the message that they want to undo the health care bill which has already apparently resulted in increases in insurance premiums for at least some of the “people?”  How is it that we can characterize what she will be doing then, if she has indeed misread the results?  Well, in that case she would be deliberately thwarting the will of the very Americans she says she serves, wouldn’t she?  Huh?  And she knew in two days what the will of the people was!!!!! That is an impressive act of analysis on her part. 

I am afraid to say that I believe she takes this position after a two day reflection period solely in order to validate her political agenda and so-called achievements.  But that wouldn’t be a very nice thing for her to do, would it?  That would amount to a punitive reaction on her part, albeit not an immature one I’m sure, against the very people she says she serves.  Her political “skills” got health care enacted when a majority or near majority was wholly unwilling to accept it.  She did not do enough, apparently, to convince them that her idea was a good one, she just caused it to pass through manipulation of the political process.  I suppose that this is understandable given her memorable quote:

But now that it has been passed and, perhaps, rejected, what to do?  How could the people who Ms. Pelosi wants to serve have sent a clearer message at any juncture that they were unhappy with a big government takeover of 16% of the economy?   They appeared at the town hall style meetings with politicians ready to protest and ask hard questions so often that the Democrats stopped having such meetings in public where they could not control the agenda.   They wrote letters, jammed switchboards and did everything they could peacefully do to tell their representatives that they didn’t want it.   They lined the streets near the capitol in D.C. the day it was to be passed asking Congress to desist.  It passed anyway.  Then they voted at the very next election and in historic numbers to “throw the bums out” and as a result many of those who had voted for it will be gone from the next congress.  It appears to me that in order to justify her protection of her achievement and her legacy Pelosi deliberately misinterprets the vote of the electorate as a mere temper tantrum seeking to cloak her naked self interestedness in the mantle of the protector of the people.  That’s like a waitress taking your order and bringing you something  else to eat because “it is better for you” and then charging you for it even though you sent it back.  It’s just a plainly arrogant thing to do.   

This is an object lesson for voters for all time.  Your vote is important.  Elections have consequences.  When you elect people you actually lose all control of them until the next election.  In the meantime all sorts of mischief can be perpetrated, even permanent changes in our way of life.  So be careful not to vote for someone who thinks you’re an idiot because, even when you vote them out, they’ll be convinced they’re smarter and better than you are and should be in control of your life anyway.  It’s as simple as that.  Forewarned is forearmed.

“America’s Holy Writ”

November 1, 2010

Andrew Romano of Newsweek published a thought provoking analysis of the beliefs supposedly held by Tea Party adherents in an essay entitled “America’s Holy Writ.”  While I disagree with much of what he writes, he makes some criticisms which have some validity and reaches some conclusions which are not obviously false and therefore are worthy of  being addressed and rebutted.  Let me first suggest to people who are Tea Partiers and those sympathetic with their ideas that they read Romano’s essay.  Be advised, you will need to disengage your emotions in order to remain open to any valid self criticism which is generated by Romano’s thoughts, but this exercise is worth your time. 

The main point I take from Romano’s essay is that Tea Party patriots are wrong to believe that the Constitution is “. . . a holy instruction manual that was lost, but now, thanks to them, is found.”  In this I believe Romano’s criticism is enough on the mark that it should be the cause of some self examination on the part of Tea Party patriots themselves.  While this initial  criticism has some validity, Romano also fully intends to suggest by his use of the term “holy instruction manual” that Tea Partiers are intent on the creation of some form of Christian theocracy, and in this idea I think he’s utterly wrong.  Although there is some evidence that many Tea Partiers see the constitution as a divinely inspired document, there is no evidence whatever that they seek to use government’s power to control all men and women in the legal application of religious doctrine.  They want more freedom, not less.  Romano should understand that Glenn Beck, the Mormon, would be the first guy under the bus in a Protestant Christian orthodox theocratic nation.  The idea of limited government, espoused by Tea Partiers and Glenn Beck, in the land of the free is the exact opposite of a noxious and invasive exercise of government power to enforce religious conformity.  The Tea Partiers are nearly militant in their quest for freedom, not more orthodoxy and regimentation in health care, energy use or even religious observance. Unwarranted and excessive governmental regulation of their lives is anathema to them.

When Tea Partiers are off base it is when they see themselves as bringing the “constitution” itself back to the country.  It has never left.  What has been lost over two centuries is the spirit underlying the constitution.  The spirit that Americans are capable people who can and should govern themselves and their affairs without directives from Washington.  Why have they conflated these two separate ideas?

I believe that this is the thought process.  It begins with a recognition of the well founded historical fact that the constitution was intended to be a very strictly limited grant of power to the federal government.  The tenth amendment enshrines the principle that the grant is a limited one. 

The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people.

To the extent that some ambiguity or incompleteness existed in the constitution the Partiers believe that the constitution should be interpreted as any agreement (covenant) between people is interpreted.  That is, the constitution should be interpreted in light of the original intendment of the people who adopted it for “themselves and for their posterity.”  The Partiers conclude that in light of the original intent of the constitution as a grant of only limited power, and with the added effect of the adoption of the tenth amendment in the first  year of the republic, that this limited federal government they created would persist until there were constitutional amendments providing the agreement of a supermajority that a more expansive scope was authorized.  Partiers are not unreasonable in believing that the constitution, although being subject to change by consent of the people, must only be changed as provided for in the constitution itself.  It is as simple as that.

Where they err, when they err, it is in believing that the constitution leaves no room to argue that strict limits on federal power per se may have implied powers attached to them. Such specificity is just lacking.  The constitution is short and cannot have physically contained all that was necessarily implied by its words.  In fact, as Romano accurately states, in our first Congress the father of the constitution, James Madison,  successfully objected to a motion

James Madison

seeking to add the word “expressly” to the phrase “powers delegated to the United States” contained in the bill of rights’ tenth amendment.  It should be noted by all, including the Partiers, that within three months of the formation of the first constitutional government, Treasury Secretary Alexander Hamilton proposed the chartering of a “Bank of the United States” for the handling of government business. Provision for neither the bank nor even for any corporate chartering was expressed in the constitution. Nevertheless, by a vote of the Congress, obviously made up of many who had participated in the original federalist debates, the bank was created.  Furthermore, the bank bill was signed (albeit with constitutional reservations) by President George Washington.  Hence, Hamilton had successfully argued to the nation’s first legislature and it’s first president that a “Bank of the United States” was necessarily “implied” by the other financial provisions contained in the constitution.  This is not something new.  Chief Justice, John Marshall, the longest serving Chief Justice in history, observed in his 1819 opinion in McCulloch v. Maryland that in leaving the word “expressly” out of the tenth amendment the framers intended to leave the question of whether a given power was granted to one level of government and denied to another, “. . . to depend on a fair construction of the whole instrument.”  So much for the argument that only those things expressly and minutely provided for in the words of the constitution are authorized to the federal government. 

