30 September 2010

Quote for today

People don't work to pay taxes. People work to get what they can after tax. They'll change where they earn their income. They'll change how they earn their income. They'll change how much they earn, when they receive the income. They'll change all of those things to minimize taxes.
Arthur Laffer, author of the eponymous Laffer Curve.

Brendan O'Neill - soothscribe again

Oh well - just one more in a day of joyful tidings.

A bar to the Soothscribe Award for this speech attacking climate catastrophism given by Spiked's Brendan O'Neill at the Gothenburg Book Fair. My only caveat is that he is unfamiliar with the terminology. "Environmentalism" is a broad term that includes a wide range of healthy and worthy activities that are the baby we should be careful not to throw out with the scummy bath water of climate catastrophism. Such activities can be broadly grouped as "conservationist" in contrast to modernity-hating "preservationism".
The doctrine of environmentalism is a new form of conservatism, which deploys the politics of fear to control or at least sway how people behave. What’s really happened is that the practical problem of pollution has been moralised – super-moralised, in fact. What should be treated as a specific problem in need of a few solutions – whether that be going nuclear, investigating renewables or reshaping our climate – is instead turned into a new organising principle of politics and morality.
Environmentalism, far from encouraging us to transcend the everyday, tells us to rummage around in our dustbins or to tot up how much carbon we used while driving to the shops; it implores us to obsess over everyday shit and nonsense. And it offers no redemption whatsoever, no promise of a better life in return for recycling our rubbish and never flying abroad. Instead, you live, you pollute, you try to pollute less, and then you die. And when you die, you carry on polluting, according to the misanthropes, through the toxins you emit while being cremated or buried in the earth.

BT-holes due for reaming

Oh, the ACS:Law story just keeps getting better and better. Hexus Channel reports that BT, the pantomime villains (boo, hiss) of Britain's failure to keep up with world trends in broadband access and speed, have admitted passing unencrypted customer details to the predatory law firm.

This is in flagrant breach of the Data Protection Act and with any luck (the law in Britain being highly fungible according to political criteria) the monopolistic BT-holes are going to get back a taste of the treatment they have dealt out to generations of Britons.

Couldn't happen to a nicer bunch of guys, you may think. Ah, but it can: 
According to ZDNet, hackers are getting ready to attack more anti-piracy bodies. The Australian Federation Against Copyright Theft has reportedly been hit and users of 4chan and Internet Relay Chat are apparently nominating new victims for DDoS attacks as part of the ‘Operation Payback' campaign. 
I'm going to quit for today. What with the Royal Society recanting from the true Climate Catastrophist faith and now this, I am blinded by tears of joy.

Deborah Orr - soothscribe again

Under the drum-fire of lefty crap that usually fills it, I'm often tempted to delete the Guardian's CiF column from my RSS. Then something like Deborah Orr's article today comes along to remind me that there are still a few clear-eyed sceptics on the left. I believe she's the first person to win a bar to the Soothscribe award.
It seems to me that all we voters have to choose between is two brands of fantasy. Ed Miliband's fantasy is that Labour can now do all the stuff it was voted in to do in 1997, when it achieved an awesome mandate at the start of a long boom. David Cameron's fantasy, shared by his deputy, is that he can wipe out the deficit within five years, to the applause of a busy, purposeful and grateful nation. 
And, with reference to the Coalition government's decision to cancel - probably on the grounds that anything he did was assumed to be corrupt - Peter Mandelson's £80 million loan to Sheffield Forgemasters (which relates directly to yesterday's post on the prospects for nuclear energy in Britain): 
Britain's nuclear energy programme may not be exactly healthy (no government subsidy for nuclear development was the Old Generation's policy, under Old Generation energy secretary Ed Miliband). But Forgemasters has an eye to the foreign markets it believes will be buying the large castings that only one other company in the world presently supplies for nuclear power stations.
Deborah Orr is married to the novelist and acerb commentator Will Self. I imagine they breakfast apart, as their combined reactions to the day's news would probably achieve critical mass.

Royal Society gets off the climate catatrophist bandwagon

The Global Warming Policy Foundation website reports that "Britain’s leading scientific institution has been forced to rewrite its guide to climate change and admit that there is greater uncertainty about future temperature increases than it had previously suggested. The Royal Society is publishing a new document today after a rebellion by more than 40 of its fellows who questioned mankind’s contribution to rising temperatures".

Climate change: a summary of the science, states that “some uncertainties are unlikely ever to be significantly reduced”. Unlike Climate change controversies, a simple guide - the document it replaces - it avoids making predictions about the impact of climate change and refrains from advising governments about how they should respond. Some key extracts:
The size of future temperature increases and other aspects of climate change, especially at the regional scale, are still subject to uncertainty. . . . It is not possible to determine exactly how much the Earth will warm or exactly how the climate will change in the future. There remains the possibility that hitherto unknown aspects of the climate and climate change could emerge and lead to significant modifications in our understanding.
Wow. The bubble really has burst. People who should have known better are at last admitting that the emperor is bollock naked. Having watched Al Gore's bandwagon gather momentum for twenty years in defiance of - indeed with active hostility towards - all norms of proper scientific inquiry, I'm having difficulty adjusting to the fact that the tide has turned at last.

It was "Climategate" wot did it. I hope some day to know who it was that leaked those emails, so that I may place them in my sparsely populated pantheon of modern heroes.

Just in case there was any doubt left . . .

Have posted previously about how the French are using EU mechanisms to attack British interests, specifically the City, quite evidently in the expectation that Britain's loss will be France's gain.

Today's story about their escalating attack on the largely London-based hedge funds in the Telegraph (and the Times, the FT and WSJ) should remove any doubt about their intentions.  

29 September 2010

US - UK: contrasting political cynicisms

I find it very odd that the mainstream media simply have not commented on the fact that the outgoing administrations in the USA (out in January 2009) and the UK (out in May 2010) deliberately poisoned the well for their successors by pushing spending to totally unsustainable levels. Both had their reasons, and we shall see which bunch of cynical bastards calculated better.

In the USA, President Bush's inner circle contained some of the most experienced Washington operators ever concentrated in one place. Presumably calculating that the pendulum must swing in 2008-9, they appear to have decided, quite early on, to shackle their tax-and-spend Democrat successors by spending and not taxing. Seen in this light, the financial crisis was a bonus, giving them an excuse to run the deficit into the stratosphere. They may have calculated that the incoming administration would be inhibited from taxing by the odium it would incur, and from spending by the parlous fiscal situation they inherited. But whatever happened, the Bushites pursued an après nous le déluge strategy, and it seems to have worked. The Democrats sailed in with their traditional banners nailed to the mast, and appear set to be punished in elections a mere two years after coming to power.

In the UK, Gordon Brown vastly expanded and packed the public administration with over-paid party clients and ran up the deficit, knowing that if he won the election he could reach an accommodation to slow the pace of spending with the state sector he had bribed so heavily. If he lost, the attempts by the incoming administration to bring spending under control would be painted by Labour party media allies as "savage cuts", while the Labour faithful in the state sector would do everything possible to discredit and sabotage any initiative by what Brown must have presumed would be a Conservative government. What he did not anticipate was a Conservative-Liberal Democrat coalition, which made it difficult to paint the new government as "right-wing" with any semblance of good faith.* The Conservatives did not sail in with any banners nailed to their mast, and seem to have been successful in letting popular opinion catch up with the reality of the fiscal situation they inherited. The coalition partners have five years until they have to face the electorate again.

I think the crucial similarity between the two experiences is that the outgoing administrations did not, in any way, let the question of what might be best for the country impinge on their partisan calculations. Together, they constitute a compelling argument for statutory limits on spending over an electoral cycle.  

* Not that such a consideration has ever inhibited the Labour party, in opposition or in power.

