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The Republican VP Gamut

Posted by: Peter Jackson on August 16, 2008 12:09:49 AM

Instapundit posted a poll "Who Should McCain pick for VP." I thought I'd review the list of potentials, such as they are.

Hillary Clinton, Joe Lieberman or any other Democrat

Let's dispense with this one first. In a word: please. In two words: come on. It just isn't serious. The day a Republican candidate nominates a Democrat for VP will be the day the Republican Party ceases being a serious political party capable of electing anybody.

Tim Pawlenty

Who?

Tom Ridge

I can hear it now: Orange Alert! Orange Alert! That's what every Democrat will scream at him everywhere he goes. Don't get me wrong, I feel for the guy, I'd never want to be the head of Der Homeland Security Department, and he probably did as good a job with HS as could have been done all things considered. But although  Ridge may be decent and somewhat capable, along with McCain they would be the Tighty Whitey Ticket. If McCain chooses Ridge we might as well just swear Obama in and not bother with an election.

Bobby Jindal

Thank God Bobby Jindal doesn't want to be VP. Bobby Jindal will one day be President, and he knows it. And when he's sworn in, President Jindal will be younger than Obama is now. But right now he's got big messes to clean up in Louisiana, and that's his ticket to the top. If he can fix Louisiana (my beloved home state), he can fix anything, and America will eat him up with a spoon.

Mitt Romney

Mitt did come in second, and he is not a totally unsubstantial politician. Still—and I mean no personal offense toward Romney—his problem is that he comes across as an insincere, plastic McCandidate, which is why his negatives are so inexplicably high in spite of spending massive personal funds to advance his name recognition during the primaries and his relatively uncontroversial past. If McCain picks him, they'll be lucky to get 150 electoral votes. Of course it would help if Romney had a compelling history or agenda, but he has neither; he's just another super-rich guy who wants to be President for some reason.

Condoleeza Rice

I love Condoleeza Rice, and believe she would make a better President than the whole lot of them, but the fact is she has Bush stink all over her, and if McCain were to pick her it would be a Christmas present to all of those democratic jerks that go around calling McCain "McSame." So far the charge hasn't been able to stick to McCain, but if he were to pick Rice it probably would. Which is a shame, especially considering how Russia is rearing it's ugly head. Rice has forgotten more about Russia than McCain or Obama will ever know. Does Bush stink wash off? Unfortunately I have no idea. We'll have to wait four years or so to find out.

Rudy Giuliani

Rudy would be an excellent choice. Before Iowa he was consistently polling not just as the strongest Republican but also as the most liked candidate of either party. So long as he doesn't bring along any of the idiots who managed his campaign, He'd give McCain FL and possibly NY. Out of all of the old white guy picks, Rudy is head and shoulders above everyone else.

Sarah Palin

If McCain were to choose Palin this election would actually turn out to be fun. Imagine that for a moment: a fun presidential election. It would be a ballsy pick, and even though voters are quite inclined to accept a certain amount of greenness in vice presidential candidates anyway, the Dems snuffed their opportunity to criticize her relative inexperience by nominating Obama as their candidate, who has even less. Her youth and vigor, her Alaska tough and her gun rights cred would highlight everything appealing about American conservatism without bringing along all of the religious fundamentalist social conservatism that creeps out independents so much. And she's a super-mom. If she were to nonchalantly unbutton her blouse and nurse her infant son in the middle of the VP debates without missing a beat about how we need to drill, drill, drill for oil in Alaska and elsewhere, Obama would be lucky to win even Illinois come November. There would finally be a prototype of a strong conservative woman that was more positive than Ann Coulter or Phyllis Schlafly.

Even though Rudy would help McCain in New York and Florida and Ridge could help in Pennsylvania, Palin would help McCain be competitive everywhere. There's women in all fifty states.

 

Quote of the Day

Posted by: Peter Jackson on May 23, 2008 7:39:03 PM

"You never change things by fighting the existing reality. To change something, build a new model that makes the existing model obsolete."

