Showing posts with label politics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label politics. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 16, 2011

OWS, Right or Wrong?




Okay so it’s been a while since I’ve blogged.  Hey, October is the busiest month of the year for me and time is very limited…so shoot me.  Anyhow there has been a lot happen since my last blog such as the Penn State University scandal, a high profile torture and murder trial, a couple of elections, Congressmen and women getting busted for insider trading (which ironically is not illegal for them) and I saw a funny video of a dog with peanut butter stuck to the roof of his mouth.  All of these are worthy topics to blog on and generally I try to blog on stuff that inspires me to write which most of the time involves motorcycles, guns, education, etc.  But recently we have had a lot of press around the Occupy Wall Street movement, the 99% (whatever that is) versus the 1% (whatever that is), corporate greed, perceived economic inequality, etc. 

Now before I get too deep into this please understand, I sympathize with the OWS group on several fronts.  First, they are correct to be outraged and afraid, our elected leaders have indebted the next 3 generations of Americans to such an extent that for the first time in American history, the Baby Boomer generation will actually have a higher average standard of living than their children will.  That’s right, the greed and corruption of the Baby Boomer generation has saddled Generation X, Y and whatever is after that with unprecedented debt and little to show for it.  This will and has adversely affected the economy to where people are not retiring out naturally, wages are depressed, jobs are more scarce, etc.  Generation X’ers are thus forced into lower status and pay professionally than their Baby Boomer counterparts had at a similar age, and Generation Y who is just emerging in the workplace are stuck with jobs below their talents and abilities with little opportunity for advancement into the near future.

Second I believe the OWS group has a right to protest on public land for as long as they like.  It is a dangerous precedent to set in allowing the police or politicians to determine when and for how long a protest is suitable.  Protests by nature are contentious and will make the power elite nervous (or should) as it is a form of civil unrest.  The police need to realize they work “for the people” not for the politicians.  That said the OWS crowd have done themselves a grave injustice in not policing the actions of those within their own camps and thus have lost a lot of sympathy from the general American public.

One thing the OWS protest did bring to light is (in my opinion):

·        A general sense of entitlement
·        Unrealistic expectations of the marketplace
·        A gross misunderstanding of basic economic principles (especially capitalism vs socialism)
·        That civil unrest is apparent on the Left as well as the Right and Americans in general are very unhappy, to the extent that Washington had better pay attention soon

So on the first point, my generation (X or Y depending upon who you ask) has demonstrated a general sense of entitlement.  It’s fairly easy to see why, we’ve been raised in a culture where people commonly demand their “rights” in highly public ways, from celebrities to celebrated criminals to the average disgruntled worker, everyone is screaming for their “rights” and have been doing so since the early 1990’s.  The problem is most of these people believe their “rights” are whatever they say they are.  They confuse “rights” with “wants” or even “needs”.  Our generation has not only been surrounded by this publicly, but have grown up in a world of Social Security, pensions, Medicare, Medicade, full unemployment benefits, disability claims, lawsuits galore, health care on demand, unions and of course mass marketing aimed at equating materialism with those “deserving of success”.  We are thus a byproduct of our upbringing which by in large has been self centered, self serving and of course ever demanding of “what can you do for me now”.  We view employment as a “right”.  We view benefits and pay equal to that of our parents as our just “entitlements” and we are unwilling to step down in the lifestyle we have been living to (provided by our parents generally) to something less than what we are accustomed.  “Paying dues” or “working your way up” mean virtually nothing to most of us and for good reason, because employee loyalty, hard work and dedication are no longer rewarded as reliably in the workplace as historically so.  Work hard, start at the bottom, give a job everything you’ve got and they’ll outsource you without a second thought.  On the flip side this has lead to…

