A Neil Young Classic Updated

KEEP ON ROCKIN’ IN THE FREE WORLD (2019 VERSION)

The first stanza is unchanged. It was perfect as it was.

_______________

There’s colors on the street

Red, white, and blue.

People shufflin’ their feet.

People sleepin’ in their shoes.

But there’s a warning sign on the road ahead.

There’s a lot of people sayin’ we’d be better off dead.

Don’t feel like Satan, but I am to them.

So I try to forget it any way I can.

Keep on rockin’ in the free world.

Keep on rockin’ in the free world.

________________

I see a woman in the night

With a baby inside.

She stands far from the light

But there’s no place to hide.

She needs to terminate it

But abortion’s now a crime

She thinks of it and wonders

Another place, another time.

She really needs a doctor

Or she’ll have to use a wire.

Any way you look at it

Her circumstance is dire.

Keep on rockin’ in the free world.

Keep on rockin’ in the free world.

_____________

We’ve got a big, bad concrete wall

For the immigrant man.

We’ve got a kinder, gentler machine gun hand.

We’ve got budget cuts; skyscrapers, too.

Climate change is comin’ and the polar bears are through.

Got a president on Twitter.

Every word is a sensation.

Lots of Democrats are lining up

To try and save the nation.

Keep on rockin’ in the free world.

Keep on rockin’ in the free world.

Parody of “Keep on Rockin’ in the Free World” by Neil Young.

On Where I Stand Today

The left-leaning NYT columnist Jamelle Bouie insists that it is too early to determine which of the Democratic candidates is the most “electable,” given that “electability” is not simply a function of identity and demographics. For once, I agree with him. We need to see these people on stage together, and on the stump, for several months before we make that decision.

Here is where I stand today:

  1. I’m a realo. I’m not going to support any fundi candidates. As a result, I’m comfortable with Biden, but I’m willing to consider younger and more vibrant alternatives.
  2. I’m completely put off by Bernie’s warmed-over seventies neo-Marxism. Even constrained by the system, he would make a terrible president, particularly in foreign affairs.
  3. Warren would be a much better “revolutionary” choice, as she is more driven by data than ideology, but she has to elbow Bernie out of her lane first. Her only option, as I see it, is to outflank him on the left, which will be a tough task. More on that in the coming weeks.
  4. Harris has a lot going for her, and her history suggests that she is a realo who knows how to wield a knife–a useful skill in politics. She can’t get the nomination unless she figures out exactly what she stands for and how she can appeal to white people who aren’t extremely liberal. Right now, I want to see it, but I don’t.
  5. Booker could win as the last man standing–the one choice that is minimally tolerable to everyone, including me. That appears to be his only hope.
  6. Beto hasn’t shown me that he’s qualified for the job.
  7. Mayor Pete is minimally qualified. He has to prove that he is more than a gay novelty during the debates. Speaking Norwegian doesn’t win you any friends in Oklahoma.
  8. Klobuchar is acceptable to me from an ideological perspective, but, without a charisma transplant, she looks like a left-wing version of Tim Pawlenty.
  9. The other candidates don’t merit any discussion at this point.

On Biden and the Iraq War

Joe Biden voted for the Iraq War. The story isn’t nearly that simple; he made bipartisan efforts to slow the process down, and he saw his vote more as an effort to give George W. Bush the diplomatic leverage to deal with the presumed WMD issue than a green light to invade. In the end, however, he voted for the war, and it was a mistake. Should it disqualify him in 2020?

In 2008, when the GOP was still dominated by neoconservatives, it surely did. As VP, however, the record shows that Biden was at least as skeptical of interventions as Obama, and argued for smaller American footprints in Iraq and Afghanistan. Besides, the danger now is that the Democratic nominee may move too far in the non-interventionist direction; in a sort of perverse way, Biden’s vote for the war provides some comfort on that point.

And so, when you consider the entire record, as well as Trump’s, the answer is no.

On Biden and the N-Words

The two words you hear most often to describe the Biden campaign are “normalcy” and “nostalgia.” Are they accurate?

As to “normalcy,” absolutely. Biden voters want to rid themselves of Trump’s divisiveness, corruption, and incompetence, but they aren’t demanding the “revolution.” They just want a quiet life with less drama and some incremental change. That’s what he brings to the table. If socialist millennials don’t like it, what are they going to do? Vote for Trump?