On the other hand, the Partiers see and are shocked by the fact that over the last six or seven decades fundamental and permanent change has occurred in the course of this country without there having been constitutional amendments adopting these changes.  The Partiers understand that the 16th amendment permits taxation of incomes but they are aware that there is absolutely no constitutional source for the creation of the numerous permanent financial entitlements (the equivalent of perpetual debts) which have so altered the financial landscape of the country and the federal treasury. The framers, Partiers say, would obviously not have permitted such an extension and abuse of the federal government because it is the very antithesis of a limited federal government. Yet no amendment to the constitution permitting permanent entitlements has ever been enacted. Likewise the Partiers are aware that the 14th Amendment gave the Congress the mandate to extend civil rights protection to former slaves and their progeny, but they are thoroughly confused by use of this amendment, solely through Supreme Court edict, to eradicate spiritual and religious demonstrations from non-federal but nevertheless public facilities and properties. They are similarly confused as to how a fair understanding of the enumerated power permitting the federal government to “regulate” interstate commerce has been extended to include federal ‘commandments’ touching upon each and every act of commerce occurring in the entire country. It is mind boggling to Partiers that federal court rulings prohibit individual state actions touching upon gay rights, abortion rights, contraception rights and many more rights without the necessity of creating a consensus and amending the constitution. Certainly the framers of the 14th Amendment did not contemplate direct federal court involvement in any of these issues, especially without adoption of enabling legislation by Congress as contemplated by Section 5 of the 14th Amendment itself. These permament ‘rights’ have, in this way, been shoved down the throats of the people without their even being asked what they think.  They might have said yes, they just were never asked.

Romano believes that Partiers are required to view the constitution in the same way he does, pretty much only as a symbol “that suppl[ies] an overarching sense of unity even in a society otherwise riddled with conflict.” He believes that constitutionality is somehow wrapped up in the arcane sociological reasoning used by the Supreme Court for the last six or seven decades to advance the power of the federal courts and government at the expense of everyone else. His implied argument is that Partiers can argue for restricting the federal government’s power but to do so they must acknowledge the power of the Court to legitimate “under the constitution” the extended scope of the government. This, of course, is a losing proposition for the Partiers because the Supreme Court, under the doctrine of stare decisis, usually treats its precedents as settled law even if, in hindsight, they were clearly wrongly decided. It is probably harder to fundamentally change a Supreme Court precedent than to enact a popular constitutional amendment. Hence, Romano would have us believe that there is no going back except by amending the constitution to put the genie back in the bottle. Of course, the difficulty of amending the constitution and changing enshrined Supreme Court precedent is the very reason that the progressives did not seek to amend it order to gain the extension of federal power they sought.  The constitution was intended to be hard to change and those bearing the burden of changing are very likely to lose.   

If Romano is correct, though, and the constitution is truly only a symbol, then the Supreme Court is the actual source of federal power in our society. This doesn’t seem right to me, does it to you? The Partiers, contrary to Romano, believe that the Constitution is the sole source of real and actual power for the federal government over the American people and the states. If the Partiers are correct constitutionally, then a super majority of the states is needed to create “permanent” rules for the power and conduct of the federal government, i.e. a constitutional amendment. A mere five to four vote of Supreme Court justices is not and should not be enough.

I can only speculate what Romano’s counter argument would be to this idea. I imagine it would be something along the lines of, if not the Supreme Court, then whom should decide? This is an interesting question. It has been answered by the likes of Abraham Lincoln and Andrew Jackson, among others. Lincoln’s government just ignored court decisions which it did not agree with. Lincoln’s government even suspended the right to habeus corpus. Likewise people like Justice Kagan believe that the first amendment’s language, “Congress shall make no law . . . abridging the freedom of speech, . . . ” is insufficiently clear and creates an option for the government to deter speech if the government’s motives (as opposed to the effects) are innocent. Who, then, protects the constitution? THE PEOPLE DO!!!!! And they must and will be heard.

Federal power vis-a-vis both the states and the people has vastly increased in the last century placing control of their government farther and farther away from the people. This is precisely the problem. Fundamental change in the country has been flowing from the top down. Often, if not always, the people haven’t been convinced it is a good idea to massively empower the federal government, they’ve just been forced to accept it as a fact of life.  An activist Supreme Court’s extensive use, beginning in the 1930’s, of the 14th Amendment enacted in 1868 but not used in this way for nearly 70 years, is a part of it.  The New Dealer’s use of the constitution’s power to regulate “interstate commerce” as a license to stick the federal government’s long nose into every aspect of commercial life in this country has eroded the power of citizens to correct their government when it is abusive.  Taken together with other “constitutional trends” these mechanisms have swamped the balance of power created by the constitution with its formerly limited federal government presumption. The elitist idea that constitutional lawyers know the constitution better than the people is a recipe for disaster because it attempts to permanently draw a distinction between what happens under the authority of the federal government and what a majority or at least a substantial minority of the people would have willingly allowed if they had had a voice. In following this constitutional strategy the legal “scholars” are close to defining themselves as tyrants who believe their “scholarship” allows them to control the people even when a large portion of the people refuse their consent to such meddling. This, among other factors, is precisely the reason that ‘jamming’ the permanent health entitlement through Congress without even attempting to amend the constitution to permit it has triggered the Tea Party backlash.

There is still more meat on the bones of how insidious constitutional change has been accomplished.  Rather than amending the constitution to provide for the permanent intergenerational transfer of power that is the social security entitlement, FDR created a link between social security taxes as they were paid and the benefits which could be expected after retirement.  In so doing FDR created a politically permanent system without the benefit of a constitutional amendment or the requirement of a supermajority giving consent.  Said FDR:

Those payroll taxes were placed in there so that no damn politician could ever tamper with this program.

