Category Archives: The Partisan Mind

Geithner Confirmation Silliness

Tim Geithner was confirmed as Treasury Secretary today. He’s been dealing with a scandal lately over unpaid taxes. That’s probably why the Senate’s confirmation vote for him was the narrowest for a Treasury Secretary in over 60 years.

Here’s what’s troubling. I haven’t heard a peep about Geithner’s stances on the issues, or his qualifications for the job. This despite being a bona fide news-hound.

What does Geithner plan to do as Treasury Secretary? Who knows? All we hear is unpaid taxes this, unpaid taxes that. Who cares! Of course he should pay what he owes. It’s a good way to stay out of jail.

But late tax payments have little to do with whether or not Geithner is a good fit for his new job.

That’s the kind of news I’d like to see. How sad that that’s precisely the kind of coverage that would lose the ratings race, and hence we do not see.

The Permanent Campaign

Good people generally do not become president. Good people don’t even want to be president.

Why? Power is one reason. There is nothing dignified or noble about seeking power over other human beings.

Morality in politics is that of Thrasymachus in Plato’s Republic: might makes right. No parent would teach that to their child. It is wrong.

The brutal campaigns are the other reason good people shy away from political careers. A successful campaign for even minor office requires months of the candidate prostrating himself before people he’s never met.

He has to tailor his opinions to match the median voter’s. He dares not follow his own heart or mind; he’d lose for sure.

Good people carry themselves with pride and dignity. The man or woman who voluntarily endures the modern campaign has neither.

Pundits started talking years ago about the notion of the “permanent campaign.” It used to be a cynical joke at the expense of a politician whose powerlust was a little too obvious; proper decorum demanded such impulses to be kept below the surface.

Decorum has declined. People who play for the Red Team are already jockeying to position themselves as their team’s nominee. More than three years from now.

The Blue Team already knows who their nominee will be. And he’s already begun campaigning for a second term. His first has not yet even begun.

The Politico‘s Ben Smith reports that President Obama has even named his permanent campaign: Organizing for America. This is unprecedented.

Smith describes it as a “potentially hugely, uniquely powerful tool, enhancing the muscle of the official who is already the most powerful man in America.”

Power. Always power. Politicians are terrible little creatures. May our children aspire to better things.

Sometimes Questions Are Better than Answers

Adam Cohen’s piece in today’s New York Times, “Republicans’ Latest Talking Point: The New Deal Failed,” is profoundly interesting. I have no idea if the article is representative of Cohen’s thought. But I’m led to believe that he is the type of person who, while very intelligent, did not ask many questions in school.

The standard high school civics textbook paints a glowing picture of the New Deal. So does public opinion. The inquisitive mind does not just take that at face value. It asks questions. Seeks answers. Comes to its own conclusion.

Maybe Cohen did all that, and decided the New Deal was a good thing. I am skeptical that he went to the trouble.

Why? Start with his first argument. It is simply lazy. It is a partisan’s argument. He quotes Fox News and the Wall Street Journal, and declares, these people vote Republican! Of course they’re wrong!

Yes, Republicans are wrong on many issues. Most issues, in fact. At least from my perspective. But Republican = wrong is just lazy. One must take an argument seriously to determine its merit.

His second argument is also lazy. It appeals to public opinion. This is a fallacy. A quarter of voters didn’t even know which party controlled Congress last election. 55% of Americans reject something as basic as evolution. Public opinion is not to be trusted, in other words. Better to come to your own conclusions. Better to ask questions.

Cohen’s most compelling argument is also his least rigorous: anecdote. He tells a story of a man helped by New Deal spending. Note that he left out stories of people hurt by that spending. Both kinds of anecdotes are right there in the open. Cohen is guilty of cherrypicking.

Then there are the errors of fact. Cohen claims that President Bush rolled back the regulatory state. But 33,055 new regulations passed under Bush’s watch. That’s not a typo. I’ll spell it out. Thirty-three thousand and fifty-five new regulations. Look at the data. Bush didn’t roll back anything.

Cohen is simply mistaken. He didn’t ask questions. He just assumed that Republican = deregulation. He didn’t ask if that was actually true.

As an economist, here’s the real doozy:

“The anti-New Deal line is wrong as a matter of economics. F.D.R.’s spending programs did help the economy and created millions of new jobs. The problem, we now know, is not that F.D.R. spent too much priming the pump, but rather that he spent too little. It was his decision to cut back on spending on New Deal programs that brought about a nasty recession in 1937-38.”

Really?

First, the theory. Let’s ask: what was the impact of FDR’s programs? Every dollar spent on them was a dollar that was taken out of the economy, then put back into it. This is not how an economy grows. Growth requires the creation of new wealth, not the redistribution of old wealth.

And the data? One of President Obama’s top advisers, Christina Romer, showed that both the Depression and the 1937-38 dip were largely monetary phenomenons. Not fiscal. Monetary. Look at the data.

What about that fiscal policy? Another economist, Price Fishback, demonstrated that New Deal fiscal policy had almost no net effect on the economy. Again, look at the data.

If one asks questions and looks at the data, one finds that the New Deal did not actually help the economy. Partisan affiliation has nothing to do with it. Neither does public opinion.

Theory and data do. All you have to do is ask them.

Sadly, most media outlets – and their customers – do not want to ask questions. That requires too much thought. Too much effort. Worse, such things can’t fit into soundbites. No, we want people who have answers.

Naomi Klein, Anarchist?

Carl Oberg takes an interesting look into the mind of Naomi Klein.

The main point: it’s all about power.

She doesn’t like it when other people wield it; power corrupts. Klein gets around this problem by taking a page from Plato’s Republic. Just give power to people who think as she does. Then, magically, power won’t corrupt.

State Bailout: Grant or Loan?

Harold Meyerson’s latest Washington Post column, “A Page from the Hoover Handbook,” is, as far as economic illiteracy goes, one of the worst I’ve seen in a while.

It may be impolite to point out others’ mistakes. But we can learn from them in doing so. In that spirit, and with no disrespect to Meyerson, let’s take a look at where he went wrong.

Democrats want the federal government to give grants to states. Republicans want those grants to be loans instead. Meyerson very strongly sides with the Democrats here. But there is no intellectual reason to prefer one side over the other. Both sides favor the same thing.

Here’s why. Suppose the Democrats win. The money goes to states as a grant. It is transferred from taxpayers to the federal government. Then the federal government transfers it to various state governments.

The federal government’s debt then increases by the amount of the grants. Bond buyers loan the federal government the money. Taxpayers then repay the bond buyers’ loans in the future.

Now suppose the Republicans win. The money goes to states as a loan. It is transferred from taxpayers to the federal government. Then the federal government transfers it to various state governments. Sound familiar?

State government debt then increases by the amount of the loans. Bond buyers loan the state governments the money. Taxpayers then repay the bond buyers’ loans in the future. Only the names change. Meyerson has no real reason to favor grants over loans. Only partisanship.

State governments have spent themselves into trouble. The way out of trouble is to spend less. If a family hits hard times, they cut back their spending. Now several state governments have hit a rough patch. But they want to cut back our spending. Not their own. How is that fair? How does that help the economy?

When Is a Tax Cut Not a Tax Cut?

When spending doesn’t go down to match. Seen in that light, President Obama’s tax cut… isn’t. George Mason professor Russ Roberts just nails it over at Cafe Hayek:

an increase in spending coupled with lower tax collections is an INCREASE in taxes. AN INCREASE in taxes. NOT A TAX CUT. If I spend more money and collect less, the government is promising to collect more taxes in the future. It is not a tax cut.

Is that really so hard to understand? Judging by both parties’ reactions, apparently it is. Welcome to Washington.

Democracy in Action

The still-undecided Minnesota senate race has already gone through several recounts. This seems to happen every time the race is closer than the margin of litigation.

First, Al Franken insisted on a recount because he didn’t win. He still wasn’t ahead after that, so he pushed for another, and another. Now he is ahead by 46 votes or so.

Now his opponent, Norm Coleman, wants more recounting because he isn’t winning.

Note the “because he isn’t winning.” That’s the important part. If Franken had initially won, he would not have asked for a recount. Coleman never favored a recount while he was ahead.

To the partisan mind, it doesn’t matter if every vote is counted, or even if the election is honest. Nor does it matter that both sides are being hypocritical. What matters is that your team wins.

If at first your team loses, then change the rules of the game so that you do win. This is one thing if you’re playing a game against a small child. It is another when the game involves grown men and control over trillions of dollars of government spending.

Politicians — and their supporters — are strange, fascinating creatures.

The Uses of Distraction

The art of argument has a lot of tools. One of them I loathe: the personal attack. Paul Krugman, a partisan Democrat, is a master of the ad hominem. I’ve taken issue with him before.

I’m reading a book of his, 1994’s Peddling Prosperity, for a class right now. Early on (p.23), there is a textbook use of personal attack to distract the reader from the matter at hand. Here, Krugman accuses someone of racism to discredit their main point, which has nothing to do with race:

In 1981 Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan uttered a startling pronouncement: “The Republicans,” he declared, “are now the party of ideas.” Moynihan was and is a moderate Democrat. He once served in the Nixon administration, and he earned the ire of many 1960s liberals both by his willingness to talk about the disintegration of black families and by his authorship of a leaked memo suggesting that the race issue be treated with “benign neglect.”

Moynihan’s “benign neglect” memo is despicable. But it has nothing to do with whether or not the GOP had creative ideas in the early 1980s.

Sadly, the average reader won’t see past that. They will take Moynihan’s wrongness on racial issues to mean he is automatically wrong on anything else he says.

Ah, distraction. When you don’t feel like constructing a strong argument, simply distract the reader. Maybe they won’t notice.

Hillary: The Movie

There’s a documentary coming out attacking Hillary Clinton. It’s called Hillary: The Movie. The FEC now says the movie is an “electioneering communication,” and they must disclose who their donors are.

I poked around the movie’s website and looked at the previews. It is shallow, partisan hackery. And of course it’s intended to hurt Sen. Clinton’s candidacy. That’s the point!

My point is that political speech shouldn’t be treated any differently than any other kind of speech. The FEC has no business here; it is a shame that McCain-Feingold gives them that power. No criticizing candidates!

The people behind the movie think Clinton’s policies are bad for the country. This is their way of expressing that. I doubt the movie is any good; Ann Coulter is in it, for one. But they have the right to speak their minds, and their funders have the right to anonymity, no matter what the FEC says.

Partisanship and Mankind’s Doom

Dave Lindorff has a piece in the Baltimore Examiner about a “silver lining” to catastrophic global warming: his preferred political party would benefit.

Funny how partisanship can make normal people say absolutely vicious things.

Lindorff is a global warming alarmist who sees massive flooding and epic catastrophe coming soon – “not in a century but in the lifetime of my two cats.”

Not bloody likely. But let’s accept his premises for the sake of argument and see where he runs with them.

The decimation of red state regions rings with “poetic justice,” because many people there disagree with Dave Lindorff on climate change policy. They are “troglodytes.” More revealingly, wants them “gerrymandered into political impotence” after the apocalypse hits.

What a vicious, petty world view. Lindorff sincerely believes in a coming Book-of-Revelations-style apocalypse. He should be concerned with how to help people survive it. Instead, he first thinks of how he can hurt his political opponents.

Grow up, child.