Buckminster Fuller

 

Postrel 1 Cancer 0

Posted by: Peter Jackson on May 04, 2008 12:57:23 PM

Well this is easily the best news from last week: Virginia Postrel is emerging from her bout with breast cancer with "no evidence of disease." I know from my own personal experience with Lance Armstrong disease that this is the closest the medical community will ever come to stating that one has been cured; "total remission without further evidence of disease" is the exact phrase I remember. Cancer in general is still technically "incurable," so the word "cure" is never uttered by the profession with regards to cancer.

Anyway, congratulations Virginia, rock on with your bad self! Is it just me, or does anyone else out there feel that liberal capitalism itself has just dodged a bullet?

 

Hot, Hot, Hot

Posted by: Peter Jackson on February 05, 2008 2:03:39 PM

Frankly, the internet could use more sites like this: Climate Debate Daily. It's an independent website presenting two columns, pro and con, of links to articles concerning climate change.

Many sites on the Internet, including some of those listed at the far left of the page, take firm views for or against the threat of anthropogenic global warming. As a matter of editorial policy, Climate Debate Daily maintains a studied neutrality, allowing each side to present its most powerful and persuasive case. Our object is to allow readers to form their own judgments based on the best available information.

No spin, no agenda, just sweet, sweet reason in a head-to-head, hand-to-hand, bare-knuckle format. Can't beat it with a ton of carbon. Hat tip: Ginny at Chicago Boyz.

 

Duverger vs. Giuliani

Posted by: Peter Jackson on January 26, 2008 7:44:05 PM

Cross-posted at A Second Hand Conjecture.

It’s all up to the crackers now. Fred Thompson has left the building, leaving Rudy Giuliani the only candidate in the Republican race potentially capable of prevailing in November against either Hillary Clinton or Barack Obama—or both. But Rudy may well have made a strategic error: having been the polling frontrunner for almost a year, Giuliani and his captains decided to forgo the smaller early state contests and focus on high-delegate states, beginning with Florida on January 29th. Giuliani's people have been bivouacked there for months. The effort has kept the candidate with a double-digit lead in the Sunshine State—until now.

Enter Duverger’s law, which states that district-based plurality elections favor a two party system due to voter polarization between the frontrunner and the strongest challenger. In the contests he skipped, Rudy finished most often in fourth or fifth place, with single-digit percentages. With John McCain and Mitt Romney now being perceived as the the top two candidates, Giuliani’s poll numbers have been plummeting in Florida, California, New Jersey, and even New York, the very delegate-rich states that he was counting on to elevate him to the nomination. In Florida, the latest polls now have Rudy in a three way tie for first place at best and losing to both McCain and Romney at worst.

But what makes it impossible to write Rudy off yet is the following: historically up to a third of Florida voters have taken advantage of the state’s liberal absentee/early voting rules to cast their ballots prior to actual elections. Giuliani’s team knew this going in, and assembled early voting and absentee voter “chase” teams that have been operating since before Iowa urging Rudy supporters to vote early. No other candidate has done this. With this being a four-way race, it's possible Rudy can absolutely stink on Tuesday yet still win due to early/absentee ballots cast for him back when he was fab.

What's more, given that the media has all but ruled it out, a Rudy win in Florida would turn the press upside down, making McCain's comeback in New Hampshire appear small and uninspired by comparison. The very trend that makes the chances of a Giuliani nomination currently appear hopeless contain the same forces required to make his big-state strategy work by making him the lead story one week before Super Tuesday. Duverger can giveth as well as taketh away.

Teh Gay

Posted by: Peter Jackson on January 22, 2008 12:46:43 AM

America is the "land of the free." Not "land of the free if you're male like me," and not "land of the free if you're white like me," and not "land of the free if you pray like me," and not "land of the free if you have sex like me." America is the land of the free...period. Well, actually, comma. We're also supposed to be "the home of the brave."

The Liberal Capitalist Party believes that America could be braver. We could give homosexual Americans their civil rights due, their freedom of association, by allowing them to legally enter into the household-forming contract of marriage.

Time to brave up, America. In the eyes of the government, all marriages should be civil unions, equal and the same, for everyone.

 

A Spark, A Flame

Posted by: Peter Jackson on January 20, 2008 6:39:39 PM

Supporters of Fred Thompson aren't taking the results of yesterday's South Carolina primary very well. John McCain took a third of the vote, followed up by Mike "get thee behind me" Huckabee coming in second with a quarter of the vote. Big Fred only managed about 15% in spite of the fact that the SC primary was the first state contest in which he actually tried to get votes.