Castrolandia

Professor Carlos Eire, one of 14,000 unaccompanied Cuban children airlifted by to the States in Operation Peter Pan, received a very rude letter about his 2003 memoir Waiting for Snow in Havana, to which he replied courteously and at some length. Key extracts:
The fact that I was born into privilege has little to do with it, for thanks to Castro and company I ended up at the very bottom of American society, a penniless orphan and a "spic" who was constantly reminded by teachers and counselors that his proper place in the world was at the bottom. So, I've been there, with the poorest, living in the same slums, facing all of the discrimination and obstacles that those at the very bottom must surpass. And no one helped me out of the pit. I climbed out because I was lucky enough to live in a free society where effort and accomplishment are not punished, but naturally rewarded. I know poverty, and have lived much longer as a poor man than as a child of privilege.
But I don't think that creating a murderous dictatorship that enforces the redistribution of goods is the solution to poverty. 
The three so-called benefits that you think were provided to the Cuban people by Castro and company are illusory. First of all, Cuba had plenty of education, culture, and medical care before Castro came along. In 1958, Cuba had a literacy rate of nearly 80%, a lower infant mortality rate than many European countries, a vibrant mix of European and African culture (which gave the world the rumba, mambo, and cha-cha-cha, along with Jose Raul Capablanca, a world chess champion), more television sets and more newspapers per capita than Italy, and attracted over one million European immigrants, and so on... I could send you a long list of items that prove that Cuba was no third world country before it became Castrolandia.

Anyway... what about these so-called achievements of Castrolandia? What is the
use of educating people if you restrict freedom of expression and communication? What is the use of health care if you deprive people of autonomy and bar them from all of the privileges enjoyed by tourists to their country? Slave owners provide health care for their slaves, after all, because they are investments. And they educate them too, so they can perform their assigned tasks.
But as he says:
I know I can't change the way you think. I am now old enough [me too, Don Carlos!] to realize that it is very hard to convert anyone who is committed to their faith. And it seems to me that you exhibit all the signs of a pious enthusiast, for anyone who thinks that the so-called Cuban revolution is a good thing is indeed a religious zealot, for seeing the destruction of Cuba and the enslavement of its people as a good thing takes commitment to a very specific ideology, that of the prophets Marx and Lenin.
Hat-tip to Charles Santos-Buch

The Servile Mind

The transplanted Aussie philosopher Kenneth Minogue has published a book as above titled, with the sub-title "How democracy erodes the moral life". Standpoint review by the excellent Noel Malcom here.

Hillaire Belloc wrote the Servile State back in 1912, a book whose author was more than a bit weird and whose prescriptions weirder still, but whose diagnostic Minogue consciously recalls with his title.

The democracy Minogue objects to is not the mechanism for changing rulers, but "a set of values or ideals, a substantive programme that is to be gradually realised as our society becomes more and more 'democratic'. The watchwords of a truly democratic society, according to this notion, are 'equality' and 'inclusiveness'. Inequalities and distinctions are signs of injustice and oppression, and it is the role of the state to liberate the people from oppressions of all kinds. But in taking this transcendent moral role upon itself, the state drains away from ordinary life many of those moral responsibilities that used to characterise us as individuals".

Too true, blue. I'll be buying the book, but that horse bolted the stable long ago. The question is not how it all went to shit - it's how the hell do we get out of it now that we're in it up to our nostrils.

Britain does not have a nuclear power option

It's amazing Christopher Booker still has a fine head of hair, as he's been pulling it out by handfuls for many years. Last Saturday, not for the first time, he raged against Chris Huhne, the imbecile LiDem Climate Change Secretary, for the Thanet wind farm boondoggle. As he points out:
In all the publicity given to the opening of "the world's largest wind farm" off the Kent coast last week, by far the most important and shocking aspect of this vast project was completely overlooked. Over the coming years we will be giving the wind farm's Swedish owners a total of £1.2 billion in subsidies. That same sum, invested now in a single nuclear power station, could yield a staggering 13 times more electricity, with much greater reliability.
There's just two teensy problems: the first is that the Coalition government has no way back from its commitment to "green energy". Cameron and his millionaire chum Zac Goldsmith burned the Conservative party's bridges with the 2007 publication of the Quality of Life Policy Groups' Blueprint for a Green Economy.

Furthermore, to back off from it would be a deal-breaker with the LibDem sandalistas, the core constituency that has been putting fingers in its ears for years and going "la, la la - I can't hear you" to any information about the looming catastrophe of energy rationing preceded by vastly increased energy prices as the old coal plants are closed down WITH NO REPLACEMENT.

But the second is that even if they all collectively woke up one day soon and realized what cunts they are, it is far too late to sign up for nuclear power on the massive scale that would be necessary. There is a bottleneck in the production of the massive nuclear core container vessels, and countries run by serious people have booked capacity for many years in advance.

Worth considering that if Britain left the EU and abandoned the "green energy" chimera, there would be a greatly reduced need to cut government spending. But that would require politicians equipped with brains and balls, neither of which are much in evidence in any party - or indeed in British society as a whole.

Pakistan-Afghanistan: guest post from Jay

It has often been said that Pakistan would make more sense as a federation of states than as a republic with its present centralized government. It has often seemed to be united mostly by its common religion, proximity to the Indus River, and its opposition to India.

Since its northern border has never been fully ratified or indeed recognized by an Afghan state, the condition of that state is of great importance to Pakistan. This situation has been complicated by the presence of four million displaced Afghans in Pakistan itself, who show no signs of returning home anytime soon. These refugees are Pukhtuns ('Pathans') like their tribal relatives (and enemies) along most of the southern tier of Afghanistan.

Whatever kind of political deal is made in Kabul following the departure of the US forces will of necessity require participation by representatives of the Taliban of Mullah Omar, the forces of the Haqqani Talibs, of the Pakistan government, and possibly will include the Jamaatis as well. If there is going to be an attempt to mine the mineral wealth of Afghanistan, everyone involved will want access to the future profits. 

But just in terms of Pakistan's national security, I am sure that Pakistani Army chief General Kayani is keenly attuned to developments in the Northwest and that his own ISI scouts are very busy trying to assess the present state of play in those parts.

The Punjab presents another, as yet unaddressed, area of militant Taliban activity. Although not fully aligned with either Mullah Omar or with the Haqqani, the southern Punjab holds many militant madrassas in Bahawalpur and Multan and is the home recruiting ground for the Kashmiri jihadis who perpetrated the 2008 Mumbai massacre

There are about three groups there, at least, who have been semi-acknowledged by the Mian brothers in Lahore: Shahbaz, the Chief Minister of the province, and Nawaz, the former Chief Minister and twice Prime Minister. This deal has however fallen through, as all such concessions to the Islamic militants do, and the jihadis have moved during the last year to either bomb or take over such notable Barelvi/Sufi shrines as that of Data Sahib outside Lahore, and have bombed a variety of targets within the city itself.

Civil authority seems to have weakened recently in Sindh as well. The continued targeted killings of muhajirs (Muslim immigrants from India) by Pukhtuns from the Awami Party have provoked a good deal of reciprocal violence from them. In Baluchistan, meanwhile, there is a great deal of militant feeling against Islamabad and the central government which is regarded, with some justification, as Punjabi dominated and exploitative of the other three provinces. There is a great deal of violence around Quetta and the writ of national law does not seem to run there any more than it does in the Northwest or in other Taliban-dominated areas.

General Kayani does not want to be the president or prime minister or even dictator of such a decaying polity. He is a hands-on general officer who understands how to lead men and to rely on his staff and his corps commanders. He knows what happened to Zia and how Musharraf failed. He has also been trained partly in America and knows something of how Americans think and respond. He is definitely the most important source of national power right now, but he does not want to waste that power by investing it in the political process directly. 

But he will need outside help, both militarily and financially, and the likeliest source is the USA, also needed to help keep India from becoming involved in Pakistan's problems more than is good for either of them. How all of this will play out in the long run, or even the short run, is beyond anyone's powers of prophecy.

Jacob Sullum - soothscribe

This comes balance what came over as an uncritical endorsement of everything that Dennis Prager wrote in NRO, when I meant only to draw attention to those parts of his article that were equally applicable to Britain.

