Archive for July, 2025

29
Jul

Eliot Spitzer – “The Fed Is A Ponzi Scheme, An Inside Job”

Uber-prosecutor, disgraced ex-governor and lifelong state-supporter Eliot Spitzer recently became a most unlikely endorser of Ron Paul’s bill to audit the Federal Reserve;

Spitzer A Ron Paul Supporter?

25
Jul

Bill Bonner Throws Out A Shocking Bailout number

From Wednesday’s Daily Reckoning;

We learned that the feds have put up an amount equal to more than 150% to GDP to bailing out Wall Street: $23.7 trillion.

16
Jul

Setting Regular Republicans Straight About Liberty

Steven Greenhut, Orange County Register columnist and Friend of Liberty, wrote a column for Independence Day that was less than completely reverential toward our Gargantuan Imperial Military. Chip Hanlon, writing in Red County, took off after Greenhut, viciously smearing him, libertarians in general, and incredibly but oh-so-predictably Ron Paul.

Scores of commenters wrote back defending Greenhut, so my addition was probably piling on, but I really like it as a statement of Liberty;

Does Chip Even Read What He Writes?

What you write, repeatedly, is that libertarians (and by implication, incredibly, Ron Paul) are all kooks, because sometimes they make statements that are at odds with your well-entrenched beliefs. You even pull quotes out of context that seem to support your position, but you have made absolutely NO attempt to understand, much less attempt to honestly and intelligently refute them. Your debate techniques are the same ones used by all but one of the Republican candidates, including the eventual nominee.

You see where that has got us. Ron Paul told us all in the debates that if the Republican Party didn’t get serious about reversing the Bush welfare-warfare-torture- spying state, and cutting back on spending and empire, we were not only going down to defeat in November, but that the party would subsequently self-destruct. You don’t have to be crazy to see and understand that he was 100% right.

Look, I accept that not everyone is ready to keep peeling away at the onion of government. Over my political life’s journey, I have been at first shocked by many principled libertarian positions. Then, after mulling them over, I often come to see that in many instances (e.g., drug prohibition, gay marriage, pre-emptive war, central and fractional reserve banks, taxes, governmment spying), and putting aside my merely personal feelings, I have come to understand that the libertarian position logically and morally flows from the fundamental principle of freedom. The libertarian non-aggression axiom is the purest expression of the ideals, if not always the actions of the founders.

A standing military, particularly one as aggressive and imperial as ours, would absolutely shock and dismay many of them.  Steve Greenhut isn’t speaking a Republican heresy, he is simply stating his (in my view correct) opinion that the military establishment is out of political, strategic and financial control, and needs, not to be lauded for its unconstitutional size and scope, but rather reined in, hard. Any honest person, who takes a look at the trail of wreckage left behind by the US military over the past, well, century or two, has to see this.

What we need in this country is a return to the ideals of the founders, minus the bigotry. What we need is a DRASTICALLY smaller government.

What we need is Liberty.

16
Jul

Great Artwork, Bad Idea

My friend, Don, did this awesome art for a lengthy and biting City Paper article about Chester’s soccer stadium. He here at LG have been early adopters of criticism concerning it on every level and we’re glad to see others are starting to see it for what it is.

cover-1

 

The state legislature, though, resisted Rendell’s overtures, with some members arguing that building a soccer stadium with tax money was a bad investment. State Rep. Thaddeus Kirkland, who represents Chester, pointed out that Chester could use a grocery store more than it could a soccer stadium.

Around this time, the proposal changed. By September, The Team had begun to talk about the stadium as the mere "anchor" of a much larger project that would include retail, office and residential components — worth $300 million of investment in Chester. By January 2008, the project had grown more ambitious still: The investment figure had magically risen to $414 million, and The Team began dangling the ultimate prize: a supermarket.

The use of public money to build stadiums has become commonplace, despite evidence that taxpayers often don’t favor it, and despite a growing body of research by economists that says the stadiums are almost always — if not always — a bum deal.

At its core, we’re seeing Cargo Cult economics. Our Benevolent Overlords think that if they can make a Potemkin Village on a macro level with shiny buildings and enough bread and circuses, it will take root and magically become a viable community. Happy, obedient citizens will walk the streets (or take light rail) all hours of the day or night, stores will be full of shoppers swiping their plastic and dogs will cease to poop.

To you and I, this propped-up, subsidized economy is the definition of failure. However, to the ruling class, once the cardboard checks have been awarded and the booty divided amongst the unions, it is now time to don the flight suits and declare victory. Maybe they’re inhaling too much Viscose. Time to take the bars off the windows (if you are from around here, that last analogy would be really funny!).

12
Jul

Ban Smoking In The Military? Are You Kidding Me?

Apparently Torture Isn't The Only Thing Lynndie England Ruined For Everybody

Apparently Torture Isn't The Only Thing Lynndie England Ruined For Everybody

The missus relayed a CNN report that a study commissioned by the Pentagon has recommended the military ban the use of tobacco entirely.

