Sunday, March 15, 2015

Mortgage Interest Deduction

The problem with taxes is that people refuse to think systemically. Take tax rebates for instance. Imagine everyone got a million dollars from the federal government. It sounds good until you realize that prices would have to rise. Admittedly there is a lot of slippage and friction in prices so there would be points of advantage but everyone understands at some fundamental level that if everyone has a million dollars, then millionaire doesn’t mean what it used to. The same thing is true if everyone gets five hundred dollars. Again there is some slippage and friction on prices so you aren't quite as equal as you might think but in a great hydraulic sense, no one has made anything. In order for tax rebates to work, someone has to be losing money.
 
This doesn’t mean that Keynes was wrong. Keynes argued that government should borrow to flatten the business cycle and get people through the recession. One of the fundamental market paradoxes is that someone can win. Almost everyone has played monopoly. No one plays it to resolution with the shoe circling the board yelling out that it won with every shake of the dice and all the other players shivering out in the cold or in debtor’s prison, but this can happen in real life. There is no point in giving the shoe any more money. The shoe is not going to build more hotels or buy more property. If you want to keep the other players in the game you have to take money and property from the shoe and give it to the other players. Keynes didn’t explicitly say that the money borrowed would have to come from somewhere and be repaid with interest devalued by inflation, but that is what he meant. Keynes opponent, goofy Hayek, the shoe concerned with moral hazard, keeps whining:
-I won, I won!
-Don’t you want to share with the other children?
-No, I won!
-They won’t want to play with you.
-I won I tell you! 
If a deduction is truly fair, then no one got the deduction. The same thing is true for a rebate.
 
Let us apply this same systemic thinking to the mortgage interest deduction. People think that the mortgage interest deduction holds up house prices, but the true subsidy is to mortgage holders. Banks get to charge more interest on mortgages because of the subsidy. It seems reasonable that a subsidy for interest expense would increase home purchases but not when banks get the first cut. The mortgage interest deduction was originally intended and functions as a bank subsidy. Since all home buyers are getting the deduction the banks would be foolish not to increase their prices to meet the subsidy.
 
The $250,000 home exclusion on the sale of a house after owning it for three years does increase market activity. People are more willing to sell at a lower price since they don’t have to pay as much capital gain tax and they are more willing to purchase since they can expect to get tax free return. It also has operational benefit for the IRS in that they aren’t concerned with fraud on sales that generate tax free return.
 
Doing away with the mortgage interest deduction would lead to a small drop in mortgage interest rates and not much else. We would pay more in taxes and less in interest. Since banks merely generate mortgages and no longer hold them, they may even favor dropping the deduction as that would encourage refinancing.

Arafat Conspiracy

This is an example of the dog that didn’t bark. Arafat was killed by polonium poisoning. This poison has the property of leaking residue all over the place, which residue is traceable to whichever nuclear reactor created it. Any intelligence agency worth anything has its own private sample of this poison and determined which country killed Arafat and no one is saying.
 
If it were Israel, the stool pigeons would have reached a crescendo. This leaves one likely candidate.
 
The poisoning of Litvinenko two years later by polonium seemed odd. It appeared that Russia intended to put a big greasy thumb print on the murder as a warning to other dissidents. Were they also waving a big sign pointing at Arafat?
 
Currently the US government has claimed the right to murder terrorists. But this was the poisoning of a world leader in 2004. It appears that taking out Saud’s stooge was irresistible to the Bush administration

1984 Buildings

You can do this for any city. Here are my picks for the Chicago buildings to use for the four ministries in 1984:
Ministry of Truth:
http://www.chicagoarchitecture.info/Building/1063/Leo-Burnett-Building.php

Ministry of Peace:
http://www.chicagoarchitecture.info/Building/1051/The-Boeing-Corporate-Headquarters.php
For those who like that sort of humor it is located on Riverside.

Ministry of Love:
http://www.blueprintchicago.org/2010/12/22/metropolitan-correctional-center/
Obviously, Orwell’s descriptions are bleaker, give it time.

Mom - Him Too?

I was disturbed by Romney’s reference to “his kids” in the second debate. Being a northerner he might be ignorant of all the various implications of that phrase in American culture. Still being from Utah he shouldn’t be. I suppose he was talking about Massachusetts. That kind of paternalism has a poor reputation.

Prohibition and the Great Depression

You would think that if econometrics and modeling had any validity at all then the issue of the cause and resolution of the great depression would be resolved. Obviously they don’t. The debate generally centers on some well propounded common sense axiom that has been violated and the ensuing consequence as proof of its validity. A good synopsis is in Wikipedia:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Causes_of_the_Great_Depression

It is generally held that World War II ended the great depression. This correlation has been unfortunate for America’s self-perception and foreign policy.
 
The debate for whichever cause is met by instances where such stupidity did not cause the great depression.
 
I offer prohibition as a major factor. The untraced illegal flows of capital may have severely burdened all the other extenuating circumstances. The opium trade should also be considered. When investors can get much larger returns with substantially less risk why should they consider legitimate markets?
If we ever can model economies then capital must be considered. It is well understood that various investments and industries impact people’s livelihood in different ways. The aforementioned defense industry requires large capital investment with relatively less employees. Whereas smaller manufacturing enterprises spread the risk and employ far more people for less investment.

There is also the social cost of enterprise. For instance, mining and logging while initially profitable can have much greater costs for the nation than any profits extracted.
 
If it is ever possible to reasonably model the flows of money and investment then it may well be found that prohibition, by absorbing so much cost and investment was the unique and underlying cause of our financial ruin.

OJ

The OJ case was remarkable in that it encapsulated all the deficiencies apparent in our criminal justice system. Part of the difficulty of recognizing the problem is that it is so easy to dismiss incompetence without recognizing its systemic nature. The vagaries of state law and tradition make it easier to dismiss aberrant events in other jurisdictions. Illinois laughs at the foibles of Wisconsin judges and police. Even the antics of Buffalo Grove and Arlington Heights are merely sources of entertainment to the rest of us, unless you are the one being stopped. Regardless of his guilt, if OJ had been tried in Chicago he would have been convicted.

As OJ demonstrated in the Bronco episode he couldn't even break the speed limit. He was framed in Vegas for running his mouth. He didn't murder his ex and her boyfriend; he hired it done.

Put yourself in the shoes of the Los Angeles police. OJ’s plane is in the air when the two victims had their throats slit, the kids aren’t disturbed, and there is no evidence. It was obviously a professional job. I suppose if this were television they would devote their efforts to finding the hit man. Good luck with that Matlock. Do you really want all the copycat clones in Malibu hiring hit men?
-Hey cheaper than a divorce.

It was also obvious who paid for it. So, they decided to smear up OJ. Rule number one: don’t disrespect the police. Bless them for trying. This seems a little risky, what if OJ had an alibi for the time before he was in the air? People don’t really have servants nowadays and celebrities value their privacy. Conversely even though older people remember OJ running through the airport in the Hertz rent a car commercial, detouring to kill his ex and her boyfriend before making the flight seems over scheduled.

Unfortunately, the police went overboard on the evidence. Blood in the Bronco was more than sufficient. The, hat, the shoe, the glove, the socks, where was the underwear? The stuff they grabbed hadn’t even been worn yet. Memo to police, when framing celebrities, look for signs of wear on their clothing. Rule number two: don’t disrespect the jury. It is well documented that police coerce confessions and influence witnesses, why should they stop at physical evidence?

Vincent Bugliosi wrote a book Helter Skelter where he described his prosecution of Charles Manson. He put on a very quick case and then let the defense talk their client into a conviction. At the end of the interminable defense Bugliosi got up and said something to the effect of:
-Remember me? You know he did it, right?

The jury was so furious at the defense that they convicted Manson even though he wasn't at the scene of the crime. Unfortunately the Los Angeles prosecution hadn't read the book, and they traded blows with the defense, answering their every point. At the end of a yearlong trial, the jury met; someone said:
-Does anyone still care?
Someone else on the jury raised their hand and the case was decided.

DNA evidence has revealed the total failure of our court system. In Illinois it was proven that half the people on death row were wrongfully convicted. This doesn't mean that the other half was rightfully convicted. It means that they were able to prove that half were wrongfully convicted. As Governor Ryan observed if we can’t decide these cases correctly what makes you think that we are doing any better on any other cases, criminal or civil? We would do better flipping a coin. We routinely convict the innocent and free the guilty. We haven’t progressed from the day of stocks and witch dunking. Governor Ryan went on, rightly or wrongly, to be convicted on suborned testimony of conspiracy charges.

Now that DNA evidence is understood, the establishment is attempting to paper over the immense breach of reality revealed by all the falsely decided cases. What we should be discussing is how to improve our court system. Instead we are indulging in CSI fantasies of justice. Someday a new technological wonder will arrive and once again we will be shocked, shocked I tell you, at all the injustice.