Reason's Sullum rightly excoriates the US Republicans for their shameless opportunism in trying to surf the Tea Party wave. There is nothing remotely equivalent going on over here, so it stands simply as a corrective to the manichaean view of US politics expressed by Prager.
In the "Pledge to America" they unveiled last week, House Republicans promise they will "launch a sustained effort to stem the relentless growth in government that has occurred over the past decade." Who better for the job than the folks who ran the government for most of that time? If the GOP's record of fiscal fecklessness were not enough reason to doubt its newfound commitment to curbing "Washington’s irresponsible spending habits," the pledge's failure to address entitlement and defense programs would be.
Quite. They are all mendacious scum - but at least in the States that view is being loudly expressed by a significant part of the electorate.

Only rock 'n' roll

Back in the early 60s, I watched TV coverage of a show by Little Richard during his last (?) tour of Britain, which started off with a panning shot of an audience sitting in their seats, then turned to Mr Pompadour as he came on banging a tambourine singing a gospel song (he was coming back from being born again).

Anyway, as the gig warmed up, LR took off his tie and jacket and got to shrieking and pounding on the piano, culminating in a long, rip-snorting rendition of Jerry Lee Lewis's "Whole lotta shakin".

Only then did camera pan back to the audience - which had gone ape-shit. The ordered ranks had been transformed into a seething mass of primal stomping and spastic upper body convulsions.

What brought that old memory to the surface was sitting in the Hyde Park Hard Rock Café yesterday and watching several videos of bands doing their thing in large open-air venues, with enthusiastic but pretty static and well-behaved audiences.

Then a video of an AC/DC gig came on and there they were, men my age - probably also grandfathers - blasting out "Spoiling for a fight". Pan to the audience and it's mostly young people going ape-shit.

Now, I pretty much gave up following rock music after Cobain blew his brains out, so cannot judge if there are any young acts out there doing basic rock 'n' roll. But if there are not, there's been a market failure.

If geezer bands like AC/DC and the Stones are raking in the money doing the same old same very old, then there's a pot of money sitting out there waiting for some enterprising band to establish itself doing the basics and ready to fill the void when the rock stars of my generation totter offstage on their zimmer frames. 

Why openness in government?

If there is one thing Cameron and Co. must have thought about a lot in opposition - there being little evidence that they thought about anything else in any depth - it will have been how to handle the avalanche of leaks with which the state bureaucracy would certainly try to undermine a new Conservative administration.

Witness today's leak of a private letter from Defence Secretary Fox to Prime Minister Cameron in the Telegraph.

Bingo! said some bright young thing. Let's make a virtue of necessity and preach openness. After all, secrecy overwhelmingly favours the bureaucratic oligarchy that actually runs the country, because it permits officials to use judicious leaks to pick off ministers who threaten to change the status quo.

The press? Can't find its arse with both hands on matters of policy. Pre-empt leaks from Whitehall and the journopukes will have to concentrate entirely on bicycle seat sniffing, which is what they do best anyway.

The electorate? Even the bare majority that is functionally literate doesn't care enough to understand how the country is run. Take away the thrill of "revelations" and they will slip into the comfort zone of reading/viewing people who reassure them that what they already believe is correct and that there is no need to think.

It's called "hiding in plain sight" - nine times out of ten if you go about your business openly and with an air of confidence, nobody pays any attention. I cannot see any other way the Coalition government can avoid being leaked to death by the labourite majority infesting the state sector.

Nor, evidently, does Cameron - witness his words to Benedict Brogan on today's leak.

28 September 2010

George Friedman: unmitigated bollocks

"Pakistan and the US exit from Afghanistan", George Friedman's latest contribution to the free part of Stratfor on-line, is so breath-takingly bad that it requires no commentary. Well, maybe just the penultimate paragraph:
Pakistan has every reason to [provide the cover for turning a US retreat into a negotiated settlement]. It needs the United States over the long term to balance against India. It must have a stable or relatively stable Afghanistan to secure its western frontier. It needs an end to US forays into Pakistan that are destabilizing the regime. And playing this role would enhance Pakistan’s status in the Islamic world, something the United States could benefit from, too. We suspect that all sides are moving toward this end.
The Taliban hate their old masters in Pakistan's Inter-Service Intelligence (ISI). The ISI hates the Americans. Any helping hand offered to the Americans will be interpreted by the "Islamic world" as further proof that Pakistan is a US proxy. India is going to be a world power eventually, which Pakistan will never be.

Apart from that, it's a great plan. 

Why there was a housing bubble



This graph from Burning our Money says it all.

Add to which Gordon Brown's wicked - there is no other term for it - and successful determination from the time he became chancellor to destroy the best funded private pensions in Europe and to divert the money to his party's clients in the state bureaucracies, and the reason why people poured every penny they could into bricks and mortar becomes glaringly apparent.

Fifty people who matter?

Thus the linked list of those with global influence - for good or ill - as voted by the few who still read the New Statesman.

That Rupert Murdoch comes in at number 1 simply confirms my suspicion that the NS is kept going by lefty media types, who fear for their jobs should the cold wind of competition be allowed to blow away their cosy sinecures.

What are Simon Cowell and Angelina Jolie doing on the list? And including the World Health Organisation's Margaret Chan is simply perverse. From her over-hyping of swine flu and the H1N1 to her praise of North Korean medical facilities (with hilarious understatement the NS write-up adds "even though malnutrition is a problem in that country"), the woman is even more discredited than her UN colleague, the IPCC's Rajendra Pachauri, who I'm intrigued to see does not make the list.

Nor does Algore - come to think of it, none of the leading global warming gurus are on the list. But the man most associated with popping the AGW bubble, Steve McIntyre, is there at number 32. If even the lefties have given up on it, maybe the whole scam will now fade into the obscurity from which it should never have emerged.

Dennis Prager - soothscribe

"Why do non-leftists vote Labour Democrat?", he asks. For once I'm not using the cutesy crossing-out to register irony: what he writes applies with equal force on both sides of the Atlantic.
What keeps most non-leftist Democrats voting Democrat has been the spectacularly effective saturation of virtually all media and all educational institutions with the message that the Right is mean-spirited and dangerous. People are fed the message “Danger on the Right” - and virtually never “Danger on the Left,” despite the Left’s far bloodier record.
Indeed - do our kids get taught about the enslavement of whole peoples and the genocides of those acting in the name of socialism? Not a chance - all they get taught is the African slave trade and the Nazis.
That is why nearly all leftist reactions to conservatives are to avoid argument and smear them as sexist, intolerant, xenophobic, homophobic, Islamophobic, racist, or bigoted. It is almost impossible to come up with the name of a leading conservative whom the dominant media have not dismissed as one or more of these, and usually as a buffoon as well. In effect, the left says, and has been saying for 100 years, “You may not agree with us, but our opponents are evil.”
The rest is more particularly applicable to the US experience, but his comment on blacks voting Democrat apply, mutatis mutandis, to the sad city and northern voters in the UK who vote tribally for a party that has spat in their faces: the leftists have ruined the cities they govern, and ruined the public schools they control, yet still their victims vote for them because they think they have no choice.

27 September 2010

Political Economy and War (Part 2)

Although Freud persuasively argued that Pharoah Ahkenaton and his priest Moses were the first to perceive the political advantage of monotheism, ideology became a permanent part of the equation with the conversion to Christianity of the Roman Emperor Constantine. He saw that a single religion with a single god could be a powerful unifying factor in an empire of disparate cultures, and realised that he could co-opt what was until then a pacifist and subversive doctrine into an instrument of state power. Muhammad had the same clarity of vision three hundred years later, with explosive consequences among what had been until then a disunited and fractious people.

The frontier between these two messianic creeds became for centuries the preferred arena for rulers on both sides to increase their power through Crusade and Jihad. From the popes who convoked Christendom to retake the Holy Land as part of their temporal struggle with the Holy Roman Empire, through Emperor Charles V who used the Ottoman threat to consolidate the Hapsburg empire, down to Khomeini calling for a Jihad to reunite the Muslim world under his Shi’a leadership, monotheism and war have gone hand-in-hand to extend and to sanctify the centralisation of power.

When Philip IV of France expropriated the military monastic order of the Templars in 1307, it was as much to eliminate an alternative source of power as to lay hands on the order’s wealth. This was seen even more clearly when Henry VIII of England dissolved the monasteries and declared himself the head of the English church. The appearance of mercenaries as major actors in warfare coincides with the emergence of the Italian city states, able to generate great wealth without the agricultural lands and populations that previously defined military and hence political power.

