Bunker Mulligan "Let us endeavor so to live that when we come to die even the undertaker will be sorry." ~Mark Twain

June 23, 2004

Wealth

Filed under: International — Bunker @ 5:55 am

Two articles I read today have a link that’s not immediately obvious. The first, at the Adam Smith Institute Blog, Facts about Millionaires, points out a survey done in Europe:

In 1999 a quarter of US households were poor (with less than $25,000 pa). By this standard 40 percent of Swedish households would be considered poor. Of course, some prefer to measure poverty relatively. In this context of US poor households, 45.9 percent own their own home, 72.8 percent have a car, and 77 percent have air conditioning.

I don’t like quoting surveys or polls due to their inherent errors in assumption, but I lived in England and France in the 1960s, and see some validity from personal experience. People in both countries still used chamber pots, a supermarket was unheard of, and few owned automobiles.

I also think the selection of a household income for a poverty line is deceiving. My parents have an annual income of less than $25K, but wouldn’t consider themselves to be in this group. Their house is paid for, Dad plays golf regularly, Mom goes to the casino boats and plays her slots, and they buy a new vehicle when they want. How many people below the poverty line have cable TV and cell phones? Many people in Europe don’t have phones in their homes.

The second is a book review by Carlin Romano, one of Joe’s compatriots with Knight-Ridder. The book, Dangerous De-Liaisons: What’s Really Behind the War Between France and the U.S., covers additional territory.

Colombani and Wells speak with casual confidence of the two personalities who sparked the latest tiff – Bush and Jacques Chirac. Both presidents, they agree, exude “arrogance” in different ways, with Chirac a worldly elitist who finds Bush and his team not ready for prime time, and Bush a populist sort convinced of Chirac’s pretentiousness and duplicity.

But the two also provide historical perspective. Throughout the marriage, the United States has wanted to lead, and France hasn’t wanted to be led. For Colombani, the core of all French-American differences can be traced to the contrast between Bonaparte and Washington, the former seeking to become “emperor,” the other willing to “give up his power.” He’s aware that French leaders, more than American ones, typically exhibit imperial temperament.

At the same time, he pinpoints a variety of U.S. policy stands – e.g., support of the death penalty, tolerance of gun-abetted violence, a perceived goal of weakening the European Union so it can’t rival the United States – to which many French, like other Europeans, thoughtfully object.

I don’t agree that we “tolerate” gun violence, but so be it.

What links these two stories? I think it shows up in our own differences at home. As a practical matter, there are far fewer people in this country living in poverty than the statistics show. The issue is more about where do you draw the poverty line, and how do you define the word itself? Immigrants in earlier days talked about coming to America “where even the poor people are fat.”

In Europe, people expect the government to take care of them. We have folks here who want the same thing. Yet when you cede that much authority to the political elite, you end up with Europe. For some, that would suit them well. But they don’t quite grasp what it means. Patriot Act? Amateurish legislation. Hate Crime Laws? Hate Speech laws better serve the government’s purpose.

Emperor, or President? Your choice. I think I’d prefer the opportunity to become a millionaire.

June 22, 2004

What do Leftists really believe?

Filed under: Society-Culture — Bunker @ 5:40 pm

I cruise around the internet reading blogs of the left, right, middle, middle-left, and middle-right. I see friends on the web receive spam in the form of bile and hyperbole from people who know it all.

I’m pretty much a libertarian, and believe the Constitution means what it says. To many, that makes me a right-wing fanatic. I’m also an engineer. I’ve read much history and philosophy, and have some fairly strong feelings about many things. Feelings. Feelings. But I know that’s what they are.

Never in my life have I thought I had all the answers. Never. Perhaps it is because I went back to college and got my degree when I was 30 and had a family. I remember being in awe of the amount of learning I had done in school, but was solid enough in my practical world to understand that there was a lot more I didn’t know.

I visit sites like Michael J. Totten’s and Harry’s Place, where leftists carry on intelligent discussions with the right and reformed communists. To be honest, I cannot recall a single comment on either of those sites where someone attacked another’s parentage or mental capacity in the kind of personal way I have seen when a leftist comments on a blog not far enough left to satisfy his vision of the world.

