Thursday, March 18, 2010

Tab dumpification: Thursday night special 


This is a tab dump in the truest sense -- items that have accumulated on my home computer's browser over the last three days. I do not know where they have come from and what will happen to them in the fullness of time, but I do know this: They will not perish from the earth without you having at least the option of clicking through. So, in no particular order...

Ann Coulter's health care reform proposal. It has the advantage of being short, among other virtues. Plus it has this passage, with its crystalline middle paragraph:

President Obama says we need national health care because Natoma Canfield of Ohio had to drop her insurance when she couldn't afford the $6,700 premiums, and now she's got cancer.

Much as I admire Obama's use of terminally ill human beings as political props, let me point out here that perhaps Natoma could have afforded insurance had she not been required by Ohio's state insurance mandates to purchase a plan that covers infertility treatments and unlimited OB/GYN visits, among other things.

It sounds like Natoma could have used a plan that covered only the basics -- you know, things like cancer.

I'm with the ACLU on this one: Why on earth ought any school administrator care if a lesbian student wants to bring a female date to the prom? It reminds us why mixing schools and government is such a bad idea.

If this were more typical many more people would want to become insurance underwriters.

Health care "reform" factoid:
Each year, the government spends an average of $927 in administrative costs per person for Medicaid and $509 for Medicare. Private insurance, on the other hand, costs only $453 per person in administrative costs.

The problem with government administration -- of anything -- is that bureaucrats gain professional prestige over increasing the number of employees that they have under their administration rather than the economic rate of return on their bureaucratic activity, whatever it may be. There is therefore no organic tendency within government to save money, and an enormous incentive to add people who are almost impossible to fire.

A fascinating article (with graphs!) about the changes in America's diet over the last 100 years.

Regarding the pricing of razors and razor blades.

WELL, HE IS AN EXPERT: Jimmy Carter actually calls Barack Obama's foreign policy "feeble." No. Really. I shit you not.

Peggy Noonan is right on:
Excuse me, but it is embarrassing—really, embarrassing to our country—that the president of the United States has again put off a state visit to Australia and Indonesia because he's having trouble passing a piece of domestic legislation he's been promising for a year will be passed next week. What an air of chaos this signals to the world. And to do this to Australia of all countries, a nation that has always had America's back and been America's friend.

How bush league, how undisciplined, how kid's stuff.

We await the bleating about respecting our "traditional allies" with bated breath.

And so it goes.

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Taxing interest and dividends to pay for health care 


Via Glenn, we learn that the House health care "reform" bill contains a 3.8% Medicare tax "on investment income (interest, dividends, capital gains, annuities, rents) earned by those with incomes in excess of $200,000 (single) and $250,000 (joint)." That is a 25% increase in the current dividend tax, which today stands at 15% (and for those of you who snort that 15% is not so much, remember that it is on top of the 35% corporate income tax rate and frequently large state corporation taxes, so the total tax on distributed corporate profits is more like 50%).

A good policy, I suppose, if your goal were to persuade Americans to stop buying bonds and making long-term bank deposits, companies to repurchase their shares rather than to pay dividends, and potential landlords from becoming actual landlords. Dividends, in particular, are so easily frozen, reduced, or eliminated that it is a sure bet that they will shrink rapidly in coming years and that the tax revenues therefor will vanish.


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Eagles, via web cam 


Behold, a live web cam feed of an eagle's nest and its occupants, central New Jersey. Awesome.

Lots of eagle factoids at the link, too.


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A few last-minute health care "reform" observations 


Barack Obama and Nancy Pelosi have declared it health care "reform" crunch time, so now's the time for some last minute links, thoughts, observations, musings, and ventings. In no particular order:

  • I have decided that health care "reform" is in the best interest of some of my family members over the short-term, because it will guarantee insurance coverage to a couple of people who may need that guarantee.