A similar link was created by LBJ in enacting the medicare program. LBJ effectively permanently changed health care in the United States and effectively amended the constitution by structuring it as a permanent entitlement.  Of Medicare he said:

And through this new law, Mr. President [referring to Harry Truman], every citizen will be able, in his productive years when he is earning, to insure himself against the ravages of illness in his old age.

These changes in the financial structure of America have wrought permanent change in the power balance among and between all wage

President Johnson

earners and all former wage earning retirees.  These were created without having engaged in the rigorousness of amending the constitution to enshrine those fundamental changes as the province of the federal  government.  As contemplated by FDR and LBJ, these programs admit to little control by the present generation of taxpayers while the beneficiaries, retirees, still live (vote) and in the meantime each new generation become beneficiaries themselves by just paying their taxes.  Therefore, the working citizenry are bound, semi-permanently, to pay the bills of retirees until they too impose this burden upon the working generation behind them.  Not constitutional perhaps, but certainly permanent.

In his last paragraph, Romano glowingly quotes from Jefferson’s letter to Samuel Kercheval in 1816.  Romano quotes Jefferson as supporting the idea that a constitution should not be beyond amendment and that each generation should be accorded the deference to handle its own affairs.  Romano, without even acknowledging the lack of amendments supporting his view of the extraordinary increase in federal power in recent years,  concludes his recitation of Jefferson’s observation with the term, “Amen.”  One could take from this quotation, and it’s rather emphatic adoption, that Romano thought the Kercheval letter an example of excellent insight and public spiritedness.  I suspect that Romano agrees with only a narrow slice of Jefferson’s ideas because most of the letter contains insights of great comfort to the Partiers.  For instance, Jefferson rails against a generation of leaders who would bind a succeeding generation with “perpetual debt” exhorting each  generation creating a debt to work as hard as necessary to discharge it.   Social Security, Medicare, Medicare Part D and Obamacare are all examples of permanent entitlements which resemble the permanent debt so decried by Jefferson.  And these entitlements by design will never to be “paid off.”  In fact in the Kercheval letter Jefferson expressed his private belief that amendments should be made every twenty years or so to permit each generation, “. . . a right to choose for itself the form of government it believes most promotive of its own happiness, . . . .”  This is exactly the opposite of the burdens represented by these entitlements, as well as the $13.5 Trillion national debt itself, which have been bequeathed upon the current and future generations.  Is Romano even aware of the irony of using Jefferson’s letter as support for his view of a malleable constitution?

Finally and most importantly for Partiers to remember is another section from the Kercheval letter.  Jefferson clearly values the “republican” spirit of the people over the republican form of government which the constitution created.  Said the third president,

Where then is our republicanism to be found? Not in our constitution certainly, but merely in the spirit of our people. That would oblige even a despot to govern us republicanly. Owing to this spirit, and to nothing in the form of our constitution, all things have gone well. But this fact, so triumphantly misquoted by the enemies of reformation, is not the fruit of our constitution, but has prevailed in spite of it. Our functionaries have done well, because generally honest men. If any were not so, they feared to show it.

It is this spirit which Jefferson believes defends the concept of liberty and limited government.  And whether the Partiers are consciously aware of it or not, it is the revival of this spirit which will defend our liberties.  Partiers would no doubt prefer it if “a return” to the Constitution were possible which, once accomplished, would permit them to rest easy with their liberties.  Unfortunately, as Jefferson believed, this will never be the case.  The price of freedom is constant vigilance.  It is of this Tea Party-type constitutional spirit rather than of the explicit terms of an ancient document which the current crop of politicians ought to be concerned as the primary threat to political business as usual.

Why Do You Need To Love Your Neighbor?

September 2, 2010

Last Saturday my beautiful wife and I attended Glenn Beck’s “Restoring Honor” rally at the Lincoln Memorial. 

8/28 Rally at 10:01 EDT

Although nonjoiners by nature we decided to attend the rally when it was first announced in order to demonstrate our support for and draw strength from the gathering and the message.  The message, as we understand it is indirectly political but primarily moral and spiritual.    And finally we wanted to prompt open and honest dialogues about the importance of liberty to the moral and spiritual realities of everyday life.  

By taking public and tangible action we chose to accept the slings and arrows of being labelled racists, homophobes, hatemongers and idiots.  While it is true that there are few who know us who will easily believe that we are any of those things, new acquaintances and passing acquaintances are another matter.  We have acted and will continue to act openly, despite the danger of overt hostility and villification, in order to challenge people to examine the validity and the counter productivity of such marginalizing labels and to create the possibility of at least some open dialogue with those who may be willing to give us the benefit of the doubt.     

When we decided to attend we did not realize that this would be held on the 47th Anniversary of MLK’s “I Have a Dream” speech although there was obviously a connection based upon the venue, the Lincoln Memorial. Shortly before the event, complaints were lodged about the fact that the date for the event coincided with that of Dr. King’s speech and there were calls for rally to be rescheduled.  What did I think about that?  Certainly I meant no disrespect to the memory and legacy of MLK by attending this rally.  In fact, I also believe that a group with a message such as ours, peaceful and loving, would have been welcomed by him especially since his niece, Alveda King, a civil rights advocate in her own right, was to join us at the mall.  I even went so far as to review the famous “I Have a Dream” speech to see in advance whether what we were doing could be misconstrued.  It’s well worth the 17 minutes to watch it.   

Apparently the fact that the rally would be held on the “I Have a Dream” anniversary and the fact that Glenn Beck is outspoken in his ideas for reforming the government into a form more like it’s original one caused Al Sharpton to respond with the idea that Beck was attempting to coopt the legacy of King’s speech.  He explicitly charged that the Beck ideas of a limited federal government directly contravened MLK’s own views, as stated in his speech, that the federal government was the instrument necessary to protect the rights of blacks.  Says Sharpton:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pHJqaICiS-U  

