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Tuesday, December 31, 2019

Post #4403 M: New Year's Eve; Bob Learns Economics; New Year Resolutions; Stossel's 2020 Tips

 Quote of the Day

I like pigs. 
Dogs look up to us. 
Cats look down on us. 
Pigs treat us as equals.
Winston Churchill

Notes to Readers:

  • My holiday schedule is complete, and I'll shortly be returning to regular posts/scheduling.
  • This year will end with 469 posts, the highest count in the blog's 11 year history. 

Bob Learns Economics



Stossel's Tips for 2020



New Year Resolutions



Choose Life



Political Cartoon


Courtesy of Steve Breen via Townhall


Musical Interlude: Christmas Melodies

Auld Lang Syne. Note this concludes our annual holiday music segment. We will be resuming our solo artist theme with a male vocalist.

Monday, December 30, 2019

Post #4402 M: Blogger Birthday; IJ a Force for Good; The Truth About the Enlightenment

Quote of the Day

Much of my success has been due to keeping my mouth shut.
J. Ogden Armour  

It's My Birthday



IJ: A Force For Good



The Truth About the Enlightenment



Choose Life



Political Cartoon

Courtesy of Bob Gorrell via Townhall


Musical Interlude: Christmas Melodies

Silent Night

Sunday, December 29, 2019

Post #4401 M: Ron Paul: 2019 Year in Review

Quote of the Day

The dogmatist within is always worse than the enemy without.
S.J. Gould


Ron Paul: 2019 Year in Review



Choose Life



Political Cartoon

Courtesy of Gary Varvel via Townhall


Musical Interlude: Christmas Melodies

Canon in D

Saturday, December 28, 2019

Post #4400 M: The Politics of Vaping

Quote of the Day
...the myth of socialism is far stronger than the reality of capitalism. 
That is because capitalism is not really an ism at all. 
It is what people do if you leave them alone.
Arnold Beichmen, Hoover Institute Fellow


The Politics of Vaping



Choose Life



Political Cartoon

Courtesy of AF Branco via Townhall


Musical Interlude: Christmas Melodies

Hallelujah

Friday, December 27, 2019

Post #4399 M: Ron Paul On Socialism and War;

QUOTE OF THE DAY

Scitum est inter caecos luscum regnare posse. 
(It is well known, that among the blind the one-eyed man is king.)
Gerard Didier Erasmus


Ron Paul On Socialism and War



Choose Life



Political Cartoon

Courtesy of Gary Varvel via Townhall


Musical Interlude: Christmas Melodies

We Three Kings

Thursday, December 26, 2019

Post #4398 M: The Real Napoleon

Quote of the Day

Few people are capable of expressing with equanimity opinions 
which differ from the prejudices of their social environment. 
Most people are even incapable of forming such opinion
Albert Einstein  



The Real Napoleon



Choose Life



Political Cartoon



Musical Interlude: Christmas Melodies

TSO, A Mad Russians Christmas

Wednesday, December 25, 2019

Post #4397 M: Merry Christmas; Disturbing Aspects of the EU

Quote of the Day

A word of kindness is seldom spoken in vain. 
It can be and is often treasured by the recipient for life.
George D. Prentice  

The More Disturbing Aspects of the EU



Choose Life

I have to laugh. I was asked by one of my sisters to play Santa for my nephews (probably to prove Santa isn't Daddy) over Christmas years back. The nephews didn't take it well, especially young Chris. I was never asked again.




Musical Interlude: Christmas Melodies


Angels We Have Heard on High

Tuesday, December 24, 2019

Post #4396 M: Prager: Just Say "Merry Christmas"; For the Kibbe Household, One Christmas Tree is Not Enough

Quote of the Day

Men for the sake of getting a living forget to live.
Margaret Fuller  

Prager: Just Say "Merry Christmas"



For the Kibbe Household, One Christmas Tree is Not Enough



Monopoly and Anti-Trust



Choose Life


Political Cartoon

Courtesy of Bob Gorrell via Townhall

Musical Interlude: Christmas Melodies

Dance of the Sugar Plum Fairy

Post #4395 J: The Best Cable Christmas Movie This Year

Note to Readers

Because of my holiday schedule, some upcoming daily posts may be abbreviated and/or prescheduled.

My Choice For the Best Cable Christmas Movie This Year




Kristin Chenoweth stars in this Hallmark Hall of Fame production as a choir director, tasked with writing a song for the group's main performance, with a secret buried in her past: she gave birth to a son who she gave up for adoption at a difficult point in her life. Her musically gifted son seeks her out and becomes a member of the choir; his widowed adoptive father develops a romantic interest with the choir director, unaware she is the birth mother. The climax of the movie is the glorious mother-son duet performance of  "When Angels Land". I haven't found a clipping yet of that performance but she does a solo performance of the song, which I really like.

