The yakka skink and ornamental snake

There is this story on the front page of the Australian this morning whose headline reads: End green sabotage of coal, says Tony Abbott. Here is the key para about the decision in the Federal Court:

It is understood the refusal to allow the mine relates to Mr Hunt’s failure to take into account departmental advice given about the Queensland species of the yakka skink and ornamental snake.

On the other hand, balanced against the rights of the snake and the skink was this:

“This is a vitally important project for the economic development of Queensland and it’s absolutely critical for the human welfare literally of tens of millions of people in India.”

An exasperated Mr Abbott said the federal government ­approval for Indian company Adani to develop the $16 billion coalmine in central Queensland, which was overturned by the Federal Court on Wednesday, was a vital project.

He said if Australia did not allow such developments, “we have a problem as a nation”.

“Lets face it: this is a $21bn ­investment of which some billion dollars has already been spent,” Mr Abbott said.

“It will create about 10,000 well-paid jobs in Australia. And if it goes ahead, it will provide for decades to come for 100 million people in India who currently have no power.”

Letmesee. The rights of the skink versus the welfare of 100 million people in India. That’s a toughie, I guess. Thank goodness for the Federal Court.

The moral depravity of the left

How many different issues there are. The Democrats overload the system with more outrage than could ever have been imagined and then let the media ignore every bit of it. Let’s just go to three.

First is ISIS. Anyone not sickened by the Islamic State is morally dead themselves. From Mark Steyn:

The self-absorbed hedonism of modern western life necessarily requires desensitization. Bloomberg reports an ISIS “sex slave” price list acquired in Iraq by UN official Zainab Bangura: A woman over 40 will set you back a mere 41 bucks, but if you prefer a girl aged nine or under – and who doesn’t? – the price rises to $165. As Laura Rosen Cohen points out, this is the real “war on women”. But nobody cares – because to care, seriously, either about an infanticide-industrial complex or nine-year-old sex-slaves in an American protectorate, would ask something of us. And to ask something – anything – more than a supportive hashtag is too much.

You can read more here, but this time in the English tabloid press: ISIS executes 19 girls for refusing to have sex with fighters as UN envoy reveals how sex slaves are ‘peddled like barrels of petrol’. The price list for women is presented as well. What is it about ISIS you don’t know that would want you not to see something done?

Second, the revelations about the American abortion industry. The actual issue Steyn was discussing in his post above was the Planned Parenthood sale of baby parts that has been captured on video. Perhaps our civilisation does not deserve to survive:

The fifth in an apparent series of twelve Planned Parenthood undercover videos shows Melissa Farrell, director of research for Planned Parenthood Gulf Coast, discussing how to manipulate the abortion procedure in order to ensure the “fetus” is delivered “intact” and thus able to be cannibalized for body parts. As Ms Farrell puts it, if a client “has a specific need for a certain portion of the products of conception and we bake that into our contract, and our protocol, that we follow this. So we deviate from our standard in order to do that.”

No newspaper or media outlet you know has covered this in anything other than a perfunctory way, assuming they have covered it at all. How morally sick do you have to be not to find this depraved to the fullest extent of its meaning.

Third, there is the manoeuvering by Obama and Kerry to remove every possible sanction on Iran developing nuclear weapons. This is not a deal. This is the action of someone who is, for all intents and purposes, an Iranian operative elected President of the United States. The only crafting involved was to structure the process so that it could be approved by first the Iranians, then by the UN and finally by the American Senate. This is not calculation on behalf of the United States. This is calculation on how the sell out can be sold. Even the Iranians don’t quite appreciate the traitorous nature of the American President, as witness this:

Obama’s remarks about the deal are meant for domestic consumption and aimed at soothing fears among Republican and Jewish critics, [Iranian Brigadier General Mohammad Ali] Asudi claimed.

