Obama’s Condescension

For over four years, Barack Obama has shown his contempt for half the people of this country, yet the Washington Post still claims that it’s Romney who insults voters, mostly because Romney hasn’t given enough details about his various plans. But what should we expect from the Post? The primary occupation of those working at MSM publications is to serve as propagandists for liberal candidates, often by claiming as truth that which is the exact opposite.

Given the nature of the fiscal problems facing America, it’s not really desirable that the candidates provide specific details about where they would cut the budget or which tax deductions they would eliminate, etc. Anyone who speaks about the economy truthfully (i.e., that things aren’t free after all) will be rejected by voters who still hold out hope for, and even insist on, free things. Rather than making unrealistic demands for specificity, it would be better for voters to identify and consider the general principles and governing philosophy of each candidate in order to understand how they would approach the problems facing us.

Understanding Obama is easy because, as the Post points out, Obama has a record and “voters know his priorities.” Indeed, Obama has shown that his preference is to place as many of the 315 million people in this country as he can under the thumb of the federal government. For example, healthcare is a local activity (most people go to doctors and hospitals located within a few miles of where they live), yet Obama wants the central government to control all aspects of it. Obama is also inclined to ignore the rule of law (e.g., auto bailout, immigration policy, EPA issues), which is the absolute bedrock of a free society. And we all understand that dependency is Obama’s priority, not freedom.

Of course, as a former governor of the bluest state in the union, Romney may end up being not much less of an authoritarian than Obama. But there would be some hope because Romney at least understands how wealth is created and that central planning and dependency will only insure continued stagnation followed by decline. Romney drew negative attention for saying he cannot win the support of 47% of voters, but Obama is in exactly the same position with respect to an equivalent percentage of voters. So liberals’ criticism and distortions of Romney’s statement are unjustified. In fact, Romney’s approach to government is more likely to help the 47% than is Obama’s.

It would not be unjustified to think that Obama is the one who is contemptuous of almost half the people in this country. Over the last four years, we’ve seen Obama’s disdain in a number of instances:  his statement in 2008 about voters who “cling to their guns and religion” or the statement in 2010 about voters who don’t “think clearly” when they’re scared about the economy. Again in 2010, Obama told a group of Latinos to be sure to vote in order to punish their enemies, and by enemies, he didn’t mean Al Qaeda or Iran’s mullahs. No, he meant Republicans, and by extension, anyone who votes for Republicans.

Obama’s condescension has continued nonstop right on into the 2012 campaign season. His nastiness and resentment of success perhaps hit a high point last summer with his “you didn’t build that” speech in which he mocked people who have created successful businesses. And last week in Ohio, Obama revised his vote-to-punish exhortation to one where he encouraged the crowd to vote for “revenge.” Surely America would be better served by someone who actually respects and likes Americans, such as Romney. The editors at the Washington Post think voters want a condescending central planner; hopefully the results Tuesday prove them wrong.

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Liberals Gaming The System

Writing in Slate, Claire Lundberg recounts her child care experience while living in France. She refers to France’s child care policies as European-style socialism adding:  “And I love it!” Indeed, she seems to especially love it when describing all the free things and subsidies that the French government hands out. Lundberg and her husband are so impressed that they’re considering extending his employment contract until their daughter reaches school age.

But does Lundberg even understand how this works? Whether we’re talking about government or insurance companies (e.g., think healthcare), the service in question can be financed only if a significant number of people who pay taxes or premiums do not actually use the service. If everybody used the service, the amount of taxes or premium would equal the cost of the service and so there would be no point in covering it. Those who don’t use the service are the ones who subsidize those who do.

Lundberg may pay taxes now, but her plan is to clear out after the daughter reaches school age, so she has no intention to pay taxes during a period of time when she doesn’t use child care. She’s clearly free riding and gaming the system; her conduct is equivalent to opposing the individual mandate in healthcare (which liberals are supposed to favor). Lundberg’s story is a beautiful example of liberal greed, and rather than be ashamed, she boasts about it.

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The Cycling Authoritarians

Austin Troy of Slate is smitten by Copenhagen’s bicycle riders and can’t figure out why Americans (especially in nice weather places like LA or San Diego) have not embraced cycling in the same way. According to Troy, Copenhagen has made investments in bicycle infrastructure with stunning results, leading 37% of Copenhageners to make their daily commute on bikes. And the people who run Copenhagen aren’t content with 37% and so the goal is to get to 50% by 2015.

