Just the facts, ma’am

— The best cure for Anglosphere idiocy is data, so here’s some on the British National Party, the UK’s equivalent of Le Pen’s French National Party. At least one BNP candidate for parliament did as well as Le Pen in recent elections, accoriding to the BBC News: Mr Griffin, a Cambridge law graduate, is pictured … Continue reading “Just the facts, ma’am”

— The best cure for Anglosphere idiocy is data, so here’s some on the British National Party, the UK’s equivalent of Le Pen’s French National Party. At least one BNP candidate for parliament did as well as Le Pen in recent elections, accoriding to the BBC News:

Mr Griffin, a Cambridge law graduate, is pictured on the BNP website in a family shot with his wife and four children. However, no mention is made of the fact that he too has been convicted of inciting racial hatred.


At the general election in June, he stood for the seat of Oldham West and Royton, where weeks earlier racial tension had led to rioting, and won 16.4% of the vote.

The alienated right-wing fringe is all over Europe, not just on the Continent.

Britain’s lack of patriotic spirit

— In one of his more bizarre applications of one-size-fits-all, jingoistic theory, Mr. Anglophile jumps through obscure hoops explaining why there’s not a Le Pen in Great Britain at the moment: Why is Britain such an exception? Two reasons stand out. One is the lack of a nationalist tradition of the Continental type, in which … Continue reading “Britain’s lack of patriotic spirit”

— In one of his more bizarre applications of one-size-fits-all, jingoistic theory, Mr. Anglophile jumps through obscure hoops explaining why there’s not a Le Pen in Great Britain at the moment:

Why is Britain such an exception? Two reasons stand out. One is the lack of a nationalist tradition of the Continental type, in which adulation of the nation-state becomes a pseudo-religion justifying the submersion of the individual in a greater cause. Absent this, patriotism becomes merely a statement of sentiment, a love of community, place and history drawing on elemental emotions.

As if Brits and Americans are any less patriotic than Continentals. Let me refer you to Mr. Nick Denton, that extraordinary Internet troll, who offers a much more sensible explanation for the fact that Brits and Americans don’t vote for Anglosphere Supremacists:

Much as I’d like to believe in the unique qualities of the Anglo-American tradition, there’s one obvious reason for the absence of far-right parties in the UK: the electoral system. A first-past-the-post system, which applies in the US and the UK, punishes smaller political groupings. So far-right voters are forced to subsume themselves within the main conservative party. If the UK and the US had proportional representation or two-round presidential systems, they would have their Le Pens.

Think about it: if Bush were running in a national election against Pat Buchanan with no other choices allowed, wouldn’t Pat most likely poll 15-20% of the vote? He’d get all the far right, and some of the disaffected left who simply don’t want to vote for the mainstream candidate, so of course he would. While it’s an amusing parlor game to connect medieval institutions with object-oriented programming, there’s nothing to it but snake-oil, and it only appeals to people fundamentally ignorant of world culture and politics and correct hyperlink structure.

Monopolies are good for you

— Libertarian bloggers are real excited about the Francis Fukuyama Op-Ed in the WSJ mounting a weak attack on libertarians for their anti-war, pro-cloning viewpoints. Granted that we all love the conceit of “proving” the correctness of our positions by ravaging a strawman, Fukuyama’s argument is most flawed in its assumption that libertarians had any … Continue reading “Monopolies are good for you”

— Libertarian bloggers
are real excited
about the Francis Fukuyama

Op-Ed in the WSJ
mounting a weak attack on libertarians for their
anti-war,
pro-cloning viewpoints.
Granted that we all love the conceit of “proving” the correctness of our
positions by ravaging a strawman, Fukuyama’s argument is most flawed in its
assumption that libertarians had any standing to lose on Sept. 11th in the first
place.

In all the major policy discussions of our time, including welfare,
drug policy, regulation of monopolies, global warming, and the encroachment
of Washington on the sovereignty of state and local government, libertarians are
non-combatants. While the rest of the spectrum is engaged in arguing, for
example, about how best to structure a welfare system so as to promote
self-dependence, libertarians simply argue that there shouldn’t be a welfare
system. And while the rest of the spectrum debates the relative utility of drug
courts and treatment to incarceration for drug offenses, libertarians simply
argue that there should be no drug laws. And while the rest of the spectrum
argues about what types of cloning and genetic engineering should be restricted,
libertarians simply say that the government should have no say in decisions that
could have more lasting impact on life on this planet than any technology ever
developed. It’s strange.


