Tuesday, January 28, 2014

Learning Humility

Nix narcissism. Narcissism is an exclusive focus on the self. The focus is appropriately on others—but on others’ needs, not on others’ misdeeds.

Eliminate entitlement. Entitled people believe they are superior to others in a way that qualifies them for special treatment. Thus, they are often preoccupied with fairness* as they perceive it.  When people are both narcissistic and entitled, they perceived themselves to be unique, special, and deserving in ways that other people are not. Humble people tend not to point to others, or themselves when things go wrong. They fix problems, not assign blame.

Puncture pride. We probably all feed pride, and sometimes our pride justly deserved. At other times, pride is a defensive shield to protect a fragile ego.

Equalize egoism with empathy. Instead of thinking about yourself, try thinking about other people’s feelings, thoughts, needs, and personal experiences.

Secure self-confidence and self-esteem—but not too much. Poor self esteem can motivate people to serve others altruistically and to avoid attention modestly. Poor self-esteem’s aim is self-protection. But so is high self-esteem aim the same. When people hold themselves to high regard but their self-esteem is fragile, they will decisively stamp out any challenge to their seeming self-confidence. Self-confidence allows people freedom from fear, which permits humble service.

Be self-aware, but not too self-aware.  Like everything in life, find a balance.

Practice virtue. Try pursing a meaningful life.

Cultivate spirituality or religion. Humble people often feel that they are responding to a calling beyond themselves.

Source: Humility. The Quiet Virtue (2007) by Everett L. Worthington Jr.

In the book, the author talks about St. Benedict’s steps of humility for monks. Interesting read.

Even Jesus and Buddha talked about humility.

 

*This is where we get social justice, wealth redistribution, etc. from.

Monday, January 27, 2014

Sampling from the Liberty Amendments book

Here is a sampling of the liberty amendments from Mark. R. Levin’s 2013 book The Liberty Amendments. Restoring the American Republic:

An Amendment to Restore the Senate

SECTION 1: The Seventeenth Amendment is hereby repealed. All Senators shall be chosen by their state legislatures as prescribed by Article I.

SECTION 2: This amendment shall not be so construed as to affect the term of any Senator chosen before it becomes valid as part of the Constitution.

SECTION 3: When vacancies occur in the representation of any State in the Senate for more than ninety days the governor of the State shall appoint an individual to fill the vacancy for the remainder of the term.

SECTION 4: A Senator may be removed from office by a two-thirds vote of the state legislature.

Taxing

SECTION 1: Congress shall not collect more than 15 percent of a person’s annual income, from whatever source derived. “Person” shall include natural and legal persons.

SECTION 2: The deadline for filing federal income tax returns shall be the day before the date set for elections to federal office.

SECTION 3: Congress shall not collect tax on a decedent’s estate.

SECTION 4: Congress shall not institute a value-added tax or national sales tax or any other tax in kind or form.

SECTION 5: This Amendment shall take effect in the fourth fiscal year after its ratification.

An Amendment to Limit the Federal Bureaucracy

SECTION 1: All federal departments and agencies shall expire if said departments and agencies are not individually reauthorized in stand-alone reauthorization bills every three years by a majority vote of the House of Representatives and the Senate.

SECTION 2: All Executive Branch regulations exceeding an economic burden of $ 100 million, as determined jointly by the Government Accountability Office and the Congressional Budget Office, shall be submitted to a permanent Joint Committee of Congress, hereafter the Congressional Delegation Oversight Committee, for review and approval prior to their implementation.

SECTION 3: The Committee shall consist of seven members of the House of Representatives, four chosen by the Speaker and three chosen by the Minority Leader; and seven members of the Senate, four chosen by the Majority Leader and three chosen by the Minority Leader. No member shall serve on the Committee beyond a single three-year term.

SECTION 4: The Committee shall vote no later than six months from the date of the submission of the regulation to the Committee. The Committee shall make no change to the regulation, either approving or disapproving the regulation by majority vote as submitted.

SECTION 5: If the Committee does not act within six months from the date of the submission of the regulation to the Committee, the regulation shall be considered disapproved and must not be implemented by the Executive Branch.

An Amendment to Promote Free Enterprise

SECTION 1: Congress’s power to regulate Commerce is not a plenary grant of power to the federal government to regulate and control economic activity but a specific grant of power limited to preventing states from impeding commerce and trade between and among the several States.