In addition to using a “carrot” of incentivizing bicycle commuting, which apparently refers to the infrastructure, Troy does admit that Copenhagen also uses a “stick” of policies to discourage car use. And some stick it is – in fact, it might be better viewed as a baseball bat to the ribs. For example, the sales tax on the purchase of a car is 180% (that is not a typo). Copenhagen is also removing 2% to 3% of the parking spaces in town every year and parking is $5 per hour.

Moreover, the infrastructure includes the synchronization of rush hour traffic lights for the benefit of bikes on main arteries, which Troy praises as an “innovation.” The speed? About 12 miles per hour for a stretch of almost four miles. And the city closed one of the busiest routes for the exclusive use of cyclists. Copenhagen also expects its commuters to ride their bikes year round (yeah, how pleasant), but don’t worry, the city gives priority to the bike lanes when clearing snow in the winter.

Troy claims that Copenhageners use their bicycles because it’s the quickest and most efficient way to get around. Well, of course it is, when your  government hates cars and rigs it so that cars can go no faster than 12 miles an hour. There’s no point in owning a car when the government is working to reduce the quality of life by recreating Saigon circa 1940.

The authoritarians are forcing Copenhageners onto bicycles and it’s no surprise that such an approach is unlikely to work in the U.S. Even if the population is willing to dance to the tune of an authoritarian government, Denmark’s cycling “paradise” is feasible only if there is room for infrastructure and commuting distances are short (unlike LA and San Diego) in the first place.

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Andrew Sullivan Wallowing In The Muck

So now we see that Andrew Sullivan is suggesting that anyone who happens to disagree with Obama’s left-wing ideology is a racist. Liberal desperation is not a pretty sight, and Sullivan is only adding to the grotesquerie of it all. Playing the race card now in 2012 is truly bizarre; it’s as if Sullivan slept through the last four years, and doesn’t realize that Americans already elected Obama once before.

It’s surprising that anyone thinks Sullivan has any credibility at all – he’s a liberal who pretends that he’s a conservative and his performance on the war in Iraq was nothing short of despicable. Sullivan initially supported the 2003 invasion of Iraq for all the right reasons, but then bailed out when things looked bleak. As they say, when the going gets tough, the tough get going, but not Andrew Sullivan:  he turns and runs away.

Sullivan became hysterical during the war’s low point – he was like the character in the airplane disaster movies who becomes hysterical and needs to be slapped backed into coherence. Apparently no one was around to slap Sullivan. Sullivan’s friends, if he has any, should think twice about relying on him for anything since he’s likely to run away when difficulty arises.

By calling people racist only because they disagree with his ideology, Sullivan is wallowing in the muck of liberal nastiness. Unfortunately, he’s not alone:  wallowing around next to him are the equally incoherent and desperate Chris Matthews and Ron Rosenbaum. Add Joe Biden to the mix, and its hard to see how liberals ever win elections.

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Obama’s Philosophy Of Government

With the election rapidly approaching, liberals are working to convince voters to support Obama. Some of the arguments amount to nothing more than saying that Obama is the candidate most likely to put and keep 315 million Americans squarely under the thumb of centralized government. Liberals justify this by describing all the good things that the authoritarians will provide, which naturally doesn’t include freedom.

One of these liberals, Jonathan Cohn of The New Republic, is encouraging voters to think about Obama’s actions when GM and Chrysler were in trouble because according to Cohn, Obama not only saved the auto industry, but the bailout story puts the differences be-tween Obama and Romney into “almost perfect relief.” Cohn praises Obama’s handling of the bailout, claiming it proves Obama understands, and Romney doesn’t, that when the market breaks down, the government should act “to make the industry’s survival pos-sible.” For Cohn, Obama’s interventionist philosophy is superior.

SIDEBAR:  Although Cohn speaks of the auto industry as if it were a single entity, there actually are two auto industries in the U.S., one situated in some of the southern states and the other located in the north. As only the northern sector is experiencing financial difficulties, Obama’s bailout is of only two of the three northern companies, not an entire industry. END SIDEBAR.

Most people would agree that the government should intervene in the case of a market breakdown. But it’s hard to see why Cohn calls what happened to GM and Chrysler a “market breakdown.”  To a great extent, the labor unions caused the financial difficulties of the auto companies so maybe Cohn is referring to the damage that the monopoly power of labor unions can inflict on firms and markets, but somehow I doubt it. Because it wasn’t really a market failure, Obama’s actions are less defensible.

Cohn claims that Obama saved more than a million jobs, directly and indirectly, by granting government loans to GM and Chrysler, and forcing the firms into bankruptcy to reorganize. According to Cohn, Romney wanted private firms to finance the reorgan-ization under Chapter 11 of the bankruptcy law, but Cohn insists that no private lenders would have helped. So he believes both companies would have been liquidated outright under Chapter 7 instead of reorganized.

