Ideas rooted in truth can be build upon, like the gospel and great societies.
common sense
"there is no arguing with one who denies first principles"
Monday, May 16, 2016
Give the Rancher a break!
A pet peeve of mine (one of many) is that of elevating wildlife and animal safety to that of fetish. I came across a snippet from USA Today about a rancher defending his cattle in Montana from a furry cute-as-a-teddy-bear wolverine. My description not theirs.
The rancher shot and killed the beast. Turns out wolverines are vicious and...oh yeah...a protected species. Everything is protected nowadays except private property.
Too many 'conservationists' think wildlife exists to photograph and rope off on federal land. Private property is suspicious to them, especially in the American West. Ranchers and farmers understand wild living better than city folks.
The rancher posted a picture of the dead wolverine (he shot) on his Facebook page. Wildlife photographer Ray Rafiti who has taken pics of the creature in the past, re-posts images of this poor rancher holding up his prize.
Comments from followers of Rafiti's page prove the unrealistic understanding people have about the 'wild' and those who live in it.
"wasteful shameful act"
"Anger, that is all I have to say before I say something I'll regret."
"So, so sad"
"Horrible!"
"Would someone please shoot this moron"
"Such a great loss"
link
A good deal of the comments are nasty barbs about the rancher's lack of intelligence, lack of manliness and lack of culture. I realize this is a Facebook comment section and therefore a cesspool, but ignorance about how fellow Americans live is disconcerting. Is this rancher supposed to care that wolverines are endangered while it terrorizes his cattle?
There were a few supportive comments of the rancher buried under an avalanche of nastiness. One women described the damage that wolverines will do to a herd of cattle. This is like explaining compounding interest to toddlers. They won't understand or care. They see nature as a well-regulated federal park with hiking paths and restrictions on hunting, fishing and alcohol use. Oh, and that summer internship at Yellowstone where they got to feed the baby grizzly bear, that made them a 'nature' expert.
I enjoy the outdoors. The Grand Canyon is an incredible sight that anyone would enjoy; the sheer majesty of God's creation is on display in countless landscapes around the world, it demands respect. Let's also respect the rugged individuals who depend on farming and ranching to sustain their life. They make tough choices everyday and understand what real conservation is all about.
To those who imagine that every private concern needs a public response, MIND YOUR OWN DAMN BUSINESS.
Saturday, May 7, 2016
'Ted Cruz for President' a eulogy
Ted Cruz is ‘dad humor’ in a raunchy stand-up comedy age, vegetables
instead of ice cream, homework instead of recess. The easy thing to say would
be “Well this just wasn’t Ted’s year, maybe next time!” The country may never
again resemble the ‘shining city upon the hill’ Reagan believed it to be.
Conservatism isn’t dead just outnumbered. ‘Ted Cruz for President’ felt like a
last gasp at salvaging first principles for a nation that didn’t ask for it. He
was the wrong man for the time, but the right man to carry the flag.
He suspended his campaign after getting buried in Indiana by the vulgarian from New York. He was
a man out of his time as he struggled to connect with a Republican party
increasingly comfortable with loose philosophical ideals. Ted was traditional
in his approach to politics; he attended Harvard and Princeton, worked as a
Solicitor General in Texas and won election to the Senate. He had a brilliant
intellect for legal matters and a scholarly approach to Constitutional history
and legacy.
His command of the issues was impressive and he never ran
from an argument no matter how ignorant or shrill the opponent. He was decent
and respectful of protesters at his rally when he didn’t need to be. I watched
him let Code Pink radicals infiltrate his stump speech and scream nonsense
about the war in Iraq, which hasn’t been a ‘hot’ topic in years. He tolerated
them, took their arguments and crushed them with logic and facts.
Ted was born to debate.
He built up a base of support from his Senate seat by
staging dramatic events that gathered the attention of the nation. He was a
showman by nature and understood the importance of proving his commitment to conservative
values. The filibuster he gave in 2013 to the Senate brought attention to a budget stuffed like a turkey with funding for Obamacare. It wasn’t technically
a filibuster but the marathon 20 hour ‘talk-a-thon’ grabbed the attention of
Americans fed up with the hated subsidy.