  • At least one of those potential beneficiaries has a condition that has benefited from a surge in new drugs over the past fifteen years, which innovation was only possible because pharmaceuticals have a high rate of return. One of the supposed objectives of health care "reform" is to lower the returns for various of the actors (although, see below, it is not clear whether the law will actually have that impact). If you lower the return of something, you get less of it because capital goes elsewhere. Therefore, had this program been put in place 20 years ago more likely than not that my family member would be more secure financially but less well physically. I suspect that there are millions of Americans who have similarly benefited from health care innovation even while suffering more financial insecurity than they would in most other rich countries.

  • Health care "reform" will hurt me financially, without regard to its impact on my company, because I am physically healthy, stand to benefit from innovations yet to come (and which may not occur, at the margin, because rates of return will not be so high), and because I am one of the happy few who will be called upon to pay much higher taxes to pay for the hundreds of billions in new subsidies.

  • Whether this hurts or helps my children depends entirely on the arc of their health and wealth, which remains to be seen. If they turn out to be healthy or confront only conventional health problems and are financially unsuccessful, this is a good deal for them. If the opposite, then it is not.

  • It remains the case that nobody knows how the current bill will affect individual drug and device companies or those industries. And when I say "nobody," I mean nobody. The people who make a living investing in such companies do not have a clue what the impact of the legislation will actually be. That, to my mind, is the number one warning sign that "reform" still is not adequately understood to enact.

  • The general consensus in the health care investment world is that hospitals will benefit, and insurance companies will suffer. I have no expertise that would support or refute that consensus.

  • Ezra makes the liberal case for the current bill here. He does not address the impact of the law on innovation.

  • Obama's FDA is making it much more expensive to get clearances and other approvals for new medical devices. My own suspicion is that this shift at the FDA is strategic and has more to do with the progressive view that new medical technology is a big driver of costs than anybody in the government will admit.

  • Today's message, that Democrats need to vote for this to "save Obama's presidency," strikes me as terrifically stupid. First, it invites the question: How did the success or failure of Obama's presidency come to this? Second, it makes all the people who vote for health care "reform" also responsible for Obama's presidency. What if his poll numbers fall to Bushesque levels? Then the people who voted for health care "reform" might not be so delighted to have been responsible for, well, the condition of Obama's presidency.

  • The Republican complaint that people will be forced to buy health insurance is analytically silly, even if it fools the boobery. If you are going to exclude pre-existing conditions as a reason for higher rates or denial of coverage, then you must force everybody in to the system. Otherwise, few people will pay for insurance until after they actually get cancer or whatever other condition will break their personal bank, knowing that they can sign up as needs require. That would destroy the private insurance industry, because it would pay claims for everybody and collect premiums from only a few. So any Republican who claims he or she supports eliminating pre-existing conditions but opposes the personal mandate is, well, not only an idiot but essentially advocating the destruction of the private insurance industry.

  • You'd think that last point would be so obvious that Republicans would not even make the argument, but apparently most people, including most reporters, cannot even think one step ahead.

  • Of course, your results may vary.

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    Wednesday, March 17, 2010

    The consistency illusion breathes its last: C-Span uploads its archives to the web 


    C-Span has just uploaded more than 20 years of Congress caught on tape. As hard as it has been for politicians to pretend to consistency, this will make it impossible. A feast for bloggers if there ever was one.

    By the time the gotcha brigade has gone through this treasure trove, everybody will seem a hypocrite. Whether that will make voters even more bitter and cynical or teach them the deeper point that arguments ought to be considered on their merits rather than according to the consistency of the advocate is a different and ultimately more important question. Me, I'm with Oscar Wilde.


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    A Guinness in springtime 

    I dropped by the Witherspoon Grill this afternoon during the half-price happy hour, and put away a "cubble o' paints" of the black gold with friends. The sun was shining, and the square in front of the library was packed with people in shirt sleeves enjoying a wonderful spring afternoon. How was your Paddy's day?


    First Guinness of spring


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    Election Postulates 

    1) Those Congressional politicians who prioritize an attempt to restructure the healthcare payment and delivery system in an effort to increase government control of it don't do well in elections. Hillarycare begat Gingrich. So far Obamacare has given New Jersey and Virginia Republican Governors and it has given Massachusetts Scott Brown. What will happen in November? It could be shocking.