Of course, as Sharpton contends, there is reference in MLK’s speech to George Wallace’s seeking to invoke the “interposition” and “nullification” concepts of state’s rights, but I challenge you to watch the brilliance of the entire speech and not conclude that the speech was primarily directed at changing the hearts of both blacks and whites.  The blacks towards a commitment to non-violence and the whites to a commitment to fair and equal treatment of all people in their day to day lives.  Whether at lunch counters or at motels or hotels, what he invoked was the dignity which each person has the right to expect from every other person, regardless of color or any other attribute.  King’s language, his “symphony of brotherhood” evokes a magnificent and uplifting idea of humanity.  The image of children of former slaves and former slaveowners sitting down together evokes an inspiring idea of a new day.  I suppose it is possible that the statement that blacks would not be satisfied until “justice rolls down like waters and righteousness like a mighty stream” could be understood to mean that he was asking the writing of new laws.  He could have been, I suppose, only calling for the creation of causes of action on behalf of blacks to sue for discrimination.  He could could have further intended this statement to call only for the empowerment of the justice department to punish racial wrongdoers.  However, no one who understands how lawyers use the teeth of the law can very well believe that this action would have satisfied King or the oppressed for whom he was speaking.  King’s language, invoking the idea of a symphony and seeking a time when “justice rolls [. . . ] and righteousness flows” was clearly a call upon the entire American people to change, not just the ones who could otherwise be threaten with suit or prosecution.  Each molecule of the water he called upon had to act individually but also as a part of larger body of water moving in the same direction toards the same end.  It can be interpreted, I truly believe, only as a call to action by us all.  A call upon people to banish the unjust ideas held within their own hearts and minds and to act as if they had been bathed in the cleansing power of God.    

Dr. Alveda King, a keynote speaker at the event, had this to say beforehand.

As readers of this blog know, I am of the opinion that a clash of worldviews has led us to the point we find ourselves in this country — at knifepoint over everything.  Like Alveda King, I believe that we need to have a place to start the discussion.  If we continue to refuse to listen to one another, or to villify everyone who disagrees with us in order to stop listening to them, we’ll never reach accommodation.  Backlash and counterbacklash ad infinitum will be inevitable.  This country simply won’t survive as the land of the free and the home of the brave.

What I heard from the stage on Saturday was a call to return to a God-centered country.  Not a theocracy, which is God rule through the men and women on top, but a call to God ruling His people through a liberty-loving, reformed populace.  Unlike the progressives (yes, I’m making a political comment here) I believe in allowing people to exercise their God-given right to liberty but that right comes with God-imposed responsibilities.  These include treating others everyday with dignity, respect and justice.  Can agnostics and atheists and non-Jew non-Christians be accommodated and respected in a country with a citizenry of an overwhelming Judeo Christian focus?  I have no doubt.  Why?  A commitment to the stated values of an unseen but personally experienced God requires this.  He requires that in addition to loving Him, that you love your neighbor as yourself.  Doesn’t this love require treating everyone as you would have them treat you?  Both the New and Old Testaments require this:  Matt 22: 37-39; Leviticus 19: 18 and 34; and Deuteronomy 10: 19.  Would not then a commitment to honor and truth in our own lives not solve the problems which Al Sharpton points out?  Of course it would.  Was this God focus not the source of the brotherhood being invoked by Dr. King?  Yes and in such a nation, a nation where the people can once again be trusted with the power to run their own lives, we will all be blessed.   

If MLK was seeking lawmaking and not soul making when he came to the Lincoln Memorial on August 28, 1963 he certainly chose an imperfect and counterproductive device.  Manmade laws cannot replace the obligation of abiding by the God made law of treating one another with dignity and respect.  Such laws as man makes for the control of his brother will in many ways be imperfect and at times be used by lawyers and others to inflict great harms.  It is the way of such things.  After all, in a courtroom it is not the truth but the proof (among other things) which prevails.  When Dr. King stood on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial, was he merely looking to men on the other end of the mall in the capitol building to act or was he looking to everyone to act in brotherhood towards one another?  If you watched the MLK speech which I embedded above, I think you know the answer.  And, whether he wanted manmade laws or not, Dr. King, the man of God, was certainly calling upon the spirit of God in every man’s (and woman’s of course) heart to reach out to his neighbor and love him.  Dr. King reached me again on August 28, 2010.  Thanks to Glenn Beck and Alveda King and 500,000 brothers and sisters.  Have faith.

UPDATE: CROSSWINDS AT GROUND ZERO

August 18, 2010

Speaking of Nancy Pelosi, she has now weighed in on an aspect of locating the mosque at Ground Zero.  The implication of her statement is that bigots who are trying to stir up other bigots should be investigated and that thoughtful non-bigots like herself should remain unconcerned with the affront.  It’s one thing to be aware that there is nothing which can or should be done through the law to prevent this provocative action.  It is quite another to wonder about “who is funding” this “issue.”  It is a legitmate and newsworthy story which really doesn’t need a lot of “funding” if an active press, much of it New York based, pursues it.  Also, what the heck is this Treasure Island that she talking about  that is so much more newsworthy? 

I’m pretty sure that if this mosque ever gets located at Ground Zero she’ll be blaming the groundswell of anger on the people who are angry hoping for anti-Islamic violence which she can tear up about and use to justify some sort of restrictive legislative action!!!!  What of her former concern about stirring up a climate in which “violence occurs?” She is just plain out of touch with reality as well as flyover Americans.

CROSSWINDS AT GROUND ZERO

August 16, 2010

It is really interesting to see the media and politicians pontificating about  the issue of “permitting” observant Muslims to build a mosque at Ground Zero.  The positions create crosswinds on the part of the political/media class which cause some of them to contort their thoughts in nearly unrecognizable ways.  Let’s examine some of the issues presented.

The first thing to do is to boil down the legal issue.  Can we “not permit” the building of the mosque at Ground Zero?  The legal question is how can the building of a mosque be prevented in a world where owners generally have the right to use their own property as they see fit.  In this instance, of course, private property will be utilized by a religious sect for non-violent religious purposes.  Do we even have to get to the idea that the bill of rights prohibits legal impediments against the free exercise of religion when somebody is using their own property for any lawful purpose?  Although the religious purposes to which the property will be used are well known, the fact is that the use is religious only adds strength to the legal right of owners to use  their property for their own purposes.  This, according to the Republicans I know, is as clear a right as any right guaranteed to us in this country.  The use of this property as a mosque violates no law which the state or city of New York have enacted.  It poses no direct threat to public health or safety.  Hence, to me, the organizers appear to have the clear legal right to establish a mosque on their land even though others are offended. 