Ted was born to talk.
He was evangelical to his core, his dad a Baptist minister.
Christianity reinforced the conservatism of Mr. Cruz, the two principles being
inseparable to how he ran his campaign, his family and his office. He spoke
passionately of faith and family values which made him a relic to much of the
country, like a fur trader on a New York subway. His speeches (especially in
Iowa) calling Christians to "Awaken the Body of Christ..." seemed kooky to those un-familiar with evangelical language.
Ted was born to preach.
Large numbers of voters distrusted him. His slick demeanor
and demonstrative speaking style reminded many of a televangelist in the
Southern Baptist tradition. He worked hard to round off the jagged edges of his
personality by appearing with his wife and kids whenever possible. After the
loss on Tuesday, Indiana went for Trump; it became obvious to the Cruz camp
that it wasn’t their year.
Morality and past success aren’t selling anymore as Cruz
discovered, Romney found out last year. Responsibility and command of issues
has never been ‘cool’ but usually carried the day. Americans could be counted
on to vote for the right guy eventually, not this cycle however. Senator Cruz
will carry the flag for conservatism and America’s role in the world from
Washington in other ways than the oval office. He is too intelligent and
ambitious to move home and start a law practice.
Ted was born to lead.
Tuesday, May 3, 2016
Interview Ignorance is Biss
Yogi Berra supposedly said “When you come to a fork in the
road, take it.” I like to think he was describing difficult choices in life
that leave one nothing but bad options. If both decisions result in poor
outcomes, flip a coin. One could always play dumb and take the easy way out. I
opted for this one recently.
I had an interview for a teaching job a few years ago. It
was an ESL (English as a Second Language) job teaching Spanish speaking
immigrants through the YWCA. Actually the YWCA just ran the program through a
Hispanic affiliate. I didn’t really expect to get the job based on the way the
interview went. The ladies asked me about socially conscience issues like “How
does racism hold people back?” and “What are institutional causes of oppression
among minorities?” I’m piecing together the questions from memory. From my best
recollection they were some version of that--heavy on institutional blame light
on personal responsibility.
The YWCA has a women’s empowerment agenda and depending on
one’s definition, this can be problematic. Like most agendas the Left drives,
empowerment usually includes abortion rights, some form of employment quotas
and an obligatory campaign to ‘stop hate’ or ‘end racism’. The looser the
definitions the easier it is to cram public spending proposals through federal
budgets. Who wants to vote for 'hate' anyway? I won’t give an exhaustive list of my beliefs here but I prefer a
Christian based approach to charity and education. The YWCA (Young Women’s
Christian Association) despite the religious name operates more like a
progressive institution. I was a poor choice and recognized it right away.
I played dumb. To the
racism question I answered “Racism is bad and I will not tolerate it in the
classroom”. To the institutional oppression question I answered that I would
treat everyone the same regardless of their ability to learn. Both answers were
so far off the mark they were borderline insulting. They wanted to hear ‘dog-whistles’
proving my devotion to the cause of ‘social justice’ and a blame America
posture that ignores individual worth. In short they wanted me to prove that I
had attended college.
I couldn’t fault them
for insisting on an ideologically pure teacher with a particular social bent. I
wouldn’t expect a church interviewing a pastor not to ask relevant questions
about his/her understanding of Christianity. For instance, does he/she believe
in the death and resurrection of Christ and does it guide their choices in life? Teaching English to Mexican immigrants
shouldn’t require the same litmus test as religious doctrine, sadly it does.
Had I used phrases like ‘social inequality’ or talked about
the ‘marginalized classes’ the outcome would have been different. At some point
during the interview and I had decided this job wasn’t for me and sabotaged the
process by being evasive. I wasn’t disrespectful or nasty and they permitted my
rambling with smiles. They were very sweet and even treated me like a toddler
describing his first day at school, lots of “Really…then what?”
Was I wrong to be so misleading? I struggled with that
question the minute I left the interview, still do. I never lied but I did deceive.