    2) American Presidents who make Middle East peace a priority in their foreign policy don't do so well in elections either, especially if they agitate aggressively for Israeli concessions to achieve it. It didn't work out so well for Carter (though many would argue that was probably the single accomplishment of his administration, it is not clear that the agreed peace achieved enhanced long term regional stability). It didn't work out so well for the first Bush Presidency - that's the one where Baker ordered the Israelis to stand down when Saddam sent missiles their way and then ordered them to agree to Oslo as well. And it may not work out so well for Obama, now that he has tried multiple times to increase the pressure on Netanyahu while remaining largely mum on other destabilizers in the region - Hamas, Hezbollah and Iran, for instance.

    To this, a knee jerk reaction might be to invoke the Mearsheimer Walt (smear) theorem and argue that the Israeli lobby wields too much electoral clout in the US. Um, the numbers make that theorem, well, not work. Instead, I would argue that American voters don't like it when we agitate for concessions to regional de-stabilizers - which would historically have been everybody besides Israel. It's not that complicated.

    So - healthcare and middle east peace are political anchors. November 2010 will be interesting. And November 2012 will give us a new president.


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    Labor force growth as a reason for optimism 

    For those of you who worry about the economic performance of the United States compared to other countries -- not really my thing, since I'm all for as many people getting rich, wherever they may be, as possible -- then this graph from The Big Picture is reason for long-term optimism. Our population is growing and will continue to grow on account of our superior fertility and receptivity to immigration. Moderate increases in population (as opposed to rapid increases or declines) is the first condition for economic growth, and it is second only to our national character (including our historical respect for enterprise and the taking of risk, which is under attack just now) in its importance for the future of our country and its people.


    Growth in the labor force


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    Happy Paddy's 


    Even we Princetonians try to avoid orange today...



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    Tuesday, March 16, 2010

    A threat, or a promise? 


    Barack Obama throws down some bluster:

    The president will refuse to make fund-raising visits during November elections to any district whose representative has not backed the bill.

    A one-night presidential appearance can bring in hundreds of thousands of dollars in funds which would otherwise take months to accumulate through cold-calling by campaign volunteers.

    Mr Obama's threat came as the year-long debate over his signature domestic policy entered its final week.

    The question is whether this is a threat or a promise. Among the moderate Democrats elected from districts that went for John McCain in 2008 or would today if given the chance for a Mulligan, I doubt this threat will be persuasive.

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    Without benefit of clergy 


    Like Glenn Reynolds and Dr. Helen, Mrs. TH and I lived together before we were married, a situation my father delicately -- with tongue firmly in cheek -- referred to as "without benefit of clergy." I confess, I did not learn as much in the process as Glenn says he did -- I think many of the really challenging issues in marriage do not emerge until after the children have, er, emerged -- but neither do I think that it disadvantaged our marriage. Any "trial run" is of short duration compared to a partnership calculated to last a life time, and the two items that most test a marriage -- children, and the sheer passage of time -- do not bear on most trial-run cohabitants.


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    Mount St. Helens on my Blackberry 


    Back at the Anchor Brewing Company bar at SFO, waiting for my red eye to Newark three hours hence and my bacon cheeseburger only minutes hence. I began the day with a 6:30 meeting in Seattle, then another at 7:45, then a flight to Portland followed by three more meetings, and now here I am. Again. There is little to report from such a hectic day, but I did get a picture of Mount St. Helens through the clouds, the airplane window, and the no doubt smeared lens of my Blackberry.


    St. Helens by Blackberry


    I'll try to do better next time.


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    Cruising the Left Coast tab dump 


    At SFO, imbibing the Steam at the Anchor Brewing Company's bar and pumping out tabs. Do not confuse with wit or erudition.

    [UPDATE: Post continued at the bar in the Washington Athletic Club in Seattle, several hours later.]

    The case against Enronizing Lehman. In other words, it is bad policy to criminalize business failure.

