US politics challenge
#41
Posted 2011-January-06, 15:17
However, since I'm a fiscal conservative (and he pretty much is too) that isn't really in the spirit of this post.
On the other side, I guess I read Krugman the most. Not because he is reasonable (I keep a small bucket at the foot of the desk for when I read his columns) but because he will tell me things that some conservative authors do not want me to know. I don't think you can be intellectually honest unless you truly understand the opposing viewpoint.
#42
Posted 2011-January-06, 15:30
I also suggested Gerson. He is religious, which I am not, and a Bush supporter which I am definitely not. Here is a column he recently wrote about our felons and second chances.
http://www.washingto...1010303883.html
I don't have to agree with everything he says, but I find him interesting.
#43
Posted 2011-January-06, 16:48
Except from a recent column of his on this topic:
Decades of punditry, pop sociology and prejudice have been premised on this neat division — from the religious right’s Reagan-era claim to be a “Moral Majority” oppressed by a secular elite, to Barack Obama’s unfortunate description of heartland America “clinging” to religion. Like any binary, it oversimplified a complicated picture. But as a beginner’s guide to the culture war, the vision of white-collar social liberals and blue-collar cultural conservatives was, for a substantial period, more accurate than not.
That may no longer be the case.
rest of story
I used to enjoy reading David Brooks. I have this crazy idea that he's really a closet liberal and that one day he'll find his inner-Biblical namesake and start writing from the heart.
* local radio guy
#44
Posted 2011-January-25, 09:44
My favorite blogger recently referred to this review of Jamie Galbraith’s "The Predator State: How Conservatives Abandoned the Free Market and Why Liberals Should Too".
Excerpts:
...
Economic freedom is reduced to the freedom to shop, including the freedom to buy elections, and anything that interferes is a threat. “Market” means nothing more than “nonstate”, a negation of use of policy in the public interest.... The policy “mistakes” in Iraq or New Orleans or at Bear-Stearns do not result from incompetence—indeed they only appear to be failures because we apply inappropriate measures of success. There is no common good, no public purpose, no shareholder’s interest; we are the prey and governments as well as corporations are run by and for predators. The “failures” enrich the proper beneficiaries even as they “prove” government is no solution.
#45
Posted 2011-January-25, 10:20
People, no doubt myself included, think far too often in quick labels. Free market certainly sounds good, who can be opposed to free, and marketing sounds good but what does it all mean?
Over the weekend we visited a couple. The guy is a fiscal conservative and I hope we are still friends. After enough wine we got to what he really proposes. The investment bankers, the auto companies, etc, would all be left on their own to fail if that's the way it went. If the economy crashed, government would accept responsibility to see that people are fed and housed but would not intervene in any other way. After further discussion of how it would all go, I summed up his position as being that government would agree to house up to 80 million people, 20 or so to a room, and feed them beans. Beyond that, the market would take care of things. He agreed that this correctly stated his view, and allowed that it might require some further thought. We plan to serve some really good wine at our next gathering.
#46
Posted 2011-April-25, 13:51
Excerpts:
Quote
If Ryan thinks the poor and the elderly should have to spend more on health care, he should say so directly—that would at least be honest. And it would certainly carry political risks, but it still wouldn't be courageous. Courage requires moral clarity, a commitment to defending what's right. Ryan is using the deficit as an excuse to shrink the government via tax relief for the rich and program cuts that largely target the poor—while sparing military spending. That isn't courageous; it's simply wrong.
In fact, one of the most effective responses to the deficit would be to preserve some existing laws. Letting the 2010 health-care reform law go forward, instead of repealing it, would control health costs for everyone and drive down the deficit. And allowing the Bush tax cuts to expire as scheduled would do a lot to increase revenue. Those positions aren't flashy enough to win praise in the op-ed pages, but they are serious and courageous.
#47
Posted 2011-April-25, 14:51
y66, on 2011-April-25, 13:51, said:
<snip>
http://en.wikipedia....ristian_Century
Uwe Gebhardt (P_Marlowe)
#48
Posted 2011-April-25, 15:19
y66, on 2011-April-25, 13:51, said:
Quote
Taking these 'serious and courageous' measures would be a giant step in the right direction, but even more will be needed as the US population ages. Sadly, the free lunch crowd opposes both of those measures, so the politics are tough. Obama has pandered to the free lunchers by pledging to maintain the Bush cuts for folks making less than $200 thousand, so he's part of the problem too.
The infliction of cruelty with a good conscience is a delight to moralists — that is why they invented hell. — Bertrand Russell
#49
Posted 2011-April-25, 19:45
Compare these two with, say, Charles Krauthammer. CK reminds me of the old story of a public speaker collapsing during a talk. As they hauled him offstage they collected his notes, where he had written in the margin "Argument weak here, shout like hell".