There are some policy debates where libertarians provide much-needed levity,
of course, which the Cato Institute does by arguing novel positions. Global
warming is a reality, Cato says, but it’s good for us (link not available because
their site’s down.)



Live from the WTC
extends libertarian buffoonery into a new sphere with
this argument that monopolies are good for us:

So in the course of the discussion referenced below, Richard Bennett asked
why libertarians fall silent on the subject of antitrust. And in the course of
answering that (short answer: it doesn’t do any good), I came across a very
interesting piece of data: after the break up of Standard Oil, prices rose.

Actually, I pointed out that libertarians don’t want to talk about monopolies,
since one had said they don’t exist and another that they’re all government-created
before Megan said you can’t do anything about them anyway. Reading her piece,
it’s not clear whether she means gasoline or kerosene prices rose after the SO
break up, but it’s certainly an entertaining viewpoint. Megan also engages in
another fun project, proving that global warming is no big deal by ripping the
Kyoto Treaty. Frankly, I have no problem with the fact that Kyoto is a bogus
approach to dealing with global warming, if there is such a thing, but its defects
don’t tell us anything at all about climate change and the models thereof.


It hurts me to see intelligent people give their minds over to cultish systems,
and there’s no doubt in my mind that libertarianism, in its native guise or when
dressed-up as “Objectivism” or as “Dynamism” is a cultish system, providing
simple answers to complex questions and alienating its practitioners from the
mainstream. It’s always the smart people that are drawn to these quick-fix,
answer-to-everything, pseudo-philosophical systems, of course, because of their
superficial intellectual appeal and their many labor-saving virtues. The thing that
libertarians never seem to grasp is that all mainstream political philosophy is
concerned with liberty, but the differences come in when we consider what things
are the genuine threats to liberty, and how to best limit their effects.

But liberty
isn’t the sole aim of political philosophy: justice is right up there among the top
principles as well, and the most interesting (and important) debates consider the
tension between these two competing values. Libertarians, by focusing solely on
freedom, are literally one-armed men (or people, if you must) in these debates,
and their one-dimensionality leads toward a kind of fanaticism. But it does save
time, of course, knowing what you believe even without understanding the issues.


So what’s up with these new-fangled variations on libertarianism, like Ayn Rand’s
“Objectivism” and Postrel’s “Dynamism?” While they may make some sort of
contribution to the libertarian ideal that I don’t get because I’m not immersed
in the doctrinal struggles of that movement, on the face of it they appear to be
little more than cults of personality centered around a would-be dominatrix.
Postrel says all the traditional distinctions of political philosophy are wrong, and we
simply have to be concerned about dynamism and stasis. Excuse me, but I’m not
personally inclined to throw out Plato, Aquinas, Burke, Voltaire, Locke, Hayek,
and Mansfield just because some redhead from Dallas who likes sexy shoes says
they’re like so last century, dude. This is fundamentally a false distinction, because
nobody seriously argues that change for its own sake is a virtue. We have too
much power for that.

So the message is pretty simple, but hopefully not too
simple: if you want to debate politics, learn something about it. If you then want
to toss aside the Western tradition, fine and dandy, at least you know what you’re
discarding. Similarly, if you want to debate social policy, learn something about
it, don’t just come crashing in with a doctrinaire viewpoint and a small set of received
ideas. That’s not too thuggish, is it?

Oracle owns Gray Davis

— THE big political story du jour in California is the $95M, no-bid contract Oracle signed with the state a few weeks ago. Go to Rough & Tumble and see the overwhelming mass of links to it. R & T, BTW, is the the pioneer political blog, the best place to get the lowdown on … Continue reading “Oracle owns Gray Davis”

— THE big political story du jour in California is the $95M, no-bid contract Oracle signed with the state a few weeks ago. Go to Rough & Tumble and see the overwhelming mass of links to it. R & T, BTW, is the the pioneer political blog, the best place to get the lowdown on California politics, and indispensible reading for everyone interested in the politics of this great state.