Unrealistic expectations of the marketplace.  Look, if you’re in your mid to late twenties to your mid thirties, let me tell you something your parents and obviously your high school and college counselors won’t tell you, the job market demands skills that employers can leverage to make them (the employer) money.  In other words if you have a degree in Gay, Lesbian and Transgender Theatre, don’t expect to jump into the workplace and make $75,000 a year.  That is  unless someone has figured out how to make far, far more money by hiring you and using your skills to further their own, personal wealth.  What’s that you ask?  They are going to make money off of you?  Oh yeah, bet on it, that’s how the world works.  Jobs are not given because you are entitled, neither are they given out of generosity.  Employment is nothing more than cold, calculated business.  It does not take into account your feelings, your worth as a human, your individuality or how popular you might be on Facebook.  Employment is about money and only money, that’s why they call the bottom line (read $$$) the “bottom line”.

Which brings me to point 3…a gross misunderstanding of basic economic principles.  Part of the problem here is because general economics has largely been co-opted by sociology types and not business types (not always but frequently).  Unfortunately this is usually because the brightest sociology majors “teach” while the brightest business majors go out into the marketplace and “produce”.  Either way this allows for a lot of theories on human behavior, some math thrown in, a little bit of research, a lot of assumptions and a dab or two of pure voodoo.  The truth is Adam Smith basically had things right from the beginning and that is we can always count on  2 things, first that people by and large are greedy and self serving and 2 that an economic system designed to equate productivity (defined as meeting a demand) to greed will result in an economic engine that will be perpetually run on an inexhaustible fuel supply…effort driven by greed (or need).  This system is known as capitalism as it allows individuals to determine how to meet their own needs (and greed, wants, desires, etc.) by producing something that someone else will exchange their own wealth, services or resources for.  The beauty of Smith’s original model is that it takes into account that resources are finite but that greed is infinite, thus innovation will naturally evolve as people find newer and better ways to fulfill their wants.  Note that I am defining greed as the desire for anything beyond the bare necessities of food and shelter which, thank God, our ancestors have struggled for generations to satisfy and we are reaping the benefits.  This brings me to the counterpoint of point 3, socialism.

Socialism in a nutshell is a controlled economy.  This model basically believes that people are so inherently greedy as to be self destructive to the detriment of the whole and thus the means of wealth and production should be controlled by a centralized, select “few”.  Now the ironic thing about socialism is that by and large it discounts the possibility that a select few could be corrupted in a way as to cause massive social and economic inequality or otherwise be detrimental to the whole.  If you believe that I have a snow cone stand in the Arctic I’d like to sell you.  The other tenet of socialism is the distribution of resources, services and wealth to those who do not necessarily produce or innovate to satisfy their own greed (wants, needs, desires, etc.).  The really damaging part is that this discourages innovation, growth, effort, etc. and cripples that economic engine that Adam Smith imagined by starving it of fuel (that is individual effort). Now there are extremes in socialism (like Cuba) and there is moderate socialism (like Greece).  Some can be somewhat sustainable though not optimal like England and others are a complete humanitarian disaster like post World War 2 China. 

The United States has historically been capitalist, trending towards socialist measures in what we call “modified capitalism” or some such like term.  To an extent, much of our socialist measure are driven by something that is almost unique to U.S. culture, that is empathy.  We don’t like to see children living on sidewalks begging, we don’t want to see elderly people and the sick turned away from hospitals.  We don’t like seeing the crippled or impaired left behind because of their disabilities and so we put measures in place to help these people and it is not wrong to do so.  In cold hearted, calculating business sense this is less than optimal, but can be done. 