Notwithstanding the obvious legal rights of the owners, a Republican candidate for governor, Rick Lazio, opposes use of the property for the stated religious purpose.  What gives, are Republicans advocates of property rights or not?  Or is this just another issue of electoral politics trumping principle?  By what legal authority does Lazio advocate the state of New York investigate the “funding sources” for purchase of the property and construction of the mosque?  What is he hoping to find?  Is he suggesting that there is probable cause to believe that the mosque will be used as a staging ground for terrorists?  Or, is he suggesting that the so-called “victory” mosque should be stopped solely because it’s location hurts the feelings of New Yorkers because the 9-11 terrorists were unanimously Islamic and they cloaked their terror in a religious veil?  Does the fact of bruised feelings raise issues limiting the rights of property ownership, religious rights or the free speech rights of the mosque site owners?  I think not, the organizers are within their legal rights to build it and worship in it unless American law changes.  Do we really want those changes at a fundamental level?  Regardless of what Lazio says, aren’t we all better off respecting the rights of Muslims to do this even if we think it’s a poke in the eye?  What rights  will we be giving away if we insist that the Muslims have no right to build their mosque?  But, you say, this is a special situation.  Does that change fundamental constitutional rights? I don’t think so.  But if she spoke up, Speaker Pelosi and her ilk may have a different opinion as to the extent of the rights of the Muslims to build their mosque or at least she would if she were being consistent.  Let me explain.

What could be motivating Muslims to spend $100 Million to build a mosque on a site where they know American feelings will be terribly hurt and their anger stoked?  This is the real emotional belly of this matter, isn’t it?  Could locating the “victory” mosque at Ground Zero be seen by some as a tangible sign that Islam has triumphed over the Great Satan?  Do Americans have the right to take such a perceived motivation, whether intended or not, as an affront to themselves, their country and to the victims of 9-11?  Are Americans required to accept at face value the protestations of the organizers that the mosque’s location means no such insult and is in fact an outreach of brotherhood?  Does the fact that this perceived insult hurts American feelings create a potential for anger and hence indirectly increase the possibility for violence?  Is it fair to say that because this insult appears in the eye of the beholder, after all the organizers having eschewed such an intent, that the beholders are bigoted to take it as such?  Can Americans, who don’t even believe in the concept of face, believe that they will lose face by allowing Muslims to build at Ground Zero?  Of course, just because an insult is implied and not stated are you not within your own rights to be offended?  Says Ms. Pelosi, however, about the creation of a previous climate of violence:

What sort of responsibility do you think Ms. Pelosi would have in mind if the “victory” mosque creates an atmosphere of violence notwithstanding the protestations of the builders?  Or, do you think she might be among the first to blame the people acting violently rather than the builders of the mosque?  The climate of violence leading to the murder of Harvey Milk by another gay man causing Ms. Pelosi to briefly tear up on camera would, I believe, pale in comparison to the climate created by the mosque being built at Ground Zero.  I think that the would be builders know this very well but refuse to acknowledge the legitimate concerns of New Yorkers and Americans at the implications of  building a mosque at Ground Zero.  Ms. Pelosi’s silence on this powder keg issue, where she was previously so outspoken against those using villifying language in the health care debate, speaks volumes.     

Another interesting take is the Republican candidate for the governorship of New York, Carl Paladino, who has suggested that the state use it’s power of eminent domain to condemn the land for “public use.”  Of course, former Supreme Court Justice Stevens, author of the majority opinion, might not want the private property rights of these Muslims to be invaded by the state but in Kelo v. City of New London he established the precedent allowing private property to be taken from one owner and given to another if the city will benefit financially.  After all, this lower Manhattan property is highly valuable for commercial and therefore taxable uses which would benefit the city much more than a mosque at the site.  Such commercial use would generate higher sales tax receipts and probably much higher income taxes for the city.  If this is not done the property will essentially be taken off the tax rolls by reason of the establishment of a “church” at the site.  Why not condemn and then sell the property for commercial and therefore taxable purposes?  If the people of New York want to prevent this mosque being built on “hallowed ground” a few bucks ought to do the trick and the US Supreme Court has led the way with its ruling in Kelo v. City of New London.  This is a result which the rather left of center justices who supplied the bulk of the votes in favor of the city of New London most likely would not have desired but, I imagine, would fall within the letter of their law.  It is also interesting that a Republican candidate for governor, a lawyer – real estate developer, would want the government more involved in decisions concerning the uses to which private property may be put. 

And then there is President Obama, chief magistrate of the entire country weighing in on what is no more than a local land use issue.  Reminds me a little bit of the silly Republican intervention in the case of  Terri Schiavo.  You remember that the Congress intervened in this case which was certainly an issue of personal importance to the family and a case providing 24/7 media coverage but not an issue rising to the level of being addressed in the national legislature.  Of course, the intervention of the president in favor of the building of the mosque contradicts the very same arguments made by fellow progressive Congressmen Frank, Waxman and Wexler Congress during the Schiavo affair that the matter does not rise to the level requiring congressional action.   

And then there’s the extremely strange charge of bigotry leveled by the media against Ground Zero mosque opponents.  How can the people who oppose the mosque on offensiveness grounds be legitimately called bigots?  First it must be decided that a reasonable person would never possibly find the mosque’s creation at Ground Zero offensive.  If anyone answers this question in the affirmative I think that they should forfeit their right to call themselves thinking human beings.  A large majority of those Americans polled believe that the mosque should not be located at Ground Zero.  Such a majority of Americans are unreasonable?  I don’t think so.  Hence, the twisting of the idea of bigotry and racism to fit this scenario is just another shopworn effort by media pundits to cast the rest of us as ignorant, unthinking boobs in need of leadership by the anointed.  Flatly arrogant?  I think so.  

In any event, there are two trains headed in opposite directions on the same track.  One train has the clear legal right of way.  The other has the hearts of the people riding on it.  This is a very dangerous situation and I believe it to be a calculated effort by those who seek to build the Mosque in order to provoke us.  In effect they are self selecting themselves as enemies or at least as those who would give aid and comfort to our enemies.  Our politicians are not helping the situation, stirring up passions by suggesting that we can legally avoid this use of the land without fundamentally changing the nature and extent of our own liberty.  Fortunately, in the same Fox News poll finding that 64% think it wrong to build a mosque at Ground Zero, the majority also realize that the Muslims who own the property have a right to build it there.  If we can simply accept the pain of “permitting” a mosque to be located at Ground Zero, this too shall pass.  Ignore the politicians and the media, the rest of us are grown ups.