As to “nostalgia,” not so much. There is a judgment implicit in the word which suggests that Biden’s repeated statements about bipartisanship are unrealistic and out of date. In reality, if any significant legislation is going to get through the system, with the possible exception of a tax bill, a degree of bipartisanship is going to be required. And if that is a long shot, is the alternative of the “revolution” more plausible?

The upshot of it is that “nostalgia” is actually “realism.” And that’s just fine with me.

A Limerick on Biden

On the Democrat candidate Joe.

He’s still got a long way to go.

He isn’t PC.

He’s as old as can be.

But he’s got plenty left, don’t you know.

The Brexit Follies, Continued

If the polls are right, Theresa May is about to lead the Conservatives to a fifth place finish in the EU elections. Her authority over her party has diminished to the point where even her attempts to use her resignation date as leverage are being ignored. And yet, she is planning to hold MV4 in the near future. Its chances of success are very poor.

For his part, Jeremy Corbyn has broken off talks with the government, because he still sees the collateral effects of an unruly Brexit as his ticket to power. Unfortunately for him: (a) he probably won’t get his general election; (b) since both parties are split on Brexit, a general election wouldn’t help to clarify the issue; and (c) he wouldn’t win the election, anyway, since the fear of a far left government is the one thing that unites the Conservatives.

At this point, the most likely outcome is a no-deal exit and BoJo as PM before the end of the year.

Is this a great country, or what?

On Warren and the Debates

The first debate is barely over a month away! Here is the advice I would give to the combatants:

  1. Project strength. Be short, crisp, and unequivocal.
  2. Don’t worry about answering the questions too directly. Use them as a platform for your talking points.
  3. Be memorable. Have zingers prepared to use wherever possible.
  4. Make everything about Trump. That’s what your audience wants to hear.
  5. Absolutely do not give vague, rambling answers to questions and conclude by referring the audience to the plan on your website. No one is going to read it.

This format works well for Bernie Sanders, who has been through the mill many times, and who is a master of reducing complex problems to battles between the people and Big Something-or-other. For the more honest and intellectual Warren, it is going to be a serious problem. She isn’t going to be able to give the issues the time they really deserve when she’s on stage with nine or ten other people. She is going to have to work that out, somehow, or her dream is going to wither away even before the primaries start.

On Australia and the GND

From rampant, dangerous wildfires to the bleaching of the Great Barrier Reef, climate change is already having a significant impact on Australia. And yet, a government that promotes the mining and sale of coal just pulled an upset and won the election.

Don’t you think there is a message in there for you, GND fans?

How Liberal Democracy Dies

In the end, the most significant differences between a liberal democracy and a banana republic are these:

  1. The executive in a liberal democracy follows court orders. The executive in a banana republic either stacks the judiciary or ignores it;
  2. The press is controlled by the executive, either through legal or financial means, in a banana republic; and
  3. Enemies of the executive are prosecuted for frivolous, partisan reasons in a banana republic.

To my pleasant surprise, the Trump administration has chosen to complain bitterly about adverse court orders, but not to ignore them–yet. It is clearly stonewalling legitimate efforts at congressional oversight, however, and we have plenty of evidence, particularly recently, that Trump is eager to prosecute his opponents, even with the assistance of foreign governments. We also remember his threats about controlling the media, and note Justice Thomas’ statements in support of that agenda.

The key figure in this process is William Barr. Based on his behavior and his reputation as an avatar for increased executive power, there is no chance that he will stand up against his boss in public for the essential norms of a liberal democracy. He will either: (a) slow walk Trump’s demands for political investigations; (b) openly express enthusiastic support for them, while doing nothing to effectuate them; or (c) actually embrace them and thus begin the process of destroying the republic.

At this point, do you really have any faith in him? Me, neither.

On the Yglesias Test

Matthew Yglesias thinks left-wing commentators spend too much time thinking and talking about the policy initiatives that have been proposed by the various Democratic candidates. With the filibuster and the Roberts Court in place, they have no realistic future. The key questions for the electorate, according to Yglesias, actually revolve around foreign policy and bureaucratic appointments, because those are the areas in which a Democratic president would have the most authority and discretion.