Simon leads Davis in polls

— I read this TheAmericanProwler Article on somebody’s blog yesterday (I forget whose) but it’s a major deal: Thanks to the anti-Simon press corps, few Californians know that Simon has been leading Gray Davis in at least five polls. The article says the ONLY poll that shows Davis in the lead, the notoriously unreliable Field … Continue reading “Simon leads Davis in polls”

— I read this TheAmericanProwler Article on somebody’s blog yesterday (I forget whose) but it’s a major deal:

Thanks to the anti-Simon press corps, few Californians know that Simon has been leading Gray Davis in at least five polls.

The article says the ONLY poll that shows Davis in the lead, the notoriously unreliable Field poll, is the one the papers are carrying. The thing is, the papers always cover the Field poll, unreliable or not, so this may not be a smoking gun, exactly.

Hayek interview

— Alexa, the Amazon/Google service that tracks your web surfing and builds a soft web of suggestions, decided I would like this Reason magazine — F.A. Hayek Interview. She was right. From the 1920s until the ’40s, Hayek and his countryman Ludwig von Mises argued that socialism was bound to fail as an economic system … Continue reading “Hayek interview”

Alexa, the Amazon/Google service that tracks your web surfing and builds a soft web of suggestions, decided I would like this Reason magazine — F.A. Hayek Interview. She was right.

From the 1920s until the ’40s, Hayek and his countryman Ludwig von Mises argued that socialism was bound to fail as an economic system because only free markets–powered by individuals wheeling and dealing in their own interest–could generate the information necessary to intelligently coordinate social behavior. In other words, freedom is a necessary input into a prosperous economy. But even as Hayek’s elegant essay extolling market prices as the signals of a rational economy was hailed as a seminal contribution upon its publication in the American Economic Review in 1945, shrewd socialist theorists proved to the satisfaction of their peers that central planning could be streamlined so as to solve, with really big computers, the very information problem that F. A. Hagek had so courteously exposed.

She must have figured this out from reading the comments on Silicon Valley Politics.

Silicon Valley Politics

— Computer people in Silicon Valley are mainly very clever, but they’re weird about politics. Demographics say that upper-middle class people with college degrees who live in the suburbs should be moderate Republicans, but Republicans of any stripe are rare here, mainly confined to the venture capitalists and some corporate management, like John Chambers at … Continue reading “Silicon Valley Politics”

— Computer people in Silicon Valley are mainly very clever, but they’re weird about politics. Demographics say that upper-middle class people with college degrees who live in the suburbs should be moderate Republicans, but Republicans of any stripe are rare here, mainly confined to the venture capitalists and some corporate management, like John Chambers at Cisco.

While engineers in other parts of the country conform to their demographic, Silicon Valley’s rank-and-file tend to be split between Chomskyites, libertarians, and feminist Democrats. Chomsky appeals to people like hardware engineers who believe that human society has to look like the systems they design, where predictability comes out of complexity when big feedback loops govern the operation of many small circuits. Chomskyites, like all paranoid schizophrenics, are fundamentally lazy and want an all-embracing explanation without doing the work it takes to get literate on subjects as complicated as politics, culture, and media.

Libertarians understand at some level that there need to be rules for the masses of dumb people who predominate numerically, but they don’t feel that these rules should apply to them, and besides they don’t like keeping their rooms clean, so they’re caught in a sophomoric political philosophy. While I have some sympathy for that point of view, at the end of the day I realize that November votes for third parties are throw-aways, so I reject it. Libertarianism isn’t so much a philosophy as it is a non-philosophy that basically says “I’m too clever for this debate, so screw you, I’m going fishing.” Fishing is good, but it’s not politics.

Feminist democrats are the easiest to understand, because they’re just lonely boys trying hard to get laid in a sub-culture where males outnumber females about 20 to 1.

The one thing all these folks seem to agree on is that complicated human problems should have solutions simpler than your average hunk of application code, and when this thought takes hold in concrete form, the results are pathetic. They elect people like Mike Honda, a former schoolteacher with a 2-digit IQ, to Congress over much smarter Reeps like Jim Cuneen simply because Honda’s a Democrat, and they support people like Boxer, Barbara Lee, and Pete Stark, even though you’d be embarrassed to bring any of them home for Thanksgiving dinner.