Dailypundit's Bill Quick is fed up enough that he's soliciting ideas for a conservative third party. I don't know if he's ever stumbled upon this site, or what he might think of it if he has. But ironically, this site was in no small part inspired by the American Liberty League, a web initiative of Quick himself from a few years back. Still, I don't know that the Liberal Capitalist Party would be Bill's cup of tea. We tangled last year in the comments section on his site over an immigration topic, and it wasn't difficult for me to glean from the exchange that he has a lot of powerful emotions concerning his restrictionist positions. The Liberal Capitalist position of allowing labor markets to determine a level of orderly entry into the US would probably be a deal-breaker for him, even though we probably agree on most everything else.

So out of respect for a fellow (95%) liberal capitalist, and out of gratitude for the original inspiration he gave me, I invite him and his readers to dig into the site and use whatever ideas you can find that might be useful for creating the American Conservative Party Bill envisions. For instance, I actually put together an idea for an internet-based party modeled on the Request for Comments (RFC) system used to develop the internet itself. It's untested in politics as far as I know, but I still believe the idea has potential. And look through the FAQs and essays. There's all sorts of stuff in there.

It's also interesting that Steven Den Beste did a flyby and dropped the Duverger's law bomb in the comments section on Bill's new site. I posted about Duverger's law last year, here. These days I've been more or less persuaded that the odds of establishing a successful third party without the help of approval voting reform are infinitesimal. Even with approval voting Duverger would hold, we'd still have a two-party system, but at least it would loosen the institutional kung-fu grip™ that the Republicans and Democrats have on the first party and second party positions.

 

Simplisme

Posted by: Peter Jackson on November 08, 2007 1:00:27 PM

This is what we get when we quit:

 

saigon_helicopter

 

 

And this is what we get when we don't quit:

 

ThankPraise400

 

 

It really is exactly that simple. Any questions?

 

Boy Wonder-Elect

Posted by: Peter Jackson on October 21, 2007 8:10:32 AM

Read Bobby Jindal's victory speech. 

Can Bobby Jindal get Katrina reconstruction on track? Can he do something—anything—about the state's failed school system? Can he loosen the grip of corruption that's been at Louisiana's throat since Napoleon sold the joint? Can this Rhodes Scholar keep the Saints in New Orleans? I, for one, believe he can, if only because Jindal himself seems to be crazy enough to believe he can.

That's one small step for Louisiana, and one giant leap for Louisiana-kind.


Exiting the Highway to Hell (UPDATED)

Posted by: Peter Jackson on September 29, 2007 10:16:31 PM


I generally enjoy Megan McArdle's commentary and find myself in agreement with her far more often than not, but this post is just, well, ignorant:

The massive subsidy provided to drivers in the form of free roads is obviously producing highly inefficient outcomes, which is why DC feels like a prison from which it is impossible to escape unless one wants to spend four hours on the Beltway. We clearly need to institute comprehensive road tolls combined with a congestion pricing scheme. Plus, of course, a carbon tax to compensate for the negative externalities drivers are imposing on those of us who use primarily mass transit.

Here's a table comparing dollars of government subsidy per 1000 passenger miles for different modes of transportation. Unfortunately it only goes to 2002, but I doubt much has changed since then.

Although government does subsidize auto use with road construction, these subsidies are offset by vehicle and fuel taxes paid by drivers. In fact you'll notice in the linked table that for most automotive modes, the government subsidy is actually negative because of these offsets, whereas transit subsidies are over a hundred dollars per thousand passenger miles since at least 1990. In 2002 it comes out to fifteen to twenty cents per passenger mile. It's clear that when Megan speaks of "massive subsidy provided to drivers" she is obviously either making her own false presumption or simply repeating a line from the leftist eco-narrative on transportation.

A real solution would entail:

1. Designing road systems to move traffic. For example, it's the year of Our Lord 2007; is there any sane reason that every traffic light in America isn't synchronized? This is especially important for the environment as a car moving at 45mph down the freeway creates a tiny fraction of the pollution that a car idling in traffic does, and of course for less time over the same distance.

