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Francis

Pope Francis has died. Two things lept to mind.

First, JD Vance was one of the last people to see him alive.

Second, while the rule is to wait a decent interval before speaking ill of the dead, his leaving of this world had been expected for a long time, and it seems many observers already had obituaries in the can regarding his legacy. So I will add my thoughts.

I’ll start off by stating up front that I am not a Catholic. I have a number of Catholics in my immediate family and circle, so the Church is not alien to me and I have a great deal of both familiarity and sympathy for it.

The next thought is that institutions work best when they remain “tethered” to their founding principles. A balloon that is connected by a tether to the ground may rise or fall, but it isn’t going to go floating off into the wild blue yonder.

One of the problems we have in this country is that our political institutions and culture, while superficially remaining the same, have become untethered from the founding principles of natural rights and social contract.

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The US Wars with China and the War with Itself

The US is currently at war with China over trade, economic policy, technology, capital and
geopolitics (Dalio, The Changing World Order, 2021, Chapter 13). While the US has no formal
treaty obligation with Taiwan and President Nixon and Secretary of State Henry Kissinger
recognized China’s claim five decades ago, President Biden repeatedly said the US would
intervene militarily to defend the island. Only a global hegemon could make such a threat.
China is destined to once again be a great dynasty, as it has been at least twenty times over the
last 22 centuries. The US was the sole global hegemon by 1945 as all the major empires of the
world were at this stage in decline, setting the stage for a century (the historical norm) of global
dominance. But within two decades, with the ascendance of FDR protégé Lyndon Johnson, a
War in Vietnam and a “Great Society” at home, the US was in decline.

In spite of the creation of OMB in 1970, the flight from the dollar that forced President Nixon to
default on gold convertibility in 1971 and the creation of the CBO in 1974 to stem the debt
crisis, starting in 1975 30 states petitioned for a federal balanced budget amendment. Since
then, US debt has grown 100-fold, current spending is twice revenue, the Federal Reserve is
financing half that deficit and the dollar has fallen 98% relative to gold. Such debt super-cycles
end in national bankruptcy-ending empire the way Hemmingway described: “slowly at first,
then all at once.”

National denial has global consequences. Britain entered into the Great War as a declining
power to thwart Germany, then a rising power. World War II was really an extension of the
Great War, when a German veteran, a lance corporal, came to power on the false narrative that
the Bolsheviks and Jews caused their loss. Britain lost the empire but remained in denial until a
speculator dethroned the pound Sterling in 1992. Similarly, the Soviet Union was in denial (as
was the US CIA) right up to the point of total collapse from within in 1989.

The US is now arguably in the position of Great Britain prior to the Great War as a military
power, but faces internal dissent that is arguably worse than that of the former Soviet Union. It
can follow the British path to weaken the rising power while restoring US hegemony, remain in
denial and continue on its current path toward civil war or revolution, or seek a softer landing
based on a restoration of US founding principles. Faced with these choices politicians generally
find war more politically palatable than the short-term pain of restructuring, even when that
results in complete destruction, asserting “nobody could have seen this coming.”

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Kilmar Abrego Floyd

I was distracted for a few days, so imagine my surprise when I saw that the lead story was Maryland Senator Van Hollen sitting in a San Salvador restaurant with some deported MS-13 gangster.

That was not on my April bingo card.

The story is about an illegal immigrant resident in Maryland, Kilmar Abrego Garcia, who was deported to his native El Salvador.

The Left and the media (but I repeat myself) would like you to believe that this is the civil rights crusade of our time, the biggest crisis since George Floyd (more on that in a minute). They claim Abrego Garcia was simply a peaceful Maryland husband and father, wrongfully picked up and deported by an authoritarian Trump administration.

Think I got it wrong? Well, I did, because he “wasn’t picked up and deported (to his home country)” but rather:

“In an authoritarian regime, the opposition needs symbols and stories. Kilmar Abrego Garcia is that symbol. His abduction in front of his autistic son and imprisonment in a foreign concentration camp is that story.”

You can read the rest of the piece if you want. I’m so old, I remember when Jonathan Last was a respectable writer.

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Past Forgetting

So, Ed Driscoll at Instapundit is dedicated to posting Covid retrospectives along the nature of “On this Day Five Years Ago…” Some comments appended to his various posts over the last few weeks express exasperation with his apparent complete inability (or disinclination) when it comes to pithy summarization, and others express exasperation with remembering the Covidiocy day by day and blow by blow. For myself, I have a mouse with a scroll-wheel and can use it. As for the second category of comments – yes, we should not forget what Covid did to us.

Yes, we ought to remember every day, every jot and tittle of such state-sponsored torments piled upon us in the name of the Unparalleled Epidemic Danger From the Covid Plague (eleventy!!!), and the identities and employers of those individuals who either inflicted those torments on the public or cheered them on through media, both Established and Social. We ought to remember every detail of civic lockdowns demanded by governors and local officials getting in touch with their inner authoritarian or feeling obliged to respond to that manufactured panic – especially those who flouted the rules that they inflicted on everyone else. (Looking at you especially, Governor “Hair-gel” Newsome, frolicking with friends at the French Laundry.)

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“Service Industries”

Phil Gramm and Don Boudreaux, in today’s WSJ:

Yet workers aren’t eager to do that (work in manufacturing plants), and for the past 60 years Americans have educated their children to enable them to work in the services industries where wages are higher and opportunities greater.

I wonder what Gramm and Boudreaux visualize when they use the term “service industries.”  It is a very, very broad category, ranging from Uber Eats delivery drivers to shelf stockers at Home Depot to plumbers and handymen to trash collectors to warehouse workers at Amazon to local CPAs and high-level management consultants. Also rock bands, software development companies, and used-car salesmen.

True also of jobs in manufacturing, ranging from assembly worker to skilled machinist or toolmaker to shelf-stocker to dispatcher/expeditor to industrial engineer to PLC programmer to plant manager and VP of manufacturing.

Note that both the factory and the service business will employ janitors doing very similar work, and he will be categorized as a manufacturing or service employee accordingly…unless the job of ‘janitor’ is outsource to another firm, in which case he will fall under ‘services’.

Note also that the work of a distribution warehouse worker and the work of a stocker/picker in a factory will likely be very similar, despite the fact that the latter is considered ‘manufacturing’ and the former is considered ‘services.’  It would appear that Gramm and Boudreaux would regard the job of the warehouse worker as somehow higher-value and more in tune with technological progress.

Also, that part about Americans having educated their children to enable them to work in the services industries where wages are higher and opportunities greater…are they really unaware with the problems with so much American education over past decades, resulting in a lot of people who having limited written communication and even more limited basic math abilities? A lot of people are in dead-end service jobs specifically because of their lack of these skills, and indeed in many cases can function in those jobs at all only because of the computer-based deskilling that has been applied to the work.

Your thoughts?