By persecuting the Moorish and Jewish conversos who constituted their commercial and financial class, the Spanish monarchs attacked their own ability to finance their wars. Conversely, in the Netherlands revolt, the House of Orange was discovering the power of protracted war to assemble a new kingdom from the dozens of disparate sources of economic power represented by the great trading cities of the region. The successive immigrations of groups persecuted for their religion as a means of expropriating their wealth on the European mainland laid the foundation for the astounding commercial success of England, then Britain and finally the USA.

The USA provides one of the clearest illustrations of the tight link between war and statism. The four great centralisers in her history were Abraham Lincoln, Woodrow Wilson, Franklin Roosevelt and Lyndon Johnson, not coincidentally associated with the four greatest wars the nation has fought. There is no chance here of confusing cause and effect – all were firmly committed to increasing the power of the federal government before getting involved in war. To this day, among those who admire their legacy, there remains a marked tendency to declare unwinnable “wars”, such as those on poverty and narcotics, to justify previously unthinkable intrusions into the pockets and the private lives of citizens.

Some believe socialism is intrinsically pacifist, against which we have the example of the French socialist Jean Juarés, whose examinations of the French Revolutionary and Franco-Prussian wars led him to adopt the doctrine of “the nation in arms”. The idea that the individual is enhanced rather than diminished by marching in step with millions of others is the common thread linking socialism with militarism. It is worth remembering that Bismarck, to many the epitome of “blood and iron”, was also the architect of the beginnings of a welfare state far more comprehensive than anything in France or Britain. Extending government favour to the industrial working class, like his short, sharp limited wars, was a means to an end, namely the unification of Germany under a strong central government.

The politicisation of private life, foretold by George Orwell in 1984 and by Kurt Vonnegut in the prophetic stories of Welcome to the Monkey House, is not the least of the entirely intentional results of rallying peoples to great national causes. For as long as people continue to rejoice in the dollar they receive from on high and do not appreciate that it is simply their own money, recycled, then as Thomas Sowell gloomily observes there is no logical stopping point on the road to consensual tyranny, what he calls “totalitarianism from within”.

If by “totalitarian” we understand a philosophy that claims to have the answers to all the questions of existence and which will seek to impose that philosophy through coercion and indoctrination, the three great totalitarian systems of our time have been Soviet Marxism-Leninism, German-Italian National Socialism-Fascism, and Anglo-American Progressivism. Of these the last and least overtly offensive has proved the most durable. All three have depended on not so much a class as a type of person for whom a world without clear direction from above is unendurable. Although all three have fought to the death among themselves, they have been united in their hostility towards traditional economic liberalism.

This is not surprising, for laissez faire means leaving people alone, and if you do that they will not think and act in the approved manner. In addition, Adam Smith’s “invisible hand” of the market gives more importance to those who produce wealth than to those who merely collect, spend and distribute it. Seen in that light, war is the antithesis of progress not just because it destroys and kills, but because whatever the high-flown reasons given for fighting (“a world fit for democracy” springs to mind), its political legacy is oppression.

Political Economy and War (Part 1)

Insofar as any of the social sciences deserves to be considered on a par with the natural sciences, economics comes the closest to being a discipline in which hypotheses may be formulated and tested (“falsified”) in the quest for general applications, significantly known as “laws”. The Moses of economics was Adam Smith, whose Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations (1776) aimed to set out “the general principles of law and government” and was a work in which economics, as defined today, merged seamlessly with history, philosophy and legal theory.

In the same year, Jefferson managed to substitute the concept of “happiness” for what everyone else thought was the more self-evidently natural pursuit of property in the Declaration of Independence, a sentiment echoed in Jeremy Bentham’s Defence of Usury (1787). Rent-seeking, not happiness, featured in Thomas Malthus’s Essay on the Principle of Population as it Affects the Future Improvement of Mankind (1798), while the similarly bleak-minded David Ricardo put a name to the emerging philosophy in Principles of Political Economy and Taxation (1817). Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels considered themselves to be political economists, their philosophy expressed in Capital consisting of an (unattributed) marriage of Malthus’s theory of population with Smith’s concept of surplus value. Their contemporary John Stuart Mill set out what events have proved the more valid historical interpretation in Principles of Political Economy (1848).

All of the above studied history in a diagnostic, not a prescriptive mode. Thus although they were not averse to hurrying the process along, Marx and Engels saw the triumph of socialism as evolutionary and inevitable. That changed with The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money (1936), written by John Maynard Keynes, which gained an enormous following among those anxious to preserve and extend the role of government after World War II. It has not been difficult for rulers to choose between a doctrine that concentrates ever-greater power in their hands and another that regards government as at best a light-handed arbiter in the interplay of natural forces. If one considers this to have been the central dynamic of modern history, then the importance of war becomes apparent.

It is a big “if”, but as a form of philosophical inquiry it provides an interpretative tool that permits a review of the actions of rulers through the ages from a new perspective. It also helps to explain the apparent contradiction of popularly based regimes being some of the most bellicose, because it simply is not true that democracy and war are antithetical, as many fondly believe. Even elected leaders tend to find the role of war leader both personally irresistible and politically rewarding.

Thus far the mis en scène, and a bridge to Clausewitz’s generally misquoted dictum that “war is nothing but the continuation of politics with the admixture of other means”. It is indeed, and nothing shows it more clearly than the manner in which war has been persistently used to expand the share of the economy that governments control and reapportion, to the point that a number of thinkers who might once have been considered of the “left” and of the “right” agree that this was the real purpose of, for example, the Cold War. From earliest times, this argument runs, the only thing all wars have had in common has been to increase governments’ powers of convocation and coercion. There is obvious merit in this point of view: as we have seen most dramatically in the last 70 years, war both centralises power and facilitates the process whereby those exercising power can conflate their ambition with the national interest.

Alexis de Tocqueville feared that freedom could not survive once the majority discovered it could vote itself money from the public purse; but even he did not foresee the manner by which the process could be extended almost indefinitely. Milton Friedman’s analogy is taking a cent from each of a hundred people, giving a dollar to one and repeating the process as many times as necessary. The loss of each cent is barely felt, the “gift” of a dollar much appreciated. Even if none of the money were kept, to increase the amount collected is to increase the transactional power of the collector/distributor, hence it is to be assumed that rulers and the bureaucrats who serve them, regardless of ideology, will strive constantly to do precisely that.

And so they have, particularly during wars. Until comparatively recently, expenditure on what we now prefer to call “defence” was virtually the sole justification for taxation, wonderfully illustrated by the French aristocracy’s self-exemption from taxation on the grounds that they paid an impôt de sang in war, a delicate consideration not extended to the politically powerless peasantry, who were obliged to pay by far the greater part of both forms of tax. A study of war finance shows that once the cost of war exceeded any likely financial gain from conquest, proto-Keynesian considerations about the stimulus that war gave to a nation’s economy began to emerge, along with a bureaucracy dedicated to harvesting some (at times most) of the surplus thus generated for “affairs of state”.

However, the slow emergence of what we now call liberal democracy was based on a very early illustration of the principle that it is more difficult to turn power into money than vice-versa. The introduction of scutage in place of feudal service amounted to a tax, one that King John of England, following the profligate Richard the Lionheart, could use to hire mercenaries and thus recover some of the power lost to the nobles. The nobles were having none of that – hence the Magna Carta, the foundation of stone of a parliamentary tradition that would have appalled all at Runnymede had they foreseen where it would lead.

The process is symbiotic; while it is easy to see that a civil war is about who rules, it is perhaps less easy to perceive that when Caesar and Pompey created the Roman Empire, their primary intention was to increase their own power. The Roman republic recognised and institutionalised the process in the office of Dictator; Caesar was, in fact, the last person to be so designated. His successors had no need of it because between an army that was no longer an expression of citizenship and the vastly increased power of patronage they controlled, it was relatively easy to brush aside the corrupt remnants of republicanism and rule as emperors.