A particularly sharp example of Silicon Valley political naivete is the essay on Dave Winer’s blog titled “Sharon Must Go.” Winer is the king of the Elf Clan that others have called the San Francisco web kids and I used to call the “Font Kiddiez.” He’s a common phenomenon in this valley, the accidental millionaire who made it big selling Mac applications in the 80s when nobody really quite knew what, if anything, the Mac was good for. He amuses himself now, while living off his interest, by building blogging tools. Here’s the essence of his argument:

I try to see both sides. Sharon went out of his way to press Palestinian buttons. He’s as responsible for the terrorist bombings, imho, as Arafat is.

The effort to see “both sides” doesn’t include any attempt to understand why Israel might like to avoid being wiped off the map, and the beef with Sharon seems to be a lurking suspicion that the Prime Minister is a troll who “punches buttons.” Winer also doesn’t quite seem to realize that the only possible successor to Sharon in the wings right now is Netanyahu, a more hawkish man than Sharon himself. And that moral equivalency thing is simply pathetic.

I find all of this disturbing because I realize that this Winer character, for all of his obvious flaws, is way smarter than the average human, so if he’s dead wrong about the war in the Middle East, how can the average man get it? Probably, because the average man doesn’t have as many mechanisms of defense going on as Winer, he’s better able to grasp the obvious. Whether you think the establishment of the state of Israel was a good thing or a bad thing in 1948, sensible people realize that that’s a done deal, and in 2002 the Israeli people have a right to live in peace and security, by whatever means are necessary. And Sharon’s personality isn’t really a factor.

I don’t see this piece going into Blog Nation, frankly.

Update: Dave comments on today’s J. D. Lasica piece on media East and West, and misses the point entirely, in a predictably navel-gazing rant confined to the Tech press. Sigh. Real soon now, I’m going to write about why the Tech press failed to warn us about the real nature of the Dot Com Swindle, a scam so vast it makes Enron look like small potatoes.

The Oracle swindle

— A couple of weeks ago, the Mercury News broke the story of a $95M no-bid, sweetheart deal between California and Oracle for some software that few agencies wanted or needed. Gray Davis, who’s established the reputation for being an autocrat who micromanages all aspects of state government, is now pretending to be outraged, as … Continue reading “The Oracle swindle”

— A couple of weeks ago, the Mercury News broke the story of a $95M no-bid, sweetheart deal between California and Oracle for some software that few agencies wanted or needed. Gray Davis, who’s established the reputation for being an autocrat who micromanages all aspects of state government, is now pretending to be outraged, as Dan Walters explains:

It stretches credulity to the snapping point for Davis’ spinners to insist that the governor was completely unaware that his administration was signing a massive software deal with Oracle, especially because Oracle delivered a $25,000 campaign contribution to the Democratic governor’s treasury just days after the contract was signed.

But the question that’s now begging an answer is who can investigate this deal that’s not already tainted by it. Probably not Att’y Gen. Bill (gasbag) Lockyer:

Davis, as part of his effort to deflect attention from himself, says he wants Attorney General Bill Lockyer to investigate what happened. But Lockyer received a $25,000 check from Oracle less than a month after the contract was signed last May, and leaving it to Lockyer is a surefire way to keep the matter bottled up until after the election.


The Legislature should pursue this matter vigorously — as vigorously as it did the scandal enveloping former Republican Insurance Commissioner Chuck Quackenbush — but if it is unwilling to do so, perhaps the U.S. attorney’s office should be brought into the case.

I concur, and it would be nice if the indictments went out about Oct. 1 or so.

The economy, stupid

— U.S. Economy Surged at 5.8% Rate in the First Quarter WASHINGTON (AP)– The economy, knocked down by last year’s recession and terror attacks, rocketed back in the first quarter at an annual growth rate of 5.8 percent. Bye bye, recession.

U.S. Economy Surged at 5.8% Rate in the First Quarter

WASHINGTON (AP)– The economy, knocked down by last year’s recession and terror attacks, rocketed back in the first quarter at an annual growth rate of 5.8 percent.

Bye bye, recession.