How should we improve the courts? One obvious issue is that it is the incompetent lawyers who become judges. The OJ case demonstrates how dangerous this Dilbert Principle can be for selecting judges. I have never heard of someone entering law school because they want to be a judge. The most successful lawyers never see the inside of a court room unless they get caught. I propose that the pool of lawyers be subject to service as judges, perhaps for five-year terms, just as citizens are subject to jury service. The sitting judges should favor this system as it would open up more opportunities for them.

Romney Tithing

How odd that Romney doesn't reveal his tax records. It seems like he is not serious about running for president. He must have known of his ambition for some time, perhaps not ten years but at least a few. I find it hard to believe that anyone will be worked up about a Republican avoiding their taxes. So what could it be? I suspect it’s the charitable deduction. First I thought of an early imprudent donation to Planned Parenthood. Then I remembered: tithing. An LDS member is supposed to give ten percent of their income to the church. Problem is there wasn't that much income. The whole point of tax avoidance is to move it into capital gains. As usual, it isn't that he broke the rules, but that the rules, even for the church, favor the rich. If someone can dig out video of Bishop Romney speaking on the joys of tithing and then lay it against a return where ten times his contribution is a lot less than his post-tax net, the ensuing discussion could be difficult not only for Romney but a lot of other members.

Peace Foundation

If you were to ask anybody from Tanzania to Toronto how to get something done in the United States, what would they tell you? Say I wanted a tax on wind chimes, how do I accomplish that? They would tell you to hire fund-raisers, lobbyists, advertising agencies, pay for results, flip congressmen, finance a political action committee and generally participate in the adult discourse of politics. No one would mention singing songs in a church, taking long walks, or fighting with police.

We have an NRA, ACLU, NAACP, think tanks, PAC’s, organizations supporting every possible cause. Why isn’t there an organization that opposes military aid, military bases and military force in a sensible modern way? There are hundreds of member organizations in the war lobby. Where is the peace lobby?

Being a pacifist doesn’t mean you have lost all sense of perspective and judgment. The lack of any such organization proves that the peace movement is thoroughly infiltrated and controlled by the Federal Government. The tactics used provoke repressive force. These are the tactics of provocateurs, justifying their budgets to their police/intelligence handlers. Provocateurs would not be able to justify their participation by reporting on board meetings or advertising buys.

When events are staged and reported, their message is at the mercy of the reporters. Outrage at police brutality can cross the political spectrum with no impact on policy.

Without control of their message, the peace movement lacks legitimacy and voting power. Correctly packaged, the peace movement message could be extremely powerful. Imagine what an advertising firm could do with the message that we gave billions in military aid to Pakistan who then created the Taliban; if we had cut off the aid, Bin Laden would have been picked up at the airport. Or follow around a local war lord, beating his wife, molesting young boys, stealing from neighboring villages and then killed by a million dollar missile.
I’m not sure what would work and what wouldn’t, but that is the point. I’m not so arrogant as to believe that the sing-along mob tactics of 1930 will work in 2012. If anything, they cement the opposition. It isn’t that professionals know what is going to work, but that they try things, test the results, and try again. Peace is too important to be left to dilettantes cruising for dates.

Critique of General Relativity

All forces are points. In particular, gravity is a point source. If you wish to distinguish between falling and weightlessness suspend two balls in front of you. If they move, ever so slightly, toward each other then you are falling. If they do not, then place them in the opposite direction and repeat the experiment. If you visualize a sphere, by positioning the balls diametrically opposite each other around the sphere you should be able to determine the direction of the gravitational force, or at least the maximum one. The balls are following their V path to the center of gravity. It should be very unusual to be actually weightless. If they are so far out that the movement can be explained by their mutual attraction then changing the direction should produce exactly the same movement.

In order to do any math we make use of gauge invariance. That is we say that for all practical purposes we can ignore this curvature. For all practical purposes, until very recently, the earth is flat. By itself, this is perfectly fine. But then we turn around and apply these derivations to the universe.

I propose two experiments. They both involve sending a probe as far from the sun as we can communicate with. Once there repeat the measurements for the red shift and the microwave background radiation. I believe that our proximity to the sun is a factor in these measurements.

How to Save the Palestinians

Some years ago, George Ball wrote an article entitled: The Middle East: How to Save Israel in Spite of Herself. I remember observing at the time that if he knew anything of Jewish faith it should be that the last thing Israel wanted was a savior. In it he propounded, as though it were new, the essential formulation of the most consistent foreign policy America has. That is: that if Israel returns land to its Arab neighbors there will be peace in the Middle East. To this end, America has bullied and bribed Israel since 1948. Given the stated objective, this has not been a particularly successful policy. Until one realizes that by “peace,” America means status quo. America, in particular President Truman, was essential to the founding of Israel. Since then, I suspect that without our help Israel would have achieved a position of stability and respect in the community of nations that has been denied her. By our consistent policy of forcing Israel to concede land, we have forced Israel to concede sovereignty and identity as a nation. Given that history, it is not surprising that most Israelis are beyond the limits of reason.

There has been some question of Palestinian legitimacy. These arguments note the small numbers of Palestinians actually expelled from Israel and view the creation of the Palestinian people as a function of United Nations relief. The detachment of military units and financial aid from other nations supports these views. But if six million, or more, people view themselves as Palestinians that will suffice. The questioning of legitimacy is a perilous and slippery slope.

There are those who believe that Israel has undue influence within the United States. The essential function of the Israel lobby in American politics is to keep up the price. This was made clear during Desert Storm. At the same time, that Israel was begging for loan guarantees to borrow ten billion, Saud was writing checks for fifty billion for Desert Storm. This difference is orders of magnitude. As this much ambiguity doesn’t make for a sound bite, I doubt that America is going to be much help.

The Palestinian position seems the most foolish. Does anyone believe that another nation in the Middle East is going to make things more peaceful? The Palestinian campaign to install themselves in a reservation between Jordan and Israel without oil or water can only be the product of foreign sponsorship. It doesn’t make sense in a democracy to demand disenfranchisement. The Palestinians can put Israel on the spot so easily, put up or shut up, in or out, what’s it going to be? If the Palestinians reversed position and demanded full citizenship, service in the army, etc. the world would finally have to appreciate their situation. They would be entering the arena of modern discourse.

Of course, neither the Palestinians nor the Israelis, trapped in the discussion of sovereignty, can appear to recognize this option. For the Israelis, Palestinian enfranchisement is far more terrifying than Palestinian sovereignty. They would probably offer the Palestinians Tel-Aviv rather than citizenship. Given the heterogeneity of the Palestinian people one has to wonder where their nation building would stop, is each town going to be its own nation? Can the Palestinians and the Israelis share a nation? Can the Israelis share a nation? This is the wonder of democracy. The United States is shared between two of the bitterest opponents in the history of the world: North and South. We don’t like each other, but we somehow manage. Although we do seem to have a particular affinity for other peoples civil wars, always supporting the south.

It is unfair to demand exceptional behavior of Israel. Israel is a nation in the Middle East, no more, no less. For instance, Israel doesn’t mistreat its Palestinians any more than other nations mistreat theirs. However, someday, Israel, like all nations, will have to decide if it’s a religious artifact or a nation. Once the Palestinians enter Israeli political life, all questions are on the table, the flag, the nation, its identity. Obviously the Palestinians will not be welcomed, the future never is.

Therefore, we see that Hamas, the PLO, or something like it, is essential to Israeli policy. What they do is frame the discussion and prevent the terrifying option of enfranchisement.

Palestinians entering Israel’s political life would not be a peaceful solution. Success would be the most dangerous result. Israel, or whatever its name would be, would be a modern democracy in the Middle East. This would terrify the world. It’s likely that everyone would attack them.

Efficient Market Hypothesis

This is a perfect example of common perception inflated to economic theory. It tells you to wait in line and take what’s coming to you. The fundamental fallacy is the belief that the game is fair. The moment you start depending on the efficient market hypothesis, you find yourself joining a buying club, in a time-share; your stop loss positions wiped out in a flash crash and trapped in the slow lane behind a befuddled shrivel.

Do not confuse the efficient market hypothesis with the cost of investment decision paradox. This is the famous cost accounting paradox predicated on the belief that the time spent on an investment decision should be tempered by the value of the expected gain. Beloved of lazy accountants who refuse to get out their rulers and measure floor space, it leads to the off shoring of production facilities and the black hole of corporate Calcutta, where more and more employees are squished into cheaper and smaller offices.

When I go into the car dealership and ask for the cheapest one, I am not using the efficient market hypothesis or optimizing the cost of my decision. I am giving up. I know that the manufacturers have spent millions beating me on this game and I am overmatched.

Anytime I enter a tastefully decorated home, I shudder. I know that with the slightest prompting they will inventory their purchasing victories. Consider the enormous man-hours that went into that effort, counted as part of the cost they would have done far better to work extra jobs and hire a decorator.

-Oh but antiquing is my recreation.