Cohn praises Obama’s approach although he also admits that only time will tell if GM and Chrysler can survive in the long term. This is the second bailout for Chrysler, so long term survival doesn’t look good. But then, companies don’t have to work too hard when their losses are guaranteed by the U.S. government. Central planning is not an approach that leads to the best use of society’s resources:  bailouts and government guarantees only lead to stagnation and decline in the long term.

Half of Obama’s economic advisors opposed the bailout, yet Obama ignored them in favor of the bailout. He also ignored the rule of law in order to give preferential treatment to unions by giving them a big chunk of both GM and Chrysler. So Obama’s decision appears to have been political, yet Cohn stubbornly claims that the decision is an example of forward looking statesmanship.

Since Obama has proven himself in the auto industry, Cohn sees him as more likely than Romney to bring more government into the financial and healthcare sectors as well.  Cohn also sees Obama as more likely to go after “manufacturers and energy companies” that fill the air with carbon. And Cohn is right:  Obama would have no misgivings what-soever to exercise central control over just about everything and everyone. Hopefully, voters will not go along on November 6.

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Heavy Taxation Of The Wealthy

Richard Posner is one of the great jurists and legal scholars of our time. No matter what topic (he is a prolific writer on many subjects), Posner can be counted upon to make thoughtful and interesting arguments, usually from a conservative viewpoint derived from economic analysis. So his recent comments on taxing the very wealthy are surprising, sounding almost like talking points from the Obama campaign.

Posner believes that a “brilliant wealthy person” like Bill Gates is not entitled to his wealth in a moral sense (because “everything is attributable to luck, good or bad”). But he argues nevertheless that it would be “ridiculous” for government to take away his wealth and give it to the poor because “it would have terrible incentive effects.” By this he means that heavy taxation of those who work hard may induce them to substitute leisure for work and thereby reduce incomes. Similarly, taxing success due to talent may induce talented people to engage in activities that may not be “socially as productive as business.”

The incentive effects are not the same for each method of generating wealth. Posner points out that heavily taxing inherited wealth or wealth won in a lottery is unlikely to have an incentive effect whereas taxation of earned wealth indeed is likely to cause the wealthy to reduce income by choosing leisure over work. Posner’s focus on incentives leads him to conclude that there is “nothing unfair about heavy taxation of wealth,” it’s just a matter of practical objections.

This may sound all well and good for liberals, but Posner’s argument is just another way of saying that the mob can steal as much of the income of successful people as it wishes, with one caveat:  don’t go so far as to kill the golden goose. Posner’s argument for heavy taxation of the wealthy is nothing more than an apologetic for mob rule, and can hardly serve as a legitimate principle of taxation (i.e., a principle based on something other than resentment).

In competitive markets (i.e., markets based on voluntary exchange and free choice), firms earn profits and their owners make fortunes only by serving other people in some way – in fact, by serving a lot of other people. Everyone knows that Bill Gates has provided products and services to literally millions of people and this fact has important implications for taxation, which Posner seems to ignore.

For all the money that we’ve given him, Gates has provided, in return, products equal in value to what we paid (actually, voluntary exchange means that we value what we receive more than what we give; if that were not the case, we would not make the exchange). So in this respect there is a fundamental equality between Gates and the rest of us.

Obviously the very wealthy should pay their share of taxes at least at the same tax rate as the rest of us. But heavy taxation means that the wealthy pay at a much higher rate than the rest of us. If we insist that Gates pay a higher rate, the difference between his rate and ours means we’re extracting more from him than we negotiated in the deal we made when we purchased his products in the first place.

Because the exchanges that we made with Gates were voluntary, it’s hard to find a moral basis for changing the rules and demanding an additional after-the-fact rebate in the form of his higher tax rate. We’ve already gotten an even deal in transacting business with Gates, and so Posner has it backward:  it is not Gates, but the rest of us that do not have a moral right to Gates’ wealth (other than at tax rates similar to the rest of us).

NOTE: There may be a principled argument for progressive tax rates, but it is not related to Posner’s argument and so is not addressed in this post.

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Hiding The War On Women

At least someone is speaking out about the real war on women being waged in the Mideast. In an op-ed article, Roya Hakakian explains how misogynists in the Mideast have adopted Ayatollah Khomeini’s tactic of using the chaos created through anti-Americanism, and the resulting reluctance of American leaders to act, to hide their assault on women.