    Lots of people in Princeton are without power, with the prognosis of restoration later in the week but as yet uncertain. That was one very powerful wind storm.

    For the parliamentarians among you, Ezra explains the latest procedural device for passing health care "reform."

    If you love Paris...

    Are consumers improving their personal balance sheets, or just defaulting?

    Does self-conscious greeniness make you a good person? Maybe not:

    When Al Gore was caught running up huge energy bills at home at the same time as lecturing on the need to save electricity, it turns out that he was only reverting to "green" type.

    According to a study, when people feel they have been morally virtuous by saving the planet through their purchases of organic baby food, for example, it leads to the "licensing [of] selfish and morally questionable behaviour", otherwise known as "moral balancing" or "compensatory ethics".

    Do Green Products Make Us Better People is published in the latest edition of the journal Psychological Science. Its authors, Canadian psychologists Nina Mazar and Chen-Bo Zhong, argue that people who wear what they call the "halo of green consumerism" are less likely to be kind to others, and more likely to cheat and steal. "Virtuous acts can license subsequent asocial and unethical behaviours," they write.

    I speculate that "compensatory ethics" may obtain less often when "virtuous acts" are unfashionable, out of sight, or not otherwise done to impress others. Displays of virtue that are fashionable are perhaps less genuine, on average, than those that have stood the test of time. Do people who volunteer in soup kitchens or food banks practice compensatory ethics as often as people who drive a Prius? Your commentary is most welcome.

    Put me down as doubtful.

    Hamas, bless its little beating heart of evil, has announced a "day of rage" in response to the dedication of a renovated synagogue. A day of rage? Seriously? Nobody likes a day of rage. What with all that negative energy and such. These dudes are going to get nowhere, no matter what the merits of their cause, without new flacks.

    The Rielle Hunter slide show. I'm gonna go out on a limb and say it: Rielle's definitely well-preserved.

    At long last, justice for ABBA. I'm not too cool to say I'm happy for them.

    Be well.

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    Monday, March 15, 2010

    Bay Bridge 


    Used my Blackberry, from a conference room around 8 this morning.


    Bay Bridge


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    Monday night caption this! 


    Status report: I'm sitting at the Anchor Brewing Company bar in the San Francisco airport, whiling away the 90 minutes or so until my flight to Seattle and working on a tab dump. While I while away, you guys should ponder the captioning skills of the White House flacks, who posted the following picture of His O-Ness on the official White House Facebook Wall. The "official" caption follows. You, I am quite sure, can do better.


    Obama "listens"


    Photo of the Day: President Barack Obama listens during a meeting in the Roosevelt Room of the White House, March 11, 2010.


    CWCID: "Bomber Girl."

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    Sunday, March 14, 2010

    Aphorism of the day 


    "Hating is a form of caring."

    Link.


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    Four cents 


    The Internal Revenue Service is, in at least one case, in hot pursuit of four cents. I admit, I had no idea that the feds were so zealous about saving money. Sort of shakes my whole attitude about the competence of government. Maybe health care reform really will cut costs!

    Goddamn.


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    Pi Day! 


    It is 3.14, the day we celebrate π. Laugh all you will, but without π circles would be impossible.

    It is also Albert Einstein's birthday, so he is naturally our Wiki biography of the day. I admit, I never knew that he had been offered (and had refused) the position of president of Israel.

    Princeton has a big celebration today, which reaches its crescendo at 3:14 pm. All the cool people will be there.


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    Gracing the Fifty: Reagan vs. Grant 


    Republican Congressman Patrick McHenry (no doubt close friends with James McMadison and George McWashington) has proposed substituting Ronald Reagan for U.S. Grant on the fifty dollar Federal Reserve note. My first reaction was to support the idea, but mostly because it would embroil the Congress in another pointless squabble between now and the November election. Every minute spent posturing about the proper way to honor the various great presidents is a minute not spent passing laws that will actually hurt the country. Burn that clock!