WHAT PROGRESSIVES THINK OTHERS BELIEVE

August 7, 2010

This thought occurred to me watching an interchange between David Letterman and Rachel Maddow.  What do progessives think the rest of us believe?  At the conclusion of his conservative and Fox News bashing  interview Dave furrows his brow, compliments Bill O’Reilly’s intelligence (finding him surprisingly capable verbally and logical in his reasoning I suppose) and addresses himself to O’Reilly’s true beliefs.  Says Dave, 

David Letterman

“I don’t think you can be as smart as he is and really believe what he believed [sic].”  [You can find a 5 minute excerpt from the Letterman interview of Rachel Maddow at the end of which David makes that statement at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=84ujLJBJJ4g.]

What can Letterman mean when he essentially says that O”Reilly must be a liar or a fool but he must be a liar because he’s too smart to be a fool?  This suggests that he, David, is so smart that he has evaluated all the thought processes and experiences which support the expressed views of O’Reilly and similar people and concludes that they are simply wrong?  Not misguided, informed by experiences he as an exalted talk show comedian has not had or just ill informed but plainly and clearly wrong!!!  That’s a whole lot of arrogance in one man it seems to me but let’s examine.  

Returning to a favorite theme of this blog the issue is one of a conflict in worldviews.  Can a worldview be simply valid or invalid as Letterman believes?  Is there a proper worldview held by the super-intelligent and a different, and completely invalid, worldview held by everyone else?   

What do we know of worldviews which the highly intelligent deem too foolish to be held by a thinking person? Rather than attempting to investigate O’Reilly’s views directly I think it more enlightening to try to determine what the highly intelligent believe the that not so intelligent believe.  Some progressives have publicly addressed themselves to some of the elements of the worldviews held by the less intellectually lofty.  These being people they recognize as their political opponents but not as intellectual rivals.   

First there is New York Senator Chuck Schumer, an Ivy Leaguer and real smart guy.  He’s a lawyer and therefore extremely capable.  While being interviewed by the same Rachel Maddow interviewed by Letterman at the time of his O’Reilly comment, Schumer identified some of the ideas of his opponents as ideas which “worked so well for them” politically from the Reagan era until the 2006 elections.  Now, of course, with the ascendence of progressives and their agenda, Reagan’s ideas have rightfully been consigned to the dustbin of history.  Schumer describes these views to include the desire to “cut off the hands of the federal government” when it moves, to support traditional values, and to project a strong foreign policy (probably meaning maintaining a strong military).              

Schumer identifies these leftovers from the Reagan era as the “hard right” implying that they are both out of the mainstream and inflexible so.  Given this interview with Maddow, it is fair to say that Schumer believes at the very least, that his “hard right” opponents subscribe to outmoded and therefore invalid ideas.  These ideas are simply “over” in Schumer’s words.  By assigning no value to these supposedly wornout ideas, Schumer apparently advocates that we head full speed into a brave world of “new ideas.”  His countervailing “new ideas” are those which won the day in 2006 and 2008.  These ideas, the opposite of the ideas held by his opponents, are the idea of an expansive and activist federal government constrained by no principled limits as well as the idea of freedom from the outworn concepts of strong family bonds, personal responsibility and self reliance.  And as a capstone, Schumer would obviously trust our interests to a world of infinite trustworthiness in which trouble is only brought on by the existence of a strong US military.  Are his ideas demonstrably better than those of conservatives or the hated Republicans?  He, like Letterman, has not addressed why his worldview is intellectually superior but simply and loftily opines that it is so.  Is Schumer’s idea of rule from the apex of political power by Washington experts so clearly superior that it doesn’t even have to debate?  How has it worked out for other countries who have tried it?  How would our country look if everyone fully embraced the central tenets of subsidizing failure, taxing success, anything goes personal behavior, looking to government for moral instruction and international weakness?  Wow, he’s got a real imagination as to how this will be a good thing.  If his ideas are clearly superior I will give mine up but first let’s agree on some debating propositions to defend and have a debate.

Talk show host and one time controversial Sunday morning commentator Bill Maher (originator of the conclusion that Brazil “got off oil in the 70’s”)  believes that his opponents are stupid and must be brought into line one way or the other.  In a conversation about the “overuse” of the Senate fillibuster rule he once said that the rule must be discarded because 60% of Americans don’t agree on anything, “even evolution.”  A telling comment about his opponents and their worldviews.  By evolution I imagine he has in mind the idea that all life emerged from “non life” by a process of undirected natural selection.  I know, I’m taking liberties by characterizing his belief in evolution but I doubt he would dispute my characterization.  This is an important element of his worldview, I’m sure and it is a touchstone in his mind between the worthy and the unworthy.  I wonder whether he thinks that O’Reilly shares his views on evolution or does he disagree with Letterman about how smart Bill is?  As for the rest of us I think he’s pretty much convinced we’re all dumb.  What dummies we must be, though, to think that just because there is no conclusive evidence for how life and DNA came into being in the first place that one theory is so much better than the other that the dumb one just needs to be ignored.  No evidence to conclusively prove his understanding of the theory of evolution is necessary.  Yeah, that sort of thing is common in the history of science isn’t it?  Has a theory about the unknown past ever really been permanently and conclusively proven to be correct?  What’s important, I think he would tell you, is a good and powerful theory!!!  Clearly, Maher and his smart ilk just need to get over their squeamishness about allowing people a say in their own lives.  People taking responsibility for themselves is so last year’s news.  They’re just too stupid to live, properly.  Let’s go ahead and drag these Cretans kicking and screaming into the new national health care plan which will be so wonderful that they’ll wonder why they ever opposed it although if it’s opponents are “proven” right and it turns out that politically rationing healthcare is a terrible idea, it will be too late to change back.  As an interesting contrast to his views about government dragging people kicking and screaming into more government control of their lives, he also believes that conservatives favor using “government power” against anyone but white people.  Are all conservatives racists then?  While he claims to believe that not all Republicans are racists, given his view of conservative racism favoring the use of government power against non-whites he must certainly believe that most of them are in fact racist.  This opinion is further demonstrated by his view that “if you’re a racist you’re probably a Republican.”  Perhaps he finds that not all Republicans are conservative.  I guess in Maher’s view we can safely disregard the conservative point of view because they are so ignorant and racist that their worldview is invalid. 