And according to Hakakian, the prospect of democracy in the region is not helping women. Rather, the Arab Spring has “brought a severe frost to women’s rights” in Libya, Egypt, and Tunisia:

The notion of an Islamic democracy is merely another euphemism for turning women into lesser citizens, and it ought to be deemed as unjust and anti-democratic as America before the end of racial segregation. “Terrorism” is only one manifestation of the evil that the world hopes to root out from the region where part-time terrorists have always been full-time chauvinists.

Hakakian does not appear optimistic about women’s prospects in the Mideast, which is understandable as Western politicians retreat into passivity (or to coin a phrase, “leading from behind”). It seems that the region is moving back to the middle ages, so perhaps the real question is to what extent the misogyny will spread throughout the Western world.

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Normalizing Misogyny

On the front page of its October 19, 2012, edition, the Washington Post published a photo of two Saudi women wearing burqas – clothing which leaves visible only the eyes of the women. The photo accompanies an article that mentions one of the women, Batoul Alawi al-Awami, and the caption under the photo identifies Awami as the woman on the left. But because the faces of the two women, except for the eyes, are completely covered, they are basically indistinguishable.

So, what exactly is the point of identifying Awami as the woman on the left? It doesn’t make any sense in so far as photos in newspapers are supposed to show what the subject actually looks like.  This is not the first such photo published by the Post and it wasn’t even needed for the article. By publishing such photos, it seems the editors want to portray burqa-clad women as perfectly ordinary while ignoring the elephant in the room:  the oppression and enslavement of women by misogynists in the Mideast.

Hopefully readers will not come to view burqa-clad photos of women as commonplace and natural, despite the best efforts of the Post to make them seem so. The photos in reality are  shocking, and by normalizing them, the Post is only helping the misogynists in the real war on women.

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Women Do Not Earn Less Than Men

Every few years, liberals push the claim that women are the victims of discrimination, earning only 78% (or some comparable percentage) of what men earn. This is just another fake issue – women who have the same education and experience as men in various jobs earn about the same as men. Indeed, if women earned only 78% of men for the same jobs, employers would trip over themselves in their rush to lower costs by hiring women, until salaries became equalized.

The reason that women overall earn 78% of men is that they make lifestyle choices (e.g., having and raising children) that lead them to work in fields that are more amenable to those choices, but tend to pay lower salaries. This is a matter of biology and choice, not discrimination. Liberals may demand that employers in all fields provide women with time off and more flexibility to raise children, but giving child-raising women the same pay for working fewer hours than men or women without children would only discriminate against the latter.

The pay disparity and discrimination claims are false and have been for a long time, but they make nice, deceptive attack ads. Especially for liberals who with respect to the upcoming election are becoming more desperate every day.

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The Libya Debate Question

The question about Libya and the answers given during the second presidential debate raised several interesting points. First, Obama continues to lie about the events in Benghazi that caused the deaths of four Americans, including our ambassador to Libya. We all know that the administration held out for two weeks, pretending the attack on the diplomatic compound in Benghazi occurred as part of a spontaneous protest of a YouTube video, rather than admit that the assault was a planned, organized attack by a terrorist group.

Yet during the debate, Obama tried to muddle the issue again, claiming that he called the attack an act of terror from the beginning. He may have used the words “act of terror” in the Rose Garden on the day after the attack, but he certainly did not refer to terror in the sense of a planned terrorist attack. Indeed, Obama’s response was reminiscent of Bill Clinton and the way Clinton twisted the meaning of words.

Second, as Romney pressed Obama on the “act of terror” statement, the moderator Candy Crowley jumped into the discussion in support of Obama, reminding everyone that Obama did say “act of terror” in the Rose Garden. Apparently realizing that she was also reminding everyone of her liberal bias (not to mention helping Obama mislead voters yet again), Crowley at least followed up with a few words favorable to Romney. All in all, though, she gave a brilliant confirmation of the knee-jerk reflexes of the liberal biased media.

Third, Romney missed a great opportunity to win the debate by going after Hillary Clinton after she earlier claimed to “take responsibility” for what happened in Benghazi. Romney could have pointed out that Clinton is apparently unaware of what “taking responsibility” means:  when four of your colleagues and friends are murdered through the incompetence of your department, taking responsibility means resigning your position. It’s more than just making a statement.

Yet Clinton has never even hinted at stepping down (and amazingly enough, some have even praised her for being “classy”) and Romney should have called for her resignation. This surely would have stirred things up and been the highlight of the evening. Indeed, at that point the intrepid Ms. Crowley probably would have tackled Romney.

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