This is a continuation of http://usednotes.blogspot.com/2013/04/comments-part-i.html
Divided Government. The other day at his press conference, the President expressed the fact that we have a divided government, meaning the GOP controls the House. He inferred that because of this little gets done in Washington because of this division. This most striking comment resonated as I believe most governments in the US, since its founding, have been "divided." Yet the legislative and executive branches compromised frequently and achieved much - and congress was not so maligned by the public as it is today. It occurred to me the President must truly miss his first two years in office with a "unified" government wherein compromise was an unnecessary and unneeded tool for agreement.
It
is one thing not compromise on the basis of a firmly held principle,
and quite another not to compromise when you don't know or have
forgotten how.
The unwillingness or inability to compromise, now on both side of the aisle, is a significant reason why little happens in Washington these days.
Exhaustion. Arguable is the proposition that the British, after
two world wars, having endured their many lives lost, abject bombing,
their treasury depleted, and the will to carry on, simply gave in to
cradle-to-grave alternatives. They have. In the years following
World War II, the Brits gave up their empire to home rule, first in India, then
after the war to Nigeria and other nations. Though this was begun with
India some twenty years earlier, it was consummated with pacts signed by Eden
and McMillan following Churchill. Ague the facts, argue the reasons,
argue the logic, but one cannot argue the results. The French gave up
much sooner. With the United States a parallel obtains. It had an empire of influence, not
territory. It endured World Wars I and II, the Korean conflict, Vietnam,
and more recently the Iraq and Afghanistan events. The USA is exhausted
with war. It is no wonder that the USA is apologizing on every front to
other nations, that it is reluctant to avoid conflicts, that it reinterprets terrorist
events as one-offs, and that it avoids "boots on the ground" options at
possible every turn. It is no wonder that the USA has advanced in the
direction of a total welfare state on each and every front of need. The USA is
merely following the British model.
My guess is that the British will need another generation or two to return to their profound greatness on the world stage. The Germans have already done so. The Russians are ascending. It is not clear if or when the USA will do the same.
My guess is that the British will need another generation or two to return to their profound greatness on the world stage. The Germans have already done so. The Russians are ascending. It is not clear if or when the USA will do the same.
References:
Arthur Herman,"
Gandhi & Churchill: The Epic Rivalry that
Destroyed an Empire and Forged Our Age,"
William Manchester, "Last Lion," a trilogy on Churchill.
Rich man - poor man. Right now I'm at a meeting in San
Francisco. I'm staying on the 25th floor
of the Parc 55 hotel. Nice hotel. This morning, I left the hotel for a little
walk to the West, and within two blocks I was knee deep in street people. No jobs, no money, no prospects. This afternoon, I walked a little to the East. I was in the land of influence
and shops stocked with the finest imported goods.
As always, there were street people, but in fewer numbers, all begging
for dimes and quarters, where just an ice cream in the local shop cost nine
dollars. I stopped in a bar for a beer early this evening. It was packed with happy hour revelers. The
guys were trying to impress the girls and the girls the guys. All were totally cool. San Francisco is a city living at once in
squalid poverty and total luxury - each within a stone's throw of the
other. OK. But I'm not the first to write this
piece. It has been written almost the
same over the centuries many times and in many ways about many cities with a
quiescent impoverished class and a garish wealthy class. This nexus of
squalor and luxury has been the subject of many hundreds of novels. It seems like humanity recognizes it, accepts it, and yet is fascinated and horrified by
it - all simultaneously.
Too poor and never rich. Once a people are too poor and too beaten and too downtrodden, they have not the inclination, nor resources, nor ability to improve themselves. To the rich, they are invisible. BUT, and this is a big but, many of those in poverty let it happen, some assuming that life would be a sequence of upgrades-without-effort. It isn't. I'm not sure of the percentage of folks, but it is a sizable percentage of people that will live in perpetuity with government offered living assistance, a government offered food allowance, with no thought of rising up in the society. In fact, doing nothing for a lifetime is just fine.