The common denominator is the American media who do as best it can not to discuss any of it. Unless you watch Fox or read right-side blogs – easily avoided if your aim is not to know, or even find out what there is to know that you prefer not to – you are virtually unaware of any of it. Even if you had seen any of it, nowhere will you have come across the slightest outrage in the media. It is a moral sickness that infects the entire left side of the political spectrum. If you still can vote for these people – if you still see Obama in a positive way – it is a moral sickness you share with far too many others who prefer to see themselves as moral giants when they are instead the worst of the worst.

Je hebt nog steeds niet krijgen

You know, Andrew Bolt just doesn’t get it. He really is just too clueless to understand the damage he has caused. Look at this latest post which is supposedly pointing the finger at the ALP: Labor – a party of lots of Bronwyn Bishops.

The metaphor he has helped establish is Bronwyn Bishop who was doing nothing more than her job by going to a party function from somewhere else she had been in the afternoon. If the country is too ignorant to know what it costs to run a Parliamentary system, then educate them. But Bronnie did nothing wrong that I can see, other than take a form of transport for which the Commonwealth is overcharged by a factor of ten. The scandal was in allowing such charging to take place, not that she took this form of transport. But to think he is turning the issue back on Labor by using Bronwyn Bishop’s name shows just how little he really understands about politics.

Insane may be just the word for them

It is the left generally and the media in particular. They are soul sick, disgusting and deranged. This is from Why Trump Resonates & Why the left doesn’t get it in one image.

heads

Here is the exchange that those headlines refer to:

KARL: Would President Trump authorize waterboarding and other enhanced interrogation techniques, even torture?

TRUMP: I would be inclined to be very strong. When people are chopping off other people’s heads and then we’re worried about waterboarding and we can’t, because I have no doubt that that works. I have absolutely no doubt.

KARL: You’d bring back waterboarding?

TRUMP: …you mention waterboarding, which was such a big subject. I haven’t heard that term in a year now, because when you see the other side chopping off heads, waterboarding doesn’t sound very severe.

Now if you are not familiar with how things work. What both the right and the left will often do is grab something from an interview and note how radical it is, how unacceptable it is, how it shows a temperament that does not reflect well on the person in question.

So take a look at that sub headline from Crooks & Liars and let this fact sink in.

To the people at Crooks and Liars Donald Trump’s statement that: “when you see the other side chopping off heads, waterboarding doesn’t sound very severe.” is a statement so outrageous that they believe they can make political hay out if it.

However to any sane human being not only is that statement objectively true but I suspect to the American voter hearing about women being sold into sexual slavery by our ISIS foes

But the Islamic State’s “revival” of the institution of chattel slavery—sex slavery of Christian and Yizidi women and girls no less—has faded from public attention.

Over the past decade, thousands of Iraqi and Syrian Christians—including, in 2013, an entire convent of Syrian Orthodox nuns—have been taken captive for ransom. Last August, shortly after ISIS established its caliphate, it began something new. After capturing non-Sunni women and girls, ISIS began awarding and selling them as sex slaves. The vast majority were Yizidis but some, according to UN reports, were Christians.

Boasting about it and justifying it under islam:

“One should remember that enslaving the families of the kuffar — the infidels — and taking their women as concubines is a firmly established aspect of the Shariah, or Islamic law,” the group says in an online magazine published Sunday.

…said voters might conclude that waterboarding is much too good for them.

But apparently not to those on the left, at least not to those who read crooks and liars.

And if you would like to understand Trump’s appeal, this, I think, comes close to it:

After watching the pro-Obama mainstream media coordinate to effectively put Sen. John McCain (R-AZ)43% and Mitt Romney on defense throughout almost all of their respective presidential campaigns, Republican voters understand that if we are going to beat the Clinton Machine and the media in 2016, whoever we pick as our nominee will have to know how to dodge the media’s sucker-punches and fearlessly stay on offense.

In the face of more than a month of withering scorn and hate from the media, Trump has been everywhere hitting back, taking on all comers, ducking nobody, and turning Gawker into Wile E. Coyote.

The bottom line is that Trump is displaying something sorely lacking in the current Republican field: competence when it comes to handling a hostile, left-wing media.

