28th Anniversary of Ronald Reagan Quoting C.S. Lewis

I’m always a sucker for a good CS Lewis quote:

The greatest evil is not done in those sordid dens of evil that Dickens loved to paint but is conceived and ordered (moved, seconded, carried, and minuted) in clear, carpeted, warmed, well-lighted offices, by quiet men with white collars and cut fingernails and smooth-shaven cheeks who do not need to raise their voices.

But now if the quote was repeated by Ronald Reagan — with a little Screwtape thrown in as a bonus — now that is something to be savored. It might surprise you to know that it came in one of Reagan’s most famous speeches. His Evil Empire address to the National Association of Evangelicals on March 8, 1983. The part of the speech in the which the quote is incorporated, begins towards the end of his talk at the 27:25 mark.

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Miami Heat: A Fan’s Plea to Keep Track Of All Those Jumping Off The Bandwagon

Before you have even one word of conversation with anyone about the Heat today, you need to get them on the record in response to one question. The question’s genesis is rooted in more serious topics — from friend and occasional guest blogger Wichi — but can be relevant elsewhere. The question is, in or out?

Do they think the Heat will win this year? Yes or no. If the person attempts to answer that they believe the Heat can win, if they do a better job of … yada yada yada. Please inform them that that was not the question being asked and make a note that you are dealing with a weasel [i.e. Yankee fan]. Then ask them again, slowly, do they think the Heat will win this year?

File the answer away in a safe place. If their answer today is no and the Heat go on to win the NBA Championship, it is your job to remind them of their answer for the rest of their natural lives. Trust me on this one, the joy derived from such reminders will rival any fun derived from the actual team win.

Assuming we expand Teddy Roosevelt’s ‘Man in the Arena’ concept to include those who support those literally in the Arena, then today’s Heat detractors fit the “cold and timid souls” description nicely.

It is not the critic who counts; not the man who points out how the strong man stumbles, or where the doer of deeds could have done them better. The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena, whose face is marred by dust and sweat and blood; who strives valiantly; who errs, who comes short again and again, because there is no effort without error and shortcoming; but who does actually strive to do the deeds; who knows great enthusiasms, the great devotions; who spends himself in a worthy cause; who at the best knows in the end the triumph of high achievement, and who at the worst, if he fails, at least fails while daring greatly, so that his place shall never be with those cold and timid souls who neither know victory nor defeat.

Like the upcoming recall, I’m in with a yes.

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Shakey Scales of Justice

I thought the recent profile of Shakey Rodriguez by the Miami Herald’s Linda Robertson highlighted a key point which is frequently overlooked when judging high school coaches:

Rodriguez, 57, has done a lot of winning in 26 years. He’s also taught five or six history classes every day throughout his teaching career. He earns a $2,860 salary supplement for his countless extra hours in the gym.

I am a casual acquaintance of Shakey Rodriguez and a loyal Miami High alumni. I’ve rooted for the guy for many years. There are times where being a loyal alumni can create a blind spot. But not here I submit. Being a loyal alumni allows me to look past administrator legalese and pose the type of questions behavioral economists might ask and earn praise for their detached analysis; What is the incentive to dedicate your life to coaching at the high school level? Who does that and why? What are the incentives of the government officials who control high school sports? Who oversees those officials? What is the incentive of the local media?

The current rule system practically guarantees that players from poorer backgrounds will attempt to violate rules which discourage their movement. Players with talent are best served by playing with and against the best competition to increase their exposure. Parents with enough financial resources can either move to the needed address or enroll in private institutions. Meanwhile disadvantaged kids are supposed to allow their careers to be dictated by their addresses. If you were the parent of a talented player, but with no money to relocate, would you passively sit back and watch that talent go unnoticed or under-developed at your assigned school? In order for someone to determine that coaches are the problem in scenarios where high school students seek to play for the school of their choice, they have to ignore how much incentive there is for players to move.

Who benefits from maintaining the current scenario? I can think of at least one group. State government bureaucrats whose arbitrary determination as to who to investigate and who to exonerate gives them power. Because the same people who benefit from the current rule structure would be responsible for changing those rules, it almost guarantees that those rules will not change. The idea that coaches who invest thousands of hours for practically zero financial rewards are the villains in this scenario is not convincing.