    That said, I found the opposing argument, from (admittedly liberal) presidential historian Sean Wilentz, persuasive. It absolutely must be discussed at length before any final decision is made, preferably in lengthy Congressional hearings comparing the achievements of the Grant and Reagan administrations, after which I would probably support retaining Lincoln's general.

    But I want to hear more.


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    Brooks on Obama 


    I suspect David Brooks is closer to the truth on Barack Obama than most people, left or right, who write about him. If you lop off the last paragraph, Brooks wrote a good column that assesses Obama more accurately than either echo chamber, which is not hard to do. The last paragraph, though, misapprehends the nature of the country:

    In a sensible country, people would see Obama as a president trying to define a modern brand of moderate progressivism. In a sensible country, Obama would be able to clearly define this project without fear of offending the people he needs to get legislation passed. But we don’t live in that country. We live in a country in which many people live in information cocoons in which they only talk to members of their own party and read blogs of their own sect. They come away with perceptions fundamentally at odds with reality, fundamentally misunderstanding the man in the Oval Office.

    Brooks reads both the rest of the world and the history of the United States incorrectly if he believes that there has ever been a "sensible" democracy. Most people, most of the time, live in an echo chamber. They have their orientation, and they have neither the ability nor the inclination to consider the other side with intellectual honesty. Franklin Roosevelt was immensely popular, far more so than Barack Obama, but he built his popularity (at least before the war) by demonizing and harassing business. If you did not support FDR, you hated FDR. Looking abroad, in how many democracies, even robust ones, do politically active voters thoughtfully deliberate, weighing each argument carefully? Israel? Italy? Maybe, sometimes, in parts of the Anglosphere, but even in those cases I am not sure. The British and the Canadians can be as rancorous in their politics, in a formal but biting way, as Americans. Debate in Parliament is of much greater entertainment value than in the Congress, but there is no evidence that it is less partisan.

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    Saturday, March 13, 2010

    Evidence that they could use me in Hollywood 

    How many of you caught the made-for-TV movie on Lifetime about the con man "Clark Rockefeller," or at least saw the trailers? Did any of you remember my prediction?


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    Wind blown 

    As previously reported, there are trees down all over Princeton. One of them landed on the house of a colleague of mine -- she occupies the third floor apartment on which that tree now rests. The bad news: The fire department has evacuated the house at least until somebody competent ascertains its structural integrity or lack thereof. The good news: My friend had departed from usual practice and parked her car, that grey VW, on the street instead of in the driveway next to the house because she was planning on just running in and grabbing some things before driving in to New York. If the car had been in the driveway, it would have been crushed like a beer can.


    A tree down on Quarry Street


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    Executive pay watch: Have you no shame, sir? 


    Among bloggers, at least, I stand second to none in my enthusiasm for high executive compensation, but even I think this is beyond the Pale. Outrageous!


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    The late winter jicker 


    You cannot get to Sola Sollew from downtown Princeton. The wind is howling, and trees and power lines are down all over town. Alexander Road, Washington Road, and Nassau Street are closed at various places from downed lines. Mercer Street is already closed owing to construction. We have no word on 206 from either south or north. If various of my family members were not out in the mess on some unnecessary mission or another, I would not be anxious. But still, there can be something quite nice in the right sort of howling storm.


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    Petraeus in 2012? 


    Marc Ambinder jumps on the story that David Petraeus is heading to New Hampshire, correctly dismissing it as evidence that he might be toying with a run for president. As Ambinder points out, Petraeus has any number of reasons to go to New Hampshire.

    However, Ambinder keeps the rumors of a Petraeus candidacy alive with this closing tidbit:

    When Petraeus sets food [sic] in Cedar Rapids...now that'll be something to watch.

    Such luminaries of the right and left as James Joyner and Matthew Yglesias have similarly registered their hopes and dreams.

    Sadly, they are all wrong. David Petraeus, a student of military history, has given the "General Sherman," the totemic words required in American politics to eschew all ambition to run for president. While it is possible that some politician at some time might dishonor that tradition, I respectfully submit that there is no chance that David Petraeus would. Republicans, and the country, need to look elsewhere for their next president.

