Monthly Archives: January 2012

Barack Obama: Dreams From My Father

 

I can’t remember if I mentioned that I bought both of Barack Obama’s books.  The campaign to see who gets to campaign against the President is in full swing, but I anticipate a fantastic political season ahead.  And these will be fascinating references.

I’m sure to call our President a whole bunch of “ists”.  I suspect I’ll call him a socialist.  For sure a statist.  Without a doubt a lefitst.  Maybe even a communist.  Who knows?  But is it fair?  Is it fair to label a man those things without really kinda knowing what that man thinks, and feels, says and write?

I think maybe I owe him the benefit of the doubt.

So here it is.  Barry O in his owns words.  Here we can see what he really thinks, or thought, as he put pen to paper.

Before I go into the books I wanna write down what I think of the man, his life experience and his beliefs.

  • I think that Obama’s view of America is unlike that of virtually every American alive.  He grew up in a state that had only recently been granted statehood.  He didn’t grow up in the America that we envision America to be.  He grew up in an island paradise hours from the mainstream mainland of America.
  • I think that Obama was highly influenced by his education in Indonesia.  I think the schools he attended, the friends he had and the society he lived in had a tremendous impact on his world view.
  • I think that his mother was a very far left wing radical.
  • I believe that when Barack Obama attended college he sought out non-mainstream individuals and organizations.
  • I think that Barack Obama sees the American version of capitalism as flawed.  I feel he believes that it creates winners and that it creates losers.  Further, that the losers are not losers of their own actions.
  • I believe that a young collegiate Barack Obama cared for the poor, the weak and the downtrodden; I think his cause was a noble one.
  • I think that he entered an occupation that would help those he saw as victims.
  • He became political and became a player in that system.  Especially that system of Chicago politics.

In short, the people that surrounded a young child Obama and the people that surrounded an older Obama were not mainstream Americans.  These were people who held an antagonistic view of America.  An antagonistic view based either on nationalism or one of “nature”, as in, what is Americanism?

So, I begin by reading Dreams From My Father by Barack Obama.

Main Stream Media: Where Is Journalism?

I like getting my news, or at least some of it, from Reuters.  Partly because they’re good at reporting the news and partly because they’re good to use as a source.  As much as I hate HuffPo or Kos, I suspect that liberals hate Fox, CATO or Heritage.

Reuters is safe.

But check out this headline:

“AT&T jacks up data plan prices as usage booms”

I mean jeepers.  Jacks up data plan prices and then followed by usage booms!  My gawd, the world is ending.  So I read the article.  And didn’t understand the outrage:

From January 22, AT&T customers will pay $20 for a 300-megabyte monthly data plan, up from $15 for 200-mb currently.

So, right now, AT&T charges $15 for 200 mb.  Or $0.075 per meg.  Right?  7.5 cents times 200 equals 15 American.  Then, after the 22nd, AT&T is going to charge WAY more than 7.5 cents per meg, they’re gonna charge $0.06 per meg.

Robber barons!

There’s more:

Users with higher requirements can also opt for $30 for 3 gigabytes — versus $25 for 2 GB previously

AT&T used to charge $25 for 2 GIG, or $12.5 per GIG.  Now, those greedy bastards are charging WAY more, they’re charging $30 for 3!  That comes out to $10 per GIG.

Wait, that doesn’t make sense.  But there’s more still:

or $50 for 5 GB, up from $45 for 4 GB.

For the larger plans, AT&T used to charge $11.25 per GIG.  And now what are those monopolistic capitalists charging?!?

$10 per GIG.  For those that attended the CLA, that is an 11% price REDUCTION!

“Jacks” up rates indeed.

We need WAY more journalists.  For sure!

For fun, I thought I’d check out the comments section of the Reuters piece.  The very first one, I shit thee not:

jscott418 wrote:

Normally demand reduces prices. What’s AT&T excuse? Seems to me they are just taking advantage of the popularity of data usage.

Normally.  Demand.  Reduces.  Prices.

Blink.  Blink.

You can NOT make this up.

Who Should Work In America

From pretty early on I knew that I was going to college.  I also knew that I would be going to get a degree that would help me get a job.  By the time I was a sophomore in high school I was having conversations with the guidance counselor about degrees and programs.  There were two key metrics in the decision-making process:

  1. How much did various occupations pay.
  2. What was a day in the life.

After graduating high school I loaded up my car and was off to MIT.  For those of you who just choked on your Sweet Red Muscadine Wine, the MIT I went to was the Minnesota Institute of Technology; not the other one 😉

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Tar Heel Red Is Famous

I was shopping for some wine the other day and I decided to get a bottle for my wife; she like sherry.  While looking in what I thought was that section I came across some local stuff and found this:

I have no idea how good it is, but it’s a local wine by gawd and I’m gonna give it a shot.

But not tonight.  Not in the mood for a sweet muscadine wine right now.

Anyway, you can find the wine here.  If you’re in the mood, support the Tar Heel Red!