Not to mention the cost of the vehicle necessary to lug those tasteful decorations home.

-Besides this gives me time with my family.

So multiply the time wasted by the family size.

-You just don’t love me

I have noticed that the proportion of goods manufactured for the resale market has steadily grown, as would be expected.

You should always check your eggs , ice cream and milk.

Awnings

Large office buildings are unoccupied during the weekends. Even when they are occupied, office management, by custom if not fact, feels entitled to turn down the heat. On Monday mornings the heat is turned up again and the ice that has collected on these buildings falls off onto the streets below. Certain buildings seem designed to take maximum advantage of this effect. In particular the diamond topped Smurfit Stone building at Michigan and Randolph used to be the best example of this effect. The diamond roof dropped all the ice directly on the entrance.

If there ever is a nuclear disaster, I am sure that Chicagoans will still go to work. I vividly remember people inching along the walls of the building hoping to get to their offices before being brained by the ice. The ice dramatically shattered in the plaza before them sending fragments up into the air. Since then the building has constructed an entryway with shops on its plaza giving tenants greater safety.

The Citibank center, formerly the Northwestern train station was a wonderful example of architectural spite. The scalloped roof would gather heat at the top, sending the ice and snow onto the lower levels, each iteration gathering more mass until some hapless commuter would be buried under an avalanche. The management finally built a large awning over the entrance area, spoiling the entertainment, or at least moving it to the street.

The sensible bungalow solution of an awning in front of many Chicago skyscrapers is not for concern over rain or sun but because while we are willing to accept the occasional rare fatality from falling ice in the street it is more difficult for a building to get a favorable settlement if they were injured or killed in an entrance.

Counting the Real Numbers

The real numbers as described by the decimals can be completely counted for each order of decimal place. Take all the real numbers from zero through one. For one decimal place, they are the numbers 0.0 through 0.9, there are ten of them or 101 real numbers and this list is exhaustive. That is, there is no real number that can be generated from this list that would not be redundant. For two decimal places 102, there are 100 of them, the numbers 0.00, 0.01, through 0.99. For each decimal place, there is a matrix 10n that completely lists all the real numbers to that many decimal places. As n approaches infinity, the real numbers are completely listed.

St. Valentine’s Day Massacre

I am always startled at my own innocence and naiveté. Every Chicagoan knows that the police killed the Moran gang. The papers reported it as:
-Men in police uniforms.

This may be the origin of that journalist’s trick that persists to this day:
-Men in government army uniforms, etc.

Of course, who wears official uniforms? Officials, but that would be in poor taste and might lead to misadventure. Yet I was surprised when I read Get Capone by Eig; I think most of us assumed that the hit had been ordered by the gangster establishment. This had always been puzzling, as Capone usually observed the proper and traditional forms.

What Eig suggests is that the Chicago police operation may have actually belonged to the Chicago police.

Capone was coming under indictment, his grip was loosening and the Police, with the backing of the FBI, wished to reassert themselves as equals rather than juniors. It seems perfectly logical. I admit I never would have considered it on my own. As Walter Arnold says:
-The Chicago mob is a front for city hall.

Dearborn Park Chicken Salad

There was a wonderful summer when my friend Phil had a boat in Monroe harbor and we sailed the beer can race each Wednesday. One of my fondest memories is working the wheel while we rounded the crib, keel over as far as I dared. I was worried until I realized, it wasn’t my boat. One evening after the race some guests brought a salad with chicken in it. I took one bite, looked up and with a great big smile said – Harold’s.

I worked next to a guy who brought a McDonald's Burger and fries every day and ate it at his desk. Determined to communicate with him, I brought a Billy Goats double cheese with grilled onions and ate it at my desk. It didn't make an impression. Then I brought some take out Sushi, no effect. Next I got a side of white from Harold’s. The whole floor knew what I was eating. He considerately ate in the lunchroom ever after.

Harold’s is a chicken franchise in Chicago. What he does is take a great big old chicken and fry it. Each store has a different taste because each fryer has a different history. When rents got low downtown, some Harold’s opened up there. I walked into one just west of the loop that had white people working. I saw something there I had never seen in Harold’s before or since, a big white block sitting in the fryer, they were melting lard. The service was slow, as usual, and with decades of payback at stake, I gave them the look, and they hurried up!

If you don’t have a Harold’s, find some place that fries big old birds. Discard the bones, skin, breading and bust up the chicken. Use mesclun or arugula, anything with bite, it has to fight the chicken. Scallions, cherry tomatoes, peppers, almond slivers, radishes, you get the idea. Add olive oil and balsamic vinegar of course.

Don’t accompany it with white bread and Richard’s. You can say it but don’t do it. Instead, have a nice chewy sourdough and a Riesling. If you must be authentic, push the cork in and drink out of the bottle. Don’t bother checking your cholesterol for a month, it’s too high and you’re going to die and that’s all there is to it.

Chicago Facade

When I was a kid, there was urban renewal. This meant many vacant lots with construction debris, rebar, huge piles of dirt; they were perfect. When they rebuilt the neighborhood, the adults asked us what kind of playground we wanted. We tried to tell them: construction debris, rocks, huge piles of dirt, what we were saying is that we wanted our vacant lots. So they put a bump, a little hill, in the middle of the playground.

LaSalle Street is an architectural success, in large part, because the buildings have a common proscenium. I have heard that word used to describe the theatrical nature of the buildings street level. I think of it as a kick plate, like the ones at the bottom of kitchen cabinets or doors. Even the State of Illinois Thompson center has a line distinguishing the bottom of the building from the rest. On other streets, the buildings kick plate/proscenium, in deference to Chicago’s plaza law, raise their skirts to give more walking space. On LaSalle they come up to the sidewalk.

The building at 10 S. LaSalle is particularly odd. It replaces the Otis building. That experience has been so traumatic that the new building does not have a name. On top, it is a normal blue skyscraper. The kick plate however is an old granite facade tacked around the bottom of the building. What happened is that the developers didn't coordinate their normal process of destruction and building sufficiently and they destroyed several landmarks at the same time, the Otis building and the Chicago Stock Exchange building. There were conservation meetings, a photographer, Richard Nickel died in a salvage expedition; the developers had to respond.
One story has the sister of the Heller brothers attending a conservation meeting:
-This is terrible, who owns that building?
-You do.

For her they took a room out of the Stock Exchange building and installed it at the Art Institute. Another sop to the preservationists was to take the old front of the Otis building and stick it around the bottom of its new blue skyscraper. Just as the adults had tried to assuage the kids’ nostalgia with the playground, the developers halfheartedly made a gesture to preservation.

Turning a disaster into a tragedy, this response became an architectural fashion, trotted out whenever they need to flatten landmarks. The worst example is the flying saucer landing on the coliseum at Soldier Field. The fashion has reached the neighborhoods. Walgreens, the destroyer of the Car Kabob in Berwyn mentioned in Wayne’s World, is now carefully keeping the Midwestern storefront at Oak Park and Madison on the front of that new store.

It’s not enough to raze landmarks, now we have to make fun of them.

Income Disparity and Bribes

Occasionally you will read a business story about some great CEO flying in to save a sale. At first you will nod approvingly about a hard working executive protecting his company. But then you might wonder, doesn’t this company have sales people? Is he going to fix general ledger next week and lead the research break through the week after that? The answer is that the Chief Executive is the only one left who can lay down the cash briefcase.

In the old days, the disparity between lowest and highest compensation in a company was about 10 to 15 to 1. Now the disparity is enormous. Like most government disasters, this was caused by reform. Back in the sixties a Texas firm demonstrating good old fashioned American ingenuity was caught paying incentives to its sales employees out of its discretionary account. Recognizing a loophole of gigantic proportions that anyone could use, Congress with the advice of the IRS passed legislation changing the accounting rules and made bribery illegal. Up until that time while bribery was illegal in several jurisdictions, it did have a place in accounting practice under variously titled entries commonly known as slush fund or petty cash. The justification was that these funds were allocated for “foreign” business activities where such practices were customary. Places like New Mexico. This rubric about foreign practice was repeated too often and that was made specifically illegal as well.

This means that bribes have to be paid out on an after-tax basis, except, of course, when corporations operate through nonprofits, promotions, foreign partners or foreign subsidiaries. Good old fashioned cash has to come out of the boss’s pocket. The discretionary fund entry has moved to corporate executive compensation. This is the major reason that executive compensation has ballooned. It’s not simply that boards of directors are spineless sycophants; it is how business gets done.

In some other countries the old ratio of compensation is still in effect. Those countries still allow slush funds. So their upper management does not have the responsibility of sealing the deal.

The IRS now gets its cut. Consider this from the point of view of the executive. Not only has his liability increased and he has to participate in dubious adventures and expenses to wash this money through to its intended recipients, but his costs have dramatically increased as well, small wonder that the major complaint of the 1% is taxes. The impact on legislation is the worst consequence. When these funds were administered by lower-level employees it was poor form to use them for anything other than improving the company’s market position. Now furthering class interest is justified as providing cover for corporate objectives.