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    A short note on urban heat islands 


    Climate "skeptics" argue that the official temperature record has not adequately controlled for "urban heat islands," places where population growth and development raise the ambient temperature around the surface stations. This would seem to be a rather compelling example.

    Now, this is one of several reasons why the historical temperature data need to be "adjusted" if we are to understand what is actually happening to the climate. The problem is that we now know these adjustments were not made systematically or transparently. We need to rebuild the adjusted data sets, starting with the raw data, and justify each adjustment at each station with a particular explanation that can be examined, criticized, or reproduced by others.


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    Consumer credit across the years 

    We've seen declines in the rate of growth of consumer credit before, but it actually is "different this time." Short commentary below the graph.


    Consumer credit across the years


    Commentary

    Obviously, such a huge decline in consumer credit in such a short period of time is both a cause of our economic woes and a result of them. No doubt a professional economist could estimate the proportion that is cause vs. effect. Regardless, American GDP is roughly 70% consumer spending (including government health care spending, which sort of mucks up the numbers) and that will not return in force until consumer credit starts growing again.

    A related question: To what degree does the decline in outstanding consumer credit reflect changes in preferences that might outlast the recession? Are some people saving more and paying down debt simply because they can? I hope so, but I fear not.

    Finally, the decline in consumer credit also reflects the massive socialization of debt. If the federal government goes in to debt to "create or preserve" jobs and the lucky beneficiaries use government money to pay off their own creditors, we have done nothing other than to spread responsibility for its repayment from an individual to present and future American taxpayers. It is far from obvious whether that is the right result for our national character, even if it makes us more prosperous over the short term.


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    Moron watch: Tom Hanks 


    I hate to be reductionist about this, but Tom Hanks is a moron. His defense, on the small chance he found it necessary to mount one, is that he is the product of a school system that devotes a lot of time to the lives of average people in days gone by and almost none to geopolitical or military history. Sorry, but it is a lot more important for students to know how cataclysmic wars start than how soap was made on a Kansas farm 130 years ago.


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    Friday, March 12, 2010

    Is the American consumer about to roll over? 

    An early indicator, transactions data for big purchases, suggests that the American consumer is about to roll over. Can anybody say double dip?


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    Thursday, March 11, 2010

    Fuzzy horses 


    A Colorado winter fuzzes up the horses like nobody's business...


    Colorado horses


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    Corruption or impeachment 


    The different climate data sets may not be as independent as was claimed in the wake of the "ClimateGate" scandal. This is important, because it means that the corruption -- or, more accurately, impeachment -- of the Climate Research Unit data set cannot be dismissed as irrelevant to the validity of the other data sets. If I read the linked story properly (and a critical link there is broken, so it is tough to verify), two of the other three data sets may not have been independent of CRU influence after all.


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    Wednesday, March 10, 2010

    The prospects for health care "reform" 

    Earlier today I received the following deck from Deutsche Bank, which surveyed institutional investors -- the professional portfolio managers who invest money in health care stocks for mutual funds, pension funds, and hedge funds -- to assess their expectations for the enactment of health care "reform" and its impact on various sectors of the industry. It is more or less self-explanatory, but two or three items bear mentioning. First, 78% of respondents believe that some version of "reform" will pass. Those are better odds than are now being given by pundits, particularly those on the right. Second, according to these pros hospitals will be big beneficiaries if "reform" passes, and other players (such as medical devices, my own company's sector) if it does not. Third, the slide with the "write-in" comments would be hilarious if it were not so tragic.



    Deutsche Bank survey on health care reform


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    Environmental humor video of the day 


    Much as this offends my knee-jerk proclivity to defend Big Oil, it is damned funny. If actual environmentalists had such a sense of humor they would make more progress against their policy objectives.



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    Hump day afternoon tab dump 


    It's Wednesday, and there has been no dump of tabs since the weekend. Allah forbid that my computer should crash before I off-load my accumulated reading for your pleasure or consternation, as the case may be. Herewith, therefore, a dancing plethora of tabs!

    In the category of ugly charts, look at what has happened to federal income tax withholding over the past year. Ouch.