Today as I read Wretchard’s Belmont Club post, I pondered this disconnect. I realized I really don’t know what the left really stands for.

I’ve tried. I can discuss things and learn from people like Michael. But those from the left who seem to populate the comments sections of blogs offer nothing but invective, then say we’ll never come together until everyone can talk to one another.

I’d like to. But I’m not interested in listening to memorized screeds. I’ve heard it before. Can we look at things in a little more depth and get beyond “Bush lied”, “No WMDs!”, and “The Patriot Act allows the FBI to check on what I’m reading.”?

After reading a comment on a friend’s site, I’ve become convinced that the majority of these comments come from college students. And they have feelings. But they don’t yet have enough experience in this old world to know what to do with them. Their comments remind me of the Harvard student that Matt Damon’s character rips to intellectual shreds in Good Will Hunting: lot’s of information floating around in their heads, and not enough sense to link it all together or analyze it rationally. Regurgitation earns good grades.

I’ve trod a lot of turf in my years on this Earth. Been to a lot of strange and wonderful and terrible places. Met some very good and very bad people there. I’ve actually saved lives by putting myself in danger. And I’ve done stupid things that almost got me killed. And yes, I’ve taken history and philosophy and psychology courses in college and once knew the buzzwords. But you know, I took classes in those disciplines when I needed an easy A to boost my GPA. There’s nothing too difficult to learn in any of them.

Application is a different proposition.

If any of you are leftists (not to be confused with sincere liberals), take the time to read, with an open mind if possible, Dr. John Ray’s monograph on the Motivations of Political Leftists. If you can read this and see yourself, perhaps you might try to analyze your own beliefs. Are you being led down the path by people with an agenda you didn’t grasp?

And please, let me know what you think. Leave a comment, send me an email. I’m willing to learn. I just don’t know what it is you really believe.

*****UPDATE:*****

Didn’t take long in my surfing to run across another example of hate from the left.

Tip from Rob.

Tall Dogs

Filed under: International — Bunker @ 6:28 am

Two tales of dogs over at Gut Rumbles, here and here. I’d recommend you simply visit the site on a regular basis. Acidman and I have much in common personally, and I like his writing style and take on issues.

In particular, I agree with his assessment that the UN has absolutely no moral ground on which it can still stand. I’m ready to see us leave.

June 21, 2004

High Flight

Filed under: Engineering — Bunker @ 6:47 pm

by John Gillespie Magee, Jr.

Oh, I have slipped the surly bonds of earth
And danced the skies on laughter-silvered wings;
Sunward I’ve climbed, and joined the tumbling mirth
Of sun-split clouds…and done a hundred things
You have not dreamed of…wheeled and soared and swung
High in the sunlit silence. Hov’ring there,
I’ve chased the shouting wind along, and flung
My eager craft through footless halls of air.
Up, up the long, delirious, burning blue
I’ve topped the windswept heights with easy grace
Where never lark, or even eagle flew.
And, while with silent, lifting mind I’ve trod
The high untrespassed sanctity of space
Put out my hand, and touched the face of God.

Magee wrote that after a single flight in a Spitfire. Imagine what he’d write after a flight like this one:

SpaceShipOne in space.

ss1 (141K)

Liberals’ Creed

Filed under: General Rants — Bunker @ 4:05 pm

Comments (3)

Hostages

Filed under: Media — Bunker @ 3:55 pm

I’ve categorized this post from Blackfive under Media, because that’s what it’s all about.

This young South Korean man is in deep kimchee, and knows it. But to whom is he pleading?

HINT: He is screaming in English.

House Slaves II

Filed under: Society-Culture — Bunker @ 11:54 am

La Shawn is not a happy lady after reading about Coalition to Defend Affirmative Action, Integration & Immigrant Rights And Fight for Equality By Any Means Necessary.

She is emphatic that the Civil Rights Act of 1964 supports a colorblind society.

No, we’re not yet there. But the shoe is now on the other foot.

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