As a never-smoker, who personally despises cigarette smoke and all of the things it does, I am nonetheless absolutely appalled that the military is even considering this breach of basic human liberty. Ok, scratch that, I’m still appalled, but on grounds of utility rather than principle. Are the quasi-conscripted enlisted to be spared nothing? Look for mass mutiny if this is ever enacted.

Of course, I am preemptively invoking Godwin’s Law by pointing out that both the motivation and the apparent receptivity of senior military brass for banning the vile weed from America’s sainted Imperial legions echo another old soldier’s logical enthusiasm for banning tobacco.

10
Jul

Friday Music Gets Economical!

Motley look, great band. Canada wins again!

Motley look, great band. Canada wins again!

The Dears Money Babies on YouTube

I don’t usually look to musicians for economic illumination

- (except maybe blues musicians - this IS a Depression, after all, and blues IS Depression Music) -

…but I just LOVE The Dears’ “Money Babies”;

Our money is elastic. Our money is elastic.

Gotta get milk for the baby and our money is elastic.

Decapitative laughter is keeping us alive.

Cavalcades of losers, losing their minds.

Hoping for disaster. Settin’ off alarms.

Amid all of the deranged. Amid all the charmed.

Do you remember that time when we thought we were gonna die?

Well, baby nothing much has changed.

And yet they haven’t been the same since at all.

Our money is elastic. Our money is elastic.

Gotta get milk for the baby. Gotta get milk for the baby.

(Honorable Mention – not economic, but also Canadian – Hey Rosetta“Red Heart”)

Oh, and – Holy Shit! – The Hold Steady – “Constructive Summer” – (Joe and I can relate to this)

Raise a toast to St. Joe Strummer / I think he might have been our only decent teacher / getting older makes it harder to remember / we are our only saviors

07
Jul

When Is A Mainstream Economist Not An Economist?

Why, when he opens his mouth, of course! This can be easily illustrated in the base of Berkley academic, Severin Borenstein in the latest issue of Technology Review. Speaking on the viabiliyty of solar power in regards to the market:

Will the stimulus bill facilitate that much-needed transition to more efficient technologies? Severin Borenstein, for one, is doubtful. Borenstein, the director of the University of California Energy Institute, says the problem with the stimulus funding is that when it comes to existing technologies, the DOE will need to pick which projects to support. "The worry is that the government will invest in the wrong technologies," he says; picking technology winners is something that "historically it has not been very good at."A far more effective way to promote the growth of renewable energy, he believes, is to put a price on carbon dioxide emissions through a carbon tax or a cap-and-trade scheme (see "Carbon Trading on the Cheap," p. 72). Either approach would provide market-based incentives for deploying renewables and would represent a more efficient and "technology-­neutral" government policy. At the same time, he says it is important for the government to fund research into new renewable technologies.

From an economist’s perspective, Borenstein says, government subsidies are justified to address "market failures": cases in which the market doesn’t allocate enough resources to the pursuit of socially desirable goals, such as reducing greenhouse-gas emissions. The government incentives then support efforts that are financially risky but are likely to provide a common benefit. In such a context, he says, the argument for public spending on research into new solar technologies is strong–but the case for subsidizing the current commercial technologies, particularly photovoltaics, is "really weak." Existing photovoltaics are expensive even compared with other renewables such as wind and solar thermal, he says, and they won’t necessarily lead to cheaper technologies, either. "You’re obviously going to get [solar] panels put in, but is that going to generate something that will have a lasting benefit? Will it help you build a solar industry? I think the answer is probably not."

Borenstein says direct government subsidies to support existing photovoltaics could in fact impede the development of more efficient technologies. "There is no question that there is what economists call ‘option value’ lost when you invest in the current technology," he says. "If the technology is about to get a lot better, and is about to get a lot better for reasons that don’t have to do with building out the current technology but because the science is going to improve, that’s an argument for waiting. You’re crowding out future investment by investing now. The money would be better spent five years from now on the new technology."

I hate to tell him this but “socially desirable goals” are like assholes; everybody has one. How does he rate solar power in relation to education? Or clean water? Or recycling? Or the preservation of whales? The answer is much simpler than he thinks. The market will rate all of these things and more seamlessly. But he does admit that present photovoltaic technology is not to a point where it would make sense to install solar panels just yet. Why the sudden onset of common sense? Could it be because he would like taxpayer largess to be spent on academics like himself?

Severin Borenstein, director of the U.C. Energy Institute, argues that state and federal subsidies for solar panel installations should instead go to increasing research and development budgets.

03
Jul

Obama O-verload

We have ridiculed taxpayer-paid campaign materials before, as have many others, so it probably shouldn’t be a surprise that such attempts are made as to try to make them less obvious. Here, on a stretch of I-295 where commuters were just over being tortured by a reconstruction product, is one of the first fruits of the “porkulus” – a sign announcing a new, unspecified, undoubtedly expensive impediment to use;

The Porkulus Comes To South Jersey

The Porkulus Comes To South Jersey

But look closely at logo at the lower left – it looks vaguely familiar;

Look Familiar?

Look Familiar?