I took serious liberties with the
questions despite their open ended nature. I couldn’t agree with the soft Marxist
view on class and privilege. The other option was to stand on the table and
recite opposing literature with the fervor of a street preacher. I can imagine
holding up a copy of Atlas Shrugged in dramatic fashion, quoting something
from John Galt’s exhaustive speech, pointing a finger at the horrified
interviewer.
I took the fork in the road and like Yogi Berra played
ignorant. I am a little wiser now about inner city non-profits and the views
they hold on economics, class and race. Understanding ‘First Principles’ requires
knowing which jobs to interview for and which ones to pass on. I’ll take my
chances working with churches on inner city outreach; I understand their
philosophy much better.
Friday, April 29, 2016
Church leader’s wife dead after buried alive during church demolition - China Aid
Church leader’s wife dead after buried alive during church demolition - China Aid
Many predicted China would begin cracking down on churches; It is the nature of Communist leaders to crush any movement that poses a 'threat' to their authority. This new president Xi Jinping is proving tyrannical like many Western observers assumed. The church crackdown, the 'corruption' crusade and aggressive posturing in the South China Sea are cause for alarm. Pray for Christians in China
Many predicted China would begin cracking down on churches; It is the nature of Communist leaders to crush any movement that poses a 'threat' to their authority. This new president Xi Jinping is proving tyrannical like many Western observers assumed. The church crackdown, the 'corruption' crusade and aggressive posturing in the South China Sea are cause for alarm. Pray for Christians in China
Monday, April 25, 2016
Education as a Commodity
Remember when a 54 inch Plasma TV cost $10,000? Very few could
pay for a new set so they waited. The price fell every year on plasma TVs of
all sizes since they were introduced. The manufacturing process got cheap,
other plasma screen makers jumped into the market and consumers benefited from
the increasingly low priced sets. I noticed a 50 inch at Target for $299.99
over last Christmas.
Value (price) falls in relation to scarcity, the more
televisions than get produced the cheaper they become. Education works the same
way except only one part of the equation is true. The total number of schools is
higher than ever so why hasn’t the price come down? In fact, the price of the
top tier schools is higher than ever. Because culturally Americans imagine a
link between schooling and advancement going back to at least post WWII
thinking; second, the student loan program continues to be a boom for
institutions and a bust for kids.
For large chunks of the middle class a college degree equals
years of student loan payments and no discernible difference between their own
career and their non-degree friends. Kids about to enter classrooms beyond
high school should consider the question--is college worth it?
Some college degrees are more in line with the nature of the
work being sought and therefore a great option. Students who study medicine,
engineering and technology (STEM professionals) find lucrative careers and
job opportunities all over the world. Those of us in the Liberal Arts (beer
pong experts) find diminished opportunities and depressed wages as we
shuffle from interview to internship. Most of us don’t have the mathematical
brain for engineering or the patience for new medical terms. Those careers
wouldn’t have suited us anyway so giving us a mulligan on ‘chosen career path’
isn’t practical. We’d probably just take the ‘do over’ money and buy a campus
apartment with a hot-tub---the extra stress and all.
Kids today struggle to find even low paying gigs in a market
where wages have been flat since 2008. College degree costs’ continue to rise
though, as do food, housing, electric, insurance, child care and everything
necessary for living. The hard workers will juggle multiple jobs and eke out a
living while working more hours than intended. Welcome to the middle class.
The ones on top, the rich, can afford the living increases
and still live well off compounding interest. The ones on the
bottom, the poor, don’t pay many of the increased living expenses like housing,
medical bills and food. Those items get subsidized through various federal and
state programs originally used sparingly, now abused consistently.
So now that Medieval
Literature degree you spent six and half years on is crushing you in loan
payments. Your interest is needed. Interest on student debt, credit card debt,
mortgage debt, sovereign debt and local debt is vital. Sell something or get
another job if you want to stay in the middle. You are in danger of sliding
down the ladder and joining the ranks of the poor, better known as ‘completely
dependent’.
All of us make choices in life whether financial or social.
