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The Grumpy Pundit | Pursuing Happiness And Cursing The Darkness. | Page 11

Thinking Point #8: A Modest Proposal

In 2010, US imports totaled just under $2 trillion. A 2% tariff on imports would generate about $40 billion in revenue. That would be sufficient to give each of the 13.3 million unemployed Americans a $1500 worker retraining grant. Make companies pay in a reasonable amount (say $10,000) for every American job they move overseas and even more money becomes available.

If 100% of the tariff were passed on to consumers, that would add ten cents to the cost of a $5 t-shirt, or $500 to the cost of a $25,000 car (about the same as the ‘destination charge’).

The point is not to seriously impede trade, but to add a tiny bit of economic friction at the country’s borders, to the benefit of American companies and workers. Of course, none of the people with the power to make this happen have any interest in such things, so don’t hold your breath.

What Everybody Knows

There’s a good article over on the Washington Post about what happens when a successful adult tries to take a 10th grade standardized test. He concludes:

“It makes no sense to me that a test with the potential for shaping a student’s entire future has so little apparent relevance to adult, real-world functioning.

“I can’t escape the conclusion that decisions about the [state test] in particular and standardized tests in general are being made by individuals who lack perspective and aren’t really accountable.”

Well, of course. The public education system isn’t about preparing kids academically to be successful adults. It is about keeping them out of the house for 13 years so their parents can work, conditioning them to accept performing dull, pointless work under conditions where rigid conformity is required, and churning out adults who are ready to do pointless scut-work for low pay in the service of their corporate overlords.

Everyone knows that.

James Shelley on Citizenship

James Shelley, interesting as always, has a piece up today on citizenship in the digital age. He is quite right in practically everything he says there, but I think there’s a point he’s missing.

Things may be different in whatever European Socialist country James lives in (that’s a joke; he lives in Canada), but here in the good old US of A we don’t go in for that ‘democracy’ stuff.

“Democracy is not simply about elections: it is about collectively exerting our collective influence for our collective good.”

Yes, yes; all true. The problem is that in the US (and, all joking aside, it may be different in other western democracies, but I don’t think it’s much different), the great mass of citizens have no collective influence. Not only do we have no say in government policy, as likely as not we are not even told what government policy is, or the reasons for it. (All in the name of ‘security’ of course. Whose security they don’t say.)

Democracy is reduced to ticking boxes on an election ballot because that is all we have, and even that is a farce. Like a Roman citizen of the 3rd century, we can dutifully elect our Praetors and celebrate our Consuls, and pretend that those things matter, but the real power is in the hands of a handful of people who pay no attention to the needs or voice of the masses, and they are not going to give it up willingly.

Before we can exercise our collective influence, we must take it back. That process took about 1800 years after the fall of the Roman Republic. I hope we can move a little more quickly this time.

The First Amendment to the US Constitution

“Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.”

That is what was written a couple of centuries ago. Now, we live in a country where bribing politicians is Constitutionally protected free speech, but peaceably assembling to petition the government for a redress of grievances will get you swarmed with riot police.

Have a nice day.

Hobby Lobby

Is politics a hobby?

Yes, James. Of course it is. I’m just waiting for each party to pick a sports team to identify with, though that may not be necessary. We already have the Blues and the Reds.

What’s In Your Wallet?

Eddie Smith over at Practically Efficient has a nice post about slimming down your unnecessarily large wallet.

I dumped most of my wallet years ago myself, so I’m pretty much with Eddie here, except for one thing. Scans of your auto insurance card? You’re going to hand your iPhone to the mechanics who need to see your insurance before doing the annual state inspection? You’re going to hand your iPhone to a cop who’s pulled you over? You know that that gives him access to everything on your iPhone, right?

I’ll carry a copy of my insurance card, and if I lose it, it only takes a minute to print out a new copy. It’s a small price to pay for keeping everything else safe.

Occupy This

Some people have claimed that the rich financiers on Wall Street are the wrong target for protesters; that those people haven’t done anything wrong. They’re not out to hurt anyone, they’re just really good at getting rich. Should we punish them for that?

The problem is, that’s not true. The super-rich Wall Street bankers didn’t simply get rich by playing the game better than everyone else; they changed the rules to favor them. Those government agency that don’t oversee the banks like they’re supposed to? That’s because the agencies are run by investment bankers. (It’s actually quite common to have an agency that is supposed to regulate an industry staffed by representatives of that industry. They’re the ones who have a sustained interest in what the regulating industry does.) They bribe our elected officials to get their taxes cut, and laws passed to loosen the regulation of their business. They get taxpayer bailouts to cover their losses when their wild gambling spree finally collapses.