Finally there is President Obama himself.  At least the President concedes that there are experiences and ideas which support worldviews, even if there are worldviews held by those who oppose him.  In 2008 candidate Obama spoke about a betrayal by government causing some of his perceived opponents to “cling” to their religion, their guns and their antipathy against those who aren’t like them.    Is he conceding by this observation the potential validity to his opponent’s worldviews.  I doubt it but maybe.  Let’s analyze what he had to say.  First how can a betrayal by government cause people to “hold on” to their religion?  I first observe that widespread, deep and heartfelt belief in a personally redemptive religion long predates even the existence of a strong government presence on this continent.  Therefore, it seems to me that the failures of government can not really be the cause of the worldview held by observant believers.  How about guns.  Guns, in Obama’s worldview, are tools of oppression even when held by people who have never been convicted of a crime and who are unlikely to commit crimes with them.  I agree with President Obama that it is possible for people to feel threatened by “strangers” and this may have an effect on their worldview regarding guns.  But what governmental betrayal would cause this?  Is it possible that this interest in guns and gun rights is at least partially caused by the federal government policy of nearly uncontrolled illegal immigration?  Perhaps it has to do with it’s poor enforcement of the criminal laws regarding drugs and gangs.  Is Mr. Obama now taking responsibility on behalf of the government for these betrayals and seeking to accommodate and protect the folks seeking to protect themselves?  Is he conceding that this betrayal by government has caused more legitimate interest in the right of citizens to own guns to protect themselves?  That would be news, wouldn’t it?  Do you think that this is what the president means, though?  Isn’t he really talking about his view that the racist tendency of conservatives, as described by Bill Maher, is causing people to arm themselves in an irrational backlash against a non-existent racial threat.   Finally, how about the government betrayal causing small town folks to feel antipathy towards others who don’t look like them?  What can this be caused by?  How could the government be involved?  Perhaps this one is about governmentally enforced policies perceived as “reverse racism” by political opponents.  Could this be the betrayal noted by the President as a cause of antipathy to the “other?”  What other government policy could he be talking about?  Isn’t it also possible that there are some people who are  afraid of “others” just because they have never had a chance to spend time with them or even people like them.  This, however, is a matter of human nature so it would apply naturally to all humans, even Bill Maher.  Government is not involved in this though, so it can’t be that.  The President may be right that a perceived betrayal by government has brought about portions of the worldviews of his ideological opponents, but I don’t think that he would agree with me that uncontrolled immigration or “reverse racism” or others of the policies he still advocates are the policies responsible for creating or hardening those views.  He won’t agree with this idea because this concept would not agree with his own worldview.    

I think we’d get a lot farther in this country if we would all just concede to each other that there are valid views on many sides of the issues.  Accepting this fact we can then make an effort to try to reach understanding of the views of all, their sources and how accommodation can be reached.  I know one thing, if we continue to seek to impose our will on other people through use of government force, we’re simply going to harden our opponents into enemies who will not rest until the ones they perceive as enemy are vanquished.   A very wise President once said that, “A nation divided against itself cannot stand.”  Let’s hope we can change.

NAACP CALLING TEA PARTIES RACISTS – A MATTER OF WORLDVIEW

July 15, 2010

I believe that the primary point of agreement among Tea Party adherents is a commitment to limited government. Is limited government a racist idea per se? Is it a racist idea in a country with a history of slavery and racism and therefore with much to correct? Is it possible that the desire for limited government is mainly motivated by the racial animus of self identified Tea Partiers? Does the existence of racism in a person or an institution require the existence of racial animus? If so, can it be demonstrated that it is Tea Partiers’ racial animus which causes them to desire limited government? Likewise, if racism requires animus, is it even possible to disprove the charge that the desire for limited government is motivated by racial animus? Motivations being such slippery things, how would you demonstrate this? Therefore, the party which has the burden of proof on the issue of animus and therefore racism, either in the affirmative or negative, will necessarily fail. If the burden is upon the Tea Partiers to prove pure motives then the limited government movement can never be rid of the label “racist.” Limited government Tea Party types must consequently accept the label of racist and understand that they can only overcome it in the eyes of their opponents by renouncing their limited government ideas.

Next question. Is it morally wrong to advocate the definitionally “racist” policy of limited government? If there is no burden of proof on those asserting racial animus as the motivating factor in the limited government movement, then the very term “racist” loses much if not all of its moral opprobium. If racism is not a matter of morality but only of policy, then being accused of racism should lose its painful sting and disqualifying connotation. If there is no evidence of racial animus but only evidence of racially disparate impact of limited government policies, then a Tea Partier can simultaneously be a racist and a good person.

The following exchange between Keith Olbermann and a Princeton professor points out the distinction between racism based upon disparate racial impact and racism based upon racial animus [Unfortunately the link to this Olberman interview with Princeton Professor Melissa Harris-Lacewell, which perfectly makes my point, has been removed and is no longer on the net, I will continue searching for it. I am adding a link to an Olberman interview with NAACP Ben Jealous who himself, around the last minute and a half of the interview, concedes that there is a difference between Selma/Birmingham racism and the “racism” which is espoused by people other than David Duke.]:

It appears to me that the divide between the NAACP and the Tea Parties is their respective worldviews. A worldview is neither a fact or an opinion but a context or point of view? If someone disagrees with your worldview they are not necessarily, by this fact, liars or morons. Substantial evidence should be required to damn them as morally defective!

Daniel Patrick Moynihan, a democratic US Senator from New York, famously observed that:

Everyone is entitled to his own opinion, but not his own facts.

At first blush Moynihan seems right but upon reflection I’m not so sure. To what extent is our worldview based upon accepted and demonstrable facts and to what extent upon our own life experience and our own emotions? Can one worldview be deemed right and the other wrong by application of facts and logic? Certainly the rightness and wrongness of worldviews are in the eyes of the holders of those worldviews since it is so much based upon each personal history and upbringing. The human ability to rationalize all contrary facts is unlimited and this is particularly true when one’s view of himself and his life is intimately affected by his assessment of the factual evidence. Therefore, there are very few statements which are indisputable enough to be referred to as the “facts” in Moynihan’s quote. We must be careful about labelling our opponents as anything other than as opponents.

As to the dominance of worldviews in regard to this issue, this blog returns to a poll reported by Rasmussen on June 24, 2010 in an article titled, 48 Percent See Government Today as a Threat to Individual Rights. It yields the following :

The latest Rasmussen Reports national telephone survey finds that 48% of Adults see the government today as a threat to rights. Thirty-seven percent (37%) hold the opposite view. Fifteen percent (15%) are undecided.