We are responsible for those choices no matter how ignorant we were of consequences
at the time. Some of us had destructive advice on debt and relationships that
set us back a few years. Many were just selfish and immature ignoring good
advice from people trying to save them from a bull-headed nature. Blaming
others for your mistakes, financial or relational, is a recipe for sliding
toward the bottom.
The American middle class family requires diversification in
income and low levels of debt in order to survive. The quickest way out of the
debt-poverty cycle is to find additional ways to make money. Sell those mint
condition KISS Army dolls you brag about to relatives and co-workers. Start a
car-washing and detailing business that dumps into a college fund for the kids.
Even if the kids turn out to have your smarts at least they won’t be in debt
when they graduate.
Second, get the debt levels as close to zero as possible and
DON’T take on more. This is boilerplate budgeting and financial planning stuff
that our grandparents understood better than we did. Somewhere along the way we
got greedy, dreamed of a better life NOW and charged it all to the future.
Suddenly debt was cool, credit cards were king and an easy money ethos fed Wall
Street. We rode the ‘rising tide’ until our ship ran aground. We’ve spent much
of our adult life repairing the hull and trying to get back to sea.
‘Getting back’ requires making tough decisions about college
and how to pay for it. The explosion in the total number of schools means
options for financing that aren’t necessarily debt. Scholarship programs exist
if you know where to look. Until the price of school falls to a level that
matches middle class living, save the tuition money. You could always by an
extra TV.
Tuesday, April 19, 2016
Noxious Cheat
The Volkswagen ‘diesel gate’ affair is well trodden territory of corporate malfeasance and fraud. You might wonder why I am mentioning something that is admittedly old news. Simple, it never got the “how dare they!?” type coverage that say a traditional ‘polluter’ like a coal company would’ve endured. Imagine the regulations the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) could propose if Access Industries was found to have lied about their emission record. VW’s cheating perfectly exemplifies the green movement and ‘guilt free’ marketing so effective in scamming American consumers.
When I say ‘green movement’ I am really talking about anyone who believes that switching deodorant brands or light bulb types is akin to adding a few odd years to the life of ‘mother-earth’ (fragile creature that she is). In other words consumers, for whom environmental concerns factor into decisions to buy, sell and grow. Businesses market goods by emphasizing ‘biodegradable’ ‘recycle-able’ and ‘non-phosphate’ as selling points.
Pushing ‘environment saving’ spray cleaner isn’t any more dishonest than selling bacteria reducing soap; both products serve other purposes so we ignore the larger claims. As long as my Windex with zero phosphates cleans the smudges off the glass I’m not concerned about the chemical makeup of the ‘earth friendly’ spray. Besides I feel good about my purchase knowing that I supported a company that really ‘gets it’. A closer look at the claims made by the companies often reveals some ugliness. This is how VW became synonymous with cheating.
Briefly, here is what happened. The company engineers created a cheat code that set the car in idle when the emissions were being tested. I don’t know how the test works or how the car knows that it is being tested; some engineer knew though and he/she designed the car to basically--go to sleep. Imagine designing a machine that makes a person’s heart rate read between 80-95 beats per minute (resting rate) after running a marathon. Kind of like that.
The maddening thing about VW is how they turned their emissions records (which were made up) into a selling point despite being the biggest offender. It’s almost as if Major League Baseball, in the early 2000s, created an ‘honest citizen’ award given annually to the high school star who demonstrated clean living and modesty and they called it the Barry Bonds Award. They created advertisements with Bonds talking about 'decency' and 'respect for the game' while some B roll of his highlights ran at length. Volkswagen didn’t just get caught cheating on the test, they got caught writing ‘how-to-cheat’ flow charts and holding ‘how-to-cheat’ seminars.
The argument supporting VW’s software hack is that emissions in the U.S. set by the Environmental Protection Agency are much tougher than the EU equivalent test. Understandably they found it easier to create a program for beating the test instead of fixing the problems associated with diesel emission compliance. Did they have to use their clean diesel program as a point of emphasis? Did they have to show expensive and clever ads like the one above?
