Monday, December 31, 2012

Dreams of the sovereign



We’re an odd bunch, we Americans. We prize our individuality, our liberty; we compete, we like to win. But when the situation demands, we coalesce and pull together, then separate again as the crisis passes. World War II was a great example – individual liberty was sacrificed to the greater good of protecting and perpetuating our country, our values, our way of life. We willingly bought War Bonds, submitted to rationing, hung blackout curtains, and joined the services in droves. But after the war, sailors and soldiers and Marines shed their uniforms and returned to the bustling, unruly competition of civilian life.

The key to this collectivization is its voluntary and temporary nature. When we recognize a threat to “us,” we willingly take up the traces. But when subservience is tyrannically imposed, we bristle, resist, and subvert. It's human nature. Note the Arab Spring, the French Revolution, and our own Revolutionary War.

Societies vary in the degree of individualism permitted. For instance, under Islamist rule, thou darest not be Christian. In China, you must not speak your mind unless you are in alignment with the Party. Even in England and Canada, you may be prosecuted for the offense of “offending” another. And many countries on Earth demand that their citizens be disarmed (hint – subservient).

Much to the dismay of the United Nations, we in the United States come from a much different mindset. Our Founding Fathers, reacting to the strictures of the English sovereign, turned that paradigm on its head and declared that “all men are created equal.” Gasp – a concept unknown in the world at that time, and still unknown to vast reaches of the Earth today.

We have something special, folks. Think about it. You are the boss of your life. If you want to be Christian, so be it. If you want to be Muslim, that’s cool. “None of the above” is a perfectly acceptable alternative as well. The government is subordinate to you – you are the sovereign!

So how does a nation of over 300 million individual sovereigns accomplish anything? In spite of the protestations of those of the liberal bent, our system rewards individual effort and risk taking, and the sum of those parts is enormously powerful in giving us all the benefit of a brisk, growing, and munificent engine of wealth. Oh, to be poor in America – the reason that our borders are overrun.

Financial dislocations, depressions, recessions are wholly due to foolish governmental interventions. There are no exceptions. If we were free to each pursue our individual dreams, the sum of our efforts would provide increasing wealth and employment and security. It is government policies, distorting market forces, which cause us pain. Social engineering, the holy grail of progressives, is our bane. With the exception of equal rights for all humans (black, white, female, male, gay, or Episcopalian), they are wrong on all other counts.

Leave us our individual dreams; have faith that the collective result will be excellent. We are each, after all, sovereign.

Tuesday, December 18, 2012

Let's control the maniacs



Insane Asylum, Jacksonville IL - 1901
First, we must agree to set political correctness aside. It is a scourge that inhibits critical thought and open, honest debate. After the enormous evil visited upon Sandy Hook Elementary School, political correctness will not serve us well. We must be brutally honest with ourselves.

Our culture has changed – there is no denying it.

And the statistics are very odd. David Kopel, writing in theWall Street Journal on 12/18/12, cites a University of Alabama analysis of a New York Police Department study of “active shooters.” While the nation’s overall homicide rate has dropped by over half since 1980, the number of mass shootings has increased markedly: 18 incidents in the 1980s, 54 in the 1990s, and 87 in the 2000s. Let that sink in – we are far safer overall than we were in the 1980s, but the number of high profile, media-splashed, mass shootings has increased markedly.

How are we going to address this problem? We must start by recognizing what has happened to us.

Coarsening of culture

The  violence in movies, video games, rap videos, etc, is so commonplace as to become acceptable, even normal. Each successive movie seems bent on exceeding the visceral impact of its predecessors. Is it any accident that James Holmes, the shooter in Aurora, Colorado, dyed his hair red and told arresting officers that he was “The Joker?”

Copycat acts fueled by the 24x7 news-hungry media

It seems that many of these shooters are driven by a need for recognition. A man was stopped by the Maine State Police in July with clippings of the aforementioned Aurora Batman massacre. He had just seen the Batman movie, was heavily armed, and was on his way to New York where he planned to kill his former boss.

Shutdown of mental hospitals

As far back as October 30, 1984, the New York Times recognized that we had a serious problem. In an article titled “How Release of Mental Patients Began”, the Times laments “The policy that led to the release of most of the nation's mentally ill patients from the hospital to the community is now widely regarded as a major failure.” The politicians’ zeal to close mental intuitions was supported by the theory that mental illness could be chemically managed. (And at a far lower cost – that was the attraction). Only problem was, it wasn’t working.

Another scary statistic – fully half of the active shooters mentioned above were proved mentally defective. How many of the remainder had mental problems as well? Is it an accident that young, white, socially maladjusted males make up the majority of the shooters?

Ejection of Christianity from the public square

In an apparent misreading of the First Amendment, thinking that we were guaranteed “freedom from religion”, liberals have rushed to eliminate religious influences from the public square. Moral relativism, preached by secular humanists, claims that Christian values are in no way superior to, say, the Taliban interpretation of Sharia law that justifies the subjugation, beating, and shooting of women who do not submit.