SECTION 2: Congress’s power to regulate Commerce does not extend to activity within a state, whether or not it affects interstate commerce; nor does it extend to compelling an individual or entity to participate in commerce or trade.

The 17th Amendment was a Progressive idea. They didn’t want states having a check on the gov’t. This amendment is why there are unfunded mandates. Then again the Left won’t like most of these amendments.

The rest of Mr. Levin’s amendments are:

  • An Amendment to Establish Term Limits for Members of Congress
  • An Amendment to Establish Term Limits for Supreme Court Justices and Super-Majority Legislative Override
  • A Limit Spending Amendment
  • An Amendment to Protect Private Property
  • An Amendment to Grant the States Authority to Directly Amend the Constitution
  • An Amendment to Grant the States Authority to Check Congress
  • An Amendment to Protect the Vote

Monday, January 20, 2014

Comte Henri De Saint-Simon (1760-1825)

All his life, Saint-Simon was possessed with the idea that he was the great new Messiah who had at last come to save earth*, and he lived at a time when a great many people** were under that peculiar impression.

[Saint-Simon] is also the father of what I should like to call the technological interpretation of history. This is not quite the same as the materialistic interpretation of history which we associate with the name of Marx, but it does lie at its root, and in certain respects is a much more original and tenable view. Saint-Simon is the first person to define classes in the modern sense, an economic social entities, dependent in a direct way upon the progress of technology—the progress of machinery, the progress of the ways in which people obtain and distribute and consume products. In short, he is the first person to draw serious attention to the economic factors in history. Moreover, whenever there is talk about a planned society, about a planned economy, about technocracy, about the necessity for what the French call dirigisme, anti-laissez-faire; whenever there is a New Deal; whenever there is propaganda in favor of some kind of rational organization of industry and of commerce, in favor of applying science for the benefit of society, and, in general, in favor of everything which we have now come to associate with a planned rather than a laissez-faire State—whenever there is talk of this sort, the ideas which are bandied saw the light originally in the half-published manuscripts of Saint-Simon.

Again, Saint-Simon more than anyone else invented the notion of the gov’t of society by elites, using a double morality. Saint-Simon is almost the first thinker who comes out and says that it is important for society to be governed not democratically, but by elites of persons who understand the technological needs and the technological possibilities of their time; and that, since the majority of human beings are stupid, and since they mostly obey their emotions, what the enlightened elite must do is to practice one morality themselves and feed their flock of human subjects with another.

He is one of the most trenchant attackers of such eighteenth-century shibboleths as civil liberty, human rights, natural rights, democracy, laissez-faire, individualism, nationalism. He attacks them because he is the first person to see—as the thinkers of the 18th century never did quite clearly see—the incompatibility between the view that wise men ought to direct society and the view that people ought to govern themselves; the incompatibility,in short, between a society which is directed by a group of wise men who alone know towards what goal to move and how to get humanity to move towards it, and the notion that it is better to govern oneself, even than to be governed well. He chooses, of course, in favor of good gov’t.

Finally, Saint-Simon is the first originator of what might be called secular religious—that is to say, the first person to see that one cannot live by technological wisdom alone; that something must be done to stimulate the feelings, the emotions, the religious instincts of mankind.

He developed the notion that history must be understood as a kind of evolution of mankind in the satisfaction of its various needs, and for that reason where the needs are different the satisfaction will be different. 

The four criteria of a progressive society:

1) The progressive society is that which provides the maximum means of satisfying the greatest number of needs of the human beings who compose it.

2) Anything that is progressive will give the opportunity to the best to reach the top. The best, for him, are the most gifted, the most imaginative, the cleverest, the most profound, the most energetic, the most active, those who want the full flavor of life.

3) The maximum unity and strength for the purpose of a rebellion or an invasion.

4) Conduciveness to invention and discovery and civilization.

What are the purposes of society? Well, says Saint-Simon, we are told it is the common good, but that is very vague. The purpose of society is self-development, the purpose of society is ‘the best application, in order to satisfy human needs, of knowledge acquired by the sciences, in the arts and crafts, the dissemination of such knowledge, and the development and maximum accumulation of its fruits, that is, in the most useful combination of all separate activities, in the sphere of the sciences, the arts and crafts’.