Other Hallmark movie songs I love:

- Twas the Night (from "Angels and Ornaments")

This is a movie I liked so much, I licensed the rights via Google. The protagonist has bad luck choosing boyfriends; she works at a music store owned by her former high school classmate, who secretly carries a torch for her. She makes a wish on an ornament made by her maternal grandfather, who was killed in WWII,  for her beloved grandmother (Emily). An angel is sent (like Clarence in "It's a Wonderful Life") as a matchmaker: unknown to both at the beginning, her grandfather; the incentive for him is a long-awaited heavenly reunion with his beloved Emily. This song is a fusion of the verses she wrote for her grandmother as a present and her grandfather's unfinished serially-posted composition for Emily.



-- Angel Like You (from "Christmas Magic")

A workaholic event planner gets into a serious auto accident. She wakes up in the spirit world and is sent to help a struggling restaurant owner/widower with a young daughter. He was an aspiring songwriter but that part of him died with his wife. They find themselves falling in love with each other, which can't happen because she's an angel--or so she thinks. As in the last movie, this song plays a part in the movie's climax.

Monday, December 23, 2019

Post #4394 M: Remy's Latest Parody; Kibbe on China and Facial Recognition Software

Quote of the Day

The art of simplicity is a puzzle of complexity.
Douglas Horton

Remy's Latest Parody



Kibbe on China and Facial Recognition Software



Woods and Scott Horton on the Lies of Afghanistan Invention



Choose Life



Political Cartoon

Courtesy of AF Branco via Townhall


Musical Interlude: Christmas Melodies

What Child is This?

Post #4393 Social Media Digest

This summary is not available. Please click here to view the post.

Sunday, December 22, 2019

Post #4392 M: From Impeachment to Senate Trial; In the Trenches of the Institute of Justice

Quote of the Day

I praise loudly; 
I blame softly.
Catherine the Second  

From Impeachment to Senate Trial



In the Trenches of the Institute of Justice



American STEM Schools in a Global Context



Choose Life



Political Cartoon

Courtesy of Steve Kelley via Townhall


Musical Interlude: Christmas Melodies

Canon of the Bells


Post #4391 Rant of the Day: No, Trump Doesn't Deserve Credit For the Economy

As I start to write (Tuesday), my private retirement account is at an all-time high. But not by much: the aggregate has been cycling within a 2-point range for weeks now. I've done some recent closed-end fund purchases and have been whipsawed by things like dividend announcements that have sometimes resulted in up to 6% price drop or more in a single day. Presumably I'll eventually get those dividends back over the coming weeks. I try to minimize risks by diversifying, but if you do a simple Google search, you'll find a tiny percentage of stocks (like FAANG) capture most of the general index gains. Diversification can control risks but also water down returns. I still have a lot of my retirement in cash, which yields next to nothing,  but I don't find a lot of bargains, at least domestically in this market, and there are currency and other risks in the international markets. (I've been burned in global investments.) The bottom line is investing can be hard work. I have a bigger retirement account than many people my age, but you never know, like my late friend Bruce Breeding blew through over $1.2M (mostly covered by insurance) in 6 months of recovery following his major stroke. I don't have those types of resources, and at this stage of my career, I really can't risk a 30% or more brutal bear market haircut.

So if and when Trump roils the market with his economic-illiterate trade war threats, my retirement account goes down sometimes up to thousands of dollars. We've been lucky that the market has had the resiliency to bounce back eventually, but nobody ever knows if and when we've hit the market peak. One of these times it may go down and continue going down. Trump is gambling at the expense of my own retirement.

If you're a trained researcher (like me), listening to a political whore like Trump take credit for a robust economy and jobs is annoying, wrong, and misleading; it's even worse in Twitter world where the usual economic-illiterate progressives seem more annoyed that Trump is taking credit for "Obama's" recovery.

Let's be clear: this is not a miracle recovery of any kind. I personally know 3 IT professionals with over 20 years of experience looking for a job. It's still an employer's market; I know of 2 cases where the client refused to waive an incidental "requirement", e.g., a preference for a higher security clearance (which could be sponsored); the recruiter had found it impossible to find an available candidate, and the client had expressed a willingness to consider a lower-level entry who could be sponsored--and then reversed himself. I know back in 2014 I had a contingent offer on a Department of Energy contract which required a Q clearance, but there was a months-long backlog on clearances. I had been told it took a prior candidate 2 weeks to get his Q clearance. You don't earn money on a contingent contract, and I had to take another job in South Carolina. In a great number of cases you find the government specifying secret clearances where the job entails working on unclassified servers.