In Opposition To Restoration and Conservation

In order to restore or conserve a work of art, you have to redo it. You have to paint over the painting, rebuild the statue, or buy another piece of hardware to replace the found object. Regardless of how cunning or clever you are, you are forging the artists work. It will be your hand, not the artist’s. Once done, however atomically close it may be, you will have a replica and not the original work. Henceforth, whoever sees it will be examining the work of the paint by numbers conservator, not the artist.

There are discussions about the nature and quality of restoration. How true it is, how faithful, but they are discussing the quality of forgery, not art. There are innumerable examples of poor or questionable restorations: Modern paint on medieval paintings, the removal of varnish applied by the artist, but that is not my point. Even if the restoration is perfect, the masterpiece had cracked, splintered, worn, became filthy as it was. Whatever follows is no longer that masterpiece.

It seems better to lose the original work to restoration rather than age. Restoration employs conservators. The forgeries continue to be available to academics and credulous patrons. Yet, why don’t they create a complete and separate replica?

This question gives the lie to conservation. The destruction of the original determines the value of the replica. It is all about value. The true horror of restoration is the loss of new art. Sadly, the available investment for art is fixed. As that finite amount is sucked up by these parodies, growing older, more established and more valuable with age, new art must suffer. Our very attachment to the old chokes the new. Before, oblivion would liberate funds for creative investments, now thanks to the conservationists the hand from the grave is perpetual, dragging down the art world.

Consider the challenge a new artist must face. Is the work beautiful? Does it help establish a new movement? Will it eventually find itself entombed in some theory of art history? Is it significant? How does it stand against the works of the museums? Its very originality may give pause. Perhaps it is too derivative. How can anyone purchase a work without feeling fleeced? Does anyone still have the standard of how does that look on my wall?

I have heard artists cost their paintings based on hourly wage. Yet once a museum obtains it, the value is completely different. This is because museum art is donated rather than purchased. Museums, like all nonprofits, exist primarily for the avoidance of taxes. When that art is deposited and displayed in these morgues, just as in ancient Egypt, preservation becomes essential to maintain the illusion of responsibility.

Recognizing the conservator as art’s enemy and the museums as institutions of privilege, what should the artist do? Paint only on velvet? Sculpt in soapstone? Produce works so easily reproducible or obviously damaged that people will only use them for decoration. Create art that people will purchase without collecting.

James Stewart Ruined America

It’s cold out, you are depressed, and you are supposed to be depressed. In the old days you would be rounding up people to shove into wicker cages to set them on fire and end the solstice. When it got warmer you would be a little embarrassed, but hey it worked and that’s what counts.
 
Nowadays you watch television and eventually you wind up watching a movie that tells you that happiness comes from owning your own house or maybe a restaurant and that the neighborhood banker is your friend in a kind of sad dependent manic depressive irresponsible sort of way. This actually explains a lot. There’s even a scene where the Baileys decide to buy their impossibly dilapidated fixer upper. Years later, George is bitter about his wasted life. I know what happened, he spent it working on that damn house, but they don’t show you that part.
 
Each of Stewart’s movies attempts to justify emotional disability and each is popular for precisely that reason. Who amongst us can’t identify with emotional disability?
 
Mr. Smith Goes to Washington is perhaps the worst. To this day American voters always choose the candidate who most closely resembles Jefferson Smith. The point of the movie is that naiveté is a sin. This is precisely the worst person you want to represent us. It doesn't matter. I don’t know if anyone has actually watched the movie from one end to the other. The lesson taken has been that our elected leaders should look and sound like Jimmy Stewart regardless of their other abilities.

Macondo Blowout Still Leaks; BP Drills New Deep Well In Gulf

Since the Deep Water Horizon rig is no more, it is more accurate to refer to the blowout which is still leaking:
http://english.aljazeera.net/indepth/features/2011/09/2011912175412109550.html

A year after the well was believed permanently sealed, the oil is back. At first I thought that I should rush this piece but then I realized that the blowout will be leaking as far into the future as I can envision. In addition to the environmental issues and loss of life, wasting that immeasurable quantity of nonrenewable resource is appalling.
 
It is ridiculous to be calling for hearings into the advisability of deep water drilling while the blowout is still leaking. How can they claim to drill safely while they still can’t stop the current leak? How do they assess the damage while new oil is being dumped on top of it? Forget the hearings, BP is already drilling a new deep water well in the Gulf, safe or not:http://english.aljazeera.net/video/americas/2011/09/201192641015567378.html

It is difficult for people to have any understanding of the pressure that exists at the depths they are drilling. You might feel your ears pop on an elevator or an airplane. If you have scuba dived you have felt the density of three atmosphere’s at 100 feet. Each 33 feet of water weighs about the amount of air overhead at sea level.
 
Macondo reached just shy of 40,000 feet down from the waves, more than 4000 feet of water and 35,000 feet of rock. These are pressures far beyond our comprehension. We have entered the world of engineering. Their new well in the Gulf will start at 6000 feet of water.
 
If you have been following this you have heard a lot of chatter about blowout preventer, cement slurry, drill monitoring systems, etc. The point is that all these technologies worked at lower pressures. They are extending their established technologies. It all may or may not have worked if they had responsible people in charge who would have told upper management:
-Fuck you, we don’t know what we are doing; we have to spend the money and wear belt and suspenders on this one until we do.
 
Instead, they have MBAs in charge. An MBA by training and intellect does not say fuck you to upper management. That is not what people with business degrees are for. If you are attending business school and they are teaching you to stand up to upper management, you should transfer; they are imperiling your career.
 
People keep asking: is deep water drilling feasible? That is not the question. What has been tested and answered is: Is deep water drilling feasible the way oil companies want to run their business? Macondo answers that question definitively.
 
Please don’t mention government regulation. Government regulation of companies that large and rich is impossible. This has been repeatedly proven; this well is a perfect example.
At this point someone blubbers:
-But we need the oil.
 
The well did not blow up because they were pumping the oil. IT BLEW UP BECAUSE THEY WERE CAPPING THE WELL. Even once it was burst and gushing oil, any attempt speculative or otherwise to capture and pump the oil coming out of the well was for incineration. They have absolutely no interest in pumping the oil. When oil companies refer to excess refining capacity, they mean the competition. There is no financial reason for an oil company to have its own excess capacity. It’s therefore unlikely that they have anything approaching the refinery capacity immediately available that that volume of oil would require.
 
I hope it does not shock you to learn that oil companies have no interest in lowering the price of oil. The major oil companies have an effective monopoly. An effective monopoly does not require complete ownership, rather by predatory pricing and other collusions they determine price and supply. The only thing holding them in check is the fear that we, the consumers will change our patterns of consumption. If you trade in your Toyota Tundra for a Honda Civic they have lost. If you continue to drive your Tundra on your daily three hour commute while demanding they drill the artic and nuke Iran, they have won.
 
If the well had been successfully capped, BP would have published some fantasy about how much oil was available at some future date when the well was tapped. These fantasies and the financial speculation on them are far more profitable than the mere mundane pumping of oil. So called “proven” reserves determine stock price and borrowing reserve. Setting aside the environmental costs it is financially preferable for BP to waste the oil than allow some other more aggressive company to claim these reserves.
 
A ban on deep water drilling is a fetcher bill; it is a solicitation not a solution. If we are to attempt a legislative solution we may as well go all in; the only responsible legislative initiative is to nationalize America’s oil industry.

Phones Tapped Anyway

As we watch the prosecutions of all the people swept up with Blagojevich the fundamental question obsessing every Chicagoan becomes:
-Why were all these people talking on the phone?
 
We are perfectly willing to write off Rob himself as a hopeless mouth with his skirt over his head, in the middle of Madison and State. But some of these people are connected. They sit on the right hand. They’re not supposed to get caught, even in their seventies, even as window dressing. What’s going on?
 
I believe these people were victims of technological change.
 
To understand let us go back to when everything started: the sixties. Some poor telephone line man in Hyde Park was coming down from the pole with all these gadgets he’d taken off the line. Ma Bell had enough. It wasn’t that they were patriotic; they had to protect their equipment. They purchased these fancy switches from a German company that recorded all the calls that passed through them. From then on any agency with a warrant, or at least the budget to pay for it, could have surveillance calls routed through this switch.
 
The switch was designed in the fifties. When new features, like voice mail, came through the switch didn’t handle them correctly. In particular, if you had a cheap phone, the voice mail light wouldn’t turn off after you deleted the voice mail. People in the know didn’t mind this feature. You might say they came to depend on it.
 
Then in the zeds, when all the old lists got reactivated, the government dumped a lot more people on the switches. It got to the point where the agencies got behind on the money they owed to the phone companies for the surveillance. Some of the new enrollees complained about the service. In the negotiations it came up that the switch didn’t really work and an upgrade was installed.
Unfortunately, it appears that, some of the wise guys weren’t in the loop. They must not have realized that their phones were being routed through an upgraded switch.
 
