Voting vs. Not Voting: The Debate Continues

One of the reasons I don’t vote is because my vote is unlikely to ever change the outcome of an election. Not even if I had lived in Florida in 2000, would my one vote have tipped the scales.

Well, it turns out one-vote elections do actually happen. This week there was one in the county I grew up in, of all places.

After a recount, Jim Kaplan won the Racine County 4th District Supervisor position. By one vote.

He’s also an alderman, and plans to hold both positions going forward. Not sure how I feel about that.

There’s one reason to reconsider my non-voting stance.

Cult of the Presidency

Gene Healy, a former colleague, is back from a blogging hiatus.

He has a new book coming out, The Cult of the Presidency: America’s Dangerous Devotion to Presidential Power. The gist of it is that a lot of people think of the President as some kind of national savior and spiritual protector. Think an amalgam of Superman, Jesus Christ, and Santa Claus. Gene thinks those expectations are bit much. He sees a more modest role for the executive branch.

Looks like a good book. It’s certainly timely. All three remaining candidates share grandiose, outsized conceptions of the Presidency.

Are Our Interstate Highways Racist?

There is a proposal to widen I-94 between Milwaukee and the Illinois border.

Some people oppose the project. Strangely, they think it’s racist:

They also argued that the project would violate civil rights laws by pouring more money into road construction and depriving minorities and low-income residents of public transportation options.”One can’t look at this without finding a pattern of discrimination against disfavored groups and communities in our society,” said Dennis Grzezinski, an attorney working with the ACLU.

I am a fan of the ACLU, but I can’t say I agree with them on this one. Racial discrimination is real. But crying wolf, as they’re doing here, will only turn people off. It numbs people to what is still a very real problem.

Substantive arguments against the highway expansion exist; opponents should try using those.

As for the merits of current public transportation proposals in Milwaukee, let the facts speak for themselves.

Putting Religious Intolerance in Proper Context

“It is very important not to mistake hemlock for parsley, but not at all important whether or not you believe in God.”

Diderot, in a letter to Voltaire (June 11, 1749).

A Perfect Season?

My Brewers beat the Cubs today, 8-2. Their record is now a sterling 2-0.

If this trend holds, we will see baseball’s first ever perfect 162-0 season.

You heard it here first.

Bumper Stickers and Bigotry

We’ve all seen those Jesus fish bumper stickers on cars. We’ve also seen the Darwin fish, sprouting little legs, that have emerged as a reaction to the Jesus fish.

National Review‘s Jonah Goldberg doesn’t like the Darwin fish. Let him speak for himself:

I find Darwin fish offensive. First, there’s the smugness. The undeniable message: Those Jesus fish people are less evolved, less sophisticated than we Darwin fishers.

He goes on:

the whole point of the Darwin fish is intolerance; similar mockery of a cherished symbol would rightly be condemned as bigoted if aimed at blacks or women or, yes, Muslims.

Well, my trusty Buick happens to have a Darwin fish on its bumper. Turns out Goldberg is putting words into my mouth that do not belong there.

The Jesus fish is an expression of faith. The driver is saying to his fellow commuters, “this is what I believe.” It is a positive statement.

I am also making a positive statement. I am saying, based on the evidence I’ve seen, that I believe the universe is more than 6,000 years old. I am saying that it is possible for species to evolve over time.

That’s it.

There is no smugness. No mockery. No implication that people who disagree with me are less evolved. Nor do I have any animus toward any religion, Christian or otherwise; disbelief does not equal contempt.

Goldberg reads a bit too much into it, frankly. Evolution says nothing about whether or not God exists. It says nothing about the origins of life itself, let alone the divinity of Christ.

I certainly have my opinions on the matters. The Darwin fish has nothing to do with them. It says only that, as the eons pass, life changes. It evolves.

I get the sense that Goldberg’s faith is deeply held, and is for him a source of strength. That is wonderful.

What a shame then, that he a priori assumes ill motives of people who do not share his faith. My beliefs give me strength, comfort, and beauty, too. Even though they’re different from his.

Better than Nothing, I Suppose

“The House voted Tuesday to improve the visa approval process for foreign artists, addressing a problem that has resulted in some orchestras and groups not engaging those from abroad,” writes the AP.

This is an excellent start. Immigrants are a blessing for America’s economy and culture.

But why only artists? There are millions of people who want to move to America. Most of them are not artists. Why isn’t Congress moving to let them in, too?

Legislative Hubris

“Usually a custom refuses to be changed by a law.”

-Will and Ariel Durant, The Age of Voltaire, p.351.

I Don’t See This Working Very Well

Congress is working on a housing assistance package to help bail out the 2% of homeowners under threat of foreclosure.

Presumably the other 98% will pay for it, with help from non-homeowners.

I don’t see this ending well. Lenders made some risky loans they shouldn’t have. They should pay the price for their mistakes.

Bailouts take away incentives to moderate risk-taking. That means risky, failure-prone mortgage loans will continue just as before. Absent better incentives, I see more bailouts happening in the future.

Self Promotion

The NCAA tournament is blamed for staggering productivity losses.

I show why I think that’s a myth over at the American Spectator Online.