The folks at Volkswagen gave the greenies everything they wanted, an affordable vehicle with earth friendly bona fides and a built in humblebrag. “No it isn’t an expensive car but the industry is committed to sustainability, I just wanna…you know, do my part.” Volkswagen had a huge success story in total earnings and as a company dedicated to air quality and ‘sustainability’. As long as no one looked too closely the engine of deception ran like a...a fine German engineered motor.
Too many times in recent history green development has been exposed as a thin scab covering a festering sore. From the Solyndra company that promised a revolution in solar energy, to certified organic labels on food and zero emission cars, the claims didn’t deliver. In many instances they were outright scams. The green movement is rife with ‘guilt-free’ products and better living through sustainability, just don’t look too close. Do yourself a favor and buy the cleaner that works, don’t worry about the phosphates.
Friday, April 15, 2016
Ice breakers: dangerous game of chance
Ice breakers: those obligatory dinner party questions that
are an easy way to make large groups seem more personal. Questions like “What
is the most interesting job you have worked?” or “What would you do with a million
dollars?” We think our lives are
ordinary, relative to others in the room. These games are designed to get us
interacting and talking with each other. Occasionally they go awry and tell us
something we never wanted to know.
The Icebreaker I used was ‘deserted island’ where everyone
says which book they would bring if they had to spend 10 years alone on an
island. The class was a group of Mongolian students learning English at a
Chinese International school--long story don’t ask. I was teaching English for
the whole school and that day just happened to be my day with the Mongolian
kids. One by one they walked to the front of the room, repeated the phrase “my
name is ____, I am _____ years old, I would read ____”. It was a modified Ice
breaker so that they could use as many English words as possible.
Not sure what type of
answers I expected, probably lots of Harry Potter reading materiel. I nearly choked after the first student
expressed admiration for Hitler by choosing to bring a copy of Mein Kampf
on her extended stay. Ditto for the second and third and after a dozen or so
kids the verdict was in on Mein Kampf.
Nearly everyone wanted a copy. They
didn’t know the German title for Hitler’s book but they managed in their
halting English to mutter “gitler buk”. I imagined men with hidden cameras were
going to jump out of the closets and force a relieved laugh out of me so I
could join in the absurdity. The kids talked about Hitler like he was Abe
Lincoln or Winston Churchill, famous for being great. Adolf Hitler was a great
German leader the way that BMW is a great German car.
It was an illuminating this is the ‘real world’ type moments.
I realized people have different expectations of leadership and the qualities
that constitute greatness. In much of the non-democratic world strength equals
greatness while weakness equals failure. Winston Churchill was a great leader
because he saved Britain and fought back against an unrelenting assault from Luftwaffe bombing campaigns designed to decimate
her Majesty’s industrial advantage. Churchill’s moral courage against an evil
ideology is what makes him great.
George Washington is also a model of resolute character in
the face of a decimated army and swift moving British troops. Having lost men
to starvation and desertion, the continental army managed to fight on with
almost no support from Congress. As the first president of the newly formed
United States he could have become emperor but stepped aside giving power back
to the citizens.
Hitler though?
Take away morality and we are left with superficial
qualities describing famous men (strength, power, decisiveness, popularity).
Churchill and Washington were moral men and their leadership qualities are
buttressed by the justness of their causes. Admiring Hitler or Mussolini or Genghis
Khan inverts the graph by making strength and power the goal instead of the
effect. This Machiavellian framework is more present in the liberal democratic
world than even I thought back in my English teaching days.
How about this for an Icebreaker: “How far in the Presidential
election cycle could a billionaire con-man known for reality TV antics get?
The success of Donald Trump is proof that there is a human
tendency to see leaders as powerful agents ‘winning’ battles and crushing
opponents. I don’t think Trump is Hitler or Mussolini but he does have ‘strong-man’
qualities suggesting lack of a moral center and an indifference to the rule of
law. He may lose the primary to Ted Cruz and be just a bad memory. But Trump
has shown a quality that many of us didn’t realize existed among Americans--a
willingness to follow a strongman.
Use Icebreakers at your own risk. You might get more than
you bargained for.
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