Some argue that much of the increase in employment reflects people taking "overqualified" lower-quality/paying jobs out of economic necessity. Let me quote something from LinkedIn, a work networking portal:
"Today, you chat with them on Uber (I've updated it to suit the times), but the point is, you may see PhD's from India driving Ubers,  MBAs from China working as waiters, and in general overqualified immigrants taking menial jobs."

Now let's point out both Obama and Trump had a robust quarter or two of economic growth of 3% or more but we have grown annually below a long-term 3.21%  since the turn of the century. And there are issues with government unemployment statistics which understate the true unemployment numbers. Make no mistake; if your ruler is systematically biased, you are measuring improvements, but the question is what you are measuring. A lot of people "retired" jobless during the Great Recession. But don't try comparing this decades economy with the 1980s/1990s. I made my career-high earnings in 1999. My most recent contract paid $10/hour less than I was making 20 years ago. There were kids dropping out of college to take $50K or more jobs. That's not happening today. A lot of graduates struggle to find a decent first job which requires their degree.

Let's start with the absurd idea that Obama was responsible for kickstarting us out of recession. How exactly? He took office at the end of January 2009. The recession ended just 5 months later.  Now anyone who has taken a macroeconomics course knows about lags, e.g., in recognizing we're in a recession and in response to relevant monetary (Federal Reserve action on interest rates) or fiscal (tax or stimulus) policy, which can take several months, up to 18 months or more; that's how we run into one interest rate hike too many. Recall that Bush signed a stimulus package (passed by a Dem-controlled Congress) into law in mid-February 2008. So, yes, Obama did sign another stimulus package a year later, but only a tiny fraction of the $750M or so (in a nearly $15T economy!) were spent before we emerged from recession. And keep in mind for much of the nineteenth century we had recovered from multiple recessions/depressions WITHOUT a central bank or large-scale federal spending. And recall that Bush had radically supersized federal spending before the economic tsunami without a resumption 90's type growth. Even if we assume policy made a difference in the economy (remember federal revenues are a reallocation of private economy resources in the first place), how do we tease out contributions to latent effects of the Bush stimulus and TARP, near-zero rates from the Fed, or Obama's stimulus? And even if the Obama stimulus helped, what about the role of the Congress in designing and passing the legislation?

And  don't forget Obama was playing winners and losers in the economy (pushing, for instance, green jobs/businesses, education, and infrastructure spending) and massive new regulations and healthcare mandates on businesses and consumers as the economy. Obama caused some of the most massive economic uncertainty since FDR's policies exacerbated the Depression and despite an unprecedented near-zero interest rate his entire tenure in office, Obama never achieved more than a few isolated quarters, not years, of 3% growth. I'm not saying Obama is the only factor responsible for sluggish growth, but I'm arguing against those saying Obama was the reason for recovery.

So what can a President do for the economy? Not much, like Kevin Williamson points out. Let me put my own spin on this. It's not like Obama had GDP growth and job faucets in the White House that broke and went unfixed during the last year of Bush 43's Presidency or Trump came into office with the flow barely flowing and turned the faucets higher. At best, a President has rudimentary tools at his disposal: he has influence over policy, like taxes, regulations, immigration and trade. He has some limited discretion delegated by Congress (unconstitutionally in my view) to fine-tune tariffs.

Like the Fed's similarly crude tools of setting interest rates, buying and selling financial assets, and regulations, the President's tools are limited and indirect in nature. There are a number of factors and risks involved in starting or expanding businesses and respective jobs. There are a number of things public policymakers can do to foster economic growth, including the following:

  • simplify/reduce the government footprint (spending, taxes, mandates and other regulations)
  • open immigration and trade to mitigate issues like labor restrictions and resource shortages, open new markets for trade to the 96% of the global population not in the US
  • limit economic uncertainty caused by government policy changes
  • pursue sound money policies

So what has Trump done with respect to this agenda?

Very little. The national debt was about 19.9T and is currently about 23.1T,  Despite a robust economy, we are actually expanding the unsustainable national debt; despite disingenuously paying lip service to paying down the debt, Trump basically dealt away hard-won GOP sequesters in his budget deals, principally a quid pro quo of domestic spending for his bloated defense budget, including the newly hyped Space Force. Trump is still pursuing an activist agenda in the Middle East/Gulf Region area, despite his soundbite of a suggestive America First policy and hints of withdrawing from Syria; the fact is he has appointed neo-con hawks to leadership. He has done almost zero with touching politically radioactive entitlements, accounting with over two-thirds of the federal budget, especially senior entitlements which will exhaust their reserves within 15 years.

