How well does Tucker Carlson live up to the standards of "Truth, Justice, and the American Way".This is of course from the lines repeated at the beginning of every episode of the daily Adventures of Superman TV show when I was a child.
Monday, February 28, 2022
Tucker Carlson
Thursday, February 24, 2022
Sanctions
Dazed and
Confused
You hurt and
abuse,
Tellin' all of your lies
Run 'round, sweet baby, lord, how they hypnotize
Sweet little baby, I don't know where you been
Gonna love you, baby, here I come again
So who is
confused about strategy and tactics?
Sanctions have been proposed by President Biden as a strategy
for dealing with Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
Some in the GOP have complained that sanctions are weak and ineffective. Those individuals are confusing strategy with tactics. Are sanctions an effective tactic? No, but they
were never claimed to be.
Those individuals opposing sanctions as ineffective must
also be fans of Pyrrhic victories. In
case you have forgotten, a Pyrrhic victory is one where the victory, and the
tactics used to achieve that victory, work against a winning strategy. E.g. you won the battle, but lost the war. They might make the tacticians who achieved that
victory proud of themselves. But a mid-season sports victory that came at the cost of injuring the team's star player almost always guarantees a losing season. A gambler who won $100,000 in a game, but has lost $400,000 over the last year is still a loser. The winner of an auction who paid more than the
asset is worth will probably be bankrupt in the long run. Or particularly germane to current events…
the French Invasion of Russia in 1812 and the taking of Moscow. It should be particularly fitting to listen
to Tchaikovsky’s 1812 Overture today, and everyday, until the Russian invasion of the Ukraine becomes the
latest example of a Pyrrhic victory.
Kind of makes you want to listen again on Election day, and when the Truth Social app
crashes and burns as well! I’d rather be weak than dazed and confused!
Monday, February 21, 2022
Inflation IV
Subterranean
Homesick Blues
Look out kid,
don't matter what you did
Walk on your tiptoes, don’t tie no bows
Better stay away from those that carry around a fire hose
Keep a clean nose, watch the plainclothes
You don't need a weatherman to know which way the wind blows
But you do need to know that there IS a difference
between
short term weather
and
long term climate.
If there is a fixed amount of money, and money is the
medium of exchange in trade, then all trading must stop if one group of players has all
of the money. On the other hand, if
society wishes trade to continue, then it must increase the supply of money to
allow trade.
The first situation describes when the supply of money is
based on a fixed asset, e.g. gold or crypto currency ( e.g. Bitcoins will be eventually limited
to 21 million). When money is based
on a fixed asset, it is said to be a commodity currency, such as the gold
standard. The second situation describes
a fiat currency, where society creates money to accommodate trade. The first is the
Chicago School, the second is Keynesian.
The United States Dollar was on the gold standard until
1933, when private ownership of gold was made illegal. However gold still was the international trading
currency. After Bretton Woods, the United
States Dollar became the international trading currency backed by gold. Predictably, international players
accumulated more and more dollars, and potentially gold, until the Nixon Shock of 1971. This was followed by an economic readjustment, as
the supply and demand curves had to readjust to this new reality. Since that time, while long term inflation has
been persistent, short term corrections between the supply and demand curves have
been minimal.
Calls to go to a commodity currency, where that is backed
by gold, or by crypto currency, appears to risk subjecting the economy to major corrections
in the supply and demand curves. Overall,
the markets have been generally stable after they recovered from the Nixon Shock.
But long term inflation has increased because the international trading currency was a domestic
fiat currency which was not growing to account for international trade ( the
Triffin Dilemma) .
The year to year increase in the 2022 CPI was 4.4%. The December 2020 to December 2021 increase
was 7%, but 4.4% is based on the average of monthly CPI weighted by the days in
each month. The 7% increase is only
relative to the lower demand in December 2020.
Given that the long term inflation has been suggested to be 4%, this
change in short term inflation might not be cause for alarm. The increase in CPI seemed to begin in
March of 2020, which is also the start of the COVID shutdown. Making policy
decisions based on a comparison of today with COVID conditions would appear to be
unwise. It is like declaring that a drought
is over based on a comparison of today’s rainfall with that during of the worst of the drought. The short term change is nice
to know, but it is the change over the long term that is important.
Sunday, February 20, 2022
Fraternities
La Marseillaise
Vive L' Liberté! Vive L'Égalité! Vive L' Fraternité!
2022 Winter Olympics
Memories
Light the corners of my mind
Misty watercolor memories
Of the way we were
What memories
should we have of the 2022 Winter Olympics?
You can say that this is the Winter Olympics of Kamila Valieva, of Mikaela Shiffrin, of Eileen Gu, etc. I will prefer to think of this as the Olympics
of Finland's
Iivo Niskanen, the
Netherland’s Kai Verbij, and the United States’ Elana Meyers Taylor.
·
Kamila Valieva is the poster child for doping and cheating in sports. But she is just that, a child. She may have taken illegal drugs but she was told
to take those illegal drugs by the adults who were responsible for her. Blaming her is blaming the victim.
·
Mikaela Shiffrin might not have won any Gold Medals for the US at this Olympics but she
did win Gold Medals in two previous Olympics, is the youngest winner of an Alpine
skiing Olympic medal for the US, and is tied for the most Alpine skiing Olympic
medals for a US team. In World Championships, she is the most
decorated American alpine skier in history, having won the most medals overall,
eleven, a record six of them gold. She was after all skiing for herself. As an American, I can take vicarious thrills in
her victories, but I can not blame her for not giving me more vicarious thrills.
·
Ailing (Eileen) Gu was raised in the US, will attend
Stanford University, and might have closer ties with the US but chose to compete
for China. As Americans, we can no more
“strip” China of those medals, unless we are also willing to give Kaillie Humphries’ Gold Medal in
the Women's Monobob to Canada, because Kaillie changed her citizenship from Canadian to the United
States because of a dispute with her coach.
Instead can we celebrate-
·
Finland’s IIvo Niskanen who won a Gold Medal, in the Men's Cross-country Skiing 15km and instead
of going off to celebrate or recover, he patiently waited 20 minutes for every
one of the 94 competitors behind him to complete the race.
·
The Netherland’s Kai Verbij who backed off on the final
crossover straight in his Speed Skating run, knowing he didn't have quite enough speed to get in front
of Canada's Laurent Dubreuil. Rather
than a risk a collision, Verbij popped out of his racing crouch and slowed so
he stayed clear of Dubreuil, who zipped away to capture the silver medal.
·
Elena Taylor who won the Silver Medal in the Women's Monobob and the Bronze Medal in the Two Woman Bobsled and will proudly carry the flag for the US during the closing ceremonies. Despite the shabby treatment of past minority
Olympians, such as Jesse Owens, Jim Thorpe, and Duke Kahanamoku, she clearly
does not hold a grudge, for which this American is delighted. And she recently survived COVID and an
emergency C section to boot.
The Olympics should not be about remembering the way we were,
but striving for the way we would like to be.
Saturday, February 19, 2022
Inflation Predictions
Revolution
Never make a
politician grant you a favor (Doo-doo-doo-doo)
They will always want to control you forever, eh! (Forever, forever)
So if a fire make it burn (make it burn, make it burn)
And if a blood make ya run (make ya run, run, run)
Rasta de 'pon top, can't you see? (Doo-doo-doo-doo)
So you can't predict the flop eh-eh! (Doo-doo-doo-doo)
What can you
predict?
NPR’s Planet Money recently aired an episode titled Predictions:
Inflation. These predictions might have
been easier if it was recognized that the Consumer Price Index is a combination
of long term inflation, which is related to the US money supply, (the medium of exchange between
buyers and suppliers), and short term inflation, which is related to changes in
the demand (buyer) and supply curves. If the proposed equations of long term inflation
is removed, the changes in inflation (as measured by the Consumer Price Index)
show a much different picture.
Friday, February 18, 2022
Blame
Billy, Billy, bo-gil-ly, bo-na-na
Fanna, fo-fil-ly,
Fee fi mo-mil-ly, Billy!
The Name game
is harmless fun. Can we say the same about
the Blame game?
When you try to
assess blame you are looking only at the past.
You look at a harmful act that has already occurred and try to assign responsibility
for that harm. But if those harmful actions
were random, or you can not determine the
cause of the harm, it may be tempting to assign blame to an individual. But assigning blame to individuals who are
not responsible for that action can’t prevent those harmful actions from occurring
again. If an investigation does correctly
assess blame, and that blame is criminal, penalties can be imposed to prevent that action from occurring again
or make the individual who is responsible mitigate that harm. Either the individuals who are responsible can
be prevented from undertaking take that harmful action again, or those who might
have considered such an action are deterred from that harmful action because the
costs of that action outweigh the benefits.
But if those individuals are not responsible, punishing those
individuals serves no purpose. It does nothing to prevent the action from
happening again. The purpose of an
investigation should be to prevent that action from occurring again. If you assign blame incorrectly and punish
the wrong individuals, those resources can not go into actually identifying the
correct cause and possibly preventing such an action from ever occurring again. Blaming the right person only has a benefit
if it deters the harm attributable to that person in the future. Blaming the wrong person can not deter harm
in the future. Doing the right thing in response to a tragedy may be commendable,
however doing the wrong thing is worse than doing nothing at all. Finding out correctly
who, or what, is responsible is productive.
Simply assigning blame, particularly if that blame is assigned incorrectly,
is not.