I propose that people being monitored should get a rebate from the phone company since they are bringing in government business.

Ms. Bowers

I was tormenting Tiquan. This was right and proper, as he was smaller than I was. We were in second grade at Ray School. Suddenly Tiquan turned around in his seat and screamed at me.
-Oh Tiquan, that’s wonderful, you yelled, Ms. Bowers said.

Ms. Bowers seized every opportunity to pass on a life’s lesson. Embarrassed, we both shrank in our seats. If someone is picking on you, you should stand up to them. Once when someone did something she said:
-Who did that? Look at you, you all turned to look, you dummies; you gave him away. Raymond, are you proud of yourself? All these friends of yours that you are showing off for gave you away.

Thereby she imparted the important lessons of group cohesion and honor.
-I can see your lips moving, I know you’re talking.

Don’t be caught was the number one lesson. Each day was a new challenge. One morning the principal, Ms. Kenause, lay in wait for us and rounded us up as we came in late. Then she marched us all into class and told Ms. Bowers to mark us down late.
-You let that old lady catch you, how pathetic.
-What could we have done?
-Wait for her to leave.

On Fridays, she would give us a word problem that was too hard for us; we would get frustrated and wander around the class looking for someone who had made some progress.

One day she got really mad and slammed the pointer on the desk and yelled. A circle of plaster, about three feet in diameter, dropped from the ceiling on her head. We had classes in the auditorium while they fixed the ceiling.

Sometimes you hear a teacher say they are on the kids’ side. Ms. Bowers was the real deal. She had come over to the dark side. Every other teacher and the principal hated her. I was in love, I asked my mom:
-Why isn’t Ms. Bowers married?
-Remember that question when you are older, mom answered.

At the end of the school year, they took us to our third-grade classroom to meet the teacher for next year, Ms. Reid. She spent the next hour yelling at us. I was scared, but I guess we should have been proud.

The War Nerd Is Great

If you haven’t been on this site before, this is a perfect introduction:
http://exiledonline.com/war-nerd-china-joins-the-yacht-club/

This goes back to the days of Cracked, Mad Magazine, Marvel Comics, you get the idea. Another fun page is:
http://www.strategypage.com/

A typical War Nerd page provides for days of boy talk. A few points:

1. Lady Di flipped Clinton on landmines. I don’t know what she said in that phone call, but President Clinton reversed course and yanked them out of Guantamo and Korea. Perhaps it was simply being a vote monster on how many votes she had as against the military lobby. That one act may have been why she died:
-I spent how much this year and that Bimbette queered me with a phone call?
She saved more lives in that one moment than Mother Theresa in her whole life.
Actually this point is from an earlier post:
http://exiledonline.com/war-nerd-913-ten-years-on-and-a-long-way-down/

2. If I were the Chinese I would call the Admiral on his cell just as the DF21 was coming down. How many different radio signatures does an aircraft carrier have?

3. Submarines are no safer than carriers. All the issues with carriers work equally well with submarines. Simply substitute torpedoes for missiles.

4. The terrifying thing about China is the testosterone issue: when the boy/girl ratio, or girl/boy depending, gets that big then war becomes inevitable.

5. Exiled writers use pen names.

Things That You’re Liable

It all started, like most things, back in the 1800’s when people started digging things up. They found rocks, fossils, and human artifacts. The British went to Egypt and Greece. The French preferred Italy. But the Germans headed for Mesopotamia. While there, they noticed that the Torah was written in two languages and different hands. They found out about Zoroaster. They really weren't scholars, they shot from the lip, and if it sounded true, it was true. They didn't ask why these stories had been so important and were still so important. They just bottom lined it:
-Ha, it’s not true.

In the United States that wasn't particularly interesting. But Germans treated their scholars almost as though they were basketball players. These stories had been used to convince them to quit lighting up wicker cages full of people to celebrate the solstice. You can actually see the void forming in their psyche. Philosophers attempted to address it:
-We’ll tell them they’re special.

A hundred years later the German nationalist political movement was still determined to create a mythology for them. I suppose if you are writing the paper at Haverford, you will address the dangers of suppressing native belief, and if you are at Utah State you will speak to the danger of abandoning Christianity.

The point is that this stuff is dangerous.

I have no interest in endangering faith. Years ago, I was working with a Charismatic. She was a good intelligent person. We didn’t get on that well. After a few years, she said:
-You know Christianity is an extension of Judaism.
-By that argument, we should all be Mormons.
-Mormons are just a cult.
-To me they are all cults. Suppose that some day we can explain tongues. I don’t mean to dismiss it, but in the same way, we can explain lightning. Will that shake your faith?
-No, I suppose not.

If your faith depends on literal interpretation of the Bible then read no further. If you are going to respect Scripture, I believe you should read the whole thing and think about the context and how people were living and why it mattered to them. Most of the so-called faith I see consists of people grabbing fragments to beat each other over the head.

They’ll quote Sodom and Gomorrah without recognizing that it is a nomadic story. To nomads the greatest sin is inhospitality, and they don’t think much of cities. To see that story cited as a justification for intolerance is despicable.

Suppose a Martian dropped by and wanted the history of humanity. Planetary conditions are such that he can’t stay long, what would you tell him?
You might give him a history of technology, or a history of religion. One could think of all sorts of possibilities but I think most of us would give a history of empire. To put it briefly:
-Rome fell.

Given that empire is a perfectly legitimate history, what was the largest empire there ever was? I’ll give a hint; it started the concept of religious freedom.

How about the Mongols?

Which empire lasted the longest?

An argument can be given for the Persians.

Why is it that the largest empire and the longest lasting empire are ignored in our histories? Because they didn’t get to write them.

Let us go back, I guess between three and four thousand years ago. There are these people living in the mountains in northern Canaan. Why would they be living there? It’s kind of out of the way and there isn’t all that much water. Maybe they’re safer there. You shouldn't stereotype people but I see them as kind of compulsive. If someone doesn’t get out and water the crops in the morning, people starve. It’s very much a small town with everybody in each other’s business.

They have pretty much the same religion as everybody else. The religion stretches from Scandinavia into Africa and through India, across language and culture. There are two gods, a male and female because that’s how you have creation. They have male and female priests to go with the male and female gods. The gods’ children act as the intermediaries. They sacrifice bulls to them if they ever have any. The sacrifice of bulls occasionally ties to the sacrifice of young men. They have the story of the goddess who returns in the spring, she was sometimes known as Ostra (Scandinavian), Eostra (Anglo Saxon), Eastra (German) or Esther. In this respect, they are ordinary. The closest modern version of the ancient religion is Voudun.

They also have their own hero story. Their hero is David. It is really the hero stories that distinguish these little towns. David is a zesty tough little goatherd. David may have come from one of the other goat herding towns, or even been shared, but I’m betting on northern Canaan.

They have many goats. It’s somewhat warm and after awhile they run out of things to do with all the goatskins. Once you get past clothing, awnings, furniture, condoms, wine skin, whatever do you do with goatskin? Somebody starts writing on it. To understand why this is such an awesome breakthrough, head over to your library or bookstore and find a volume of ancient writing,Gilgamesh say or the Tibetan book of the Dead. The first hundred pages or so will be an introduction telling you how important the work is. Then there will be a further chapter about the translation. Eventually you will reach the sacred ancient text. It will be very short.
-Well, I guess they were kind of busy back then.

They commonly told stories that lasted for weeks. They loved long stories. However, when it was time to press that sucker into clay, beat papyrus together, paint it on a wall or pound it into stone they did substantial editing. The cool thing about vellum was that they could expound. They could include description or even verse. What distinguished this town was that their hero story, the story of David, was a verbose written document.

The cities, civilizations if you will, were all on deltas. That’s because no matter what kind of dumb farming you did, every year a new load of fresh dirt would come down, and you could start over. Most deltas are on plains. You could see off into the distance and have a fair idea of who was around. The Tigris Euphrates is different in that it is surrounded by mountains. The people who lived on the delta had it good. The people who lived in the mountains were not as fortunate. The major ambition of the people on the mountains was to become the people of the delta. The major goal of the people on the delta was to stay the people on the delta. Babylon was the big town on the delta, and there was a collection of suburbs around it.

Their hero story was Gilgamesh. They had gotten it from the town of Uruk, who had probably gotten it from those before them and so on. It’s a lovely picturesque civilization story. There’s a person in the middle of a plain building a boat. It’s such a ridiculous image. Then a flood comes and he is proven right. The point of the story is that things change and you had better be ready. This is a valuable lesson to pass on to the children when you are living in the Tigris Euphrates, or anywhere else for that matter, so if they ever do find the ark on Mt. Ararat it will have a big Aramaic “G” on it for Gilgamesh or a Sumerian “U” for Ur.