2. Legalize transit. Most metro areas have gobs of laws outlawing or monopolizing various forms of transit, from prohibiting private buses and jitneys to creating sovietized taxi regimes. These barriers not only need to be removed, they need to be replaced with a generic infrastructure framework such as a system of transit stops and rights of way that competing private transit companies can use to provide orderly systems. This also means deregulating fares and allowing transit providers to charge what the market will bear. All other deregulation can't work if price controls on all forms of transit aren't eliminated.

3. Throughout most of the metro areas in the country, home offices are actually illegal to some degree or another through various zoning restrictions. We need to reverse this, and remove local legal barriers to private telecommunications development and deployment.

4. Convert general toll roads and existing HOV lanes into free roads with High Occupancy/Toll lanes. Control traffic on HOT lanes using variable tolls.

5. And finally, after a few years of reform, sell off most public transit systems, bus by bus if necessary. The chart linked above says it all. Maybe someone facing marketplace imperatives and competition can figure out a way to run these systems efficiently.

 

UPDATE: Cool! Megan responds. And I riposte in her comments...

 

Imagine No. 1

Posted by: Peter Jackson on August 21, 2007 10:31:41 PM

Imagine there were no taxes on economic production: no income taxes, inheritance taxes, business taxes, corporate taxes, or excise taxes. Imagine instead that America's taxes were paid solely at the cash register in the form of sales taxes, with exceptions for food, rent and medical care.

Imagine how easy it would be to manage family finances when there were no more tax forms to fill out, no more receipts to save, no more tax professionals to pay, and no more budget-busting checks to write to the government. Families would have far more control over how much tax they paid in any given year by simply regulating their purchases instead of having to actually earn less money to ease their tax burden. What we earned would be ours, what we saved would be ours, period.

Imagine how much easier it would be to be self-employed, and to own and manage our own businesses. We wouldn't have to retain a payroll company to manage our employees' taxes like we have to do today even if we employ only a hand-full of people. No more intentional mis-allocations of resources and financial acrobatics would be required to avoid even greater tax losses. And there would be no more having to predict future income or being forced to prepay future taxes for those of us who employ ourselves, allowing a new Entrepreneur Society to be fully born.

Imagine ultra-full employment as firms from the world over flocked to the US to invent, produce and trade in a vastly simplified and cheaper business environment. The massive new competitive pressures of demand for labor would permanently keep the unemployment rate as close to zero as possible, and force wages to lead the inflation curve instead of follow it. In the United States, employees would cost less in spite of being paid more.

Imagine lower, fairer prices for just about everything we buy when businesses and corporations no longer have to imbed the cost of their taxes in the prices they charge us for their goods and services. Competition would force producers to pass the cost savings to consumers, and sooner rather than later. For many things this would mean lower actual cost even after additional sales taxes are factored in.

And lastly, imagine it no longer being in the government's interest to track the incomes and economic behavior of businesses and individuals. Imagine financial privacy actually being legally possible, with the government having no reason now or in the future to use the computer and communications technology already available to essentially catalog every one of our market transactions, monitoring (and eventually regulating) our economic lives.

It's called freedom, folks, and unlike most things we imagine, we can actually have this if enough of us come together and punch it into the national political narrative.

 

Peace Proceeds from Victory

Posted by: Peter Jackson on August 15, 2007 11:42:45 PM


Over at Q&O, McQ has posted some video from 1991 in which then Secretary of Defense Dick Cheney explains why the United States didn't overthrow Saddam during the Gulf War. And to be fair, the first Bush Administration made what few would disagree was a rational decision. In The first Gulf War, Arab League forces made up 40%+ of the coalition's ground forces that pushed Saddam out of Kuwait. For all we knew at the time, these guys could have started shooting at our guys if we had moved on Saddam. We should also remember that the 1991 war was far more politically tentative here at home, with the Congressional authorization to go to war passing in the Senate by a single vote.

Still, I bet we can all agree that if Bush Sr. had gone in and knocked off Saddam, the 2003 war, approved by a Congressional super-majority, would have never happened, and there would be 3600 American soldiers and countless Iraqis still alive today as a result.