Channel Four

One tends to concentrate on the Bitchy Boys because of their air of smug lefty superiority, but of course Channel Four is just as bad and its news presenter, Jon Snow, learned his trade at the Bitchy Boys - notably during the Bitchy Boys' finest hour, when they broadcast information designed to help the Argentines during the Falklands War - and then went forth to set new standards of supercilious bias at C4.

The C4 press release for tonight's Dispatches reads as follows:
With the spending review edging ever closer, Britain's unions are preparing to take advantage of the public's discontent. They have spent the past few decades on the back foot, while the population often never had it so good. So now that austerity measures are set to bite, do these organisations have the mandate to fight back?
How remarkably revealing. Since it makes clear that the unions are apart from "the population", what "mandate" could there possibly be? And, outside of the state sector, where is this "public discontent" that the trades unions are supposed to exploit?

But finally, "on the back foot" really does not come close to adequately describing what has happened to trade union membership. See ONS graph to 2006. Less than a third of the working population is still unionised, practically all of it in the state sector, with membership declining even as the Labour regime privileged its clientele over those who work for a living whose taxes pay their wages.

Biters bit

Hexus Channel reports that the website of predatory law-firm ACS:Law, which pioneered the charming habit in the UK and elsewhere of mass mailing accusations of illegal file-sharing and shaking the marks down for £500 apiece, has been comprehensively hacked.
The firm's actions have been highlighted by the BBC and Which? has referred the firm to disciplinary tribunal. The website was taken down by a 4chan DDoS attack, while the firm's owner , Andrew Crossley received prank calls in the middle of the night earlier this week, according to TorrentFreak.
Some seriously embarassing stuff is promised. One of the hackers commented "Payback is a bitch, isn't it Andrew?" 

The Bitchy Boys are outraged - why any minute now we may find out how much the inner circle are skimming off to their own production companies!

ROFL

USA and UK: polls apart

Over on CiF Michael Tomasky glooms about the following CNN/ORC poll, conducted 21-23 September.

Republican Party
Too extreme 36%
Generally mainstream 58%
Mixed/Neither (vol.) 4%
No opinion 3%

Democratic Party
Too extreme 42%
Generally mainstream 53%
Mixed/Neither (vol.) 3%
No opinion 2%

Tea Party Movement
Too extreme 43%
Generally mainstream 41%
Mixed/Neither (vol.) 6%
No opinion 10%

"I give up", says Tomasky. If only, Michael, if only.

He is particularly exercised about the Republicans being cattle-prodded into scepticism about the global warming scam - oh, sorry, I see that's now "trying to do something about climate change" - by the electorate, as shown by the defeat of the Republican incumbent by the Tea Partier Christine O'Donnell in Delaware.

He says the Democrats have been losing the argument for 30 years. Well, maybe he would be happier if he gave up on his native land and settled here permanently. Views well to the left of the most wild-eyed US Democrats are centrist over here, and all three political parties are fully signed up to the global warming scam.

Ignorant posers

The Guardianistas, of course. Are you a Chávista?, they ask.

No, but if I were I would be a Chavista, since the emphasis moves to the penultimate syllable when you make an -ista out of Chávez, hence the accent disappears.

The revenge of the nerds


I note that I have been mis-spelling Miliband with two els - thought association with millipede, I guess.

Anyway here's a definition of "geek" that for some reason springs to mind when viewing this image of the brothers Miliband.
A derogatory reference to a person obsessed with intellectual pursuits for their own sake, who is also deficient in most other human attributes so as to impair the person's smooth operation within society.

Brendan O'Neill - soothscribe of the week

The following from the editor of Spiked (which is having a very good day) is unimprovable:
After it ditched everything it once claimed to believe in, launched three disastrous wars, obliterated key freedoms, and went from viewing the working classes as potential voters to branding them a dumb, unhealthy blob in need of constant policing, you might think there is nothing left to admire in the Labour Party. But there is one thing. Its powers of self-delusion. These are so strong, so unshakeable, that they cannot help but inspire a kind of bizarre, wide-eyed awe in anyone who beholds them. And they have been on full display following the election of Ed Miliband as the new Labour leader.

The Tea Party

Given that British schools no longer teach any history that does not support the "progressive" world-view, the powerful symbolism of the Tea Party phenomenon in the USA probably escapes most people over here.

In 1773 a group of drunken rowdies hired by the agitator Samuel Adams, who was probably funded by the French government, dumped a ship-load of taxed tea into Boston harbour to protest the British government's attempt to make the colonies pay something towards their own defence. Adams tried to represent it as an expression of popular outrage at "taxation without representation", but the act was repudiated by most of those who later lead the colonies to independence and it did not acquire iconic status until the 1830s.

Those furious at a distant, arrogant government today have evoked the Tea Party's iconic symbolism, but have not yet moved to direct action. But the fact remains that they could, and if the Federal government reacts as brutally as it did under Clinton at Waco and Ruby Ridge, or if the FBI should mount another black op such as the one that produced the Oklahoma City bombing, the shit really could hit the fan in buckets.

On Spiked, Sean Collins asks "In the Tea Party debate, who's really acting crazy?", with reference to the reaction of American "liberals" (leftists) to the phenomenon.
The real issue is that, when it comes to the Tea Party, liberals have two big blind spots that render them unable to understand what’s going on. The first is that they fail to appreciate the depth of popular alienation from the political establishment. Voters are generally disenchanted with politicians across both parties. A New York Times/CBS News poll found that congressional Democrats’ approval rating was at 30 per cent, and congressional Republicans’ approval was even lower, at 20 per cent. A separate survey by Gallup found that approval rating for all of Congress is at an all-time low of 18 per cent (down from a peak of 39 per cent shortly following Obama’s entry into the White House).
DOWN from a PEAK of 39 percent? 
The second liberal weakness is that they cannot resist spending their energies being preoccupied with the Tea Party. They see the partiers’ rise as an independent phenomenon, but it is as much their own creation, especially by those in the media. Before the Tea Party represented much of anything, liberals drew attention to it, and warned of the dangerous consequences if it got close to power. It could have been dismissed as an irrelevant fringe movement and a sign of weakness within the Republican Party (given that it arose outside of the party’s structure). They also crowned Sarah Palin queen of the Tea Party, even though many if not most Tea Party activists reject her politics, especially her socially conservative views. In the event, liberals’ fear of the Tea Party’s rise has become a self-fulfilling prophecy: shining the spotlight has given this ‘party’ the aura of being something new, different and willing to have a go at change.
Amen to that. However, the fact is that the US leftists have defined themselves in contemptuous opposition to a genuinely grass-roots movement that commands the sort of widespread support that they have never enjoyed, and are feeling as personally isolated as, objectively, they always have been ideologically.

It will burn out, of course - these things usually do because real people have lives to live. Then the zombies who draw their life-force from politics will continue as before, possibly a little chastened - but not much. A generation will pass, the lefties will try again, and the whole psychodrama will repeat itself.

To be borne in mind that when the same Massachusetts yeomen who kicked off the American rebellion in 1775 rose against their new masters under the banner of "no taxation without representation" in 1787, they were violently suppressed because, in the words of Governor James Bowdoin, America would descend into "a state of anarchy, confusion, and slavery" unless the rule of the law was upheld.

Conflicts are seldom about legitimacy - they are about who shall have the power to reward their friends and punish their enemies. Elections - and revolutions - are about turning over the dung-heap.

Guardian editorial - ya got to larf

Miliband is Labour leader because four big unions, predominantly composed of public sector workers, organised strenuously for him and because, in the process, they put enough pressure on a few undecided MPs to carry the day. Labour will undoubtedly unite behind Mr Miliband now, as they should. But the new leader must make clear that he will give no special favours to the unions . . . . If Labour is to become again a party of government it has to be the party for public sector workers without being the party of them.
 And the three bears . . .

26 September 2010

Ed Milliband: the lesser of two weevils

Ed has narrowly edged out big brother David for the leadership of the Labour party thanks to being the favourite of the state sector trades unions and to the second preference votes of no-hoper Ed Balls.

Celebrations at LibDem and Tory party headquarters. God knows neither Cameron nor Clegg inspire any great enthusiasm among their respective party faithful, but it's beginning to look as though they are not going to have to rally the troops for battle. Having been led to disaster by a chippy Scot, the Labour party has chosen to replace him with someone even more hostile to English history and culture.    