Occupy Wall Street: Seattle Style

I’ve often referred to the Occupy crowd as a bunch of stinky hippies.  Not really ’cause I think that they are hippies or even stink; mostly because I’m a hippie of sorts and I enjoy poking fun at myself.  But I do think the movement is largely made up of folks who find themselves in a condition that is largely of their own doing.  And then they’re mad at that condition.

I stumbled across this video from Seattle where a gaggle of the gentle Occupy movement took over a house that was under renovation and made it their own.  And by “made it their own” I mean they destroyed it.  To the point that the city began to cite the real owner and he had to call in the SWAT team to remove them.

These people and this movement are not serious.  They are not concerned about making positive change in society or creating opportunities that would better allow decent hardworking people to better themselves.  Rather, these people are interested in forwarding an agenda that allows them to live off the labor of others while they recline in ease and contemplate life.

The Politics Of Supporting Gay Marriage

I’ve made the point over and over again that gay marriage is an issue that Republicans should be leading on.  At its most basic, and perhaps only legitimate, issue, the conversation is one of individual Liberty.  That is the ability of one person to consciously and willingly decide who to live with, form a relationship with and enter into financial contracts with.

Any other considerations aside, this is a basic human dignity issue.

But this IS politics.  And if we wanna be able to advance the case for Liberty and Libertarian based policy, we need to win elections.  We need to support more like-minded folks and generate momentum and a movement.  In other words, we need to generate good will that translates into votes.  And by alienating a group of people who might otherwise be loyal conservatives, you fail in that mission.

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Three Steps To Avoid Poverty

Income mobility.  Poverty.  How to create best results.

Topics that generate a lot of interest in the discussion of politics, government and the role of government.

I have discussed how marriage can impact the GINI coefficient measuring income disparity in populations and more recently had conversations regarding the impact of marriage on social mobility.  I feel that the more married we are, the more mobile we are:

I suspect that it [ social mobility] has to do with several things, but I feel that our declining marriage rate and the number of immigrants are leading reasons.

I came across an interesting piece of data from the Brookings Institute:

The Immediate Prerequisites to Success Are:

  1. Recieve a good education [graduate high school]
  2. Work full time
  3. Marry [And do it before having kids]

The results are staggering:

If an individual adheres to zero of those three social norms, he has a 76% chance of being poor.  Only a 7% chance of attaining the middle class.

On the other hand, if an individual adheres to all three of those social norms, an almost exact opposite picture is painted.  An individual stands a 74% chance of attaining middle class and only a 2% chance of being poor.

 

Of Studies And Numbers And Questions

I make a decent living fixing very complicated broken things.  Much of my life is dominated by trends and reports; statistics.

So when someone says to me:

Cardiac arrests in marathon and half-marathon runners have become more common during the past decade – a fact that has generated more terrifying accounts about fit athletes keeling over in the midst of competition.

I always, ALWAYS, question the data, the gathering and the incentives.

This is true in my professional life where the reports describe very complicated broken things or when I stumble on a report that says:

…many researchers have reached a conclusion that turns conventional wisdom on its head: Americans enjoy less economic mobility than their peers in Canada and much of Western Europe.

When a “report” doesn’t ring true, you have to investigate.  For example, the report about the alarming increase in heart attacks among marathon runners?

The increase in cardiac arrests, it turns out, has been accompanied by a dramatic increase in the number of participants…

Honest to God.  “They” reported that heart attacks were on the rise!  Regulate marathons!  Then “they” did a study to identify the reason why more runner were experiencing heart attacks.  And it was because there were more runners.

When someone tells you that America doesn’t have the world’s best medical care; don’t believe them.

When someone says that America doesn’t have the greatest ability to lift you out of poverty; don’t believe them.

Dig deep.  Find the data.  And discover for yourself that truth.

Why I Hate Religion But Love Jesus: Two Stories

There’s a poem going through the innertubes.  I’ve seen it a number of times on my Facebook feed and finally decided to watch and listen.  I don’t enjoy the genre [never have enjoyed rap] and the lyrics are somewhat strained.  But the message……yeah man, that’s some cool stuff:

So I did a quick search and found a response.  Much less popular, but I enjoyed that message as well; perhaps more so.  I acknowledge that if I were to bow my head in prayer before a meal with a Jew, a Muslim and a Hindi, my God would hear and acknowledge each of our supplications.

It’s a crazy thing, God.  But if you have ever considered a conscience while feeling the wind on a cliff, or the sweet sound of a babies laughter, you’ve heard what I hear.

Free Market: Microsoft Office

The latest iteration in the market delivering goods and services at the lowest price possible:

This week, Onlive Inc., in Palo Alto, Calif., is releasing an app that brings the full, genuine Windows versions of the key Office productivity apps—Word, Excel and PowerPoint—to the iPad. And it’s free. These are the real programs. They look and work just like they do on a real Windows PC. They let you create or edit genuine Word documents, Excel spreadsheets and PowerPoint presentations.

When allowed to roam free, the market will solve virtually any problem you can think of.