On Trump and the Notorious R.B.G.

I suspect that Justice Ginsburg thinks that, at her age, she has earned the right to say whatever she wants.  I have a degree of sympathy for that, but her comments on Trump, while accurate, were not a good idea.  The world does not need a left-wing version of Scalia.

Trump and the Life of Bryan

The pundits rarely put Trump and William Jennings Bryan in the same sentence, and for very good reasons:  Bryan was a passionate left-wing lawyer and politician who viewed political and economic questions largely in moral terms; while Trump is a semi-successful developer and mass marketer with no interest in traditional Christian values and a predominantly right-wing agenda.  Bryan would have seen Trump as the personification of all of the vices that he was fighting against; Trump would have dismissed Bryan as a loser.

That said, in functional terms, both of them were populists who engineered hostile takeovers of their respective parties, to the horror of the prevailing establishment.  Bryan never succeeded in getting elected; let’s hope Trump suffers the same fate.

A Limerick on the New Gilded Age

We live in a new Gilded Age.

Its significance is hard to gauge.

Life is good if you’re rich.

If you’re not, it’s a bitch

And you may well be seething with rage.

Comparing the Gilded Ages: Politics

I don’t claim to be an authority on American politics between 1880 and 1920, but it is my understanding that the system was characterized by four large groups:

  1.  Republicans:  a pro-business WASP-dominated group with its heart in the Northeast and the Midwest;
  2.  Democrats:  an unusual coalition of urban immigrants and white Southerners, united mostly by their antipathy to the Republicans;
  3.  Progressives:  largely Republican (though found in both parties), they were dedicated to fighting corruption and perceived abuses of power within a system characterized both by urban machine politics and the increasing economic and political power of large businesses; and
  4.  Populists:  a largely rural phenomenon, this grouping within the Democratic Party combined left-wing economic ideas with support for traditional religious and cultural values.

When you compare this picture to the situation today, you find some elements of continuity and some significant differences.  The Republican Party of the 1890’s is essentially the PBP faction of today’s GOP.  The Progressives are best analogized to policy wonks allied with Obama and Clinton within the Democratic Party.  The Democratic Party of the 1890’s no longer exists;  the closest modern analogy would be to ethnic minorities within the party (of course, African-Americans had no power at all in the First Gilded Age).  Finally, today’s Populists can be found in both parties–they voted for Trump and Sanders.  Based on the election results, you would have to say they are predominantly Republicans.

If there is a message here, it is that populism can’t easily be forced into traditional left/right pigeonholes.  That is the heart of Trump’s message, and one of the reasons his relationship with the GOP elites is so fraught.

Tim Duncan: An Appreciation

I watched some of his very first game for WFU.  It was in the Great Alaska Shootout, and I don’t think he took a single shot–his offensive game was that raw. It got a lot better, and quickly.

I would guess that I watched 90 to 95 percent of his games since then.  He lost most of his athleticism a long time ago, but he still somehow managed to remain effective, particularly on the defensive end.  He always played hard, and the right way, and with style and grace.  He was always a great teammate.  Finally, he did it all without glorifying himself; it was all about the Spurs, not his ego.

And that is why, in spite of his five rings, his two MVPs, his three Finals MVPs, his All-Star MVP, and all of his All-NBA selections, Donald Trump probably thinks he’s a loser.

On Elvis, Cole, and Woody

During the late 1970’s, it was fairly common for critics to refer to Elvis Costello as the “Cole Porter of Punk.”  That didn’t really mean anything to me at the time, but after I saw the movie “De-lovely,” everything became clear.

The two shared a strong sense of pop craftsmanship and a love of word play.  In my opinion, however, their differences are more significant than their similarities. Porter wrote exquisitely polished and urbane songs which became standards, while Costello’s songs have a much rougher edge, both lyrically and musically.  There is no Costello song that is as instantly memorable and accessible as, say, “Night and Day,” but there is no Porter song that seethes like “Watching the Detectives” or “Lipstick Vogue.”

I don’t think anyone has put adolescent male sexuality to music as artfully as Costello.  Anger, moral and aesthetic disgust, and frustration, mixed with more than a little irony–the entire package can be found in his first three albums.  The amazing thing to me is that he was married at the time he wrote those songs.  I honestly don’t get that.

I think Woody Allen provides a better analogy than Porter to Costello, for the following reasons:

  1.  Both of them are in love with language;
  2.  Both created geeky, frustrated loser personas in their early days;
  3.  Both presented sexual issues with a mixture of anger and humor, although Costello tended to emphasize the anger, and Allen the humor;
  4.  Both had popular successes early in their career, but subsequently tapered off, and ultimately became elder statesmen; and
  5.  Costello has appeared in movies (“De-lovely”, appropriately enough, being one of them), while Allen is a reasonably accomplished jazz musician.

It is not, therefore, a coincidence that I am a huge fan of both.

A Song Parody for Gilded Age Week

In honor of last week’s trip to Newport and the upcoming GOP convention, this week will be dedicated to an analysis of the old and new Gilded Ages.

                                    Money

Money

Not enough

Don’t give away so much free stuff.

 

Money

Check the facts.

We don’t want to pay more income tax.

 

Money

Don’t despair.

We’re going to make the system flat and fair.

 

Money

It’s all mine.

Undeserving poor don’t get a dime.

 

Money

More for me.