As for rights, ‘right’ is an empty sound: there are only interests. Interests are which humanity happens to want at any given moment. It is the business of producers to give it to them. Humanity divides into two vast classes, the indolent and the workers. By ‘workers’ he does not seem to mean manual workers or the proletariat; he means anybody who works, including managers, captains of industry, bankers, industrialists.

Above all, we must have professionals and not amateurs. Poverty is always due to incompetence, and we must replace the appalling waste of competition by concerted planning; what we want is a centralized industrial plan for society.

Source: Freedom and Its Betrayal. Six Enemies of Human Liberty (2002)  by Isaiah Berlin.

The beliefs of Saint-Simon I think are for the most part believed by the Left today. He could be one of their “founding fathers.” He did influence Karl Marx who called him a Utopian socialist.

Who are the other betrayers you might ask? Claude-Adrien Helvetius, Jean Jacques Rousseau, Johann Gottlieb Fichte, Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel, and Joseph De Maistre.

 

*Sounds like the current U. S. president.

**This of course is the lame-stream-press, most musicians and actors, college professors, etc.

Wednesday, January 15, 2014

Rule of Man or Rule of Law?

From Fee.org (Jan. 14):

The rule of law sounds boring, but—along with its companion, property rights—it is the single most important factor in quality governance.

If you compare two geographically similar areas—say Florida and Haiti—and ask why the former is prosperous and peaceful, and the latter is not, the rule of law is the most important reason for the difference. The West triumphed relative to its competitors over the past thousand years not because of climate or ethnicity, but because of the evolution of all sorts of institutions (good rules) that fit under the rule of law.

Despite its importance, few educated adults, and fewer students, would list “the rule of law” as central to our prosperity. Perhaps they haven’t fully experienced the alternative—which one might call “the rule of man.” We only half-notice the order in which we live, without thinking about how it developed or what its alternatives are. We forget what Locke stated in England’s Glorious Revolution: “Where there is no law, there is no freedom.”

Locke's statement doesn’t mean that all laws makes us freer: We rightly intuit that Obamacare or NSA spying aren’t exactly expanding our freedom by leaps and bounds. The Lockean understanding of laws, and a pretty good litmus test of any proposed legislation today, is that laws must enlarge an individual’s freedom.

Laws do this best when they are:

  • simple rules,
  • evolved over time,
  • agreed upon and known by all,
  • rarely changed, and
  • applied equally to all people.

An individual law may be silly, but if it fits the most of the above criteria, it likely is better to live under it that than to be ruled by a ruler, who is likely to be capricious and arbitrary. [read more]

Interesting essay. The tax rules are not simple, not known by all, always changing, and not applied equally to all people. Actually, you could say that about most bureaucratic regulations. The Ten Commandments and the Bill of Rights are simple rules and rarely changed. Well, the Commandments and Bill of Rights never changed and probably should never change. Both should be agreed upon and known by all. Both are definitely equally applied to all people.

The physical laws of nature like Isaac Newton’s Three Laws of Motion, and Johannes Kepler’s Laws of Planetary Motion are simple rules (each contain only 3 laws) that never change and apply equally to all objects in the universe.

The author gives an example of the Roman Emperor Claudius was fond of pronouncing edicts, issuing dozens of them per day, even declaring that public flatulence was good for one’s health. Evidently he never heard of climate change.

Not sure what the author means by laws should “evolve over time.” Evolution usually means change so that kind of contradicts his assertion that laws should rarely change.  Also, laws like living organisms can devolve too. 

Tuesday, January 14, 2014

Miscellaneous Thoughts Part 32

  • There is a reason why the Liberty Bell isn’t called the Equality Bell or Fairness Bell.
  • To the Left the only essential Americans are those who put them and keep them in power.
  • Obamacare essentially controls your life, so you have very little liberty, which diminishes your happiness.
  • If gov’t fears the people the country may get liberty if that is what the population wants. You will probably get a revolution, but you may get a softer tyranny.
  • The reason the Left doesn’t like religion is because they cannot control something that is bigger than themselves.
  • Age income tax: A federal flat income tax where you pay half the tax rate when you are 40 and no taxes when you are 80 and above. For another idea, see negative income tax.
  • To those who love big gov’t, criticizing it or even questioning its policies means you hate gov’t period. 
  • Book publishing companies could use the Modeltalker program (speech synthesis software for people who are losing or who have already lost their ability to speak ) to make audio books. 
  • The minimum wage law is a war on teenagers trying to get an entry-level job.
  • The Left wants rights for people when they consenting to have sex but not when they are consenting to make a business contract like hiring an apprentice for free.