Let’s give an illustration.  Suppose you have a supercharged, V8, 400 horsepower 1970’s hot rod.  We’re talking roaring exhaust, hood scoops, chassis twisting, torque here.  Just raw power…this represents economic potential.  Now you are planning on running this vehicle on gas (labor, innovation, effort) and resources (oxygen, spark).  A pure capitalist society would be this vehicle topped off with a full tank, wide open air ports, good spark plugs and just raring to go.  Granted the byproduct of this would be massive exhaust and noise but all the power in the world to go forward would be present.  If you begin to add entitlements (free healthcare, pensions, etc.) you begin to starve the vehicle of resources (air and spark), if you begin to add wealth distribution you begin to starve the vehicle of fuel to burn (effort, innovation, labor).  Do enough of either and you stall the car out completely and regardless of potential, what you have left is a gigantic paperweight.  A little of one or the other or even both and the vehicle may still run, it may in fact still be absolutely powerful, the trick is to find the balance.  How do you do the humane, empathetic thing but without stifling resources or fuel?


Of course no discussion on economics in America would be complete without mentioning Keynes.  Basically he believed the government should act to prevent economic destructions (recession and depression) through policy.  The problem is the government has taken what is originally narrow in scope and abused it to such an extent that some question if we will ever recover.  Would Smith agree with Keynes?  Who knows...

Back on topic, the basic premise of capitalism is that people do not go to work and bust their humps out of the goodness of their hearts, they do it for money.  Now granted, you may love your job, you may even feel it is a calling, but at the point the lights get turned off and there’s no bread on the table, labors of love go out the window and need becomes the ultimate driving force.  If my employer were to stop paying me or even to pay me half (for example), I’d quit my job and look elsewhere without a second thought, despite how much I love what I do.  I get up and go to work for money, not mirth, not good will, not for the heck of it. I am driven to work harder and to gain more skills by the possibility of more money, not because I want to be superman.  I understand that I am paid for what I can bring to the table in terms of potential to earn not just for myself, but for someone else as well.  It’s just business.

Which brings me to the final point, our elected leaders and their failures.  For generations now Americans have labored for the promise of a better tomorrow.  We have been taught to embrace liberty and freedom, that capitalism is good, communism is bad.  That we have individual liberties guaranteed to us by the Constitution and that we are responsible for our own happiness.  Recently however we espouse capitalism and borrow money from communists, we talk about civil liberties yet our own police forces are turned against us, we have attorney generals who refer to veterans as potential terroristic threats, we’re told we’re “free” just as long as we not get in the way of our elected leaders.  We’re forced to pay for legislation we not only don’t want but that we yell and scream at our officials for at town hall meetings to get them to listen to us yet our “representatives” cram it down our throats anyway.  We are arrested for tax evasion, they aren’t, we would go to jail for insider trading, they won’t, we would do life in prison for they way they run Social Security but they won’t even allow it to be referred to as the Ponzi Scheme it so obviously has become.  They (Congress and Senators) have twisted, distorted and perverted their office to such an extent that most Americans would almost be willing to scrap both houses altogether.  We have been robbed time and again, with privatization of profits and socialization of losses.  We have been saddled with unwanted debt that we cannot sustain.  We have been depleted of our motivation, our pride and our will to innovate and work.  They lie and lie and lie again and wonder why we have no faith in them.  Lastly, they too seem to lack basic economic understanding which bodes poorly for our country in the future. 

For example, look no further than the current Presidential debates.  Obama is trying to “create jobs”.  The GOP is promising to “create jobs” but what nobody is saying is that the government itself is utterly incapable of producing one single cent of wealth.  Why?  Because government taxes from producers to sustain, theoretically had they not removed those resources from that producer that producer would have the means to hire more labor (increase effort/fuel) to further their own wealth.  In other words they (the government) stifle fuel and resources to our economic engine (potential) and nothing more.  The government produces no more “new” jobs than the crud that gets caught in your fuel filter produces horsepower.  They have the ability to dramatically retard economic growth but are very, very limited in their ability to encourage it (some would argue not at all).  The government needs to get out of our way, loosen restrictions, loosen financial constraints and let this engine do what it naturally wants to do, which is move forward.


The OWS movement is right to be afraid and angry, but their efforts are misdirected.  They should be occupying Washington D.C., as should we all.    



