The magic number stays at 11. They’ll have another go at it tonight.
Tomorrow, the Brewers begin a 4-game set against the Phillies. I’m curious to see how they fare against a team with a 50 percent larger payroll — and a possible playoff opponent.
The magic number stays at 11. They’ll have another go at it tonight.
Tomorrow, the Brewers begin a 4-game set against the Phillies. I’m curious to see how they fare against a team with a 50 percent larger payroll — and a possible playoff opponent.
Comments Off on Cardinals 4, Brewers 2
Posted in Sports
I’ve argued for a long time that stimulus bills are poorly named; it implies that they stimulate the economy. “Spending bill” is a non-loaded term that has the added advantage of being accurate. Both parties have passed spending bills over the years in the hopes of stimulating the economy. Intentions being different than results, Democrats are finally starting to agree with me on this misuse of language, as The Hill reports:
Democrats are now being careful to frame their job-creation agenda in language excluding references to any stimulus, even though their favored policies for ending the deepest recession since the Great Depression are largely the same.
The article continues:
Recognizing the unpopularity of the 2009 package, however, Democratic leaders have revised their message with less loaded language – “job creation” instead of “stimulus” and “Make it in America” in lieu of “Recovery Act” – in hopes of tackling the jobs crisis.
Spending bills work by taking some money out of the economy and then putting it back in, minus transaction costs and political malfeasance; one can see why they don’t have much effect. The thinking is that Congress can invest money more wisely than private investors. If Solyndra is any indicator, that isn’t true.
Public opinion has soured on spending bills after some initial optimism. That same public also wants its politicians to do something, anything to get the economy going.
But the only tool available to Congress is spending. That’s why politicians insist on following the same failed policy over and over – it is their only tool. The only alternatives are doing nothing, or actively paring back spending and regulations. And those don’t look nearly as glamorous on camera.
Stimulus, spending bill, job creation bill – a rose by any other name has thorns just as sharp. And this particular rose refuses to bloom. That means it’s time to try something else. Maybe reducing spending to sustainable Clinton-era levels, which isn’t even particularly austere. Congress should also try a deregulatory stimulus sometime.
This Brewers-Cardinals series started off better than the last one. Randy Wolf pitched a gem, and the offense was able put up enough runs to keep the lead comfortable.
The magic number is now 11, with 20 games left.
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Posted in Sports
The Brewers rebounded from being swept by St. Louis by sweeping Houston.
St. Louis lost to Cincinnati.
Milwaukee and St. Louis begin another three-game set today.
The Brewers’ magic number is 13.
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Posted in Sports
Same score as the day before, but this time the Brewers never trailed. George Kottaras also hit for the cycle — a rare feat for a backup catcher. He is the first major league player to do it in over a year.
St. Louis won its game against Cincinnati, 6-4.
Milwaukee’s magic number is down to 15.
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The Brewers were down early, but an outburst of 8 unanswered runs sealed the win.
St. Louis also scored 8 runs. Cincinnati, however, scored 11.
Milwaukee’s magic number goes down two. It is now 16.
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Posted in Sports
Here are some regulatory bloopers I’ve uncovered recently:
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Posted in regulation
Tagged arkansas, boston strangler, burping, los angeles, nevada, oklahoma, reptile sellers, txas regulations, urban agriculture
The Cardinals earned a sweep. As I said not too long ago, they are no pushovers; point proven. The Brewers have had an amazing month. Two bad weeks knock them out of the playoffs. Nothing is settled.
From here, the Crew hit the road for 3 games against lowly Houston. Then it’s off to St. Louis for one last chance to dim the Cardinals’ postseason hopes.
The magic number remains 18.
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Posted in Uncategorized
The Department of Justice sued this week to stop the proposed AT&T-T-Mobile merger. Associate Director of Technology Studies Ryan Radia thinks this is a mistake. The evidence that the merger would make the wireless market less competitive is unconvincing. Nobody knows if the merger will succeed or not. Either way, consumer harm is unlikely.
Comments Off on CEI Podcast for September 1, 2011: The Blocked AT&T-T-Mobile Merger
Posted in Antitrust, CEI Podcast, Economics, Technology
Tagged Antitrust, at&t, at&t merger, at&t t-mobile merger, department of justice, doj, justice department, ryan radia, t-mobile, t-mobile merger, wireless