Jan 282009
 

Here’s a comment I posted in response to the article by Harvey Wallbanger in The Atlantic titled “Football is a Dangerous Business“:

Here’s my favorite proposal to improve the situation: eliminate free substitution and go back to having the players play both ways. If they had to play both ways, there would not be so many of the freakishly large players on the field who create the lethal forces that endanger others’ lives. An added benefit is that it would tilt the game more in favor of the best, most versatile athletes.

Besides, super-specialization is a hallmark of the modern industrial society, along with super-commoditization and super-organization. Sports are supposed to be a way to bring back a taste of the more primitive life we left behind when we all became cogs in the giant industrial machine.

Jan 282009
 

As one who has long been opposed to fair trade, fair wages, and other such forms of political favoritism, I was fascinated by Bart Wilson’s article, “Fair’s Fair,” in The Atlantic. It contains this paragraph:

Did you know that fair is one-to-one untranslatable into any other language–that it is distinctly Anglo in origin? And a relatively new word at that? (Late 18th century, actually–the industrial revolution apparently also vastly enhanced our capacity to complain.) But the twisted history of “fair” is even more interesting than that. For the original antonym of fair is not, as most modern Americans would probably expect, unfair. If you want to understand the roots of fairness, look not to ethicists, but to baseball, which still uses the original dichotomy. If a ball is hit outside the bounds of fair play, it’s not unfair–it’s foul. That’s an important clue. As Columbia law professor George Fletcher had noted in his 1996 book Basic Concepts of Legal Thought, the Anglo-American notion of fairness is firmly rooted in the rules of a game.

I’m usually suspicious of any claim that X can’t be translated into language Y. My grandfather used to say that about certain German words, but I’m pretty sure it’s not true. There are usually ways of expressing any idea, even if it can’t be done with a one-to-one translation. My hero St. Ronald once made the foolish statement that the Russians had no word for freedom. But they do. Some of the commenters on Wilson’s article took him to task for this paragraph, and rightly so.

But then Wilson veered into the more interesting topic of whether ideas of fairness vary from culture to culture. There are some interesting experiments waiting to be performed, to see whether a sense of entitlement affects one’s idea of fairness.

And a place to find people with a strong sense of entitlement is perhaps in some subpopulations within our universities. I’ve been privileged to work with a bunch of prima donnas for many years. They are great people to work with and I am not the least bit sarcastic when I say I’ve been privileged. But they do have quite a sense of entitlement. They’d be great subjects for some of Wilson’s experiments.

Jan 272009
 

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I’ve ordered my very own copy of the Little Blue Book, but it’s temporarily sold out. Here is the Amazon description:

This is the little blue book that has everyone twittering and blogging, essential reading as we pick ourselves up, dust ourselves off, and begin the work of remaking America. Printed in a size that easily fits into pocket or purse, the book is an anthology of quotations borrowed from Barack Obama’s speeches and writings. POCKET OBAMA serves as a reminder of the amazing power of oratory and the remarkable ability of this man to move people with his words, a primer for readers who want to examine the substance of his thought and reflect on the next great chapter in the American story. His superb and captivating oratory has earned comparisons to John F. Kennedy and Martin Luther King, and this collection presents words that catapulted his remarkable rise to the American Presidency. Includes themes of democracy, politics, war, terrorism, race, community, jurisprudence, faith, personal responsibility, national identity, and above all, his hoped-for vision of a new America. Learn earnestly and diligently. It is an unofficial requirement for every citizen to own, to read, and to carry this book at all times.

Even if you don’t buy a copy for yourself, you’ll want to read the reviews at Amazon. It’s not every day that someone can successfully pull both the right and the left leg at the same time. I especially liked this one, though:

Why buy this book here? Im sure it will be provided for free in the re-education camps.

