Tuesday, March 31, 2009

On..David Brooks


Welcome Back (Hopefully to stay)

I've enjoyed David Brooks for sometime. His book Bobos in Paradise is a minor classic, but the last few years he has become the most staunch and mythical centrist on the planet. I've had a number of conversations about him with colleagues and he has almost become a joke on how middle of the road-utopian he has tried to be. I don't know if occurred when he was hired by the New York Times to be their token "conservative" or it's simply his good guy genes. Occasionally he has a good article but he's been so centrist it's sucked the life out of his writing. He had been the post-boy for post-partisanship. I don't know how such a smart guy can belief in such magical nonsense. Obama and Rove-clone Gibbs are already using bi-partisanship as a weapon against the Right. [Isn't Gibbs just odious? He makes me physically sick.]

Well, maybe Brooks is having the avalon-snakeskin removed from his eyes. He really nails this whole GM-Obama-Big Government mess on the head in his article today.

I encourage everyone to read it. It goes nicely with the Detroit News' latest editorial.

BROOKS: CAR DEALER-IN-CHIEF

DETROIT NEWS: DeFacto Take Over

Monday, March 30, 2009

On...The Real Car Czar


Expansion of Presidential Powers: It is only beginning

We are starting to see the power the White House will wield. Be warned any person coming hat in hand to 1600 PA Ave. You leave without your hat.

GM is only the beginning. I think the people of Michigan are starting to long for W when it comes to the auto industry. Now that's scary stuff.

What and the hell does Obama know about a car-company? This is the typical elitist attitude. They know everything about everything and their Smart Team can pull purple rabbits out of hardhats all friggin' day. Making rash decisions are going to bite you. The White House now owns General Motors. If not in reality then in public perception. If GM fails now Obama will bear most of the onus in the public's eyes. He's responsible. Since when should the POTUS be worrying about a CAR COMPANY! in a 14 Trillion dollar economy. I just don't know about this. He can act all calm and high-almighty but he's in the whirlwind now. Way to deflect the AIG boondoggle by pushing Detroit off the Ambassador Bridge.

The DETROIT NEWS editorial on Wagoner's Ousting is very good and raises a bunch of questions.

MI Governor Granholm calls Wagoner a "Sacrificial Lamb." How true.

Does anyone else smell the return of Jimmy Carter? I really hope not.

FILM REVIEW: Duplicity


FILM REVIEW: Duplicity

Perhaps it was the sorta-low expectations I had going into the film that allowed me to really enjoy this movie. People had said it was confusing and had too many flashbacks, etc. These people are nuts. I guess if you're too interested in your super-large soda and burlap sack full of popcorn to turn your brain on then, yes, maybe it is confusing. But if you pay attention you will not only following what is going on you will be challenged. Yes, a few thinks don't totally make sense but by no means did it detract.

Tony Gilroy (Michael Clayton) has written a well-plotted and witty script and infused it with a dash of old fashioned wordplay. I'm usually not a big Julia Roberts fan but she was quite good. I feel her maturity is a plus. It fits her. As for Clive Owen, he is one of my favorite actors. And only Daniel Craig can pull off the finely cut clothing they cover him in. I was watching the film and thinking how much I just want to have his wardrobe. Together they have real chemistry.

Tom Wilkinson and Paul Giamatti both have crafty roles and chew on the slick dialogue with panache. They play rival corporate CEOs. Rivals puts it lightly. These guys HATE each other. They drive the plot. Roberts and Owen also play rivals, ex-spooks who now are hired by corporations to screw each other over. It plays well.

There are a few spots in the film, near the end, when the film seems to lose steam and you're not sure where it is going. However, it only lasts for a minute and events come into focus.

I highly recommend Duplicity.
RATING: 8 out of 10

From...Ross Douthat

I'm posting one of my favorite bloggers, Ross Douthat, and his recent comments about the Pope, Africa, and AIDS. He currently is employed by The Atlantic, but starting in a few weeks he's moving over the New York Times. He is one of the most solid Catholic political intellectuals I know. He also blogs on movies and baseball. He's right up my alley.

The Church, AIDS, and Africa

Thursday, March 26, 2009

On...The Athenian Mob (According to VDH)


"Only the Educated are Free"

Since I've been teaching the finer points of Ancient Greece the last two weeks, albeit in a brief high school unit, this article from Greek expert Victor Davis Hanson struck a chord. We are currently seeing the more churlish side of democracy and mobocracy. I've included a couple of my favorite Greek quotes.

See article HERE

"The fool believes he is wise and the wise man knows he is a fool."

Wednesday, March 25, 2009

On...Economic History...Are We On the Right Route?

Contradictions

Economic Historian and author of the great book An Empire of Wealth recently wrote an article for Commentary. John Steele Gordon gives a brief rundown of US economic activity, mainly regarding the Democratic Party (see his book for more info) and what new Dem President Obama's plan may or may not produce. Food for thought.