I’ve got friends in the GOP.

 

Parody of “Money” by Pink Floyd.

Thoughts On My Trigger-Happy Country

  1.  There is plenty of evidence to suggest that African-Americans are treated unfairly by law enforcement and the judicial system.  It is logically impossible, however, to know if racism is responsible for any given police shooting, because you cannot know if the officer would have responded to a white man in a different way.  It is a little bit like attributing hurricanes and tornadoes to climate change;  you know that global warming makes them more likely, but you can’t know if they would have occurred in any event.
  2. The MSM frequently appear to buy into the notion that the life of a policeman is more valuable than the life of an innocent civilian.  That really irritates me.  Why do we grieve more for someone who is paid by the taxpayers to put his life on the line than someone who isn’t?
  3.  It is frequently necessary in this world to make choices, but this isn’t one of those occasions:  I don’t have to pick between the police and the community.  I don’t want policemen to use unnecessary force, but I certainly don’t want anyone to shoot at them, either.
  4. Here is the bottom line:  (a) the police have a difficult and dangerous job, and it is inevitable that mistakes will be made that will cause loss of life on occasion; (b) some of these events may be attributable to racism, but some of them probably are not; (c) there are issues with racism in the system that need to be addressed on a community-by-community basis, but that information is best derived from comprehensive studies, not individual events; and (d) the police are not immune from criticism, and there is nothing wrong with peaceful protests.

Low Crimes and Misdemeanors

My mother, who was kind of an old school Republican (she would have voted for McCain and Romney, but never for Trump), had the best description of Bill Clinton’s conduct in the Lewinsky affair that I have ever heard:  it was a “low crime and misdemeanor.”  Her point was that Clinton’s behavior was deplorable and arguably illegal, but it was not sufficient to warrant impeachment.  The majority of Americans agreed with her, as did I.

I was reminded of this phrase when I heard the FBI Director talk about Hillary and the e-mail issue.  My initial reaction to the use of private e-mail was that it was stupid and arrogant, but essentially inconsequential.  I still think so, but I can’t help but be troubled by the public misstatements that she made to defend herself.  They don’t go far enough to disqualify her as a candidate, but they certainly don’t bode well for her Presidency, if there is one.

The problem is that there is not, and never was, a reasonably plausible alternative.  If Sanders had articulated an agenda that was directed at modernizing the welfare state to address issues created by technological change and globalization, I would have taken him more seriously, but all he wanted to do was bash banks and spend tax money mindlessly on programs like “free public college.”  Like Jeremy Corbyn, he has a mindset that is stuck in the radical politics of the 1960’s and 1970’s.  Trump, on the other hand, is a blowhard strongman wannabe who not only lies every time his lips move, but views lying as a legitimate campaigning and negotiating tactic.  I have discussed the likely implications of that to the world economy in previous posts.

I miss Obama already, and he isn’t even gone yet.

On Bernie and the Tea Party

Some commentators and Sanders supporters have speculated that Bernie could become the leader of a left-wing opposition faction analogous to the Tea Party after the election.  It won’t happen, for the following reasons:

  1.  Sanders doesn’t have enough friends in Congress to create a faction of any respectable size.
  2.  The Tea Party has the ability to wreak havoc because shutting down the federal government is completely consistent with its anti-government ideology.  A left-wing, pro-government faction logically can’t do that.  In other words, you can’t plausibly expect to increase the size and power of the government by threatening to paralyze it–what would happen to the people you are trying to help in the meantime?

Hillary Channels Boz Scaggs About Bernie

                   It’s Over

Rivals both

Till the end.

It’s time to stop the fighting now.

You have to break before you bend.

 

So shut it down

In Philly town.

No more jabs and no more frowns.

It’s time to take on Trump the clown.

 

Why can’t you just get it through your head?

It’s over; it’s over now.

Can’t you hear me clearly now?  I said

It’s over; it’s over.

 

I’m just really sick of you.

You might say that I can’t take it.

I can’t take it.

Lord, I swear, I just can’t take it no more.

 

Parody of “It’s Over” by Boz Scaggs.

The Fatal Ambivalence of Francois Hollande

When Hollande was elected, he was confronted with the following clear and fundamental choices about the future of France and its economy:

  1.  Should France join Germany in promoting austerity, or align itself with the southern European states in supporting Keynesian policies within the EU?
  2.  Should France emulate Germany in adopting reforms to make its economy more capitalist-friendly, or soak the rich and continue to protect labor insiders?

In the event, when he approached the fork in the road, he . . . took it.  He supported German efforts to impose austerity on Greece, but offered to lighten the Greeks’ load a little bit.  He ran deficits in excess of those permitted by the EU, but not by much, and fought the battle to do so not openly, but in a passive-aggressive way.  He supported a supertax, and then backed off.  Today, he is in a desperate struggle with the unions for labor market reforms that are too watered-down to make much of a difference in the French economy.

France has not performed badly over the last eight years relative to most of the countries in the EU.  The problem is that the French compare themselves, not to Spain or Italy or Greece, but to Germany, and the German economy is growing much faster than theirs.  No one takes France seriously as an equal partner to the Germans anymore.  That is unacceptable to the French.

When it is all said and done, Hollande’s inability to make up his mind is likely to split his party and will put Le Pen into the second round of the election in 2017. At that point, anything can happen;  do not assume that she has no chance of winning.