    Brookings releases its latest wad of statistics that purport to show "how we're doing in the world." Interesting, although the tone of the accompanying analysis, or at least its lede, does not precisely square with the data, framed as it is with reference to Barack Obama's performance.

    The largest gold coin. Ever. And you'll never guess who struck it, and when.

    Three things liberals can't admit. Candidly, I can think of more than three things, but Lowry's focusing on the health care fight.

    Yet another price that apparently must be paid in order to get health care "reform" through. Oh, and another.

    According to this analysis, California -- a center for "green jobs" because of its vibrant tech and venture capital community -- will nevertheless lose jobs because of its aggressive greenhouse gas regulation. Of course, pro-regulation activists will say that this presents a false choice. Or a moral one. Either way.

    Barack Obama, a putatively great communicator who has manifestly failed to make the case for his most important policy initiatives, has recruited an important new ally in his propaganda war. At least we're going to get some good graphs.

    Speaking of graphs and such, look at how much cleaner the air of America has gotten in the last 30 years. There's something for everybody in that post. On the one hand, there are some hilariously wrong predictions from Paul Ehrlich, perhaps the wrongest person who ever lived, and various others. On the other hand, the Clean Air Act seems to have worked rather decisively, at least insofar as the objective was reducing air pollution (no comment on whether it might have been done more efficiently).

    A page of links from Maggie's. Hey, it was an open tab, and this is a tab dump.

    Virginia Postrel on innovation and health care reform (video).

    Nouriel Rabini, whose fame has compounded on account of his prediction of the world financial crisis, is not optimistic:

    Even if the euro zone does not suffer a double dip, growth in demand will be even more limited and this will hurt the United States' potential for export growth, according to Roubini's paper.

    The Roubini Global Economics benchmark scenario puts the risk of a double dip at 20 percent, while a slow, protracted, U-shaped recovery is given the highest probability of 60 percent. [Choking off free trade to buy union support for health care "reform" is not going to help the situation. - ed.]

    But since the end of February new macroeconomic data from the US have come out and "they have been almost uniformly poor, if not outright awful," Roubini wrote.

    I do not necessarily disagree -- my view is that the most that can be said for the economy this year compared to 2008 and 2009 is that it will suck less. No, that is not particularly inspiring.

    A graphical look at how the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change has changed the slope of historical temperature over time. In each revision, "warming" becomes more apparent and dramatic. The question, of course, is whether these revisions reflect good science or are designed to achieve a policy result. If you are like me and instinctively distrust pretty much anything associated with the United Nations, you already know how you are going to come down. (I suspect, by the way, that just as the involvement of the United Nations in climate science boosts that discipline's credibility with most of the world, it hurts its credibility with Americans, a difference in attitude that transnational progressives miss every time.)

    More later.

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    A useful list: The top right-wing blogs 


    The top right-wing blogs, at least according to Right Wing News. Yes, we're there, even though we've lost some of our mojo in recent months, or at least spread it around to other activities.


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    Lunchtime video fun 


    For anybody who was ever excluded by the cool kids....



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    A book recommendation 


    I'm about 60 pages in to The Art of Strategy: A Game Theorist's Guide to Success in Business and Life by Avinash K. Dixit and Barry J. Nalebuff and recommend it highly. It is the most thought-provoking book I've read in ages.



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    Civil disobedience 


    This is an excellent idea, and I'm going to do it. I encourage you to do it as well. The act in and of itself sends a message about our government's obsession with race and ethnicity.


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    A discussion on race and segregation 


    Notorious TigerHawk comment troll and erstwhile TigerHawk roommate, Christopher Chambers, was interviewed about segregation, de jure and otherwise. My sister responds and expands on her blog. Apart from Chris' apparent denunciation of "course behavior" -- seriously? -- it was solid work by both of them, I'd say.


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    Tuesday, March 09, 2010

    Partisan rag 


    On the matter of the intellectual honesty of the editors of the New York Times, the prosecution rests.

    CWCID: Glenn Reynolds.


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