Category: Politics
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Do Moral Intuitions Change in Different Situations?
In response the Jonathan Haidt’s comment on Bryan’s post: One of my biggest questions about Haidt’s work: are people’s moral intuitions consistent across different situations? We know that behavior is often not generalized across situations. i.e. interventions in children’s homes/families have little or no effect on their behavior at school. I wonder if survey choices…
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Just to Be Really Clear: Why I Hate Avatar
Jonathan Haidt asks on his blog: “Can anyone understand Avatar who lacks all intuitions of purity/sanctity?” He’s talking about the sanctity of nature, and of spirituality, as against corporate, consumerist, and militarist values. My answer is “Yes.” I (a devoted liberal with a “Liberal Purity” score of 1.0–compared to Libs’ 2.7 and Cons’ 2.1) understand…
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Libertarians, Republicans, and Democrats: New Findings on Morality, Empathy, and Sympathy
Will Wilkinson returns me to a subject of fascination to me — the different moral weightings employed by Republicans and Democrats — and points out new findings about the moral weightings of Libertarians. To recap a previous post on research by Jonathan Haidt, as recounted in an article by Steven Pinker: Republicans care equally about…
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Robin Hanson’s Reply to the Luddites
Update: I am an idiot. (You could have found that out by asking my daughters.) Curt Gardner is nice enough to point out in the comments that “the book you link to is not Robin Hansen’s, but that of his GMU colleague Tyler Cowen.” I do get the two confused at times, this being a…
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Is Swiss Health Care a Good Model for Ours?
While perusing Arnold Kling’s post for my previous, I came across the following, which simply cannot go unchallenged: …why not try single-payer in one part of the country and radical deregulation in another? Switzerland, which is about the size of Maryland, has different health care systems in each of its 20-odd cantons, which are about…
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Want to Spread the Power? Spread the Wealth.
You’re forever hearing Republicans and conservatives saying that they want to put decision-making–political power–in the hands of states and localities. This post by Arnold Kling is a good example out of thousands. The reasoning is not crazy (though it is contestable): Wisdom of the crowds. More people trying different policies results in succesful policies winning,…
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‘Pubs Love Catastrophic Coverage. Too Bad the Free Market Doesn’t Provide It
Perhaps with very good reason, free-marketeers believe that catastrophic health coverage produces the best market efficiencies. People pay for everyday health care out of their own pockets, which gets them to shop for services and ask what the cost is, pushing costs down. They have an inexpensive insurance plan with a high deductible to cover…
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Deficits Don’t Matter? The (Supposed) Experts Speak
Dick Cheney famously said, “Reagan proved that deficits don’t matter.” I’ve argued elsewhere that this was a political, not an economic statement. People love to complain puritanically about debts and deficits, but they vote for politicians who promise to cut their taxes. Hence the 30-year hegemony of Reaganomics. But do deficits mattter (economically)? In particular,…
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Pubs: You Had a Blank Piece of Paper for Eight Years
Since you didn’t do anything, why should we think that you’ll do anything this time? Here’s the cost of doing nothing: In case tea-partiers are finding the arithmetic troubling, if we’d adopted the Clinton plan we’d currently be saving close to half a trillion dollars a year. If we’d adopted Nixon’s plan, we’d be saving…
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Where Did the Deficit Come From? From “Conservatives,” of Course
While poking around for info on the previous post, I came across this graphic: Which comes from this especially great WikiPedia page. Which just re-emphasizes what we’ve seen since WWII, and especially since 1980: Related posts: Largest Oil Spills Talking About Food Trends in Intergenerational Mobility: Declining Opportunity Since 1980 Galbraith Translates “Trickle Down”: Eat…
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Okay, “Conservatives,” What Spending SHALL We Cut?
Not surprisingly, somebody went out and asked them. Here are the results: Source. I think this pretty much speaks for itself, though it’s worth noting the commonly misunderstood fact that foreign aid accounts for less than 1% of Federal spending. Related posts: It’s Unanimous: Cut Spending! (As long as you don’t cut spending!) What’s Wrong…
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“Out of Control Spending”? Not So Much
A comment by flipspiceland on a previous post, about Democratic senators and “out of control” spending, got me curious about our spending numbers compared to other large, prosperous countries. Short story: our governments (fed, state, local) are incredibly frugal compared to the rest of the world. This even with a defense budget that’s larger than…
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Democrats are Profligate Spendthrifts! Oh…Wait…
Damn I’m busy today. I came across yet another great Wikipedia page that I really had to share: National debt by U.S. presidential terms. I’ll just share a little top-line data. There’s much more over there. Average Increase, 1978-2005 Spending Debt GDP Under Democratic Presidents 9.9% 4.2% 12.6% Under Republican Presidents 12.1% 36.4% 10.7% Who…
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Galbraith Translates “Trickle Down”: Eat Shit
In digging around for the previous post, I came across this beaut on Wikipedia (can’t believe I’ve never seen it before), and just can’t resist sharing it: The economist John Kenneth Galbraith noted that supply side economics was not a new theory. He wrote, “Mr. David Stockman has said that supply-side economics was merely a…
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David Stockman on Starving the Beast: “It doesn’t work. Game over.”
You remember David Stockman, right? Reagan’s “whiz kid” budget director? He’s the man who engineered the last thirty years of Republican dominance by implementing The Reaganomics Strategy: borrow money from our children and from abroad to buy votes at home with the “I’ll cut your taxes” pander. Stockman has never been the type to twirl…
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Cutting Taxes Creates Growth: Yeah, Right
Cactus at Angry Bear does yeoman’s work yet again to drive a spike into the heart of voodoo/trickle-down/supply-side Reaganomic ideology, demonstrating what economists have known for decades: Keynes was right. Over the short term–one to three years–raising taxes hurts economic growth. Deficit spending (read: low taxes and high spending) promotes economic growth over the short…
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A “Center-Right” Country? Not So Much.
Gallup: Solidly Democratic or leaning Democratic: 33 states (plus D.C.) Fairly evenly balanced: 12 states Solidly or leaning Republican: 5 states Four words for Democrats: get out the vote. Related posts: Pubs and Dems: Brands and Beliefs Engineering a Permanent Democratic Majority Everything Sez: “Obama Landslide.” What Gives? McCain’s Steel Ceiling: Who Loves Ya, Baby?…
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Yeah, Right, The Recession’s Over
We’ve been hearing more about “jobless recoveries” over the years, but it’s pretty profound how rapidly the trend is increasing. Calculated Risk: Months to Return to Full Employment 1981: 28 1990: 31 2001: 47 2007: ?? This multi-decade trend suggests to me that there’s something secular and structural at play. I suggest this. Related posts:…
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Investment Bankers are *Victims!*
Responding to a U.K. tax on bank bonuses: “This is extreme victimisation,†said one senior investment banker. “A lot of people have been working their tails off, never seeing their families to try and fix the problems of the past and now they are being discriminated against. It just makes me want to quit the…
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Volcker: “Give me one shred of neutral evidence that financial innovation has led to economic growth”
I pointed out recently that: From 2003 to 2008, the value of global over-the counter derivatives increased 300%–by a factor of four, while U.S. fixed capital (read: productive assets) increased by only 25%. Profits (or so-called profits) for U.S. financial companies have gone up 258% since Q4 2008, while profits for nonfinancials have gone up…