Too poor and never rich. Once a people are too poor and too beaten and too downtrodden, they have not the inclination, nor resources, nor ability to improve themselves. To the rich, they are invisible. BUT, and this is a big but, many of those in poverty let it happen, some assuming that life would be a sequence of upgrades-without-effort. It isn't. I'm not sure of the percentage of folks, but it is a sizable percentage of people that will live in perpetuity with government offered living assistance, a government offered food allowance, with no thought of rising up in the society. In fact, doing nothing for a lifetime is just fine.
Comfortable subsistence is a life.
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Old technology – new technology.
Let's hear it for Steve Jobs. He was a visionary; he transformed the way we
communicate through the net and by cellular phone and by devise. I guess he was a genius. That's as far as I can go. He did
have a little mean streak. When he was
about to launch the iPad, arguably a game changing technology, he knew it would
catch on fire. Correct he was. But at the time, Apple's MOV format was
loosing a serious multimedia battle with its arch competitor, Macromedia's
Flash. One hardly saw any MOV applications,
but zillions of Flash applications. It
would have been childs play to support Flash (SWF format) on his new iPad. He didn't.
The result is that there have been wasted hundreds of thousands of Flash
applets, not to mention millions of hours lost in writing them and learning the
Action Script language. (Me included.)
But by defeating his nemesis, did he win? Only in beating back Flash. In fact, most new applets are written in the
HTML5 format, and Apple could not dare not supporting it. Movies have not been recast in the MOV
format, but the MP4 format.
In fact, the Flash technology disappeared within two years. 'Tis a shame.
All of this may seem technical if not arcane to most
readers, but it clearly illustrates the nonlinear zig-zag path of technology. One day this technology is on top, working
well, with many happy users. The next
day it is gone for good. The striking
aspect is that it has not been replaced by a better technology – just a
different technology. For the
technology, it could be called a reversal of fortune. For the practitioners, it is downright
defeating. The example here is by no means unique.
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What has happened to the young men? These days there seems to be an army of young and not-so-young men that simply cannot find their way in life. This is true in affluent and poor homes alike. The young man lives with his parents, perhaps lives with parental support, perhaps simply becomes lost in the wash of humanity. A natural question is why? One answer is this: Men no longer have a mission. When I was 14, my dad died of a heart attack. All his friends told me to "take care of your mother." This was a mission. In school, I was told year after year the importance of getting a good job to help preserve the nation and to make a comfortable living, have a comfortable home, and raise a family. I had a mission. I had to achieve. Society and my family were counting on me. It seems this has all vanished. Now the government will take care of your mother though assistance; now we have support groups to count on; now there is an equality between sexes which diminishes the young man's sense of importance and duty. It seems the young man, too many young men, have no sense of self-value, no sense of duty, no sense of importance, and no mission. Altogether too many languish in pointless, empty, half-lives, having little purpose and no clear direction.
Thinking. Some people should just not be allowed to think! Know any?
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What has happened to the young men? These days there seems to be an army of young and not-so-young men that simply cannot find their way in life. This is true in affluent and poor homes alike. The young man lives with his parents, perhaps lives with parental support, perhaps simply becomes lost in the wash of humanity. A natural question is why? One answer is this: Men no longer have a mission. When I was 14, my dad died of a heart attack. All his friends told me to "take care of your mother." This was a mission. In school, I was told year after year the importance of getting a good job to help preserve the nation and to make a comfortable living, have a comfortable home, and raise a family. I had a mission. I had to achieve. Society and my family were counting on me. It seems this has all vanished. Now the government will take care of your mother though assistance; now we have support groups to count on; now there is an equality between sexes which diminishes the young man's sense of importance and duty. It seems the young man, too many young men, have no sense of self-value, no sense of duty, no sense of importance, and no mission. Altogether too many languish in pointless, empty, half-lives, having little purpose and no clear direction.
Thinking. Some people should just not be allowed to think! Know any?
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