With 20/20 hindsight, it's now obvious Bush Sr. should have secured at the get-go a commitment from Egypt, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, et. al. to finish the job. in 1991 we had virtually destroyed Iraq's entire military, there was no Saddam Fedayeen, Al Queda was in it's infancy, Muqtada al Sadr was eleven years old, and there were hundreds of thousands of Iraqis Saddam had yet to slaughter who most likely would have helped us.

As much as I'd love to say "oh well, live and learn," unfortunately I can't, because frankly it's still an open question whether we've learned anything from allowing Saddam to remain in power.

 

Textbook Economic Illiteracy

Posted by: Peter Jackson on August 06, 2007 1:07:57 PM


Jon Henke and MichaelW seem to think the idea of a bloggers' union is some sort of non sequitur.

Jon:

Collectively bargain with and receive health insurance from who? Who would they go on strike against? To whom does the blogger “shop steward” talk? What constitutes "management" for an independent blogger?

 

MichaelW:

But what of Jon’s question? Who is supposed to pay for these medical benefits and who would the union bloggers bargain with? Very few bloggers get paid as it is, so I don’t understand how forming a union will increase that number, much less wring benefits from the currently non-existent employers.


Why, The Man™ of course, you ignorant running-dog scabs. It's The Man™ with his boot to our throats, keeping us down. Why, if it weren't for The Man™...

You know the old saw about when the only tool you have is a hammer every problem begins to look like a nail? Well all the left has is The Man™, which of course is simply shorthand for power : economic power, political power, what have you. To the left, every social outcome, good or bad ("just" or "unjust") is determined by power. Unfortunately this premise tacitly forces the leftist world-view into an intentionalist box: when good things happen it's because good power—unions, left-wing activist groups, leftist politicians.—prevail over bad power—George Bush, greedy corporate management, neocons—otherwise bad things happen just as bad power intends them to.

When your world is this black and white, creating a "just" social institution like a bloggers' union makes perfect sense if bloggers want good things like job security, "fair" wages, and medical insurance, even if there is no readily identifiable The Man™ working to keep bloggers unpaid and uninsured. To the intentionalist left, it is sufficient for just power to intend it in order to have it, and if it still doesn't happen, well, it's because some unjust power must have thwarted it.

To me, that's the saddest aspect about life on the political left, being forced by their own logic to live in a world of imagined evil.

 

Opportunity Knocking, a Little Harder This Time

Posted by: Peter Jackson on July 13, 2007 3:59:46 PM

Although the supporting article focuses on a hypothetical Bloomberg candidacy, here are some astonishing numbers from a weekend USA Today/Gallup poll:

In a USA TODAY/Gallup Poll taken Friday through Sunday, 58% say the two major parties are doing "such a poor job" that a third party is needed. Just a third say the established parties "do an adequate job of representing the American people."

Wait! There's more:

43% of those surveyed in the new survey identify themselves as independents—significantly more than call themselves Democrats or Republicans. That proportion hasn't been higher in close to a decade.

And finally, the coup de grace:

Neither side now gets high marks from the public. President Bush's disapproval rating reached a high of 66% in the July Gallup Poll, and the June Poll put Congress' disapproval rating even higher, at 71%.

Disapproval ratings. Yow...

WE'RE HERE, WE'RE HERE, WE'RE HERE!

Posted by: Peter Jackson on July 12, 2007 12:07:47 AM

Brink Lindsey and I simply see the same world around us and that's all there is to it. His latest book, The Age of Abundance: How Prosperity Transformed America's Politics and Culture, is on it's way to me as I type this, so I will soon be able to gauge the depth of our common vision, but after reading his supporting pieces in Reason Magazine and now this month's lead essay at Cato Unbound, to say that I'm startled is an understatement. His "soft libertarianism" is my liberal capitalism, and we both see it everywhere. Lindsey does us the additional favor of advancing a well-supported narrative of the social cataclysms that have brought us to where we are now, at the end of end of the American left-right political era.

Of course the political question left to us is: now what? Lindsey notes that the Libertarian Party is a "fringe operation." Will that change? Will the Democrats or the Republicans evolve? Or can another party emerge?

Back in December Lindsey seemed to be placing his bet on the Democrats, but since then their Congress has descended even farther in the polls than Bush. Certainly we've seen both parties evolve and evolve again over the generations, but can they jettison their twentieth century baggage and evolve at the same increasing speed as our social and political cultures?