Milliband père, Adolphe, was born in Belgium of Jewish immigrants from Poland. Fleeing Belgium in turn ahead of the Nazi invasion of 1940, they came to Britain where Adolphe resolved the problem of sharing a name with the Nazi dictator by renaming himself Ralph. He was a hard-core international socialist all his life, bitterly hostile to the efforts to decontaminate the brand by the "New Left" that emerged in the 1950s.

In 1961 he married another Polish immigrant and they produced the brothers under reference in 1965 and 1969. After a mediocre academic career, much of the latter part spent abroad, Ralph died in 1994 and is buried in Highgate cemetery close to his hero Karl Marx.

Both sons went to school at Haverstock Comprehensive in Chalk Farm, north London, and both attended Corpus Christi college at Oxford, where both read Politics, Philosophy and Economics. Apart from a failed attempt by Ed to become a TV journalist, neither of them has ever held a non-political job. David hitched his wagon to Blair's star and became an MP in 2001, Ed went with Brown and became an MP in 2005.   

The extreme shallowness of talent in the Labour party became embarrassingly apparent during its thirteen years in power, but all the same it is startling that the only two candidates with a chance of becoming the new party leader were the offspring of a man with the classic profile of a Comintern agent.

For obvious and entirely understandable historical reasons, Jews never feel they belong anywhere, and secular Jews like the Millibands are also cut off from their historic support system. Then there's the additional chippiness of young men who managed to claw their way from a comprehensive school to Oxford, where exposure to the members of the public school elite will have deepened their feeling of apartness.

Add the classic chip on the shoulder attitude of the younger brother, and we find that the Labour party has chosen a leader entirely defined by what he is against. Given his debt to the state sector unions and the fact that a majority of Labour MPs and party members did not want him as leader, I think it safe to predict that Ed Milliband's insecurities will make him not only a poor, but a disastrous leader. 

25 September 2010

Not all that emerges from Labour mouths is puke

I am gob-smacked by this Guardian report on David Muir, director of political stategy to Gordon Brown. I did not expect such dispassionate political realism from that quarter. Who did?
Voters talk of the need to 'make do and mend' public services, of living within their means. There is little to no recognition that growth, jobs and homes could be placed in jeopardy. The coalition looks competent, and, importantly, mainstream. This may sound bad for the new Labour leader, but it is in fact much worse.
Wow; and it gets better. Muir says Labour failed to hold on to a particular group of voters in the Midlands and south-east of England, described by market research as 'happy families', who constitute 40 percent of the population in key marginals such as Milton Keynes and who are the most positive about the Coalition.
These families live in new-build housing, many have young children, a household annual income of £20,000 to £30,000, and are cash and time poor. They depend heavily on their car and really feel the pinch when petrol prices rise. They are utterly demanding for their children and want the very best in terms of service provision.
As I said - gob-smacked. How could someone that honest ever have worked closely with Gordon Brown?

Prat's Clegg-fall at the UN

It is hard to select which part of Clegg's address at the UN was more cringe-worthy. It certainly puts him ahead of Jack Straw, who set the previous benchmark for arse-crawling foreign policy statements.

Straw, of course, had the Muslim voters in his Blackburn constituency in mind when, as foreign secretary, he claimed blame on behalf of Britain for the problems of the Middle East and the Indian subcontinent. Nobody in either area even commented on his nostra culpa: unlike the self-abusing Labour pukes, the peoples once part of the British Empire have more important things to do than to wallow in a distant and ambivalent past.

At least Straw's crawl had a strong basis in historical fact. Not so Clegg, who, confronted with the self-imposed mission of crawling up Indian and Muslim arses simultaneously, produced this gem:
Four centuries ago, the great [Islamic] Mughal emperor Akbar was legislating for religious freedom and equality in what is now India [actually conquered northern India, but what the hell], while in parts of Europe heretics were being burned at the stake [there goes the Roman Catholic vote].
Actually, Akbar ruled with much the same indifference to local cults as the British were to do later, although the insensitive British imperialists hanged offenders instead of getting war elephants to step on their heads, and offended against multiculturalism by abolishing suttee and thuggee.

That phrase alone might have won the title for Clegg, but then there was this gem: 
The United Kingdom will also show leadership by example. As fierce advocates of the international rule of law, we will practice what we preach. No nation can insist on the law, and then act as though it is above it.
Nice one. Leadership implies that someone may follow, an optimistic view of Britain's current world status. Plus declaring that Britain acted illegally in joining the Iraq invasion, although consistent with LibDem orthodoxy, is not Coalition policy - the Tories, after all, supported the invasion - and admits a legal liability that the Iraqis, who bear Britain a grudge for surrendering Basra to Shia extremists, may choose to exploit.

And finally there is this POS:
In recent years we have learned – in some cases the hard way – that democracy cannot be created by diktat. Freedom cannot be commanded into existence.
Let's see now: Italy, Germany, Japan are the more screamingly obvious exceptions to Clegg's newly-discovered principle of political science. And what about all those wars of national liberation? Finally, who in his right mind would argue that democracy creates freedom? Unless the rule of the majority is circumscribed by fundamental laws that the majority cannot change - which is not the case in Britain - freedom is an extremely fragile flower that may be trampled at will.

24 September 2010

Bonfire of the quangos?

Today's Telegraph publishes a list from a leaked document of 177 quangos to be abolished, 4 to be privatised, 129 that may be consolidated down to 57, and 94 still under review. The article says 350 will be retained, but only 25 appear in the linked article.

"Yet again we see this Tory Government, and its Lib Dem cheerleaders, playing politics with people's jobs", said a Labourite spokesman. "Briefing the media ahead of any consultation or thought for those involved is not the sign of a government that has any idea what the word fairness means."

Biased BBC reports the usual even-handed reporting by the Bitchy Boys.

Assuming the list reflects intentions, that still leaves the great majority of those nests of parasitic lowmids untouched, and most of those whose sinecures are abolished will drag their resentful arses to other jobs in the state sector, where they will actively work against the Coalition government.

If you're going to cut, cut them all and cut them loose - trimming will not get the job done.

23 September 2010

Where are the British in Afghanistan?

Intriguing graphic in Der Spiegel. Seems there is no British presence in Afghanistan. The principal target of the article is the NGOs that have pullulated in the nutrient rich flow of inadequately audited international development aid.

Afghanistan has 303 international NGOs, also known as INGOs - including sub-sets dubbed BINGOs (business-related INGOs) and MANGOs (mafia-related NGOs). Over 2,000 Afghan NGOs have been disbanded for lack of evidence that they were doing anything, but there are still 1,327 operating.

After the end of World War II in the Pacific, religious rites known as "cargo cults" emerged among the more primitive islanders, pathetically trying to bring back the well-paid jobs and the extravagant logistics that came and went with the advancing US armed forces.

I wonder what the long-term effect of all this corrupting "charity" will be on the Afghans after the westerners and the hopelessly corrupt regime they sustain are gone?

Revealing Demos document

Demos, the leftist think-tank associated with Tony Blair's "Third Way", has published a pamphlet, "The Crisis of Social Democracy", by Peter Kellner, the president of YouGov.
Social democracy, as we have come to understand it, has become unaffordable. . . By “social democracy” I mean the doctrine that a contented society is not merely a rich society, but that public purpose is as important as private profit and that the government has a duty to pass laws, levy taxes and provide money and services to protect people from the insecurities and depredations inherent in a market economy. . . Unlike liberalism, social democracy believes that a strong state is needed to make life better for everyone, and that liberty and localism alone will not lead us to utopia. Unlike conventional socialism, it asserts that a properly functioning market economy is the best way to generate the money needed to finance our social ambitions.
National income is almost four times higher than in 1953-54. So we could afford to quadruple health, education and welfare spending without these services adding to the tax burden as a percentage of GDP. But spending has risen faster than that, so the burden has increased, from 11 per cent of GDP in 1953-54 to 28 per cent this year. And it is worth noting that, whatever we like to think about the Thatcher/Major years, “social democracy spending” grew by 75 per cent in real terms between 1979 and 1997, and rose from 20 per cent of GDP to 23 per cent.
Kellner asks, "How can social democracy continue to fight for the collective good, for social justice and for a view of human well-being that includes but goes beyond material wealth, in an era in which the spending train has hit the buffers?" He has six proposals:
  1. Transfer payments: reduce universalism (apply means testing).
  2. Public services: use co-payments to increase the cash available.
  3. Services delivery: distinguish between objectives (what services and support should be provided and to whom) and methods (who should deliver those services) - what I have called a switch from order command to mission command.
  4. Housing: double the council tax on Band H homes, halve the tax on Band A homes and alter the intermediate rates accordingly; levy capital gains tax on sales of homes and use the money to build more social housing.
  5. Employment: create a National Jobs Service.
  6. Equality: this is not just about money; it is also about culture, health, clean air, attractive public spaces, decent housing, good schools, healthy eating, access to new skills and freedom from fear of crime.
1 to 3 are sensible; but 4, apart from the capital gains suggestion, is incoherent and ignorant. Raising council tax on more expensive homes will simply make their catchment areas more exclusive; and those councils will not be building "social housing". Plus "social housing" offers local councillors an opportunity for corrupt favouritism that rivals the awarding of planning permission.