Friday, September 30, 2011

Obama and Ford Motor Company: Censorship or petty politics?




It would seem that the Ford Motor Company CEO, Alan Mulally received a surprise phone call from the White House “bullying” him (Mulally’s words) into pulling a television advertisement that made the Obama administration look bad.  The commercial is above (for now) for those of you who have not seen it.  Essentially the customer is given a surprise press conference where reporters ask him why he purchased a Ford.  His honest and unrehearsed response was that he wanted to buy an American vehicle from an American manufacturer that did not take government bailout money, who accepted the risk of doing business and during hard times, stepped up to the plate and got it done.  I’m paraphrasing of course but this man is nowhere nearly alone in his sentiment. 

I only wish I could say I had the same level of conviction.  Yes I am positively disgusted with General Motors for the way the union and government strong armed bond and stock holders out of their investment, essentially “stealing” money while reneging on debts.  I’m also disgusted by the transfer ownership of the company to the very same union that caused it so many financial woes in the first place.  GM also of course begged a federal, tax payer backed loan and eventual bailout of billions from the government.  Of course GM later advertised that they paid their government loan money back but they failed to mention the bailout money they used to do it…in short they kept the cash they just changed the label of the bucket it was sitting in.  As for the investors that got bilked, if you think only fat cat Wall Street types lost money in that deal, you might want to take a really close look at your 401K managed investment portfolio prior to the GM bankruptcy, you might be in for a nasty surprise. 

But let’s step back and forget about taxpayer money or the investors and bond holders who were bilked. Forget about the bailout money too, after all Harley Davidson took bailout money and I own two of them.  It’s not the loan that is worrying; it’s not even the bailout that is the thing that keeps me up at night.  A little bit of it might be the way the investors got jacked over…but I’m not even overly concerned about that at the moment.  The concerning thing is the government stepped in, directly from the White House and essentially threatened Ford Motor Company in order to cow them into silence.  This is petty at best, immature and beneath the type of conduct that we should see coming from the highest office of the most powerful nation on earth.  This could also be painted in a darker, more sinister light for those so inclined as this is the type of stuff I heard horror stories about as a kid growing up in Regan’s America during the 1980’s.  You remember?  The good old days where we were warned about Communism, the evils of censorship from the government, the abandonment of individual liberties for collectivist thinking and the thing that always stuck out in my mind were the toilet paper and gasoline shortages that the USSR experienced, but I digress.

This was a grievous error on the part of the White House and I think ultimately it shows just how petty and low this administration is willing to go.  I think this will hurt Obama politically for sure but my biggest hope is that this does not set a precedent indicative of future behavior.  It’s beneath the office. 

Now before anyone gets on my comments section below and starts the knee jerk Bush bashing that seems to occur anytime anyone criticizes this president (which to this day I do not understand) please keep in mind that I understand the Bush administration had its warts too, though I somehow have a hard time picturing direct calls from the White House demanding unflattering advertisements be pulled from the air “or else” so try to keep on topic if you want to leave a comment.  We’re talking about Obama, or the Ford Motor Company, GM or anything relevant within the last 2 or 3 years…and that isn’t Bush so please keep that in mind if you wish to disagree with my post above.   

Sources

Source 1: http://detnews.com/article/20110927/...ad-on-bailouts

Source 2: http://www.foxnews.com/on-air/hannit...big-businesses

Thursday, July 21, 2011

Conservatives vs. Liberals: A tongue in cheek side by side comparison



Conservatives tend to be generous with their money: Liberals tend to be generous with other people’s money.

Conservatives believe the government’s role is to protect your God given rights: Liberals believe the government’s role is to allow you to have (some) rights and protect you from the idea of a God (unless you’re Muslim).

Conservatives believe criminals commit violent crime: Liberals believe guns commit violent crime.

Conservatives believe the government depends on a good economy: Liberals believe a good economy depends on the government.