Most Republicans (74%) and unaffiliateds (51%) consider the government to be a threat to individual rights. Most Democrats (64%) regard the government as a protector of rights.

What are we talking about? Is one side or the other lying about how they see the proper role of government? Can both be right and both wrong simultaneously? That this Rasmussen poll gives profound insight into the worldviews of the two sides seems inescapable. There is a fault line that runs through American politics which is based upon the view of whether government is a threat or an ally. This fault line is too deep to overcome by mere factual evidence.

The NAACP perceives Tea Party people as racists because they advocate policies which are not specially advantageous to members of racial minorities but are targeted at making the playing field level for all, a situation which in their worldview is the ultimate in correctness. Generally speaking, however, the average white is economically and institutionally better off than the average black or hispanic so whites begin the game with a head start. That there is “institutional racism” in our world is inescapable given the disparate impacts of existing structures on differently situated people. Therefore in the worldview of the typical black or hispanic citizen this may be viewed as a matter of racism since they start out with less institutional and economic power than most whites. The typical response of the white worldview to the worldview which holds these institutional advantages to be forms of racism is likely to be that their own ancestors started off with nothing when they came to this country and that wasn’t racist, it was just a fact of life which their respective immigrant groups overcame. The alternative worldview holder argues in response that they and their ancestors have been in this country for hundreds of years and that if their race were different they would certainly be economically and institutionally “equal” by now. The reason that they are not equal by now, they conclude, is that racism and its vestiges hold them down. Therefore, they say, they’re still entitled to the head start government intervention gives them. To which the typical Tea Party response is something like, I don’t care what happened hundreds of years ago, just start out on our level playing field and you and your children will get the economic benefits of existing institutions in due course. To do otherwise, they argue, the governmentally instituted advantages for minorities will effectively become permanent which may actually inhibit the disadvantaged from ever “catching up.” And so the argument goes on ad infinitum.

The point of this blog is that NAACP-style “outcomes racism” or “institutional racism” is not actively and causally connected with a demonstrable racial animus. This type of “racism” only requires proof of disparate racial impact for existence not proof of racially based feelings of superiority or inferiority. With this type of “definitional” racism what is really being talked about is political maneuvering for advantage and it cannot be properly considered a moral label. As such “racism” is a label which has everything to do with differences in worldview and little to do with human moral values. Remember that Majority Leader Reid was absolved of a charge of racism by reason of statements about President Obama’s “light skin” and lack of “Negro dialect” essentially because Reid had the right voting record. Apparently no visible moral taint on Reid’s moral character or reputation remains.

Contests between worldviews have always been the province of politics in this country, ever since the federalists and anti federalists squared off over the constitution more than 220 years ago, and so it goes.

Krugman’s Depression!!

June 29, 2010

Paul Krugman

Well, it’s finally happened.  Nobel prize winning economist, Paul Krugman, is throwing in the towel on the current crop of top politicians.  He has called the start of the Third Depression.  The hyper-rational Krugman has concluded that the G8 and G20 leaders are not about trying to save their countries or citizens through a frugal reappraisal of their economies.  Oh no, he judges that Merkel, Harper, et al., are marching to a different drummer and an anti-social one at that:

So I don’t think this is really about Greece, or indeed about any realistic appreciation of the tradeoffs between deficits and jobs. It is, instead, the victory of an orthodoxy that has little to do with rational analysis, whose main tenet is that imposing suffering on other people is how you show leadership in tough times.

Although I am not a genius like Krugman, I believe that Keynesianism’s strength is that it addresses the economy as a dynamic whole.  The idea is that the more money that is moved (spent), the higher the incomes of the people.  Hence, in recessions and depressions Keynes prescribes a policy of forcing money to move. The problem is that when you move borrowed money through the system in a way which does not result in an increase in real wealth, you have wasted the money.  And the taxpayers still have to pay it back.  How much of the money increases real wealth?  I’m thinking that the $700 Billion stimulus bill, put together in a matter of months, probably has a lot more boondoggles than wealth creating projects in it.

It’s like the difference between borrowing $100 to buy a business tool and borrowing the same $100 to eat out.  The former increases your wealth, you are demonstrably better at making money.  The latter only makes you better off to the same extent that a patio grilled hamburger,  which would have fed you just as well, would have made you better off.  If you spent $100 to eat out and you could have served hamburgers on the grill for $10, you’re $100 in debt but only $10 better off.  Surely, the restauranteur and the waiter and the chef are better off but you’re still left in debt from the extravagance.  Keynes assumes that you’ll be better off in the long run when the money goes around.  Perhaps this is so but we’re all still in debt even though we made some money in the coming around going around merry go round. 

It can only be true that the political leaders of the largest economies on earth are sadistic ideologues if they believe that their borrowing money today is without negative economic consequences in the future and still they refuse to do it?  Are we really to believe Krugman cares more about their electorates than they do?  Is this refusal to accept purely rational Keynesianism just another example of populist anti-intellectual backlash ?  Being willing to allow “unnecessary” pain to be visited upon current voters in order to benefit those not yet alive or at least not old enough to vote is without a doubt politically difficult.  After all, it is not a political coincidence that Keynesianism, which minimizes short term pain, is the very ‘ism’ we in the US have been following since Bush and the Democratically controlled congress passed a $152 stimulus in 2007.   Krugman the intellectual simply denies even the possibility that the willingness to accept current pain is simultaneously the patriotic and responsible thing to do.  

Mr. Krugman, is it possible that the G8 and G20 leaders believe in the “new orthodoxy” of frugality because they have lost faith in the long term benefits of following Keynes?  We started with Keynesian policies in the 1930’s so it seems it’s fair to say we’re in the long run now. Keynes didn’t theoretically address the long term outcomes of continuously following his proposals over a long period since he suggested that in the good times which followed the bad ones we’d pay back the debt.  It should also be remembered that Keynes coined the phrase, “In the long run we are all dead.”   What’s happening right now in the Keynes driven economy?  Not much good that I can see other than an increased propensity to save.  The political leaders of much of the rest of the world, personally disdained by Krugman, seem to agree with my assessment of the situation. 

Keynes is Krugman’s intellectual hero.  A rejection of Keynes is in a real sense a rejection of Krugman.  Krugman obviously believes that rejecting Keynes and therefore Krugman is irrational.  The rejection of Krugman may be what he really has in mind when he calls the G8 leaders sadistic.