 

The Official Joke of the Liberal Capitalist Party

Posted by: Peter Jackson on July 06, 2007 2:13:35 PM

Q: What is socialism?

A: The longest road from capitalism to capitalism.

 

Like all of the best jokes, this one kind of makes you want to laugh and cry and the same time, doesn't it?

 

¡Viva la Status Quo!

Posted by: Peter Jackson on June 28, 2007 1:37:31 PM

As with so many policies produced by left-right Washington, the compromise immigration bill that the Senate effectively scuttled today was a lose-lose proposition from the beginning. It contained a one-time benefit for a chunk of our current illegals, but it didn't address the ongoing issues that compel Mexican laborers to stream over the border in the first place. It also contained billions of dollars worth of the same dubious enforcement measures that are currently failing, not the least of which was hundreds of miles of mostly symbolic fencing and a truly disturbing national employee verification system that would have increased the cost of every job in America and made the Federal government the final arbiter of every employment decision made in this country.

Although entrepreneurship is at an all-time high in the US, most of us still work for someone else, and so when the government comes along with a new scheme that demands businesses hand over yet another right to the government, too many Americans think little of it. And then a few years later, when the depressing effects of the new regulations come home to roost, the same Americans get angry and demand yet another government scheme to address it. It's pretty obvious that freedom loses in every revolution of this cycle, and when freedom loses, we all eventually lose.

It would be great if conservatives would realize that the market doesn't care one bit whether the expensive regulation imposed upon it is intended to protect us from Mexican labor or to protect some sub-sub-species of nematode, and thus there is no practical or moral difference between the two, but I just don't see this happening, with immigration nor anything else. Unfortunately for America, as this immigration bill demonstrated, when both of their policies are wrong-headed, any compromise between the two sides of the aisle simply compounds their error instead of counterbalancing each other, and thus the best we can hope for under the current state of affairs is that they both fail. In other words, under the Democrats and Republicans, progress = the status quo. Not very inspiring for the future, is it?

 

 

Yes!

Posted by: Peter Jackson on June 25, 2007 12:59:45 AM

First Whittle, then Rachel Lucas, then the Frogman, and now the best pure blogger ever, Michele Catalano, is back. What a glorious month it's been!

Hat-tip: Cranky-d 

Dancing With Myself

Posted by: Peter Jackson on June 24, 2007 11:30:06 PM

See that little menu item up top under the masthead that says "The Conversation"? Well click it already! It's the new Liberal Capitalist Party forums now at www.liberalcapitalist.org, and I can't decide if they're more cool or groovy. 

Back before 9/11 when I was still a Libertarian, I happened upon the link to a marijuana growing website called OverGrow. In a flash of brilliance it occurred to me that perhaps with pot being illegal and all, it might be easy converting these particular heathen to the Libertarian gospel. Well it turns out that most pot growers are are also pot smokers and as such decidedly leftist, but that's not the point. The forums on that website were a thing to behold, with thousands and thousands of people posting from all over the world in umpteen languages every day. There were pages and pages of conversation threads discussing every topic imaginable, from various growing methods to politics to legal advice to entertainment to just shooting the breeze. And the forum software they used made it easy to navigate the site amongst all of these conversations. Unfortunately the site owners eventually ran afoul of the law in Canada, where it was hosted, a few years after the war on terror commenced and I'd long given up proselytizing for the Libertarian Party. OverGrow was a very huge, very unique community, and it's a shame it's gone.

Anyway, check out The Conversation and help make it just that, a conversation: register and post a knock-knock joke, or tell me I'm full of it or something. We have a lot to talk about.

Preemption, Self-Defense, and Just War

Posted by: Peter Jackson on June 17, 2007 4:33:51 PM

During the Republican presidential debate hosted by CNN a couple of weeks ago, Congressman Ron Paul made a remarkable statement:

“We in the past have always declared war in the defense of our liberties or go to aid of somebody,” he said. “But now we have accepted the principle of preemptive war — we have rejected the Just War theory of Christianity.

“We have to come to our senses about this issue of war and preemption and go back to traditions and our constitution and defend our liberties and defend our rights,” he added.