Conservatives believe people know how best to spend their own money: Liberals believe it’s not your money if they can tax it.

Conservatives respect private property: Liberals photograph their “private” property and send it to college girls on Twitter.

Conservatives believe that marriage is a divine partnership: Liberals believe it’s simply a contract between partners.

Conservatives believe a smaller government is the answer: Liberals believe government is the answer.

Conservatives know the effort that goes into making a dollar: Liberals know the effort that goes into taking away $.75 on the dollar.

Conservatives believe we should harvest oil locally to cut gasoline prices: Liberals believe you should buy a smaller car, preferably manufactured by a unionized organization that contributes to the Democratic Party.

Conservatives think: Liberals feel.

Conservatives can balance a checkbook: Liberals see no need, if you get in trouble just ask your neighbors to bail you out.

Conservatives have only themselves to blame: Liberals blame everyone but themselves.

Conservatives believe victims have rights: Liberals believe criminals have more rights.

Conservatives believe in justice: Liberals believe in compassion, unless of course the crime was classified as a “hate crime” then it’s all “fry the bastard” and all that stuff.

Conservatives believe that racism is bad: Liberals believe that racism is good as long as it’s in the form of affirmative action or otherwise discriminatory against any Caucasian male.

Conservatives deal in facts: Liberals deal in emotion.

Conservatives tolerate opposing ideals: Liberals espouse tolerance and attack anyone who disagrees with them (except if your Muslim).

Conservatives think that 9/11 was a vicious attack on our country caused by cowardly terrorists: Liberals believe that 9/11 was in response to something we did to piss them off and we just need more “understanding”.

Conservatives know we have an immigration problem: Liberals know a new potential voting base when they see one.

Conservatives tend to be patriotic: Liberals tend to be pessimistic.

Conservatives tend to be independent thinkers: Liberals tend to fancy themselves as independent thinkers because they’re told they are by their friends who think just like they do.

Conservatives tend to think that abortion is murder: Liberals tend to think that executing a murderer is murder and/or eating meat is murder.

Conservatives believe that loosening revenue and tax cuts will boost economic growth: Liberals believe you can tax yourself into prosperity.

Conservatives like traditional American ideals even if we haven’t always lived by them: Liberals have contempt for those ideals and love pointing out that we haven’t always lived by them.

Conservatives believe in “teaching a man to fish”: Liberals believe in trading fish for votes.

Conservatives read the Constitution with reverence and respect: Liberals read it with a highlighter, a red pen and whiteout handy.

Conservatives believe the Bill of Rights were meant to protect us from unconstitutional actions from the government: Liberals believe the Bill of Rights is more like a list of best practices.

Conservatives believe Socialism in any form cannot work: Liberals believe that the only reason Socialism and Communism hasn’t worked is because the Russians, Chinese, North Koreans, Vietnamese, Cambodians, Cubans, Laotians, Albanians, Angolans, Bulgarians, Czechoslovakians, Ethiopians, Finnish, Germans, Greeks, Grenadians, Mozambicans, Polish, Kampucheans, Hungarians, Romanians, Somalia’s, Yemenis, Yugoslavians, etc. just weren’t as SMART as THEY (the American Liberals) are” and neither are you.

Monday, July 18, 2011

The Great Helmet Debate: Are you free or a freeloader?