Babylon, due to its situation had a lot of clay. They had enormous brickyards. Making large volumes of bricks gets tedious, so they conducted slaving expeditions to staff their brickyards. One of the groups they scooped up was the small town in northern Canaan.

Suddenly this small-town crowd found itself in the big city. There were other kinds of people with them, Canaanites, Amorites, etc. There were many stories. They collected the stories and wrote them down. The story of David seems a little piecemeal, perhaps the Amorites contributed. Then they created new stories. The principal new one was the story of Esther, the sly transformation of the story of the goddess who returned in the spring into the story of the concubine who saved her people. In the celebration of Purim, you can see the small-town hicks discovering the big city. There are games of chance, and you drink to excess.

Velum explains how they were able to record their stories, but it doesn't really explain the stories they chose to record. The Greek myths are somewhat rough but nothing on the Old Testament, or even the New Testament. Obviously, these people weren't as prudish as most. Perhaps they were required to accept these stories as they were; starting with David might have opened things up.

Somewhere in all the ferment, they discovered monotheism. Maybe it’s because a powerful male king ran Babylon. The priest class, the Magi, may have realized that factionalism put them at a disadvantage. Zoroaster, from another town, Balkh in what is now northern Afghanistan, said it came from being sickened by excessive animal sacrifice. Perhaps it came from the story of a Phoenician who decided to become a Canaanite and not sacrifice his first-born son. It was very positive because it established personal responsibility. You could no longer claim that Hera had blinded you and therefore you had slain your children.

The next big story is the story of Joseph. It’s a reworking of Esther. There’s still a distant powerful king. Now the principal protagonist is male, which probably mattered in Babylon. They had a difficult issue to address. The Babylonians had noticed that they read and wrote. People being what they are it was decided that this must be a genetic quality and occasionally boys were taken off to be scribes in the court. The story of Joseph is an attempt to address this issue on an emotional basis. You can’t tell children that their parents are powerless, that has no meaning to them. Therefore, they told them that their brothers did it. They also tried to impress on them that they should remember who they are and where they came from.

They didn’t have a very positive view of the Babylonian court. Part of the story of Joseph is that he is thrown in jail for refusing the advances of his employer’s wife. However, Joseph is wise and he can tell the future so eventually he wins his freedom. Are you very wise? Can you tell the future? All right then.

After Joseph, the big story is Moses. By now this slave people had identified themselves as Jews. It’s a reworking of Joseph. They cut up on the Babylonians. Whenever someone tells you they came from somewhere, just remember if they’d been tough, they wouldn't have had to leave.
-You think this is tough? This is nothing. You should have been with us when we were slaves in Egypt. We were slaves lot worse places than this. This is cool. In Egypt, they made us make bricks without straw. Believe that? Without straw. Good thing nothing like that happens around here boy, telling you. They were bad in Egypt. Didn’t treat us right at all. Shame what happened to them.

Egypt is a place way far away; you’ll never get there and forty is a number bigger than you can count. The sea of reeds is north of Babylon, priests doing tricks with snakes sounds like Magi, and bricks weren’t that big a deal in Egypt.

The miracle was that the stories worked. When the people of the mountains, in this case Cyrus, came in, he decided that this people, known as Jews, was an issue. He resolved it just as America tried to do with Liberia. The Jewish people, a slave people, became a self-governing outpost of Persia in Jerusalem. Never underestimate the power of public relations. They actually managed to talk their way out of Babylon.

The first thing they did, of course, was make lots of rules. Part of it was a system of bringing different groups to the temple so the earth would lie fallow. I think they liked rules. Surprisingly, whenever, wherever and however they got them, a lot of these rules, not all, at least not yet, make sense today. It’s really not a good idea to have a lot of rules because eventually someone tests them and when nothing happens, it kind of rocks the boat. Therefore, it is a little puzzling that so many of these rules turned out to be good hygienic practice.

They also reworked their stories to suit their various situations. Adding and dropping as they would.

They had a theocracy that delegated authority to a city manager, kind of like Iran, Utah or China.
The essential problem with monotheism is good and evil. The Persians eventually came around to the idea that good and evil are really two sides of the same thing. This is intellectually honest but emotionally worthless, particularly if you are the one catching it.

The Jews kind of ignored the issue or treated it as insoluble. There was a sense of the greater good of the culture, or people.

Then the Greeks showed up and the Jews had to confront evil, not only in the individual sense, but also in the sense that their whole culture was under attack. Persia fell to the Greeks. The Syrians were in charge of the Jews. By some miracle, the Jews conducted a successful campaign of attrition and drove the Syrians out. Apparently the Greeks didn’t have quite the same stomach for extermination, at least in this instance that the Romans had.

The Jews reaction to their victory was a disastrous retreat into Maccabee chauvinist fundamentalism. Where the Persians learned from their conquerors and adapted, the Jews experienced a convulsive denial in the face of evil. This made them easy prey for the Romans.

The Romans were truly evil. They had lifetime slavery rather than the customary seven years. To the Romans, the Jews were an outpost of an empire, Persia, which opposed them. As well as being monotheist heretics. The Syrians were back in charge, this time with Roman legions backing them up. They destroyed the Jewish culture from the top down: heavy taxation, slavery, and messing with the calendar leading to destruction of the land.

The story of Jesus is a shriek of heresy dripping in irony. Every commandment is broken. Every holiday but Chanukah, the celebration of resistance, is trashed. The story of Isaac is turned on its head as god makes the sacrifice of his son. The miracle of forgiveness is offered as an answer to the problem of good and evil. Jesus performs water miracles for the Persians, does Hercules for the Greeks. When the Marys’ are emphasized the commandment to honor your parents is broken explicitly rather than by omission. Being a carpenter may have been a nod to the Maccabee hammer and their analogy of chopping down the Roman phalanx as a forest. To its credit: with four versions, the New Testament is clearly in the oral tradition rather than literal truth.

Shortly after this, the Jews have enough. Led by an idiot rabbi, they engage in a fierce bitter campaign of armed conflict against the Roman Empire, supposedly with failed assistance from the Persians, and are crushed. The Romans paid off the hill people to delay the Persian army. I wonder if the Christian heresy was part of the provocation for rebellion.

I am probably mistaken on some fact or interpretation. But while reading James Bond a modern-day hero story, for instance, will give you an understanding of our mores, customs, beliefs and geography you would not use it as a basis for history. Having a glimmer of how ghastly things were, how angry people were, their despair and their humor gives me a greater sense of reverence and awe.

King Conspiracy

The Black Muslims have published several articles suggesting that his own people set up Martin Luther King. The irony is that the Muslims are implicated in the only certain political assassination conspiracy of that time, that of Malcolm X. Several people shot at Malcolm, thus by definition a conspiracy. The intriguing issue in the Malcolm X killing is that only three men were convicted of the crime. Why didn’t the police do their normal job, the researching of the convicted men, offering them a deal, determining their associates and tracking down the ringleaders? What’s the difference between Malcolm X and Martin Luther King? Three years. On the principal that it takes one to know one, let us consider the possibility of conspiracy in King’s killing.

Dr. King had several remarkable qualities: He was fiscally honest: any money he received was spent on Civil Rights. He was pragmatic: he chose non-violence as the only possible way to achieve civil rights. The United States is the only nation in the world that has a holiday honoring civil disobedience and nonviolent protest. He was brave; everyone knew full well that his life would be short.

It’s not remarked on but while his declamations were deservedly famous, he was also one of the most boring speakers to ever be a preacher. When he wasn’t given a cadence and speaking for the cameras he used a normal tone of voice, huge words, and went on forever.

He went where he was called, wherever local organizers felt that national attention and Dr. Kings staff, money and advice would do some good.

James Earl Ray could have acted alone. What this required is that he spend some length of time perched on top of a bathtub with his rifle pointed out the window at King’s motel room. First, he would have to know where Dr. Kings room was; then find the appropriate site to aim from; then he would have to identify his victim going in and out of the door. This would all be a lot easier with an inside man.

King and his friends went into the motel room. Ray didn’t shoot. Then they came out. Ray didn’t shoot. King was returning to the room for a jacket when Ray finally shot him. Apparently, that is when he finally was able to figure out which of the men was King. The official explanation is that Ray got lucky. The moment Ray looks out the window of his newly let room with his newly purchased binoculars; King is standing on the porch of his motel. Ray jumps up and runs to the shared bathroom, locks himself in, chambers a round, sticks his rifle out the window over the tub and shoots him. It is possible that someone in the group gave him guidance.

Part of the reason for suspicion is that the dog and hunter or set up man and shooter is standard bushwhacker technique. One person calls them out and the other shoots them.

Ever since Judas, snitches and police have had systems of signals to communicate in crowds. If you see someone making an effort to stand out, perhaps with a hat, they may be a detective, auxiliary or interested observer. Identifying a perpetrator may be as simple as staring at him. Open hand means you got the wrong one, closed hand or raising your hat means you got him. Shaking hand means he's running. In this case a fist pump, for instance, could mean that King was approaching his room. It would be kind of scary for the setup man because the sniper may be observing through his scope.