Jan 272009
 

I’m still puzzling over Obama’s outburst at Eric Cantor. Robert Kuttner tried to pass it off as a jocular remark, but Kuttner didn’t quote the part where Obama said, “I will trump you on that.” Nor did anyone tell us that after Obama tried his joke, he followed it up with, “Seriously…” and a discussion of why he disagreed with Cantor.

Besides, Obama isn’t much known for his sense of humor (although he has cracked an occasional self-deprecating joke — like the one about picking a dog for the White House). But if this is an example, he’s probably better off being known as a humorless politician.

I’m wondering — was this a breakfast meeting where he had his encounter with Cantor? Did Cantor somehow get between Obama and his waffle?

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Jan 262009
 

I posted this over at Real Clear Politics, in response to an article by Robert Kuttner titled, “It’s Show Time for Obama“:

That’s a jocular comment when Obama says, “I won?” The leader of the free world can offer no better argument than the iron fist? It doesn’t make him come across like the kind of person who wants to heal divisions. In his inaugural address he said, “we have chosen … unity of purpose over conflict and discord.” Maybe his type of unity is achieved by shutting down dissent, which is what he seemed to be doing wrt Cantor.

Jan 262009
 

According to Ron Suskind, in January 2003 when George W. Bush was informed that Saddam Hussein did not have weapons of mass destruction, his response was, “Fuck it. We’re going in.”

Whether or not that’s true, Barak Obama has already had his “Fuck it, we’re going in” moment. When Rep. Eric Cantor objected to a part of the president’s stimulus proposal, Obama’s response was, “I won. I will trump you on that.” (URL)

And to think that some of us were hoping that Obama could at least be more articulate than Bush.

Jan 262009
 

Watching the Obama administration promises to be like watching a Dilbert cartoon. I began to form that opinion back in the days of President-Elect Obama. Now that he is really the president, we’re still getting Dilbertisms.

George Will: “Days before becoming responsible, in the eyes of a public fixated on the presidency, for almost everything, Barack Obama vowed to convene a ‘fiscal responsibility summit.'”

Jan 262009
 

Less than a week after the inauguration, John Kerry and Kent Conrad choose fear over hope. Their article in Monday’s WSJ is not unlike the fear-mongering that sent us to war in Iraq and which established the USA Patriot Acts that gave us the Homeland Security department.

An extra nice touch is the way they blame the Bush administration for the TARP program which Congressional Democrats passed only after they bribed Republicans with extra pork to go along. They blame the TARP program for a list of items that will be bad about the new stimulus program, too, plus suggest a few new items that will make their new stimulus program even worse than TARP.

Unfortunately, the Bush administration failed to fix the problems in our financial system, refused to help homeowners, and didn’t pass stimulus measures to create jobs in order to lay the foundation for stronger economic growth in the future. Instead, it handed out large sums to struggling financial institutions under TARP in order to prevent a complete financial collapse. But it did so without consistency, without adequate transparency and accountability, and without restoring the credit availability that our economy desperately needs.

Jan 262009
 

Speed Gibson points out that cars don’t guzzle gas, people do. That’s a good argument for a netzero gas tax vs CAFE standards.

Speed says “The market regulates all this just fine, or would if the government would stop interfering.” I don’t completely go along with that, as it doesn’t take care of regulating the external costs of fossil fuel consumption. But a netzero tax would harness market forces to do the parts that markets do best.

Jan 242009
 

Vladimir Vladimirovich Putin has got to be jealous of Barak Obama these days. Putin had to have over 20 journalists murdered in order to get the rest of them to be as compliant as the ones covering Barak Obama.

Just how compliant are Obama’s people? Carol Marin of the Chicago Sun-Times explains:

The press corps, most of us, don’t even bother raising our hands any more to ask questions because Obama always has before him a list of correspondents who’ve been advised they will be called upon that day.

And Obama did it without firing a shot.

Or maybe American journalists are not as tough as those in Russia. Maybe we should import some of the surviving Russian ones to help fight off the re-imposition of the Fairness Doctrine. A report on Eric Holder’s evasions on that subject is here.