See HERE.

Tuesday, March 24, 2009

On...Potpourri of Russia, Depopulation, and Dreaming


Just a few articles I read this afternoon that I found interesting. You may as well.

1) Anne Applebaum at Slate.com on the "Reset" strategy apparently being pushed by Team Obama in our Russian Relations. Are they really this naive? I hope it is a brilliant ploy on our part or we're going to have a "Cuba" moment in the near future if the Russian bear smells weakness.

2) Phillip Longman at USA Today goes over a bit of the danger in world of babies and why not enough people are having them and what this will mean. It is also in conjunction with the growing Green Movement encouraging our population to shrink. Start having babies you responsible middle-class Americans!

3) And the last is Andrew Breitbart ruminating on a number of glaring goofs of Team Obama in public relations. The Leno/Special Olympics, British DVD SNAFU, and Iran/YouTube vid are especially glaring. Minor stuff to be sure, but it may hint at bigger things ahead. Gulp. He ends with dreaming about a General Petraeus surge in 2012. The first half is more interesting. I'm not ready to dream about that yet.

Saturday, March 21, 2009

On...Populist Rage and Tyranny


Some Real Outrage (The most overused word of the Obama Years, along with Smart and Crisis)

I'm not a lawyer and I'm sure my lawyer friends will point out precedent and court cases that will negate my opinions here, but that's okay, that's America. But what's not American (or shouldn't be) is currently being churned up in Congress as I type this. Members of both parties, hopped up on populist roofies, are starting to build cages for freedom.

Why? Because of $165 Million in bonuses to AIG. (Doesn't everyone hate those letters already?) The House has passed a bill to tax up to 90% of all bonuses from companies that received more that $5 billion in federal bailout cash. Now if this was only for future bonuses then they could do it, I wouldn't agree, but it is in their legal right. But what about contracts that have already been written!? Violation of contracts by anyone, including the monolithic federal government, would be the real outrage. What a terrible signal that sends to the citizens of this republic and the world! The USA cannot justify changing and altering contracts they don't like. This is something that fascists and Hugo Chavez do. Do we really understand the ramifications of such a terrible action? The protection of contracts between individuals and companies is one of the key pillars of our freedom.

The other detestable potential action of Congress is the ex post facto odor of this retro-active bill. This is a weapon Congress should never use. "The power to tax is the power to destroy," to quote Chief Justice John Marshall. This tax is doing just that. They are destorying something they don't like that was legal at the time. Do these fools know history on any level? Do they really want to be apart of such an odious abuse of power? I know the populist outcry is LOUD, but really. They should tell the hoi polloi to shove it. I don't like the bonuses but civilizations are not run on what we like. They are run on respect for the rule of law. We have founding principles for a reason that have weathered 232 years of unparalleled success. You stick to them, especially when the issue is not critical.

We also have a $3.6 TRILLION budget on the table and our Congress is worried about this pittance of a bonus? Gain some freakin' perspective already. President Obama should veto any bill that reeks of this tyranny. And if he doesn't have the sense the Supreme Court should come out and crush this, just as I'm pretty sure Justice Marshall would do.

Here's to real hope that reason and justice come out on top, not blind emotionalism and rage-soaked rash action.

OTHER ARTICLES ON THE ISSUE

Bonfire of the Trivialities By Charles Krauthammer

The Problem with Flogging AIG from the NYTimes

Tax code mustn't be used as weapon from Miami Herald

Obama Seeks to Soften the Punitive Legislation from WSJ

Thursday, March 19, 2009

On...Making Detroiters Cry


Slate.com put together this slideshow on the ancient ruins of a once great city...Detroit, MI

So sad. It's a little thin. I would love more, maybe a coffeetable book is in order?

Friday, March 13, 2009

On...Looking Inside the Vanquished


Friday Delights

I was bumming around amazon.com looking at Peter Hart's new book on the Battle of the Somme (hey, isn't everyone?) when I decided to go my book in the search engine. I was greatly surprised (and I don't know how it happened) but my book now has a "Look Inside" feature. You can see the full cover and back cover plus the first five pages and a surprise me feature. Pretty cool.

You can see it for yourself HERE

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

On...The Only Thing to Fear is....More Fear, I Guess

Or...Well, ya gotta do what you gotta do.

Jonah Goldberg of the LA Times makes a number of really good points about using a crisis as a smokescreen to get what you want. You'd think more people would see through this facade and challenge the legitimate philosophical undertones of such moves.

Saturday, March 7, 2009

On...The Animal Spirits of Capitalism

Golden Geese and Animal Spirits

Michael Barone has an interesting piece in US News & World Report called Crushing those Animal Spirits. He raises some good questions regarding how much the investment class will allow itself to be taxed before they head for the hills and squirrel their money away instead of investing it. I've used the Golden Goose metaphor in many conversations, he uses Animal Spirits but it does come from the same dilemma.