We have created a void of values which, in the face of the other cultural influences above, is very dangerous.

Imaginary ”gun free zones”

Hold firm to your grip on the pledge to avoid political correctness. This one is tough. Almost all of the mass shootings studied by the New York Police Department occurred in imaginary gun free zones. An actual gun free zone requires metal detectors and armed guards to enforce it – witness our airports since 9/11. An imaginary gun free zone is declared by government fiat or corporate policy, but is not enforced. Prime examples are shopping malls, movie theaters, schools, and post offices.

The characteristic of imaginary gun free zones is that law abiding citizens obey the rules while criminals, maniacs, and other evildoers do not. This creates all the conditions required for a massacre – defenseless citizens become the prey of armed perpetrators. As good as our first responders are, they just can’t get there in time.

How can we proceed?

So what are we to do? The prescription seems obvious. We need a renewal of ethical values to counteract the inevitable coarsening of culture. Whether these values are religion-based or not, they must abhor the taking of life and be inculcated early into our young.

We need to be judicious in how early and often our youth are exposed to violence in the media and on the internet. A tough problem, but one that deserves serious debate. Hollywood will push back vigorously.

We need to readdress the availability of mental health services and long term institutionalization of the violently insane. It is crazy that anyone, even with no insurance, can get treatment for a broken leg, but parents with a disturbed teenager have few options.

Where gun free zones are desired, we must create actual ones, not just imaginary. Metal detectors and armed guards are required to do so. If a government agency or corporation requires you to give up your means of defense, then it becomes responsible for defending you.

And we must look to our politicians to lead. Governor Lincoln Chafee of Rhode Island, in his foolish eagerness to banish Christmas, and hence Christ and Christian values, from the public square, is not part of the solution. Governor Deval Patrick of Massachusetts, in his equally unwise bid to eliminate long-term psychiatric beds, is likewise part of the problem.

This is not an easy problem to solve. And focusing on guns alone is a dangerous red herring. These young perpetrators are crazy but not stupid – there are many other ways to wreak havoc. The root cause must be addressed – maniac control.

Tuesday, December 4, 2012

The unintended consequences of Obamacare



President Obama signing the Affordable Care Act

What do these disparate items have in common?

          -  9.9 horsepower outboard motors
          -  50-seat regional jets
          -  29 hour work week

All are unintended consequences of government actions.

For instance, the great state of Maine, as well as other jurisdictions, require that 10 horsepower outboard motors and above be registered (and therefore taxed). What was the reaction of manufacturers? Of course, they detuned their 10 horsepower models slightly and rebranded them as 9.9 hp. Now, in the marketplace, 10 horsepower motors are extremely rare and 9.9 models plentiful.

The Federal Aviation Agency has a safety regulation (FAR 121 section 391) that specifies the following:

“For airplanes having a seating capacity of more than 50 but less than 101 passengers – two flight attendants [are required]”

Airlines could save a lot of money by using only one flight attendant in a 50 seat aircraft. And indeed they did, ordering the Bombardier CRJ200 in the 50 seat configuration in great numbers even though the aircraft was capable of carrying 52 passengers.

And finally, the Affordable Care Act (“Obamacare”) defines full time employees as those working 30 hours or more, and requires that those employees must be provided with full health insurance coverage.

“For purposes of section 4980H, a “full-time employee” is an employee who is employed on average at least 30 hours per week.”

So, once again, the reaction of the marketplace is predictable. The Huffington Post reports that the “Community College Of Allegheny County will cut the hours for some instructors to avoid paying for their health insurance coverage under new Affordable Care Act rules.” CCAC President Alex Johnson announced that they will be cutting the hours of 400 employees to less than 30 hours to avoid paying for health insurance, thereby saving $6 million.

But the surprising thing here is the comments posted in response to the Huffington Post article by their audience of typically liberal readers. Here is an example, directed at CCAC:

“If you can't afford to pay for employee benefits, don't start a business. Period.”

So let’s analyze this sentiment. This particular individual, representing the voting bloc that reelected President Obama, is advocating for higher unemployment.

How about this one?

“This is being portrayed as a failure of Obamacare, but it's more a failure of inadequate financing of state run higher education.”

This Obama voter is calling for higher tuition rates, a burden that parents and students already find intolerable.

And CCAC is only the tip of the iceberg. Similar stories are emerging regarding many other companies including Walmart and numerous others. For instance, the New American reports:

“According to the Orlando Sentinel, Darden Restaurants, Inc., operator of casual dining chains such as Olive Garden, Red Lobster, and LongHorn Steakhouse, is doing just that [reducing hours].”

The Affordable Care Act was validated by the Supreme Court and cemented by the election of 2012. The only surprise is that Mr. Obama’s supporters are surprised by its unintended consequences. Apparently, the 1,017 page bill should have been read before being voted into law.

Many liberals are now calling for additional legislation to prohibit companies from reducing hours to avoid health insurance costs. Proof only that big government always leads to even bigger government.