This is a lovely thought, as evidenced by the 250 supportive comments to the CNN post. It's also factually incorrect:

Are we really to believe that this country never before waged war even though our national security was not being directly threatened? What then was the first of this republic's wars, its war for independence? That colonial rebellion, which would last eight long years, began as a disagreement over tax policy, not because our security was threatened—directly or indirectly.

Skipping lightly over the undeclared naval war with France (1798-1800), the same could be said of the War of 1812, which was a war of our choice. Indeed, at the time it wasn't easy for Americans to decide whether to go to war against France, Great Britain, neither or both.

The Mexican-American War needn't have been fought if this country had been willing to recognize Mexican claims. It, too, was a war of choice, not necessity.

And what about the Spanish-American War? Our national security was scarcely threatened by the decaying Spanish empire, much of which we soon made our own. Nor did we have to put down the Philippine Insurrection that followed — for years.

There was considerable hesitation before the United States chose to enter the First World War, too, under a president who had just campaigned for re-election under the popular slogan, He Kept Us Out of War.

Nor did American involvement in the Second World War begin, as it does in the movies, with the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. For the United States was being drawn into that conflict long before war was formally declared.

 

Read the Rest... (442 words)

Le Bad Ass

Posted by: Peter Jackson on June 14, 2007 11:33:03 PM

Back during the run-up to the Iraq war, there were a handful of blogs I frequently read which helped me anchor my confidence in my own world-view. But the war turned out to be a go, and a year or so later after everyone realized that Iraq wasn't going to be a drive-by, an almost suspicious number these bloggers either experienced life issues, or became simply burned-out from fighting the good fight on the front lines against the left-wing anti-American narrative. Some of these bloggers let their blogs go dormant, some quit them altogether, and some quit blogging about the war and politics and started blogging about some other, less controversial topic.

Dissident Frogman was one of those blogs that just sort of stopped. Thankfully, it now appears the Frogman's hiatus was only temporary, because he's back up and running. Written by an anonymous pro-American Frenchman(!), this blog is big-time funny, occasionally poignant, and very original, including original graphic artwork and animated gifs. He belongs on every liberal capitalist's blogroll and bookmarks collection. Seriously, it's that good, and the new layout is beautiful. Welcome back Frogman! I'll get you on my blogroll as soon as I can remember the password...

 

Democrats vs. America

Posted by: Peter Jackson on June 14, 2007 2:23:05 PM

It seems House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid have written President Bush a stern letter claiming that the US troop "surge" in Iraq is a failure—you know, the troop surge that was scheduled to actually start in full-force right about now.

I'm sorry, but the Democratic Congressional Leadership's nakedly faithless attempt to truck in the blood of American troops for partisan political gain has traversed a breathtaking new low in American politics when they feel compelled to claim defeat for military operations before they've fully commenced. For Democrats, The United States simply has to lose in Iraq. Really, for me, it's simply beyond words. But thankfully it isn't for Dennis Miller (Hat tip: Jeff Goldstein):


The Liberal Capitalist Immigration Solution: Part One

Posted by: Peter Jackson on June 08, 2007 11:00:15 PM

There is no law saying that by permitting foreign nationals to live amongst us and work, we have to put them on the track to permanent residency and citizenship. And if I'm wrong and there is such a law, well, we can change it. One of the reasons that so many Mexicans are willing to come here illegally is because they have no intention of ever becoming American citizens; the ones that want to become citizens are the ones waiting in the decades-long lines to get here legally.

So the first step the US has to take is to separate, both conceptually and legally, work visas from the process of becoming a US citizen. It is in our best interest to allow the former unfettered and slow-walk the latter. Congress should create a work visa that lasts, say, two years—a "W" visa, with "W" being for "work." There should be no restrictive quotas or conditions on a W visa; instead they should be restricted only by charging a price for them. This price should fluctuate based on the "market." We should charge as high a price as possible, but not so high that most Mexican workers decide that it's more cost-affective to enter and work in the US illegally. A good starting point would be to find out how much the coyotes charge and charge half of that figure (remember, the idea isn't to compete with them but to put them out of business). The last I saw, they were charging $1000-1500 per head.