Competence always translates into votes. The media knows this, which is why in 2012 and 2008 they created a dynamic that said, “Obama can do no wrong, and his Republican opponent can do nothing right.”

Without breaking the back of that media strategy, Hillary Clinton will be our next president, and right now only Trump is showing that he can break the media’s back.

Naivety alert – why Burke won’t quit

Andrew Bolt has written a column about Tony Burke. This is how it is introduced on his blog with the ridiculous title, Bishop quit. Why not Burke?. This is the blog post in full:

HYPOCRISY alert. Was that really Tony Burke who said Speaker Bronwyn Bishop should resign for bringing “massive disrepute on the entire Parliament” with her expenses?

Well, Bishop has now resigned in shame, but what of Burke, the Labor frontbencher?

You can go to the whole of Bolt’s column which is linked at his blog. I won’t link to it here. I won’t even read it, since it will make my blood boil all over. With neither fear nor favour! More like with neither common sense nor judgement. These high minded and sanctimonious jerks will be the death of us. How Abbott must despair at the fools who surround him.

Robert Conquest (1917-2015)

It is essential to mark the passing of one of the great historians and enemies of totalitarians of all varieties. Robert Conquest passed away on August 3 at aged 98. I think it is even possible that I read every one of his books [UPDATE: I just went to look at what he’d written – I got nowhere near it]. This is from The Telegraph in London picked up at Powerline:

Conquest personified the truth that there was no anti-communist so dedicated as an ex-communist. His career illustrated also what the Italian writer Ignazio Silone, another former communist, meant when he said to the communist leader Palmiro Togliatti that “the final battle” of the 20th century would have to be fought between the two sides they represented.

An ardent Bolshevik as a young man, Conquest became a bitter foe of Soviet “Socialism”. He had first visited Russia in 1937 as a youthful devotee of the great experiment. It was a half century before he returned in 1989, having spent his life between chronicling the horrors the country had endured, and emerging, in the view of the Oxford historian Mark Almond, as “one of the few Western heroes of the collapse of Soviet Communism”. “He was Solzhenitsyn before Solzhenitsyn,” said Timothy Garton Ash.

The most dedicated anti-socialists are former socialists, which I have seen often. Of what he wrote, I have found his Three Laws of Politics amongst the greatest insights you are likely to find anywhere:

1. Everyone is conservative about what he knows best.
2. Any organization not explicitly right-wing sooner or later becomes left-wing.
3. The simplest way to explain the behavior of any bureaucratic organization is to assume that it is controlled by a cabal of its enemies.

But if you want his best quote of them all, it is his suggested title for the reprint of his The Great Terror after the Berlin Wall had fallen and his estimates of death by gulag had turned out to be too small: “How About”, he said, “I Told You So, You Fucking Fools?”. When dealing with the left, there are many instances when you feel like saying it, but no one has ever had the right to those words more than he did.

Dealing with the red-green faction of the Liberal Party

In the poll showcased by Sinclair, this was the tally that mattered. So far as Coalition voters are concerned: Abbott 41% / Turnbull 21%. Among Coalition voters, the split thus is 66.1% Abbott and 33.9% Turnbull. And would you like to know why? From a few days ago:

Communications Minister Malcolm Turnbull added pressure by live-tweeting his morning journey by public transport from Melbourne to Geelong — the same journey for which Mrs ­Bishop notoriously claimed a $5227 helicopter bill in ­November. “One tram, one train, one car,” Mr Turnbull said.

My dim and distant memory is that Peter Costello refused the leadership in 2007 primarily because he was not prepared to put up with the continuous white anting from Turnbull. Life was to short so he gave it away, and we have missed out on a great potential Prime Minister. Instead we had Brendan Nelson, who was white anted instead. Then Turnbull, who white anted himself with his incompetence. And how he is doing the same with Abbott.

The red-green faction of the Liberal Party is a major problem, and I just wish they’d stop. The government would be in a much better position if there was less treachery. Abbott I think understands all too well what is happening around him. But you are forced to work with the materials you have. He remains the most conservative and free market Prime Minister we are likely to have any time soon. He’s not perfect. He’s only better than any and all of the rest.