The National Jobs Service would dwarf all previous bureaucracies, would run directly counter to point 3, and would vastly expand the boundaries of state parasitism. The extension of the "equality" agenda simply makes obvious what it has always been: totalitarian social engineering.

And this is supposed to be the centre left?

22 September 2010

The power of left-wing patronage

In July last year, controller of BBC drama commissioning Ben Stephenson gave an interview to - of course - the Guardian, which kicked off with the following mission statement:
Making drama is the best job in the world – the privilege of working with writers with a unique vision, the spine-tingling spirit of camaraderie between a production team, the privilege of broadcasting into the nation's front-rooms. What could be better than that?

But what I love about it the most is how passionate the people who work in drama are. Working in TV drama isn't a nine-to-five job, it is a wonderful, all-consuming lifestyle. It gobbles up everything. It is glorious.

And with passion comes debate, discussion, tension, disagreement. If we didn't all think differently, have different ideas of what works and what doesn't, wouldn't our lives, and more importantly, our TV screens be less interesting? We need to foster peculiarity, idiosyncrasy, stubborn-mindedness, left-of-centre thinking.
He's still there.

Even Brits who recognize BBC bias do not appreciate how far-ranging is its impact on British culture overall. The leftists have been in uncontested control of the the largest source of arts patronage in the country for over 40 years, and throughout that time if you wanted a career in television, or if you wanted your book, play or comedy act to receive a priceless TV review - or even a mention - you had to be left-of-centre.

Deepening the active in-house bias, already over-paid BBC establishment figures set up production companies to skim the cream of the corporation's external commissioning. Check out the empire Kirsty Wark and husband built up. Nepotism is rife - quite apart from the God's annointed Dimbleby family, Peter Snow has done his considerable best to impose his son Dan not merely as the military historian he is not, but as an all-purpose presenter just like his dear old Dad.

That is the power of patronage the BBC enjoys - my money being taken under threat of criminal prosecution by a self-serving, self-perpetuating oligarchy in order to promote an agenda that is actively hostile to what I believe - on the basis of far wider life experience than any of the BBC lifers even aspire to - is best for me, my family and my country.

Ocelot - better never than late

"The Ocelot, a British built vehicle that can be rebuilt in a matter of hours, will replace the highly criticised Snatch Land Rover", reports the Telegraph. For "highly criticised" read death-trap that should have been replaced seven years ago, and that's about right.

The new patrol vehicle could save scores of lives with a specially designed V-shape hull and a highly manoeuvrable off-road capability. It has been ordered by the Ministry of Defence, as part of an expected £200 million, 200 light protected patrol vehicle [LPPV] package, that will provide a major boost for the economy securing 750 British jobs. It could also lead to big export deals with both Australia and America said to be keen on buying it.

For God's sake. The primary purpose of military equipment is not to provide jobs. In this case, the timely introduction of a properly protected vehicle would have saved 37 lives and many more amputations.

The Ocelot appears to be a good bit of kit, unlike the designed for other climatic conditions Viking and the insane open-plan Jackal patrol vehicle, which places the crew right over the front wheels. However the Ocelot will only start to be available in useful quantity by the time the British pull out of Afghanistan.

Then what? Well, the Army paid £4.5 million for 14 LPPV Mambas, used them in Bosnia and then sold them for £44,000 each to, among others, Blackwater Security, which used them to ferry VIPs between Baghdad airport and the Green Zone.

Meanwhile British troops pootled about in Snatch Land Rovers, which offered no protection against mines or even small-arms fire. What price in wasted lives and money for the latest "boost for the economy"?

Cow'rin, tim'rous beasties

The evidence of the grossly intrusive statism that Brits tamely put up with is overwhelming. Big Brother lists examples almost daily, as today with Coventry school finds a new reason to victimise parents, where we learn that parents are being stopped from watching their children play sport because they place undue "pressure" by standing on the sidelines. Spiked also highlights a couple:

Hands off our testicles reports on two men found guilty of providing sperm without a licence from the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority. "These fresh sperm delivery services just fill me with horror. There is no way on earth that they can guarantee that [the sperm] is infection-free", one expert told the Telegraph.
Would Those Who Know Better also like us to require a licence before we are allowed to share sperm in the traditional way? Perhaps we shouldn’t give them ideas – their answer to that question would almost certainly be ‘yes’.
Who's really scaring the girls? slams a recent publication Because I Am A Girl by Plan UK for grossly overstating the specific risk to girls in Britain's cities, relating it to the fact that "no crime is too tragic, no trend too exaggerated, for a politician not to take the opportunity to posture as our protector, our guardian."

Of course the fact that the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority and Plan UK are both quangos, like the rest of them trying to save themselves from the promised "bonfire", might have something to do with it.

Arseholes Emeritus Causa

I have introduced a new side bar listing those journopukes so full of crap, that is to say producing articles so consistently badly reasoned, dreary and repetitious, that to comment on them is superfluous. 

Robert Peston - arsehole of the week

Many uber-capitalists would tend to agree with Vince Cable's critique of capitalism - that it tends towards short-termism, that markets often don't work in a fair and efficient way, that vast rewards often accrue to the undeserving.
Thus Robert Peston, the Bitchy Boys' business editor. That's über, pronounced you-ber, by the way. Peston's verson sounds like udder-capitalists, which, come to think of it, may be an unwittingly accurate description of the sort of people he is talking about, who love a heavily regulated market because it raises the cost of entry and permits them to buy from politicians the advantage their products cannot win in the marketplace.

The marxhorroid term "capitalism" no longer serves any purpose. It implies there is an alternative. The correct term is "the free market". It is not self-evident what or who is "fair", "efficient" and "deserving". If it were, the dream of socialism would have worked. Instead it produced a corrupt, tyrannical nightmare.
Every government since the fall of Margaret Thatcher and Ronald Reagan some two decades ago has - by stealthy increments - tried to make it their business to try and harness capitalism to minimise the bads and maximise the goods that it generates. The problem is, some would say, that they did this in a piecemeal way that didn't get to the heart of the matter.
Nearly all governments subsequent to Thatcher and Reagan, all over the world, continued the process of deregulation because it created greater prosperity.

"Some would say" - how pathetic. What is the "heart of the matter"? Answer comes there none.
Acknowledged experts - including the governor of the Bank of England and the chairman of the Financial Services Authority - assert that the banking crisis of 2008 is a demonstration that the taming of capitalism has failed in a pretty fundamental way.
That would be the "acknowledged experts" who, possessing all the necessary power to restrain asset price inflation and the uncontrolled speculation based on it, did not do so.