Possibly in vague conformance with the thread, I just saw Atlas Shrugged. Maybe my expectations were suitably lowered due to the terrible reviews, but I enjoyed it. Not great, but I enjoyed it. The movie began with six people in the audience including me and my wife. At the end there were four. The other guy in the audience spoke with me in the Men's room afterward to explain that this was real life and Hollywood tried to keep us from seeing it.
#50
Posted 2011-April-26, 06:51
P_Marlowe, on 2011-April-25, 14:51, said:
It seems these guys really are Christians. That explains it.
#51
Posted 2011-April-30, 06:42
y66, on 2011-April-26, 06:51, said:
Quote
Don't know the Christian Century magazine, but I do know other ethical Christians who work to put Jesus' teachings into actual practice. Many years ago, a Catholic classmate from San Lucia introduced me to a nearby commune of Catholic Worker folks. Before that I had never even heard of Dorothy Day, but I saw that the Catholic Worker people worked hard every day to live the way Jesus taught. And those I met were among the warmest, most welcoming folks I've ever known -- even to those of us who disagreed with them on certain issues.
But we all know that religious beliefs and ethical behavior don't always go hand in hand. On the contrary: Why do Americans still dislike atheists?
Quote
Seems strange, but I'm sure most of us have observed that to be true. Probably has to do with a religious tendency to accept positions without thinking them through.
The infliction of cruelty with a good conscience is a delight to moralists — that is why they invented hell. — Bertrand Russell
#52
Posted 2011-April-30, 07:40
I read that piece about atheists in the paper. I really don't want to think of myself as a member of some silly minority group struggling for proper respect. There's enough of that going around already.
#53
Posted 2011-April-30, 08:27
kenberg, on 2011-April-30, 07:40, said:
I read that piece about atheists in the paper. I really don't want to think of myself as a member of some silly minority group struggling for proper respect. There's enough of that going around already.
I think it's useful to put forward non-strident information that tends to undercut religions. Part of the age-old atheist conspiracy.
The infliction of cruelty with a good conscience is a delight to moralists — that is why they invented hell. — Bertrand Russell
#54
Posted 2011-April-30, 10:53
Quote
So fire and brimstone has its uses.
The infliction of cruelty with a good conscience is a delight to moralists — that is why they invented hell. — Bertrand Russell
#55
Posted 2011-April-30, 11:12
Quote
I always suspected this!
#56
Posted 2011-April-30, 11:25
PassedOut, on 2011-April-30, 10:53, said:
So fire and brimstone has its uses.
Threat has its uses. Fear has its uses. Fear-inducing threat captures the best of both worlds.
#57
Posted 2011-April-30, 12:35
To bring this back to politics, this may apply to the threat to not raise the debt ceiling. It's a really bad idea to issue a threat unless you intend to follow through. So are the Republicans really planning to not raise the debt limit? If yes, they are fools. If it is a threat where they assume it will not require follow through, they are dangerous fools.The thug's lament after his victim dies: No one was supposed to get hurt, I thought he would do as I told him to do.
#58
Posted 2011-April-30, 13:02
kenberg, on 2011-April-30, 11:12, said:
Quote
I always suspected this!
In the UP we don't ever kid around in that way...
The infliction of cruelty with a good conscience is a delight to moralists — that is why they invented hell. — Bertrand Russell
#59
Posted 2011-April-30, 21:09
Quote
of which predicted cheating behavior in our previous studies (with East Asians and women
cheating more). Consistent with predictions, higher God Negativity Scores were associated with
lower levels of cheating (Wald=- 4.16, odds ratio = .95, p = .04; see footnote 3). Neither
religious devotion nor ethnicity had an effect on likelihood of cheating, but a sex difference
was found showing higher cheating behavior among women (see Table 1).
They cite a Wald of -4.16 for those with high God Negativity scores but in fact the Wald from Table 1 for sex is 4.57. Now I actually have no idea what this means, but they seem to think it proves something. I suppose high numbers indicate that some effect is going on. Belief in a punishing God, or simply being male, are two items associated with less cheating. And for the sex angle, apparently this is consistent with previous studies that they have done.
Maybe one shouldn't joke about it, but I don't plan on taking it seriously.
#60
Posted 2011-July-22, 19:00
Jul. 21 2011 - 10:49 am
by Timothy B Lee
Quote
Quote
This has gotten me thinking about the broader connection between peoples’ views on monetary policy and their broader ideological worldviews. With the lonely exception of Scott Sumner, virtually every libertarian or conservative who has expressed a strong opinion about monetary policy has come down on the side of the inflation hawks. Over the last three years, a wide variety of fiscally conservative Republican politicians have attacked the Federal Reserve for its unduly expansionary monetary policy. I can’t think of a single Republican on the other side.
Yet it’s not obvious why this should be. more.