Going Dutch

“It is one thing to have free immigration to jobs. It is another thing to have free immigration to welfare. And you cannot have both. If you have a welfare state, if you have a state in which every resident is promised a certain minimal level of income, or a minimum level of subsistence, regardless of whether he works or not, produces it or not. Then it really is an impossible thing.”

Milton Friedman

The AP story is obliviously written by an American who still thinks European countries are run by royalty. Nevertheless, he gets the point well enough to see the future everywhere in countries that, amongst other things, have been invaded by non-productive sponges and drones. We are back to a modern version of the ancient Marxist maxim: those who do not work, do not eat.

King Willem-Alexander delivered a message to the Dutch people from the government in a nationally televised address: the welfare state of the 20th century is gone.

In its place a “participation society” is emerging, in which people must take responsibility for their own future and create their own social and financial safety nets, with less help from the national government.

The king traveled past waving fans [!!!] in an ornate horse-drawn carriage to the 13th-century Hall of Knights in The Hague for the monarch’s traditional annual address on the day the government presents its budget for the coming year. It was Willem-Alexander’s first appearance on the national stage since former Queen Beatrix abdicated in April and he ascended to the throne.

“The shift to a ‘participation society’ is especially visible in social security and long-term care,” the king said, reading out to lawmakers a speech written for him by Prime Minister Mark Rutte’s government.

“The classic welfare state of the second half of the 20th century in these areas in particular brought forth arrangements that are unsustainable in their current form.”

The cradle-to-grave welfare state will go. Dependence on the government, other than occasionally and in small amounts, will disappear. If you are not self-supporting, no one else will be obliged to provide for you what you cannot earn yourself. We shall see if there is enough support for such measures in Holland in 2015. By 2030, it will be on its way to being universal since the welfare state can no longer be sustained.

Productive and unproductive labour

This is an online conversation I had with the editor at the Liberty Fund that helped me clarify even in my own mind some of the concepts that had remained free floating and had not been nailed down.

Q: Steve, let me ask you something. I’ve never been clear on the classical distinction between productive and unproductive labor. If a menial servant (in a free market) doesn’t add value to something, why is he paid? Did Menger, Bohm-Bawerk, or Mises reject the Smithian distinction? Maybe this would be good to address in a comment. . . . Why doesn’t the menial servant add value?

A: What do you think of this which is the point I think Smith and Mill were trying to make?

“It might be argued that economists are productive. But the reality is that if we heard that entrepreneurially-driven construction activity with no government subsidy was to double over the next ten years we would all agree that the economy would be bigger and stronger at the end of that time, more jobs would be created and real incomes would rise.

“But suppose, instead, we heard that over the next ten years there would be twice as many meetings of the Economic Society and that the number of journal articles would double. What then would be the effect on output and employment, do you think?”

I do think I contribute in a longish-term sort of way to productivity by building the human capital in my students. But it is not what makes the economy stronger, but in fact, the incomes of menials and others draws down on the productivity of the existing capital structure. If that doesn’t work for you, I will think about it some more. But the stimulus drew down without building back up which is why things are falling apart in so many ways.

Q:It still seems that everyone earning an income must therefore be productive.

A: Many earning an income are subsidised by the state, which the stimulus entirely consisted of just about everywhere. But even going past that, every private sector job will hold its place in that its production costs are met in full, but only some forms of economic activity allow real incomes to expand over time. Someone who carries someone else’s bag adds value and can be paid out of existing productivity which is the income of the owner of the bag being carried. But the economy does not become larger as a result. Only activities that add to a nation’s capital, including human capital, can do that. That is the distinction that they were trying to make. They would never have thought that the effects of C, I and G had identical effects on an economy which is what we now do.

Q: Does someone making consumer goods “allow real incomes to expand over time”?

A: I don’t see how incomes can expand unless there is some kind of capital expansion under way somewhere.

Q: In other words, isn’t someone who makes a car more like a valet than like someone who makes capital goods?