I don’t think that there is much to the supposed scandals associating with recruiting at the high school level. It’s always the same scenario begging for a more creative solution. A real need to change the system so that freedom of movement is available to families lacking financial resources. Think of that the next time you hear about the scandal of a high school athlete trying to attend the school of their choice.

The truth is that we the general public never really think about issues like this until we happen to know, or know of, one of the parties involved. If we happen to have a high opinion of that person, as I do of Rodriguez, that is when we attempt to look past the salacious headlines. To my way of thinking, no evil or even bad guys here, just a flawed system with no incentives to correct it.

Since Miami Herald article links expire, the entire Robertson article is copied at end of this post
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Robert Kagan: Why No Love For Colombia?

Before Egyptian protests initially began on Jan 25th, Robert Kagan had an Op-Ed in the Jan 23rd Washington Post which stated the following:

But sometimes American policy is as incomprehensible as it is regrettable, as damaging to our interests as to our ideals. Consider the case of two countries: Colombia and Egypt . They’re both important to American interests. Colombia is on the front lines in the war against narcotics traffickers and narcoterrorists in Latin America. It is a staunch pro-American ally in a region threatened by Venezuela’s tyrannical Hugo Chavez and his various cronies in Bolivia, Ecuador and Nicaragua. Egypt has been an important player in the Arab world; it maintains a cold but durable peace with Israel and is an ally against Iran and in the fight against radical Islamic terrorism. Both Colombia and Egypt have received billions of dollars in U.S. aid over the years. 

Now for the differences. Colombia is a democratic success story. Once plagued by guerrilla insurgencies and murderous paramilitaries, with wealthy drug lords controlling major cities, Colombia is in the midst of a political and economic renaissance. Under the brilliant and enlightened democratic leadership of Alvaro Uribe for eight years, the narcoterrorist FARC was beaten back, the drug cartels of Cali and Medellin were all but destroyed, and a poor human rights record began to improve. Last summer Colombia held free and fair presidential elections, and already, Juan Manuel Santos has demonstrated a remarkably open and liberal approach to governing. As The Post’s Juan Forero recently reported, Santos has pushed legislation to compensate victims of Colombia’s long guerrilla war, including those who suffered at the hands of security forces. He is trying to return millions of acres stolen from campesinos by corrupt politicians. In a world where democracy is retreating and authoritarianism is advancing, Colombia stands out brightly against the trend.

For now, the amazing the timing of Kagan’s comments — in effect having history confirm his analysis in a matter of days — is overshadowing the 2nd country in his analysis. Why the hostility towards Colombia by the Obama Administration? Why would an Administration struggling to ‘appear’ more amenable to free-market solutions oppose a free-trade agreement negotiated and signed five years ago with a strong ally? I think the answer is tied to the reasons the Administration supported former President Zelaya’s efforts to replicate a Chavez-stlye subversion of democracy in Honduras.

Here’s my shot at why. His political roots are with the Left. While he has shown the discipline to do what is necessary to get and stay in power [i.e. Afghanistan], at some point a person’s early influences and psychological allegiances matter. Maybe because a part of them resents that Colombia defeated the FARC guerrillas. Why would they have any allegiance towards the narcoterrorist FARC? Who knows, maybe they grew up rooting for so-called Latin American revolutionaries and resented Reagan’s support of the Contras in Nicaragua. Proxy payback anyone?

The Kagan article referenced is copied in full at end of post.

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Leaders Who Believe In Free-Markets

The WSJ’s great Mary Anastasia O’Grady reports on one country’s efforts to create free-market oriented cities. The country has leaders who make the type of statements noted below.

  • Leader 1 – What I love about the concept is two things. First, that we will employ the best practices from similar projects around the world that have been successful. Second that it is entirely voluntary for people to move in. They are the ones who will protect it.
  • Leader 2 – If we want to develop we have to find a way to counterbalance the populism that causes us so much harm. The model city is a way of decentralizing power and connecting people to their government.