If the King killing was an inside and outside job, then it is likely that it was government. The primary function of the FBI is the care and feeding of informants. They are a much larger scale version of the normal police detective bureau. People usually don’t choose to become informants. When someone is vulnerable enough to be an informant, then that vulnerability is open for other purposes.

J. Edgar Hoover was portrayed as powerful. Instead, his own vulnerability may have endeared him to each president. The certainty that the FBI would carry out whatever task the president required could be irresistible.

It’s difficult for me to believe that anyone would cross Johnson or exceed their authority under his command. If the government killed King, then Johnson ordered it. Why would Lyndon Johnson order King’s assassination? Johnson was complex yet simple. It doesn’t really explain anything, but Johnson loved the deal. It would have of be part of some deal, even if that deal was only in Johnson’s head.

Arendt and Socrates

As I move from one town or city to the next I am always amused by their various claims to celebrity and achievement. I grew up in Hyde Park in Chicago. The only plaque or monument I am aware of there, honors the first nuclear chain reaction. Most places would give such an event its own acre, perhaps with a museum and diorama. Hyde Park keeps shuffling it around,
-Look, it happened nearby, OK, maybe not exactly right here, but in the general vicinity and anyway we've got a few things going on right now.

When I was a child, living in Hyde Park, my mother introduced me to Hannah Arendt. She was a member of our congregation. Hannah Arendt told me she studied evil and I said that sounded boring. My words were not flippant. Evil people did not impress me. We agreed that evil was worth studying.

I wish I could tell you that Hyde Park lionized Arendt; instead, we subjected her to our usual snottiness, throwing Fermi out of Steinways drugstore for buying a single coffee and staying for hours, etc. The rabbi denounced her work Eichmann in Jerusalem for saying that some rabbi collaborated with the Germans, which isn’t exactly what she was saying. Why are rabbis so stupid? I know other religions have their moments, but they seem honestly wicked. For pure self destructive, narrow-minded stupidity, it’s hard to top a rabbi.

Bruno Bettelheim, the great revisionist, also from the neighborhood, called Jews to task for not recognizing the coming cataclysm. For being, so centered in our day-to-day lives that we had refused to see the obvious. There had been many waves of anti-Semitism before and we didn’t have to leave. The lesson of Noah lost yet again.

If you must criticize Jews for their compliance, then you must also criticize the interred Japanese Americans. Many of them had left Nippon for America to keep their Buddhist faith and then we persecuted them for being Japanese. They had no more reason for expectation of survival than the Jews did. Some did not survive. There was never an explicit order to kill the internees. Americans don’t work that way. It was very sparse, cold and isolated. The only way for a soldier to transfer off guard duty was to kill a prisoner. Many years later my brother asked my friends dad, who had been an internee, if he had volunteered to serve in the Japanese-American combat regiment:
-Hell no.

Socrates when faced with the overwhelming evil of tyranny simply went home and refused to participate. However, when the democracy rightly or wrongly ruled his execution, he accepted the hemlock. Socrates equated evil to ignorance, Arendt wrote of its banality.

What is the proper code of conduct of the victim? When Muhammad ordered the slaughter of the Jews, our calm acceptance horrified the Arabs. If the Japanese had stood in armed defiance, more of them would have died. It’s easy to see Jews making the same estimation.

The revenge of the victims is their absence.
So, that’s what we did, what did you do in your neighborhood?

Marilyn Monroe Deserves a Memorial



A dedicated craftsman, deeply passionate about her art and a great comedian, I recently saw All About Eve where she gave a class in the difference between movie and thespian acting. The new statue in Pioneer Court recognizes her stature. In fairness after Rodin most statues seem poor. Gazing at the statue I miss her. She had such gifts. I remember her line about getting a date shortly before she died. I can think of several things she might have said about this statue, but I am sure her own line would have been far more devastating.

Perhaps someone would ask her if she had seen the statue and she would reply:
-no.

Perhaps she’d say something about the statue being thin or where’s her horse.

Perhaps it would be something about a hammer. This statue reminds me of the porcelain collectibles that were put out about twenty years ago. This statue is more about the collectible than the actress.

It is difficult to memorialize Marilyn Monroe. Arthur Miller attempted it. Remember when she tore up the McCarthy hearings? Millers play was pretty much a eulogy. Notice how they are spoofing method acting in the Seven Year Itch subway scene.

Perhaps this statue represents a greater, more universal aesthetic. I remember how disappointed I was seeing my first natural sunset with its insipid pink and baby blue. If the galaxy can have a Mobius strip at its center maybe Michigan and Wacker should have a huge doll image of Marilyn Monroe. Perhaps this idol has brought the heat wave.

Stuxnet: Not a Virus, Not a Worm, a Bacterium

Wired recently described the computer nightmare:
http://www.wired.com/threatlevel/2011/07/how-digital-detectives-deciphered-stuxnet/

Like most disasters this started with good intentions, to cripple Iranian enrichment for nuclear weapons. To do this they, whoever they are, used professionals in a project. Instead of a small clever piece of code making use of social engineering, they wrote a system that exploited network distribution vulnerabilities. Just like malaria crossing from one species to another, their programs crossed operating systems. They sent instructions to Siemens controllers from Windows. They also spoofed site authentication.

We have spent tremendous time and effort getting systems and hardware to communicate, now each portal is a hazard.

It is the use of professionals that is the most terrifying. We professionals have gazed into the pit of despair, we know how infuriating intermittent results can be; we know the nooks and crannies. The reason Linux, UNIX, mainframes, Apple etc. is safe is because those cultures have no interest in exploit, or at least no interest in getting caught. The use of professionals is akin to letting Navy Seals loose on a kindergarten playground.

Whoever did this went to a lot of effort to target specific sites in a specific timeframe. We will not be so lucky next time.

Buying a Lap Top

In 2007 I got a peculiar diagnostic on my PC, which led to my replacing the battery on the motherboard. It was slow booting up as well. The two primary choices were getting another PC or a laptop. With a laptop, you don’t need an UPS (uninterruptible power source) since it comes with a battery. It also has a much smaller footprint. Still I would feel like a chump when something broke and I had to send it in for fixing. Lap tops have even tinier little connections and all sorts of gotchas when you take them apart. Usually by the time that happens, it’s time for a new one. There is the possibility that I might actually carry it around with me. I determine to get a laptop.
 
There are two choices Dell or HP. They both have nice web sites. HP is offering 64-bit machines, Dell isn’t. Why would I want to have fewer bits? I’m an American; also HP gives a free printer.

My first order I go wild, I think it was around $1700. Then HP declined the order because I specified a third party to receive it. I live alone, I work; it didn’t make sense to me to have to go Franklin Park to pick up my laptop. I had a friend who worked at a UPS store and I told them to ship it there. HP wouldn't do it. I’ve often wondered why dry cleaners and post office box places couldn’t take delivery for packages; apparently, it’s the shippers.

I tried a few big box stores but their offerings looked like chump bait.

The next time I was more sensible:
- HP Pavilion dv6700z Entertainment CTO NB
- Upgrade to Genuine Windows Vista Home Premium with Service Pack 1 (64-bit)
- AMD Turion(TM) 64 X2 Dual-Core Mobile Technology Gold Edition TL-64 (2.2 GHz)
- 15.4" diagonal WXGA High-Definition HP BrightView Widescreen Display (1280 x 800)
- 4GB DDR2 System Memory (2 Dimm)
- NVIDIA GeForce Go 7150M
- HP Imprint Finish (Radiance) + Microphone
- FREE Upgrade to 802.11b/g WLAN and Bluetooth from 802.11b/g WLAN!!
- 120GB 5400RPM SATA Hard Drive
- SuperMulti 8X DVD+/-R/RW with Double Layer Support
- No TV Tuner w/remote control
- 12 Cell Lithium Ion Battery
- Computrace LoJack for Laptops, One Year
- System Recovery DVD with Genuine Windows Vista Home Premium (64-bit)
- Microsoft(R) Office Home and Student 2007
- HP Home & Home Office Store in-box envelope

I probably should have gotten a faster chip and less ram. This came to $1200. Two years later, similar specifications from HP cost $800, so I don’t feel that taken. I had them deliver to my office, so the order was accepted.

Taking it out of the box, I realize I’ve bought a shiny glass laptop, so much for portability. (- HP Imprint Finish (Radiance)) I’d sooner carry a vase around with me. Actually most vases are not only less expensive but less fragile.