I'll sum it up for you.

Democrats love the golden goose [capitalism] but are impatient and want more golden eggs so they squeeze the goose's neck and prod his belly and generally threaten to kick its ass. The majority knows they can't push too hard for they risk killing the goose, which they rely on to make the world a better place and provide numerous dimensions of equality. So they tinker with now much they can shackle the goose and still have him be cooperative. And by all means they can't let that goose fly around willy-nilly and unregulated. I thought Obama was pretty smart during the campaign because he appeared to know how to shackle the goose and get a few more eggs out of it without killing it. But then came his waterboarding Stimulus Plan, crowbar Bailouts, and then the grand-daddy Iron Maiden Budget. (Poor Goose!) Now I don't think he has a much of clue on how to get the goose to work with the Democrats. He seems prepared to use this "crisis" as a "great opportunity" to shake the hell out of this already sick goose. Some Dems like Evan Bayh and crazy CNBC econ-man Jim Cramer are starting to notice how hard he is prepared to throttle the goose and it should scare them and anyone who is fond of the golden goose.

Stuff the Beast
Another theory, more devious, yet effective regarding Obama's overarching scheme of EuroSocialism is called "Stuff the Beast." first mentioned in Ross Douthat's piece called "The Pursuit of Social Democracy." If this is really what he is doing even my post-election bi-partisan spirit will be on life support.

Friday, March 6, 2009

On...Laying on the SOFA

The Unitary Executive Theory

You can all read George Will's take (with thanks to Kristen for the heads up) on a return to balance of power in foreign policy regarding the executive and the legislative. HERE It boils down to how much power should the executive (the president) have in terms of troop deployment, treaties, war, etc. without consulting Congress.

It is safe to say that the president has been taking more and more power in regards to this since the days of Andrew Jackson. In my best estimate you could also add Polk, Pierce, Lincoln, TR, Wilson, FDR, Truman through Nixon, Reagan, Clinton, and Bush II as guilty of expanding the executive waistline to Taft-esque lengths. There are other gaps (the Virginia Dynasty Period [1801-1825], The Gilded Age [1866-1897], and the Twenties, where Congress dominated the other two branches and executive power either waned or more precisely I believe was held by an "inactive" executive, say a Coolidge or a Cleveland.

It did make me think of one of the conversations I had with Gordon Wood in 2007 about the expansion of executive power. He was worried about it. I agree. Executive power is like most government bureaucracies. Once it grows it is very hard to shrink it back.

Every war or crisis we encounter, say a civil war or 9/11 the executive takes more power. I believe if Gore had been president in 2001 he would have also expanded executive power, probably not as far as Bush but he would not have given Congress the lead. I also think in such moments the people believe a single person should take charge, should be out front, its an old trait that we haven't weened ourselves from the old tribal days. Bush learned this after Hurricane Katrina. He should have been on the next plane bossing people around. He wouldn't have gotten as much flack.

We want decision-makers and quick decisions, for better or worse. Legislatures debate and have motions and have committees and sub-committees and generally bore the hell out of people. Presidents in a crisis or war can take ACTION. They can make things happen. The mob gets sucked up in it. It's the whirlwind. And granted sometimes you definitely need that. But the fog of war can last a long time. And many congressmen are weak-willed. They are worried about reelection more than attacking a president who has the high-ground. They can be thrust into the national spotlight when they are ready or can worse yet look like a Kucinich or a Durbin.

When the gears of war start moving it rarely, and I mean rarely, stops. That's what I find really amusing about the war-protesters and pacifists. They never stop any wars from starting and they barely have any impact in slowing them down. Not even the hippies had any impact on really ending the war no matter how much they think. Nixon didn't give a damn about them. They never have in the history of the USA stopped a war. But yet they still try.

Maybe Unitary Executive Theory simply is a flaw of republican government in an uncertain world. Maybe being ever vigilant is probably the only solution. But I don't think it can be halted without a constitutional amendment, but all the consequences of such an action would need to be thought about or we could inadvertently put ourselves in a corner when push came to shove.

Wednesday, March 4, 2009

On...Little Surprises

Topsy-Turvy

I have to say the world is turning upside down when I have read over the past week back-to-back articles by Maureen Dowd of the NYTimes AND I found them not just tolerable, but actually good. May I say very good? Somebody pinch me. I give her some kudos for not being so partisan you lose self-reflection.

Here is the latest STAGE OF FOOLS

the other one was last week DARK DARK DARK
Her critique of Eric Holder was spot on.

Also Evan Bayh (D-IN)had a responsible article in the WSJ regarding the budget today too. He's voting it down by the way. Maybe there is actually some hope.