Lefty childishness

The "Rude Britannia" exhibition at the Tate was a reminder that graphic British political humour has always leaned towards the childishly scatalogical. But what it also underlined is the crude banality, both in content and drafting skill, of contemporary political cartoons. Here's the best the Beano Guardian can produce:


21 September 2010

The Politics of Resentment

Title of a heart-felt article by Soothscribe Emeritus Thomas Sowell about the defeat of Adrian Henty, the highly effective black mayor of majority black Washington DC.
Mayor Adrian Fenty, under whom the murder rate has gone down and the school children's test scores have gone up, was resoundingly defeated for re-election. He was not simply a passive beneficiary of rising test scores and falling murder rates. He appointed Michelle Rhee as head of the school system and backed her as she fought the teachers' union and fired large numbers of ineffective teachers - something considered impossible in most cities across the country. Mayor Fenty also appointed the city's chief of police, Cathy Lanier, who has cracked down on hoodlumism, as well as crime.

Either one of these achievements would made mayors local heroes in most other cities. Why then was he clobbered in the election?

One key fact tells much of the story: Mayor Fenty received more than 70 percent of the white vote in Washington. His opponent received more than 80 percent of the black vote. Both men are black. But the head of the school system that he appointed is Asian and the chief of police is a white woman. More than that, most of the teachers who were fired were black. There were also bitter complaints that black contractors did not get as many of the contracts for doing business with the city as they expected.

In short, the mayor appointed the best people he could find, instead of running a racial patronage system, as a black mayor of a city with a black majority is apparently expected to do. He also didn't spend as much time schmoozing with the folks as was expected.
How did we reach the point where black voters put racial patronage and racial symbolism above the education of their children and the safety of everyone?

There are many reasons but one key factor was the creation, back in the 1960s, of a whole government-supported industry of race hustling. President Lyndon Johnson's "war on poverty" bankrolled all kinds of local "leaders" and organizations with the taxpayers' money, in the name of community "participation" in shaping the policies of government. These "leaders" and community activists have had every reason to hype racial resentments and to make issues "us" against "them."

One of the largely untold stories of our time has been the story of how ACORN, Jesse Jackson and other community activists have been able to transfer billions of dollars from banks to their own organizations' causes, with the aid of the federal government, exemplified by the Community Reinvestment Act and its sequels. Racial anger and racial resentments are the fuel that keeps this lucrative racket going.
This is precisely the trend accentuated by The One's core supporters, and what the "multiculturalism" pushed by the Labour pukes and their bought and paid for media allies have tried to recreate in Britain.

The "Other"

Here's a nauseating, and seemingly well substantiated horror story from the Washington Post.

For weeks, 25-year-old Staff Sergeant Calvin R. Gibbs wound up a group of soldiers from 3rd Platoon, Bravo Company, 2nd Battalion, 1st Infantry Regiment of the 5th Stryker [armoured infantry] Combat Brigade, 2nd Infantry Division to randomly target and kill an Afghan civilian, and get away with it. On 15 January 2010 a solitary Afghan man, Gul Mudin, approached them in the village of La Mohammed Kalay. One soldier tossed a grenade on the ground to create the impression of an attack. The others opened fire.
According to charging documents, the unprovoked, fatal attack was the start of a months-long shooting spree against Afghan civilians that resulted in some of the grisliest allegations against American soldiers since the invasion in 2001. Members of the platoon have been charged with dismembering and photographing corpses, as well as hoarding a skull and other human bones.
Forty-two years ago a new "shake and bake" subaltern leading a platoon of conscripts massacred hundreds of Vietnamese civilians at My Lai. The Army tried to cover it up, but when it was finally investigated the thing that emerged most clearly was that the soldiers did not regard the "gooks" as human beings.

A secondary factor was that, having lost comrades to booby traps set by an enemy who never gave them the catharsis of battle, the soldiers were possessed by an indiscriminate desire for vengeance. Not just against the "gooks" - they wanted pay-back for being where they were, fighting a war they knew they could not win.

Sound familiar? There is a limit to how much stress any human being can cope with. I would like to know the incidence of self-inflicted wounds and if any officer "fragging" is taking place, but this incident argues very strongly that even without considering the appalling cost of the continuing conflict to the Afghans, there is a prima facie case for the US Army to pull out for its own institutional health.

Electoral fraud Part 2

As reported previously, the Labour party in Tower Hamlets turned a blind eye to the registration of phantom voters, bribery and intimidation by Councillor Lutfur Rahman, who thereby won the party nomination as candidate for the Mayor of Tower Hamlets. After all, it worked for them in the General Election, so why not?

Here's why not - Peter Golds, leader of the Conservatives on the Council, today demanded that the police investigate Rahman's breaches of the Political Parties, Elections and Referendums Act. With electric haste, the Labour party's National Executive Committee made the following announcement:
Having received a number of serious allegations concerning both the eligibility of participating voters and the conduct of Lutfur Rahman, the NEC has decided to investigate the allegations made. As a result, administrative action has been taken to remove Lutfur Rahman as a candidate pending the investigation. Nominations for Tower Hamlets mayor close this week and in the circumstances the NEC had no option but to impose another candidate. The NEC has voted to select Helal Abbas Uddin as Labour's candidate.
Abbas Uddin was always the NEC's favourite son, but they were prepared to put up with Lutfur rather than open the can of worms about how Labour keeps itself in power in all its rotten boroughs.

So now their opponents know: it's a waste of time expecting the Labour pukes to show any respect for democracy or civic decency - the only thing that works is the cattle prod of imminent police scrutiny.

How MoD wastes billions

Not a bad Dispatches on Channel 4, always allowing for the obligatory British chippiness about social class.

One thing, though - the programme made a direct comparison between the battlefield utility Future Lynx helicopter procurement and the "off the shelf" medium lift US Blackhawk that everyone on the ground has been clamouring for ever since IEDs made ground transport so hellishly vulnerable.

The correct comparison would have been with the medium lift Merlin, but one can see why the programme shied away from that, as the Merlin procurement predates the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. The issue there would have been whether to cancel a long-lead procurement programme in order to buy Blackhawks.

Still a valid point, but not so striking. And the per unit cost quoted for Blackhawks (£10 million) was just plain wrong. Taiwan recently acquired 60 Blackhawks for $3.1 billion, to include essential training, spares, tools, etc., which works out at about £32 million a copy. 

A shame they over-egged that pudding, because the principal reason for Future Lynx, admitted by Army chief Richard Dannatt, was the ludicrous arrangement whereby the RAF has a monopoly on operating the larger helicopters. The Army was so desperate to have battlefield helicopters under the operational control of the ground commander that they were forced to settle for the Future Lynx.

That's insane. The programme really should have zeroed in on the RAF's primary culpability for the whole mess. The simplest way of adjusting British military expenditure to fiscal realities is to abolish that totally superfluous service and to redistribute the arbitrary third of the defence budget that is wasted on it.

Live by the hype, die by the hype

Mona Charen has posted a thoughtful article on NRO about how backward-looking the agenda of the US "progressives" has been since their messiah was elected, as symbolized by the Time magazine cover - one of about two dozen - that showed him as Franklin Roosevelt, jaunty cigarette (horrors!) holder and all.

When you consider the Obama ascendancy as a case of pent-up liberal Democratic demand, things come into better focus. How else to explain why a Democratic government would push through a new trillion-dollar health-care entitlement when large majorities of the electorate have signaled near-panic over growing government debt? How else to explain the $800 billion stimulus (whose funds went largely to public-sector union workers) and the obese budgets? “This is our time,” Obama intoned in 2008, “This is our moment.”

If this had been 1980 or 1990 or even 2000, the Democrats might not have suffered the backlash they are now enduring from the electorate. But they chose to indulge their spending spree just when Americans were sobering up about past overspending in their private lives. The recession was a smack across the head reminding people that those jumbo mortgages and home-equity loans were mistakes — that eventually the bills come due.

Over here, the "progressives" continue to be characterised by what George Orwell long ago described as the "British leftist's mechanical snigger", with the Bitchy Boys Club sneering at Sarah Palin and now Christine O'Donnell - well, they are women (ugh!) as well as conservative - so regularly that you'd have thought somebody in the USA might give a damn what they think.

If there is a widespread popular recognition that the fiscal incontinence of the Brown regime mirrored personal attitudes to spending and debt, it is getting no attention from the mainstream media at all. I very much doubt if you could gather even a small crowd in Britain, let alone a mass popular movement, animated by outrage at statist profligacy. That would involve looking in the mirror and actually seeing what it reflects, and the British are as eisoptrophobic as vampires.