Trump has had modest success on the tax and regulatory front, especially in reducing a globally high, noncompetitive business income tax and moving from a worldwide tax to a more hybrid territorial system; he has helped trimmed up to $25B or so in burdensome regulations through last, but the fact is that the regulation burden went up 10 times higher during the 111th Congress alone under Obama. Also, as Williamson points out above, business tax and regulatory reform is more of a long-term issue, with limited short-term benefits which Trump is trying to claim. And keep in mind though that whereas $25B is a step in the right direction, it is almost negligible in the context of a $20.5T economy. Not to mention that Trump didn't have the political support to pass permanent policy changes, and a subsequent Dem administration could easily revert things like executive orders.

As for his job creation hype, keep in mind jobs enable core services and products and facilitate business objectives to the point the marginal benefits of labor meet its marginal costs, but labor is a cost; technology makes labor more productive over time, and keep in mind China and other countries are subject to the same trends seen in the US, i.e., half or more jobs are in the service sector and less than 20% of jobs are in the manufacturing sector. Many more jobs are lost to robotics and other technology than those presumably lost to global competitors. The good news is the higher standard of living gives people more resources to spend on other goods and services, a longer-term opportunity for job seekers. The failed business models Trump wants to resurrect are simply not sustainable.

Also in hyping "the best economy ever" with a low official unemployment issue, this is somewhat misleading in the sense that Trump has rarely recovered part of the lower labor force participation rate which dropped from 65 to 62%; it's currently at about 63.3%, an improvement, and of course part of the story is an aging work force (baby boomers retiring). But best economy ever? Trump hasn't even met the long-term trend of 3.x% growth, never mind exceeded it, except for a few isolated quarters--and Obama did the same. I think you can make an argument that Trump has been better for the economy than Obama, but the growth rate is mediocre compared to what we saw in the 80's and 90's.

Don't get me started on "Tariff Man" and Trump's unprovoked trade wars. A mere hint of new or more aggressive trade policy will tank the stock market. Trump doesn't conceptually understand the trade deficit (we have had more robust economic growth while running a deficit) which is financed by a capital surplus. Tariffs are paid by Americans, not foreign producers, and ultimately Trump's tariffs benefit a concentrated few versus the many. For example, tariffs or quotas on foreign steel and sugar resource-using companies (like car and candy manufacturers respectively); higher costs make American goods and services less competitive globally. These costs reduce our standard of living.

The same goes for Trump's economically illiterate immigration policy. Open immigration benefited the rise of the American economy to global leadership in the nineteenth century--without a federal welfare system. Studies beyond the scope of this post point out the win-win proposition of liberalized immigration.

Finally, Trump has been pressing the Federal Reverse to lower rates (almost every President running for President has done this, of course, wanting a robust economy on election day), even pressing for negative rates as in the weaker developed economies. It ignores the fact that beggar thy neighbor currency wars are a race to the bottom and a recipe for a global recession or worse. One of the reasons we are attracting foreign capital is because of a good economy and a strong currency; Trump is playing with fire, just as he failed to understand that China would respond to his tariffs with their own, aimed at his rural base selling exports and Trump responds with bailouts of affected farmers.

What I can tell you is that the American economy would be stronger today than under the meddling of Obama and now Trump; the true recipe for economic growth is the free market, free trade, and open immigration.



Saturday, December 21, 2019

Post #4390 M: McClanahan on VA 2A Sanctuary Counties and Tariffs

Quote of the Day

Murphy's Seventh Law:
Left to themselves, things tend to go from bad to worse.

McClanahan on VA 2A Sanctuary Counties

McClanahan addresses on a correct distinction between the state and US Constitutions. I'm more of a more consistent proponent of the principle of Subsidiarity, against state-base restrictions against individual liberty.



McClanahan on Tariffs



Woods on the Latest Dem POTUS Primary Debate



Choose Life



Political Cartoon

Courtesy of Ken Catalino via Townhall


Musical Interlude: Christmas Melodies

O Come, O Come, Emmanuel

Friday, December 20, 2019

Post #4389 M: Impeaching Bad Presidents Not a Big Deal; Woods on the Recent British Election

Quote of the Day

It is one of the most beautiful compensations of life,
that no man can sincerely try to help another without helping himself.
Ralph Waldo Emerson  

Impeaching Bad Presidents Not a Big Deal



Woods on the Recent British Election



Kibbe on the NBA and Hong Kong Protests



Choose Life




Political Cartoon

Courtesy of Reason


Musical Interlude: Christmas Melodies

Linus and Lucy