That is the voice of a true realo, and every word of it makes sense. If you accept it, the most appropriate nominee would be Biden, who has the most foreign policy experience and the biggest network of qualified potential appointees. If you prefer a more revolutionary approach, then the best choice would be Warren, who knows the bureaucracy inside and out, even if her ideas about foreign policy are unformed at best. For some reason, however, Yglesias undercuts his own message by maintaining that the Democrats need a fresh new spokesperson, not a retread. There is undoubtedly a case for that on electability, but not on qualifications.

The Revolution at Three Percent

Desperate times call for desperate measures. That’s the reason dramatic increases in the size of the federal government have been associated with crises–the Great Depression, World War II, and the 2008 Great Recession.

There are no guarantees that the current conditions will remain in place in November, 2020. Absent a fundamental change, however, the Democratic nominee will be facing an election in which real GDP growth and the unemployment rate are both around three percent.

It is imaginable, given Trump’s poor poll numbers, that a nominee who promises to bring decency and competence back to the White House, along with some incremental changes favoring working people over the wealthy, can win even in the face of the three percents. Is it plausible, however, that a Sanders or a Warren “revolution” can succeed without some sort of a cataclysm between now and November, 2020?

No.

On 1979 and 2019

One of my few vivid memories of the yearbook from my senior year in college is of a photo of a handmade sign saying “Nuke Iran Until It Glows in the Dark.” The sign did, in fact, accurately depict the intensity of feeling in the country in 1979.

Trump and Bolton will be relying on those memories to build bipartisan support for the upcoming war. Will it work? I don’t think so. Forty years is a long time; images of Carter and the hostage crisis will take a back seat to perceptions about Trump’s divisiveness and the Iraq War in the eyes of most Americans. In the absence of a truly compelling Iranian provocation, the blue team isn’t going to accept the legitimacy of the war, and there is going to be big trouble at home.

Why America Fears China

Imagine a scenario in which the UK is light years ahead of the United States in AI research. Would that alarm you? Would it keep you up at night? Of course not. But if you substitute China for the UK, the story is completely different. Why?

In all honesty, a little bit of it is probably racism. A much bigger part, however, is concern about the nature of the Chinese regime. We look at the Uighur camps, the black jails, the controls on the internet, the growth of the surveillance state, the abductions of critics of the regime, the construction on the fill islands in the South China Sea, and the use of economic ties for leverage against weaker countries and think, that would be us if China dominated the world. True, the Chinese wouldn’t insist that we live on collective farms, but this alternative doesn’t sound too promising, either.

If you pose this to a Chinese official, he will probably tell you that China is still a poor country that has no interest in dominating the world, and would undoubtedly fail if it tried. The problem is that the increases in the military budget and the aggressive rhetoric from the government tell a different story. How can we be sure that China’s ambitions are limited to economic growth and sovereignty over its borders? We can’t, really, so we have to prepare for the worst.

The answer to this, obviously, is for the Chinese government to dial down the nationalism and make a bigger effort to present itself as a friendly, peaceful neighbor. Will that happen? I doubt it; Xi is too invested in nationalism and repression to back down.

On Israel, Iran, and Plan B

Israel doesn’t really want an American war with Iran, says the NYT. It’s only about applying maximum pressure to bring about regime change.

Right. And when that doesn’t work, what do you suppose Bibi’s Plan B is? Is it to thank Trump for the effort and just leave it alone?

Would Bernie Be So Bad?

The usually sensible Matthew Yglesias argues that Bernie would not be a disaster as the Democratic nominee or as president, because: he typically runs ahead of the nominee in Vermont; he was a largely pragmatic and successful mayor of Burlington; he can’t get the “revolution” through the system even if he wins the election; and he would have to rely on Obama holdovers to staff his administration. Is Yglesias right?

As far as he goes, yes, but he ignores the negative impacts of Bernie’s foreign policy, which is the other side of a Trumpian coin. Sanders promises to preach for left-wing values abroad without actually doing anything serious to restrain our adversaries or promote our interests. In practice, that probably means campaigning openly for Corbyn in the UK, acquiescing to Maduro in Venezuela, complaining about elected nationalist thugs in the EU and South America without taking any concrete action to dispose of them, and giving Xi and Putin the freedom to dominate their respective spheres of influence. That, my friends, would just be a disaster of a different sort; he would alienate our remaining friends and accomplish nothing.

Also, to make an obvious point, Vermont is hardly representative of America as a whole. It is closer to Switzerland than Oklahoma. Using Bernie’s performance there as a guide to anything is a clear mistake.