The printer came with a manufacturers rebate. It is just a junky little printer and that’s all I need. I have no idea why they bother to try printing color. The most expensive part of a printer is the ink. I suppose if I were buying from a store, the manufacturer rebate would make some sense but I am buying from the manufacturer. This is just insulting. They want me to include three different documents. Obviously, they don’t expect people to bother. I guess $70 means something to HP. Then they refuse to honor the rebate because they shipped as two separate orders. American Express takes my complaint, it seems reasonable to them, then gives up. Finally, I remember that I live in Illinois. Lisa Madigan, the Attorney General has a web site. I file a complaint with her suggesting that this might be a class action. HP sends my rebate. If Lisa Madigan runs for mayor, I’ll have to vote for her.

64 bit just isn’t working. It comes up fast and then fails. Microsoft browser fails. Chrome and Firefox work a little better. Maybe that’s why Dell didn’t sell 64bit. Sometimes it locks up and I have to take the battery out to boot it. My job’s VPN, the CISCO package that I telecommute with is 32 bit. A 64-bit version is expensive and my company isn’t interested. AT&T antivirus won’t work on 64 bit either. I jam the battery taking it in and out. (- 12 Cell Lithium Ion Battery) Admittedly, this is my fault, but it shouldn’t be that easy to jam and I should be able to fix it myself. I wrap up the very expensive, fast booting brick in the convenient mailer provided and ship it back with instructions to fix the battery and make the operating system 32 bit. (- HP Home & Home Office Store in-box envelope)

After some hemming and hawing they put the 32bit Vista on.

I tell them just send it to my apartment. The LoJack that is supposed to trace it if stolen is registered and I am no longer that concerned. (- Computrace LoJack for Laptops, One Year) When I get it back, everything works.

Three years later I can’t upgrade to the new browser, the SP update fails; maybe it’s something about a 64 bit machine with a 32 bit operating system. A minor irritation but Yahoo keeps nagging me to upgrade. Then the laptop fails. The screen flickers then freezes. Whenever I turn it on the laptop keeps going on and off. The nice man on the phone tells me it’s my video chip and it will cost $350 to fix. (- NVIDIA GeForce Go 7150M) This is a common problem with HP Pavilion.http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2009/03/faulty-nvidia-c/

The new laptops come with removable video cards.
Here’s a video on baking the mother board:
http://computerszine.com/baking-the-motherboard-hp-pavilion-dv2500-nvidia-video-chip-fix-no-video-corrupted-video-issue
I order a tower from Dell. 64 bit internet explorer still doesn’t work, so Dell includes the 32 bit version.

After poking around on the web, it turns out that the NVIDIA chip burns so hot it melts the solder and loses contact. This wouldn’t be so difficult to fix except that this chip is soldered to the mother board, buried under a heat sink, with the whole thing squished underneath all the other doodads HP sold me.

Then I try just leaving the laptop on sloping the opposite way. That is, I take out the battery, put it on the power cord and prop up the front slightly. It keeps doing it’s recycling routine until three hours later, it works. That chip is really hot. This allows me to rescue my files.

As computers get smarter, the chips get denser and hotter-a good mind is hard to fan.

When I use the laptop it sometimes fails, I guess the video chip is sloshing around in its solder. The fan works but the laptop is really hot. Maybe they should build them with a metal case and lots of fans. I lost an earlier PC, with a metal case, to static when I left it on a rug.

Maybe I could use the laptop to run a blog site.

Die At County

Chorus:
Let me die at County
Not out on the street
Let me die at County
Take me off my feet
Let me die at County
When I’m passing on
Cause dying at County
I won’t be alone
-
Ma died at County
Daddy he did too
My eldest died of gunshot there
And his wife she did too
So take me to County
When my time is done
Cause dying at County
I won’t be alone.
-
All the hospitals are on standby
The ambulance won’t stop
Don’t matter it you’re a movie star
Don’t matter if you’re a cop
The building’s kind of new
And it’s packed to the brim
I may die at County
But they always take me in
-
The young men are dying
It’s taking them awhile
Trying to go with dignity
And just a little style
Medicines expensive
Health care aint free
Last year’s social butterfly
Has no modesty
-
My HMO says SOL
My PPO just won’t
Medicaid wants to be paid
And Medicare just don’t
So take me to County
I can’t afford to pay
Let me die at County
In the USA
-
County’s the best hospital
So I’ve been told
All the doctors are young
All the nurses are old
When it’s their turn to die
They reach paradise
Cause they’ve spent enough time
In fire and ice
-
They took County hospital
Put it on TV
Made a lot of money
Off people like me.
They get residuals
I get along
All I’ve got left is
This damn old song
-
I went to the county
I was sick real bad
It was the worst
I’d ever had
Told the clerk
I felt I was dying
She told me
To get in the line
-
Stroger had a stroke
The ambulance raced
Didn’t stop
Till it got to his place
Stroger came to
Opened an eye
Said keep on going
Aint ready to die

In Defense of Privilege

The Supreme Court decision striking down quotas, Parents Involved in Community Schools v. Seattle School District No. 1 is such woeful denial of their entire history of honoring precedent that the decision itself becomes an agonized ironic scream.

Back in the sixties, it had finally come down to the question of merit. This is what everyone had been fighting for and the civil rights movement finally came to its senses. There was no way we could have merit, so we got quotas. The actual law said, in admittedly protracted convoluted language, that if you could demonstrate merit, and not very strictly, I might add, you didn't have to have quotas. The fact that we have quotas means very few were able to even give a pretense of merit selection.

To understand the deep bitterness aroused by affirmative action in the 70’s you have to recognize that the essential function of middle management is to avoid responsibility. What this meant is that every difficult personnel decision could then be explained as a consequence of affirmative action.

Now that we have done away with quotas, if we do not enforce merit, all that remains is privilege. Is this a bad thing? In England, for instance, they use tests to determine who is admitted to government paid Universities. This requires them to carefully construct the tests so that only privileged students who have been properly instructed can pass them. It also requires them to destructively instruct the unprivileged students so they do not pass the tests. I wonder if our privileged classes would be able to remember their instruction well enough to get through their tests.

In America such merit requirements as we have had, particularly for entry-level positions has forced our privileged into MBA programs. This means they have skipped the entry-level jobs for middle management positions, a disastrous consequence.

Does it make sense to fight privilege? Do we want merit? I argue that we don’t want to see ourselves as balls in a chute, dropping into our natural place in the bell curve. What we desperately want is to belong, to be part of something. We want to be special and we want to think we got a break. We certainly don’t want what’s coming to us; we want to be in. To fight privilege is to fight human nature.

Take the bum in an alley, he may seem hopeless to you, but that’s his alley, he knows that alley, that’s how he survives and how he belongs.

In your mind's eye visualize your favorite educational institution. Walk through the quadrangle, the courtyard, whatever, to the admissions office. How big is it? How many people does it employ? Why is that? Is your institution the kind that recklessly spends money? Does it have gold-plated manholes, outrageous landscaping? Allow me a suggestion. Have an administrative assistant build a word merge application to take the Princeton testing service scores with their addresses, majors and self-reported GPA, sort them up in score, major sequence and send out the acceptance letters and financial packets. The reported SAT scores would stand in lieu of an application. I believe that applications would increase dramatically. Everyone admitted would know they deserve to be there. The classes may be less diverse within a particular year, but I believe that over time the school would have far greater diversity than it has today. The school would save hundreds of thousands in salary.

I don’t know how rich your school’s endowment is, but my guess is that it would go out of business within a decade if not sooner. Imagine Biddle-Barrows, or Johnson, or Goldblatt staring across the frozen lake. Chutney Tech did not admit young Lemuel. Does Sally-Ann need a donation? That’s why those people are working in that office, so young Lemuel, and his friends, get in.

When we legislate against drugs, campaign donations, or privilege we stand against the overwhelming hydraulic force of human need and desire; we force it to find other channels.

More importantly, we have expectations for the privileged. It may sound trivial but a president of the United States isn’t going to take it into his head to resign in order to study under the Maharishi. (Although that can’t be said for the governor of Alaska and a television contract.) At each level, there is an accumulated wisdom, an accretion of manner and behavior. Despite their pretensions, this knowledge doesn’t arrive from a preparatory school, college, or graduate program, although such things can provide validation. It takes generations. One hard earned lesson after another passed on and impressed into their very marrow.

The essential issue is that it is so difficult to distinguish between authentic privilege and mere pretension. The difference between the heroic privilege of George Herbert Walker Bush and the pretension of George Walker Bush seems obvious to me but apparently not to enough. When the common man recognized W as one of us, they failed to recognize the implications; you don’t want one of us running things.

What we disdain is the git, overreaching their station. When politicians expect the privilege of donors, as at the University of Illinois, it arouses our ire.

There are some wonderful counter examples: the Lodge’s, the Cabot’s, Wittgenstein, but even they announce themselves. Always on the wrong side, never right about anything, at least they are predictable.

Defending privilege is unnecessary. It is its own defense. The Human primate’s drive for hierarchy requires it. Who stands for merit? Who claims that arbitrary criteria lead to superior selection? Even communists don’t believe in merit.

popular posts: