Regulation of the Day 161: Crossing the Street

Three states are proposing to make it illegal to listen to your iPod while crossing the street. Legislators in California, New York, and Oregon are leading the charge, citing increasing pedestrian deaths. A similar proposal in Arkansas was retracted after constituents mobbed the state legislator who wrote the bill with hate mail.

Pedestrian deaths did go slightly up last year. But pedestrian deaths have been trending down for two decades, despite the rise of iPods and smartphones. Turns out that most people have enough common sense to pay more attention to traffic than their phone while crossing the street.

Legislating common sense is at best redundant. But in this case, it’s actually harmful. Police departments only have so many resources to go around. All the time and manpower they spend watching people cross the street is time and manpower not spent on more serious crimes. This is a solution without a problem.

Caroline May has more over at the Daily Caller (I am also quoted).

Obama Congratulates Wisconsinites on Packers NFC Championship

No politics here. This just made me smile. Apparently Packers cornerback Charles Woodson sent President Obama a signed jersey inscribed, “See you at the White House.” Good stuff.

Bush’s Third Term Continues

President Obama’s policies are remarkably similar to President Bush’s. Most of their differences are in matters of degree, not principle. Both presidents believe in expanding federal involvement in health care, education, energy, you name it. Both grew regulation, spending and deficits at tremendous rates. Even their foreign policy is almost identical.

Over at the Daily Caller, I analyze last night’s State of the Union address (I also live-blogged it here) and find it wanting. There are some real stretches of logic:

In 1957, the Soviet Union launched a satellite into space. Therefore, taxpayers should give more money to politically favored corporations. This is not a rigorous line of thought. But it was typical of yesterday’s State of the Union address.

It wasn’t all bad, though:

There was some good in yesterday’s speech. The president would like to lower corporate tax rates. After Japan’s recent rate cuts, America now has the highest corporate tax rate in the developed world — nearly 40 percent in most states. This is not the way to encourage businesses to invest in America.

I wish the president had spent a little more time on the rate cut. He could have explained to the country and his party that businesses don’t actually pay corporate taxes. That’s because businesses pass on their costs. Consumers — you and I — foot the bill.

Read the whole thing here.

State of the Union Live-Blog

As promised, here is my live-blog of last night’s State of the Union address:

8:17 In line with recent tradition, the full text of President Obama’s speech leaked early. National Journal is hosting it – http://nationaljournal.com/whitehouse/exclusive-obama-to-declare-the-rules-have-changed–20110125

8:18 Here are excerpts from Rep. Paul Ryan’s response – http://budget.house.gov/News/DocumentSingle.aspx?DocumentID=221278

8:41 Here comes Biden. Introduced as President of the Senate, not as Vice President.

8:42 Just turned on the tv. Curious to see which Ds and Rs will be sitting together. I hear Pelosi declined Cantor’s offer.

8:47 CNN is using the music from the John Adams miniseries. Inappropriate?

8:48 If you’re bored while waiting for the speech to start, you can read last year’s State of the Union live-blog here – http://www.openmarket.org/2010/01/27/state-of-the-union-live-blog/

8:53 CNN poll – Which is more important? 78% say not cutting social security is more important than reducing the deficit. 21% say the reverse.

Remember, in a democracy, the people get what they want in the long run. This is why neither party is willing to take on entitlement reform.

8:53 Wolf Blitzer looks like he just got out of a wind tunnel.

9:00 Important People continue to file in.

9:01 The Supreme Court is front-and-center. I’m guessing there will not be a repeat of Scalia’s mouthing “that’s not true.”

9:05 There sure are a lot of Important People in Washington. They’re still arriving.

9:05 Here he is.

9:06 Much applause.

9:08 I’m guessing this is as much “face time” as most of these Congress-critters will get.

9:08 Nice acknowledgment of Coburn’s missing beard.

9:10 CNN is debating the political significance of the color of Obama’s tie. It’s not news, it’s CNN.

9:11 Here we go!

9:11 But first, much applause and many thank yous.

9:12 That’s two standing ovations already.

9:12 Hearts to you, Rep. Giffords.

9:13 Please recover quickly.

9:14 Oh, dear. He’s blaming the Tucson tragedy on partisan bickering. But it wasn’t that. It was the act of a crazy person. Tone had nothing to do with it.

9:15 “We need to work together tomorrow.”

Somehow, I don’t see this happening.

9:16 “We will move forward together, or not at all.”

Given how politicians move, let’s hope for the latter.

9:16 [Comment From KevinKevin: ]
Hello from Elyria Ohio !

9:17 Congress didn’t actually pass tax cuts in December. Tax cuts are when rates go down. Congress voted to keep them the same.

9:18 People don’t have the same job for life, anymore. A reference to the decline of American manufacturing.

9:19 One problem with that is that U.S. manufacturing output is near an all-time high.

9:19 Another is that few people want their children to grow up to be factory workers.

9:19 India! China! Scary!

9:20 “The competition for jobs is real.”

Except there isn’t a fixed number of jobs to be fought over between different countries.

9:21 Lots of talk about the future. A way of avoiding talking about the present?

9:22 “We need to out-innovate the rest of the world.” Get out of the way, then!

9:22 Curious to hear his thoughts about how he wants to make America a better place to do business.

9:23 Needs to encourage innovation. Sounds to me like an open invitation to rent-seeking and lobbying for politically popular industries.

9:23 First mention of Facebook in a State of the Union address?

9:23 [Comment From KevinKevin: ]
Blah Blah stop the bs

9:24 Ah, Sputnik.

9:24 [Comment From KevinKevin: ]
yes stop the spending Obama !

9:25 The Soviet Union launched a satellite in 1957. Therefore the federal government needs to invest in green jobs.

9:26 Yes, take money out of the economy, waste some of it on bureaucracy, then put it back into the economy. Maybe that’ll work!

9:26 [Comment From KevinKevin: ]
We need less goverment !

9:26 [Comment From KevinKevin: ]
didnt he cut NASA money ?

9:27 Kevin — don’t believe so. The shuttle program is ending soon, but budget remains the same

9:28 End oil subsidies — good! Government-sponsored innovation — yeesh.

9:28 How about ending all energy subsidies, period?

9:29 If it’s commercially viable, it doesn’t need a subsidy. If it isn’t commercially viable, no amount of subsidy will make it so.

9:29 Education.

9:30 Family rhetoric. Trying to appeal to Republicans, no doubt.

9:30 Much applause.

9:31 [Comment From KevinKevin: ]
not teachers ?

9:31 Race to the Top as meaningful reform.

9:32 Do people in Washington really know how to educate kids in California, Texas, Maine, and beyond? This is properly a state and local issue. Get the feds out of it.

9:33 Is anyone against good schools across the country?

9:33 Teachers unions have to be loving this.

9:33 Merit pay! maybe not.

9:34 100,000 new teachers, in the fields of his choice. Echoes of Clinton, except not in a good way.

9:35 Student debt for all!

9:36 I like that he’s giving two-year colleges some respect. But they are also properly state and local issues, not federal.

9:36 [Comment From KevinKevin: ]
Yes !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

9:36 [Comment From KevinKevin: ]
NO jobs for teachers ! local schools are broke

9:37 Much applause.

9:37 Immigration.

9:37 Sounds good so far…

9:38 “Protect our borders.” Yeesh. Sounds like a Republican.

9:39 The best way to end the problem of illegal immigration is to make the legal channels easier, faster, and cheaper.

9:39 Prohibition doesn’t work.

9:39 Infrastructure.

9:40 Paid for by…

9:40 Good luck keeping politics out of this!

9:40 Especially with high-speed rail.

9:41 Nice pat-down joke. Please do something about those, Mr. President. They don’t make the country safer.

9:41 [Comment From KevinKevin: ]
Yes I need the votes !

9:41 [Comment From KevinKevin: ]
taxes !

9:41 [Comment From KevinKevin: ]
get the shovels its getting thick

9:42 If the government spends more on education, innovation, and infrastructure, good things will happen.

9:43 Lower corporate tax rate, with an allusion to the Laffer Curve.

9:43 Makes sense — who knows about the revenue, but U.S. corporate tax rates are now the highest in the developed world.

9:44 Not the way to encourage businesses to locate in the U.S.

9:44 Korea FTA – no specifics

9:44 I hear it may implemented by July. Let’s hope.

9:45 Increase exports! Fewer goods and less direct foreign investment for all!

9:45 Ah, regulation.

9:45 They are why food is safe and air is clean. I’d wager that wealth has more to do with it.

9:46 Child labor laws didn’t hit the books until that vile practice was well in decline.

9:46 Ditto with Clean Air Act, Clean Water Act, etc.

9:46 The health care bill. The elephant in the room.

9:47 The reactions are very partisan.

9:47 Anecdote!

9:47 Another anecdote!

9:47 How about some data?

9:48 “Fix what needs fixing, let’s move forward.” Curious as to his definition of what needs fixing.

9:48 National debt.

9:48 Blames Bush for beginning the spending binge. Right on.

9:49 Not sustainable. Quit sustaining it, then! His presidency has been Bush’s third term in almost every respect.

9:49 Spending freeze.

9:49 $40 billion per year. That’s roughly 1 percent of federal spending.

9:50 Deficit is something like 25%+ of federal spending. Try harder, please.

9:50 Curious to see how fast people spin this into spending cuts.

9:50 Oh wait, he just did.

9:51 A cut is when spending goes down. He is proposing that 12% of the budget stay the same, while the rest continues to increase.

9:51 [Comment From KevinKevin: ]
never going to happen

9:51 [Comment From KevinKevin: ]
Lip service !!!!!!!!!!!!

9:51 [Comment From KevinKevin: ]
more TAXES !!!!!!!!!!!!! lost jobs!!!!!!!

9:51 Taxes.

9:52 Reduce Medicare and Medicaid? Don’t see this happening in the current political environment.

9:52 Medical malpractice reform to rein in frivolous lawsuits. Much applause. Rightfully so!

9:53 Bi-partisan solution to Social Security reform. In other words, punt it down the road.

9:53 Distrusts IRAs, apparently.

9:53 Not just personal accounts.

9:54 Millionaire tax break equals taking scholarships away from children. How about reducing spending on frivolities?

9:54 Simplify the tax code. Yes! If only either party had any interest in this.

9:55 Government should be affordable, competent, and efficient.

9:55 Brave stance.

9:55 Nice job poking fun at salmon regulations!

9:55 [Comment From KevinKevin: ]
how many jobs is the health care reform making ?

9:56 Sell off unused federal real estate.

9:56 “I will send a vague proposal to Congress in the near future.”

9:57 People need to believe in their government.

9:57 Good transparency rhetoric. Put it online.

9:57 Earmark ban! I’m guessing the definition of ‘earmark” will change, or else Congress will be, shall we say, less than cooperative.

9:58 [Comment From KevinKevin: ]
BLAH BLAH !!!!!!!!!!!

9:58 Foreign policy. New threats could emerge at some point! EVERYBODY PANIC

9:59 [Comment From KevinKevin: ]
God bless the troops !

9:59 [Comment From KevinKevin: ]
get them HOME !!!!!!

9:59 Right on, Kevin.

10:00 Armies can fight wars. but they can’t build nations.

10:01 Don’t hate Muslims. Blame the individual, not the ideology. Hopefully this is widely heeded. Sound advice.

10:02 Congress likes it when he gets belligerent towards foreigners.

10:03 [Comment From ChrisChris: ]
I’ll believe the part about N Korea abandoning nukes when I see it.

10:04 South American tour. Hopefully this means action on the Colombia and Panama free trade agreements?

10:06 Democracy for all! I hope he realizes that freedom and democracy are not the same thing. They often correlate. But they are not the same thing.

10:07 Sounds like he wants to spend more on defense.

10:09 Franken looks bored.

10:09 He is not alone.

10:10 Constitutional rhetoric.

10:11 Biden and Boehner are quite the pair.

10:11 Anecdote!

10:11 [Comment From GuestGuest: ]
McCain applauds like there is no tomorrow.

10:12 [Comment From ChrisChris: ]
This seems like it’s falling flat.

10:14 Just like last year, this was a long one. Much applause.

10:15 On to Rep. Paul Ryan’s response.

10:21 This will be an important speech for Paul Ryan.

10:24 His style is policy-heavy. I don’t always agree with his voting record, but here’s hoping he stays true to form. Policy is far more important than rhetoric, even if it is less glamorous.

10:25 It also helps that President Obama takes him seriously, even when they disagree.

10:25 Here he is.

10:25 Oops, they cut out his first few words.

10:26 Nice words about Tucson.

10:26 Necessary. But get on with it.

10:27 House as cut its own budget. Nice symbolism,but small potatoes.

10:27 Debt is growing.

10:27 “No economy can sustain such levels of spending and taxation.”

10:28 It’s a bipartisan problem. Yes. See the Bush years as well the Obama years.

10:28 Obama has increased domestic spending by 25%, added $3 trillion to the debt.

10:29 Doesn’t like the health care bill. It will increase costs.

10:29 Washington should not pick winners and losers.

10:29 Regulatory reform. CEI has many, many ideas for that.

10:30 What was a challenge is now crisis. Hyperbole, but with a grain of truth.

10:30 Unlike last year, Congress will actually propose a budget.

10:31 I like his ambition, but I doubt he’ll get all he wants.

10:31 Founders rhetoric alert.

10:31 Definitely trying to appeal to conservatives.

10:32 “Individual liberty requires limited government.”

10:32 Dems want to increase government, even though it’s already at an all-time high.

10:33 But not just over the last two years. His own party is just as guilty when they hold the reins.

10:33 Transform the social safety net into a hammock.

10:33 We still have time, but not much. Cf. Greece, et al.

10:34 Day of reckoning?

10:35 Spirit of initiative should triumph over political clout. hear, hear. Too bad two major political parties disagree with him.

10:36 American exceptionalism. no, it’s actually institutional exceptionalism that has made America great.

10:36 Nice and brief!

10:36 Sometimes it’s good to be the opposition. You can be more honest, less flowery, and mercifully brief.

10:38 Well, that’s all for tonight. Thanks for following along, and thanks for your comments. My CEI colleagues will have more in-depth analysis for you tomorrow. Good night!

State of the Union Wrap-Up

I’ll post the full text of tonight’s live-blog sometime tomorrow.

Until then, here’s my one-sentence reaction: Bush’s third term continues.

Live-Blogging the State of the Union

Since I wasn’t clever enough to figure out how to syndicate the content to this blog, just click on over to CEI’s staff blog, OpenMarket.org, to read my live-blog of tonight’s State of the Union address.

I’ll paste the full text over here sometime after the speech. But at OpenMarket, you can follow along as it happens. So head on over.

On the Radio Again – State of the Union

Tomorrow morning at 6:50am EST, I’ll appear on The Talk of Connecticut to discuss the State of the Union address. I don’t know if you can listen live online, but the network’s website is here.

On the Radio – State of the Union

Today at 3:35 EST, I’ll be on WTIC 1080 AM (Hartford, CT) to talk about the State of the Union address. You can listen online here.

I will also be live-blogging the speech starting around 8:30 EST for CEI’s blog, OpenMarket.org. You can follow the action here. I will also try to syndicate the feed to this blog, but no guarantees since I’m not exactly tech-savvy.

Packers Beat Bears, Advance to Super Bowl

Yesterday was a glorious day to be a Packer fan. Not only is Green Bay going to the Super Bowl, they’re going at the Bears’ expense. But I was shocked and disappointed at the way Chicago fans turned on their own quarterback.

Jay Cutler injured his knee sometime in the second quarter, but finished the half. After playing one series in the third quarter, he left the game and didn’t return.

After the loss, Bears fans were seen burning their Cutler jerseys outside the stadium and in various streets throughout Chicago. Barely an hour after the game was over, Cutler’s knee had its own satirical Twitter account, sending out juvenile, poorly-spelled insults. Almost the entire country was questioning Cutler’s toughness and his will to win. After all, he was able to walk around on the sidelines and didn’t appear to be limping. Why wasn’t he in the game?

They should not have been so quick to judge:

Veteran center Olin Kreutz said he was surprised Cutler stayed in the game as long as he did with the injured knee.

“It was shaking right after he took the hit and walked back into the huddle,”Kreutz said. “It was swinging. I knew that one of his ligaments probably went.”

Kreutz was right. Cutler tore his MCL. He told reporters that his knee joint felt unnaturally loose and “structurally unsound.” It’s hard to imagine him being able to compete at a championship level with that kind of injury. Putting aside the possibility of long-term bodily harm, staying in the game would have probably have hurt his team, not helped it.

While his knee will recover in time for next season, one wonders about his mind. In the locker room, after reporters told him what people were saying about him, Cutler offered a “no comment” and tears were visibly swelling in his eyes. He knew he did all he could, but nobody else seemed to believe that. Not only had his own fans turned on him, his peers around the league had, too.

Every team’s fans boo their own players once in a while. And usually, it’s deserved. But Chicago fans seemed almost eager to rip into Cutler. They’ll still be booing him come training camp and the preseason, and maybe into the regular season, too. No matter how much Cutler tries to block that out, it has to hurt. It could well affect his on-field performance.

This is not the way to treat the first decent quarterback the team has had since the 1980s. I can’t help but feel bad for Cutler, even if he does play for a team I don’t like.

In the meantime, here’s hoping the Packers prevail over the Steelers in the Super Bowl, and that sports fans learn that supporting their players yields better results than burying them.

Today’s Threat to Humanity: Sleeping Next to Your Pet

Bruno Chomel, a researcher at UC-Davis, believes that sleeping next to your pet can give you the bubonic plague.

According to a new study Chomel co-authored with the California Department of Public Health’s Ben Sun, other risks include “chagas disease, which can cause life-threatening heart and digestive system disorders; and cat-scratch disease, which can also come from being licked by infected cats.”

Pet owners probably face statistically greater threats of being struck by lightning (that’s roughly 1-in-500,000 people per year).

If I want to be scared, I’d be better off watching a horror movie. They usually depict far more plausible threats than catching bubonic plague from sleeping next to a dog or a cat.

So despite Chomel and Sun’s dire warning, my cats will remain welcome in my bed. Besides, they’re warm. And it’s been a cold winter.