Monday, January 13, 2014

Terrorist Group Issues Fatwa to Kill Journalists and Spies

From Blaze.com (Jan. 10):

Leaders of Pakistan’s most deadly terrorist organization issued a recent “fatwa” – an Islamic edict – ordering their followers to kill journalists and those believed to be spies for the West, saying they are enemies of Islam.

The 30-page document titled “FATWA Regarding Dajjali Media, Who is Wrong? Who is Right?” was issued by the Terik-E-Taliban’s (TTP) Central Shura in Pakistan’s lawless tribal belt and includes Fox News, the Associated Press, the BBC, Pakistan’s GEO News, Al Jazeera and several other news outlets whose logos are on the cover of the document. That said, the document stipulates the edict is to be directed at any reporter or news organization they deem anti-Islamic.

The document, written in Urdu, has only been released on several Jihadi websites. TheBlaze obtained the document this week and had it translated but chose not to publish it in its entirety out of the concern for journalists and other individuals working overseas. [read more]

What is this?! Islamists wanting to kill journalists? I don’t get it. The lame-stream-press is always careful not to tick off the Jihadists. Must be one of those conservative journalists ticking them off. Probably, made a online video disrespecting Islam. That’s got to be it.

The journalists and Western spies don’t have to worry about the FATWA though. It doesn’t seem to be issued by Al Qaeda. So it’s alright. They can let out a sigh of relief.

Wednesday, January 08, 2014

10 Surprising Government Programs That Are Costing You $10.2 Billion

From blog.heritage.org (Jan. 7):

The following is a list of the 10 programs where [Romina] Boccia [a Heritage budget expert] believes Congress can save taxpayers money. Click here to read the full report.

1. Cut Pet-Shampoo and Similar Projects, Save $3.1 billion: The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) program funds “wasteful parochial projects, which include funding a pet-shampoo company and issuing risky business loans.”

2. Stop Bankrolling the Common Core, Save $2 billion: The Department of Education competitive grant programs under the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA) funds more than 60 projects, including an initiative that promotes Common Core national standards. Boccia says this is “an area regarded by tradition and law as a state and local matter.”

3. Cut a Program That Hurts Youth, Save $1.6 billion: Job Corps is a residential job-training program to serve disadvantaged youth, but according to Boccia’s research, it “has an abysmal record.” Job Corps participants were less likely to earn a high school diploma than non-participants in a control group. Participants in the program also worked fewer weeks and worked fewer hours per week than similar teens and tweens.

4. Cut Unnecessary Red Tape, Save $1.5 billion: The U.S. Department of Agriculture Food for Peace Title II grants require food to be purchased in the United States and then shipped across oceans in U.S.-flagged vessels, adding unnecessary logistical challenges to already-higher costs.

5. Cut Pork-Barrel Projects, Save $800 million: The Department of Transportation’s Transportation Alternatives Program funds community preservation projects like bicycle paths, sidewalks, and nature paths. Boccia argues “such projects are purely local matters.”

6. Cut Private Landowner Beautification, Save $730 million: The Natural Resources Conservation Service runs this program to help private landowners maintain private land and teach them how to best use their land. Boccia says taxpayers should not be forced to subsidize advice on how to improve visual appearance.

7.  Cut Government Handouts, Save $200 million: The Department of Transportation Essential Air Service subsidizes the flights of rural passengers who opt for air travel when cheaper or unsubsidized travel alternatives. According to Boccia, any subsidies for these flights should come from the local or state level, which are benefitting from the service.

8. Cut Corporate Welfare, Save $120 million: The Department of Energy’s Advanced Manufacturing Program subsidizes activities leading to greater energy efficiency in American manufacturing processes – something Boccia believes companies should decide on their own to participate in.

9. Cut Crony Capitalism, Save $100 million: The Rural Business Program Account deals with business and industry-guaranteed loans and rural business enterprise grants. This allows the federal government to play venture capitalist with taxpayer money, Boccia says.