A: Mill’s not trying to be judgemental. He is only pointing out that some of the productive effort going on adds nothing to future growth while some does. And he is pointing out that all activity, both productive and unproductive, drains productivity which must be replaced. A machine breaks and so maintenance must take place just to stay where you were. Without some part of the economic structure first maintaining and then adding to the economy’s capacity to produce, the economy goes backwards. Those parts of the economy that are working to increase future productivity he describes as productive employment. I think the inferred insult is what must have annoyed so many. A Supreme Court judge might not like to think of himself as unproductive labour, but in Mill’s sense, unless his work makes the economy more capable of producing goods and services in the future, that is what he is. I have tried to replace the concept with the term value added, but I am beginning to think that I have overloaded this one poor word with two aspects of the issue under discussion.

I can also see that I didn’t explain completely why I had chosen the bag carrier as an example. I chose it because there is no capital required for someone to lift a bag and carry it somewhere else. But that is beside the point anyway. I can see that an enterprise earning profits above the level required to maintain the business’s capital structure also contributes to the flow of saving in a very minor way, if the owner reinvests those profits into productive forms of output. Nevertheless, most of the saving that matters is in the form of the accumulated capital that has been built up through economic activity over the past. It is not the flow of newly-produced capital that constitutes saving but the stock of assets that have been built up over the past.

How is the Iranian deal in America’s interests?

I can understand how the Iranian deal is in Iran’s national interests. I can also understand how it is not in the national interests of many of the countries of the Middle East, Israel and Saudi Arabia in particular. But tell me, how is the deal in the interests of the United States (aka the Great Satan)? In what possible way are any of America’s foreign policy aims advanced by this agreement?

If you are an ally of the US, you are now looking elsewhere for protection and safety. No one can or will trust the US as they once did. It will not matter who is elected next or the time after that. The treacherous nature of the US, which can change with every election cycle, and which is often determined by domestic side issues of no real consequence to its strategic concerns, will leave each of its allies looking for alternatives. The possibility of a far-to-the-left ideologue as president would have once been seen as impossible. With Obama and the constituency he has built, it seems to have become almost mandatory.

And while it seems invisible to those who govern the US at the present time, the combination of its economic and open-borders policies will make the US a weaker country well into the foreseeable future. Built on top of that the fetish for green energy. It may still be the strongest military presence, but it will be able to enforce its will to only a limited extent should it even wish to do so.

Thirty years from now we will be living in a world so changed I can only barely begin to sketch it. The only thing I am near enough sure about is that the Pax Americana we have depended on since the fall of the Pax Britannica will have been vastly diminished.

In the meantime, Kerry is off to do the near impossible while leaving out trying to do the absolutely impossible:

The Iran nuclear deal tops Secretary of State John Kerry’s agenda as he meets with foreign ministers from Egypt and Qatar this weekend. Kerry will skip a visit with Israel, the main U.S. ally in the Middle East and a vociferous opponent of the deal. . . .

“People in my region now are relying on God’s will, and consolidating their local capabilities and analysis with everybody else except our oldest and most powerful ally,” Saudi Prince Bandar bin Sultan wrote in a July 16 op-ed for Lebanon’s Daily Star.

With that, you do not even need to read between the lines. Diplomatic though Saudi Prince Bandar was, he could not have been more clear or more critical.

UPDATE: At least there isn’t completely idiocy across the US, only among Democrats and their leaders:

American voters oppose 57 – 28 percent, with only lukewarm support from Democrats and overwhelming opposition for Republicans and independent voters, the nuclear pact negotiated with Iran, according to a Quinnipiac University national poll released today.

Voters say 58 – 30 percent the nuclear pact will make the world less safe, the independent Quinnipiac (KWIN-uh-pe-ack) University Poll finds.

Opposing the Iran deal are Republicans 86 – 3 percent and independent voters 55 – 29 percent, while Democrats support it 52 – 32 percent. There is little gender gap as men oppose the deal 59 – 30 percent and women oppose it 56 – 27 percent.

I should just add that 52-32 percent support is not “lukewarm”.