But even though W visas should be easily renewable for an additional price every two years into perpetuity, purchasing them and living and working in the US under their auspices shouldn't entitle the foreign worker to citizen track status—or any other status for that matter, other than "W."

 

Be Careful What You Bitch For

Posted by: Peter Jackson on June 07, 2007 1:44:53 PM

That's it. I'm sick of the sniveling. And the whining. And the absurd histrionics. So let's just do it. Let's build our wall. Let's deport every illegal that can be found. Let's sanction any and all employers we find hiring illegals. I'm ready, but I'm betting the anti-Mexicans aren't.

Let's see how well the right-wing lustre on the immigration restrictionists arguments holds up when the government starts sanctioning farmers out of business by the hundreds and thousands. After all, a majority of Americans oppose "amnesty," right? Let's see how well the thousands of middle-aged construction sector small businessmen like picking up a hammer again after all of their help is deported. Sure, it might pay a little more than it did when they were younger, but will they be more likely to vote Republican? And will the market be affected when housing starts don't merely slow but disappear? Let's watch how the poor and working classes deal with doubling grocery prices to go along with the fuel inflation they've already been struggling against. The inflation won't come because unemployed Americans will demand more than illegal Mexican workers for picking produce and manning feedlots. Prices will go up due to shortages of these goods, at least until foreign agricultural imports can grow enough to take up the slack. From countries like China and...Mexico.

And I'm all for a 2000 mile wall. Let's build it. That is, let us build it, not Mexicans. Let's pass a law banning any Mexican labor or materials from being used to build our all-American wall. And then let's see if it gets built. Let's see how much money it takes to get enough middle-class, legal Americans from behind their PCs in their air-conditioned cubicles and home offices to man a shovel in the Chihuahuan Desert.

I understand that most people are unaccustomed to the idea of actual labor scarcity and the implications of true full employment. The history of the human condition has until now been one of surplus labor punctuated by periods of intense job scarcity known as recessions. Thus many can't get their heads around today's employment reality: We. Are. Out. Of. Workers. Those that used to be on the low end of the totem pole have moved up, and now there is a shortage at the bottom. The problem we have is that the laws of supply and demand don't care if we can figure it out or not. They are going to do what they always do, regardless. Like all natural laws, they have no conscience.

Now some may be thinking to yourselves, "but I thought all you free-market types said that keeping illegals out is impossible? How are farms going to go out of business unless these barriers to immigration actually work?" Well ultimately they won't be kept out, or at least not most of them after they discover the holes in the new system and fake documents become more ubiquitous. What will cause the economic damage is the disruption caused by enforcement. When the INS comes and rounds up all the illegals picking your lettuce, what is the lettuce going to do? Patiently wait until you can scrounge up other workers to resume the harvest? No, it's going to quickly become unsalable, which means you aren't going to make this season's payments. To many farmers, it won't matter that enough illegals will figure out how to get here in time to pick next year's crop. For these farmers (and meatpackers, and landscapers, and contractors, and small restaurant owners, etc.), there won't be a next year.

 

Site Redesign

Posted by: Peter Jackson on May 27, 2007 9:44:36 PM

The list of changes I've wanted to make to LiberalCapitalist.com had grown over the last year to the point that it was making me nuts, so I finally rolled up my sleeves and implemented most of them. I simplified the document structure and eliminated several sections that were essentially orphaned.

The biggest change was the elimination of the creaky old Xaraya forum in favor of the shiny fancy Simple Machines forum (SMF). You can get there by clicking on "The Conversation" in the menu above. As soon as I figure out how to move it, I'll shift it to the liberalcapitalist.org domain which I also have registered. There is a small inconvenience introduced with the change I must apologize for in advance, and that is if you've registered here on the blog your registration doesn't carry over to The Conversation, so you will have to re-register there in order to post in the forums. I'm afraid I couldn't migrate existing accounts either because the passwords of users are actually (gasp) secure. The only reason I've used registration here on the blog is because if I don't the site becomes quickly inundated with comment spam. As soon as I can figure out a way to do it without exposing myself to the tender mercies of the spambots, I'll enable guest commenting on the blog and do away with its registration altogether. If anyone has any comments, criticisms or suggestions, leave them below or email me at the address listed in the contact block at the bottom-right. Anyhoo, this site is now officially considered out of beta. Cool


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