Few things are debated in the motorcycle culture as hotly and intensely as whether or not bikers should wear DOT helmets.  Of course every biker I know thinks that at most, it should be left up to the individual rider.  But once you leave the confines of the freedom loving state of Texas or the biker community in general, opinions begin to change and quickly.  This is plain to see for anyone who participates on the various motorcycle related forums (my favorites are www.v-twinforum.com and www.harleytechtalk.org) or who keep up with the news on legislative action that affects bikers.  On what I like to call the “left” side of the argument are some motorcycle enthusiasts (I refuse to call them “bikers”) and seemingly most people who do not ride anything at all who espouse the life saving and supposed injury prevention virtues of helmets which of course they believe translates to lower insurance premiums and fewer medically related taxes in their state.  They also argue that wearing a helmet is the right thing to do by your family and have no qualms forcing you to do so.  The “right” side of the argument is often “it’s my head and I should be able to do whatever I damn well please with it”. 
To me, both sides of the argument have valid points but I’m obviously going to have to go with the “right” side of the argument.  My reasoning for those who care, is based not just upon freedom of choice but more on that of the role of lobbyists and government in our lives combined with deductive reasoning.  First, let’s look at the deductive reasoning part of the argument; riding a motorcycle is dangerous compared to driving a vehicle no matter how long you’ve ridden or how talented you may be.  Motorcycles will lose in pretty much any type of collision or accident bar none.  Wearing a helmet may prevent some types of injuries but certainly not most and it is no guarantee of survival as we all know.  Will this result in lower insurance premiums?  Honestly I do not give a rat’s flea bitten posterior.  Why?  Because if we solicited our government to take action to prevent us from doing anything remotely dangerous that would cost insurance companies more money we’d have to outlaw most power tools, all guns, fireworks, ladders, cars, anything sharp or mobile, electrical sockets, etc.  Following this line of logic to extremes…well you get my point.  Granted they’ve won the seatbelt law thing for decades but you have to pick your battles. 
Which brings me to the whole “freedom” thing.  The government has never had any qualms about telling people what they can, cannot and must do with their bodies.  The “it’s my head” argument is likely one of the weakest arguments we can raise in this debate and resounds exceedingly hollow with the voting public at large.  The government already tells you that you have to vaccinate your kids despite sometimes dangerous side effects; you must also refrain from illegal drug use, despite the fact that some legal pharmaceuticals are far more dangerous.  The government may also draft your body and send you to war to get shot and blown to pieces if it deems necessary (assuming of course you are a male).  So why should the government suddenly balk in fear of forcing people to wear a helmet when riding a motorcycle?  The answer is because of organized efforts by responsible bikers that make it politically and financially prohibitive to do otherwise. 
Personally I wear a helmet, a DOT certified helmet that probably makes me look like a character out of Spaceballs.  I do it anyway though because if I ever go down, I need every advantage I can get.  I wear the helmet for my wife, my two children and for myself, not because the government wants to play surrogate parent.  I am a reasonably intelligent, productive member of society capable of determining the repercussions of my actions on my own and because of this I will use my resources, financial and otherwise to make sure this freedom is preserved even if I myself do not partake of it.  But you bikers out there who are insisting upon riding without a helmet who are not part of the ABATE, AMA, TMRA2 or like motorcycle rights organizations and who do not participate in legislative calls to action by such organizations should be ashamed of yourselves for piggy backing upon the efforts of your fellow bikers/activists.  Just because your God given freedoms shouldn’t be taken does not mean that they will not.  Your freedom to ride without a helmet only exist as long as the efforts of your fellow bikers exceed that of well financed and organized insurance lobby groups who will never quit.  These lobbyists will do everything in their power to sway popular and political opinion and guess what?  In some states they’re winning.  We are the extreme minority where every effort or lack thereof impacts the final outcome, think about that. 
Join the TMRA2, AMA, ABATE or a like organization and make sure to pay attention to calls for support and action from these organizations and organizations like the U.S. Defenders.  If you are an independent, unaffiliated rider get involved by supporting the AMA, ABATE and the Coalition of Independent Riders.  Ride free, not freeloading. 

Think I’m full of hot air?  Just within the last three days 2 new news articles have surfaced…
Michigan voters oppose helmetless riders because of insurance premium concerns for non-motorcyclists:
Delaware debating on making wearing of a helmet mandatory:
Worthwhile Organizations
TMRA
TMRA2
ABATE
U.S. Defenders
AMA