The competitive economy isn’t a matter of sitting down at a table with a poker player who is more skilled than you. It’s a matter of sitting down at a poker table with a player who may or may not be more skilled than you, but who can–and will–unilaterally change the rules to favor himself as the game goes on. It’s tough for anyone else to win that game.

If the Occupy Wall Street protesters sometimes sound as if they don’t know what they want, or if their goals sound foolish, that’s because of the nature of the problem. It’s impossible to reform the system because only the people benefiting from the system as it is now can do the reforming; the interlocking marriage of government and big business/finance can’t be broken from within the system, because they control the whole system. Any suggestion for reform sounds absurd when reform is impossible.

My own absurd idea (which couldn’t possibly be implemented, but which is no less absurd than any other attempt at reform) would be to fill offices by lot. Pick people at random from the pool of registered voters. Sure, some of the people you get will be corrupt, or crazy, or stupid, but some won’t be. The system we have now practically guarantees that _only_ the corrupt, crazy, or stupid get in. Adding 12 randomly chosen Tribunes of the Plebs, with laws making it high treason to give any Tribune or member of their family a bribe or ‘valuable gift’ would be a nice bonus. Corporations would still find a way to buy them, but having to buy all 12, and a different set every year, would get expensive.

(Tribunes of the Plebs are another Roman institution, one our Founding Fathers didn’t want to touch. We got a House of Representatives instead. In American terms, all 12 Tribunes would have the same Veto power as the President, plus the power to bypass Congress and bring legislation before the American people directly. Awesome, huh?)

Crazy? Of course. But what isn’t?

Thinking Point #7: What You Pay For Is What You Get

What we, as a society, want from our domestic security apparatus (the TSA, Homeland Security, the armed forces, etc) is for them to keep us safe, to let us feel secure.

The security apparatus, however, is rewarded when we feel unsafe and insecure. When danger is around every corner, they need bigger budgets and more power to keep us safe.

What we, as a society, want from our healthcare system is for it to keep us healthy.

The healthcare providers, however, are rewarded when we are sick. If you are healthy and never have to go to the doctor, your doctor doesn’t make any money.

See the problem? Imagine if firefighters got paid only when buildings caught on fire.

When there is a disconnect between what society at large wants from an organization, and what actually benefits the organization and its members, society is going to be poorly served by that organization.

Thinking Point #6

Do the citizens of a democracy have the right to know what their government is doing in their name (and with their money)?

TSA: Broken From The Start

The real problem with the TSA isn’t that they have stupid rules and arbitrary rules that don’t do anything to protect us. The real problem is that that’s the only way they can work.

The TSA is focused on stuff. They have a list of stuff that they’re not supposed to allow on the plane. That seems like an easy way to keep air travelers safe, right? Keep dangerous things off the plane, then there won’t be any danger.

The problem is that dangerous stuff isn’t the problem. A person could get on an airplane with a box full of hand grenades, an M-60 machine gun, a knife, a sword, and even the most dangerous thing of all, a pair of nail clippers, and that flight would not be in any slightest danger at all if that person doesn’t intend any harm.

But a person with evil intent could wreak havoc with a pencil and piece of string.

There is an old saying that there are no dangerous weapons, only dangerous people. That is absolutely the case when you are talking about things like airplane security. Taking things away from people who don’t intend to do any harm does absolutely nothing for passenger security. (In fact, it may do harm, by reducing the passengers’ ability to protect themselves from the people of evil intent. Imagine if the non-terrorist passengers on 9/11 had all been carrying pistols.)

I’ll say that again: Taking ‘dangerous’ stuff away from good people is totally useless.

Taking dangerous stuff away from bad people isn’t all that useful either, because practically anything can be dangerous. The trick isn’t to try and stop dangerous stuff; the trick is to stop dangerous people.

The TSA is completely hopeless at that. They don’t even try.

People say that the Israeli method of doing airport security wouldn’t work here because of the volume of air travel, and that’s true enough. The lesson to be learned from how the Israelis do security isn’t to copy everything they do, but look at where their emphasis is. The Israelis do some scanning for bombs and the like, but most of their passenger screening efforts are on looking at the people, not the stuff.

That is what we don’t do, but what we should. There are no dangerous weapons, only dangerous people. The TSA isn’t interested in dangerous people, only in looking at their list of dangerous stuff and making sure nothing on that list gets past them. (Though they’re not even very good at that.)

That is why the TSA must go. It is a broken organization; no matter how good they get at doing what they do, it won’t make us safer because they do the wrong thing. And they aren’t even any good at that.