Obama on the fence. Chrysler manages. Throwing some leather. Nuclear investors. Condoning perverts, and more.
COMMUNITY-ORGANIZED HYPOCRISY
Re: Philip Klein's
The Night and Day Economy:
"The White House has launched a series of defenses. However, to believe them, one would have to accept that the state of the economy is simultaneously both better than expected and worse than expected."
Should we really expect Saul Alinsky-disciple Barack Obama and
his team to believe any different expectation of the public,
given Obama's characteristic Humpty-Dumpty-ish use of words --
and given that everything he says has an expiration date or a
date by which he will contradict himself at least once?
-- C. Kenna Amos Jr.
Princeton, West Virginia
OBAMA IS SELLING A LEMON
Re: Eric Peters'
Food Stamps for Chrysler:
Mr. Peters' recitation of scenarios illustrates the truthfulness
of "those who don't know history are doomed to repeat the same
mistakes over and over again." Government takeover of the auto
industry has failed in Britain, France, and everywhere else it
has occurred. Even where the companies survived, it was simply as
jobs programs for the elites' supporters. The other old bromine
is that the definition of insanity is continuing to do the same
thing over and over again and expecting a different result.
Surely this applies to the liberals in the U.S. but not really.
Obama and those of his ilk really do not expect a different
result and in fact do not want one. Their actions are all about
control and failure only gives them more control of people's
lives with the aid of the dishonest media and celebrity culture.
But, as Chesterton said, "once we cease to believe in religion we
will believe any and everything." How true! I spent twenty-five
years as a member of the GM Legal Staff and can personally report
that the government deserves along with the management and the
UAW its share of the blame for the downfall of the US auto
industry. The amazingly swift descent of Chrysler from the most
profitable US auto company to its present state, as Peters
demonstrates, indicts both the US government and the UAW for
agreeing to it. I guess the UAW felt the seat on the board of
directors was worth it. How short-sighted.
-- Jack Wheatley
Royal Oak, Michigan
MARKET POWER
Re: Lamar Alexander's
Let's Build 100 Nuclear Reactors -- Again:
Lamar Alexander makes sense until he gets to this paragraph:
The final step is to double funding for energy research and development and launch mini-Manhattan projects like we had in World War II, this time to meet seven grand energy challenges: improving batteries for plug-in vehicles, making solar power cost competitive with fossil fuels, making carbon capture a reality for coal-burning plants, safely recycling used nuclear fuel, making advanced biofuels (crops we don't eat) cost-competitive with gasoline, making more buildings green buildings and providing energy from fusion.
Presumably, Mr. Alexander means doubling government funding. I
suspect that whatever bet Mr. Alexander proposes on our behalf,
President Obama will be happy to raise. Why let the lawyers who
run government allocate these scarce funds? They are outside of
their area of expertise. They wouldn't even know what questions
to ask. No doubt, funds will flow to those politically favored
individuals and institutions who are presumably smart enough to
make advanced biofuels cost-competitive with gasoline, and solar
power competitive with fossil fuels. If it takes a mini-Manhattan
project to figure this out, chances are it is a false economy.
Let the risk capital figure it out. Barring an answer, markets
will sort out energy usage by changing the way we freely choose
to live.
-- Dan Martin
Pittsburgh
FEAR OF FLYING
Re: Roger Scruton's Facing
Torture:
Too much cerebration. We are not talking about the old days, when
Igor might apply a glowing poker to an eye socket or one's rear
end. These are the days of caterpillars and waterboarding.
Regarding the latter, apparently it is so benign that servicemen
and women are exposed to it, to know what it feels like. It
replicates the sensation of drowning, but produces no physical
damage at all. So let's ask the question: In order to preserve
such a valuable technique, would I be willing to be waterboarded
myself, if somehow I were wrongfully "fingered" by the Feds? I
believe that such an occurrence would be vanishingly rare, and
perhaps never happen, but if it did, and to me, the answer is
yes, I would be willing to suffer the same indignity as service
folk suffer. It wouldn't hurt me, it would quickly establish my
innocence, I think, and would be in the service of my country. We
need to keep things in context here: Of course, it is one thing
if an innocent, or even a not-so-innocent, is sequestered in a
dungeon, having his fingernails pulled out with pliers, and such,
but loud music, sleep deprivation, waterboarding, and the like?
Some of this stuff isn't much worse than the experience one goes
through when flying, these days.
-- David Reich
Auburn, New York
RABBIT'S FEET
Re: Bill Croke's The
Twilight of the Gods:
To me basketball is that game you play to kill time until
baseball season begins. It always will be. Except for my
following my favorite, the NFL Indianapolis Colts, baseball will
be, in spite of scandal and mishap, the game that has the human
drama and renewal which happens in spring. The past heroes of the
sport are always going to be there, and if you look hard enough
you can find new ones with those scandalized ones few and far
between.
-- Michael Skaggs
Murray, Kentucky
It should be Walter Maranville, not James. I actually played for
him as a 16-year-old kid. He showed me how big-leaguers put on
their uniform pants -- inside out and then pull them up. He was a
runt; so was Phil Rizzuto.
-- Jim Sweeney
Los Angeles, California
NUCLEAR ASIA
Re: Doug Bandow's
Following the New Australian Defense Model:
To bring real protection to democratic nations in Asia Australia,
Japan and South Korea (one day Taiwan) should be given nuclear
arms to act as a deterrent against the Democrats' friends in
China and North Korea -- time for our Asian Pacific allies to
grow up and join the big boy club. At the same time the U.S.
should be letting Europe the days of the free ride are gone as we
drastically cut our presence in Central Europe. NATO is fast
becoming a waste of funds we cannot afford thanks to the despot
Barack Obama. Semper Fi,
-- Mike Tomlinson
Jacksonville, North Carolina
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The speech our President should make.
A noted economist fires back.
How political can you get?
You might have missed it, but it was boomed in January.
Farcical feminism is a decades-old phenomenon, as George Will's essay from 1970 reminds us.
Appleby| 7.14.09 @ 9:49AM
To Bill Sundling: remember Mark Twain's comment (in another context -- regarding women preaching) that "It is not so much how well they do it, but that they can do it at all"?
That I think explains calling King Zero's every BM "historic."
Bill Croke | 7.14.09 @ 2:09PM
Dear Jim Sweeney, The book I cite in my article has Rabbit Maranville's full name as James Walter Maranville. I've heard "Walter" too, but was going by the book, as they say. Anyway, I find it interesting that you actually knew him. Best wishes, Bill Croke.
Quartermaster| 7.14.09 @ 6:52PM
Why is everything that Obama does called "historic"?
Perhaps because it is historic in its stupidity, Bill.
Alan Brooks| 7.14.09 @ 7:25PM
well, with Obama we know what we have-- with Bush you could'nt nail his jello-conservatism to the wall.
Alan Brooks| 7.14.09 @ 7:31PM
the Derb, as usual, got it just so:
clotheared, moonbooted .
'compassionate conservatism'. oxymoronic.
conservative futurism-- academic SNAKE OIL. even the Newtonian PhD is a bit suspect.