10. Cut Funding for Overseas Abortions, Save $35 million: The United Nations Population Fund, funded in millions of taxpayer dollars, faces continued allegations that it has been complicit in China’s coercive one-child policy, which is often enforced through forced abortions and forced sterilizations. [read more]

Sounds like a good idea to me, but will the Republicans have the guts to propose these cuts? After all if they propose cuts in 2), 6), 7), possibly 3) and 10) the Dems will demonize them and say they mean and don’t care. Then again the Left will always say that no matter what the Republicans do or don’t do.

Tuesday, January 07, 2014

The Lincoln Platform

  • Embrace what is new. Lincoln the modernizer wouldn’t have any patience for an economics born of nostalgia or of distrust of the workings of the market.
  • Emphasize education. Lincoln talked of the importance of education from the first, although not with much specificity. He lived out his own commitment to it in his early years, with all his reading and self-directed study.
  • Resist dependency. Lincoln resented his father for making him labor and keeping the proceeds for himself. He preached the gospel of work, and wanted as many people as possible participating in the commercial economy.
  • Build infrastructure. Lincoln favored funding better transportation infrastructure, whether it was improving the pathetic little Sangamon River or building a grand railroad project spanning the continent.
  • Fund other basic supports for growth. Lincoln lent aid to transportation improvements on the theory that they were transformative and couldn’t necessarily get the capital on their own otherwise. A direct analogue today is basic science and research.
  • Reject class politics. The entire thrust of Lincoln’s economics was growing the pie for everyone and resisting zero-sum arguments positing an inherent conflict between classes. 
  • Welcome immigrants.
  • Exploit our resources. Lincoln would probably favor drilling, mining, and fracking to the utmost.
  • Pay attention to the interests of the common worker. “Whatever is calculated to advance the condition of the honest, struggling laboring man,” Lincoln said in 1861 on his way to Washington, “so far as my judgment will enable me to judge of a correct thing. I am for that thing.” 
  • Support causes of social renewal.
  • Elevate the culture.
  • Look to the founders. Lincoln’s attitude to the Founders bordered on the worshipful. He said of George Washington: “Washington is the mightiest name of earth---long since mightiest in the cause of civil liberty; still mightiest in moral reformation.”

Source: Lincoln Unbound. How an Ambitious Young Railsplitter Saved the American Dream—and How We Can Do It Again. (2013) by Rich Lowry.

Monday, January 06, 2014

These 13 Tax Increases Hit in 2013

From the Heritage blog (Dec. 31):

1. Payroll Tax: increase in the Social Security portion of the payroll tax from 4.2 percent to 6.2 percent for workers.

2. Top marginal tax rate: increase from 35 percent to 39.6 percent for taxable incomes over $450,000 ($400,000 for single filers).

3. Phase out of personal exemptions for adjusted gross income (AGI) over $300,000 ($250,000 for single filers).

4. Phase down of itemized deductions for AGI over $300,000 ($250,000 for single filers).

5. Tax rates on investment: increase in the rate on dividends and capital gains from 15 percent to 20 percent for taxable incomes over $450,000 ($400,000 for single filers).

6. Death tax: increase in the rate (on estates larger than $5 million) from 35 percent to 40 percent.

7. Taxes on business investment: expiration of full expensing—the immediate deduction of capital purchases by businesses.

8. Another investment tax increase: 3.8 percent surtax on investment income for taxpayers with taxable income exceeding $250,000 ($200,000 for singles).

9. Another payroll tax hike: 0.9 percent increase in the Hospital Insurance portion of the payroll tax for incomes over $250,000 ($200,000 for single filers).

10. Medical device tax: 2.3 percent excise tax paid by medical device manufacturers and importers on all their sales.

11. Reducing the income tax deduction for individuals’ medical expenses.

12. Elimination of the corporate income tax deduction for expenses related to the Medicare Part D subsidy.

13. Limitation of the corporate income tax deduction for compensation that health insurance companies pay to their executives.

[read more]

Wow! That’s quite a few tax increases. It looks like it won’t be a very good year for the tax payer.

There should be no death tax or medical device tax. Definitely no medical device tax. That is going to reduce innovation in the medical device field. As for the corporate tax America has one of the highest taxes. Having all those taxes won’t stimulate the economy. It will do the exact opposite.