Pop quiz: The above quotes come from one of the following [as in all multiple-choice questions, 2 of the possible answers are absurd]:

  1. Obama Administration officials
  2. Islamic Brotherhood
  3. Hong Kong
  4. Hounduras

PS. In response to hundreds of reader comments, while they might be kindred spirits in some respects, answers #1 & #2 are not the same.

The O’Grady article referenced is copied in full at end of post.

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Verizon iPhone an improvement?

Perception: Verizon is superior to AT&T, so their iPhone is the better buy.

Reality: Verizon voice calls are better, but their data network is inferior.

This according to the WSJ’s Walt Mossberg:

What about the trade-offs? Chief among them is data speed. I performed scores of speed tests on the two phones, which I used primarily in Washington, and its Maryland and Virginia suburbs, and for part of one day at Chicago’s O’Hare Airport. In these many tests, despite a few Verizon victories here and there, AT&T’s network averaged 46% faster at download speeds and 24% faster at upload speeds. This speed difference was noticeable while doing tasks like downloading large numbers of emails, or waiting for complicated Web pages to load. AT&T’s speeds varied more while Verizon’s were more consistent, but overall, AT&T was more satisfying at cellular data.

Also, because Verizon’s iPhone—like most other Verizon phones—doesn’t work on the world-wide GSM mobile-phone standard, you can’t use it in most countries outside the U.S. AT&T’s iPhone does work on this standard, and can be used widely abroad, albeit at very high roaming rates. In the midst of my testing, I had to travel to Hong Kong, one of the few countries where the Verizon iPhone functions. But even there, it only worked for voice, not data, at least in the areas where I was working. The AT&T model handled both voice and data everywhere I tried it there.

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Milton Friedman on Hayek

Perception: Milton Friedman was a conservative.

Reality: Friedman, and Hayek, saw themselves as radical in attacking the root of the problem [socialism].

Tyler Cowen from Marginal Revolution recommended this C-SPAN Book TV video from 1994 featuring Milton Friedman being interviewed by Brian Lamb about the 50th anniversary release of Hayek’s book The Road to Serfdom. At the 50:30 mark, when asked about Kenneth Galbraith, Friedman explains beautifully about the difference between socialism and freedom and why he is no conservative, as we now — now being the latter half of the 20th century, hey the dude was born in 1912 — define it. So while someone like Friedman would probably have issues with the particulars of specific Tea Party proposals, I believe he would have supported the movement itself.

How good was Milton Friedman? He’s been dead for 5 years and the hyper-partisan Paul Krugman is still afraid to cross him.

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What Andre Frossard Saw In The Chapel

Andre Frossard passed away Feb 2 1995. During the last 30 years of his life, he was a columnist in English and French for Le Figaro newspaper. Prior to that, Frosard was arrested by the Gestapo [Klaus Barbie] as part of the French Resistance and tortured by the Nazi’s. Prior to that, Frossard had a powerful conversion. A little background from his obituary about that conversion in The Independent:

… His grandmother was Jewish, his mother a Lutheran Protestant, his father, Ludovic-Oscar Frossard, an official atheist who was first secretary of the Communist Party and later a socialist minister.

The young Frossard discovered religion when he entered a chapel to look for a friend in July 1935 … “I was as surprised,” he wrote, “to find myself a Catholic when I left the chapel as I would have been to find myself a giraffe when I left the zoo.”

Who stops by a Chapel at 5am? What happened in that chapel? Glad you asked. Frossard recounted his conversion in his book, “God Exists. I Have Met Him”:

“Having entered a chapel in the Latin Quarter of Paris at 5:10 in the morning to look for a friend, I left at a quarter after 5 in the company of a friendship that was not of this earth. Having entered as a skeptic and an atheist…and ever more skeptical and atheistic, indifferent and preoccupied with so many things other than a God to Whom I never even gave a thought even to deny… I was standing by the door, looking around with my eyes for my friend, but did not succeed in finding him…

“My gaze passed from the shadows to the light…from the faithful gathered there, to the nuns, to the altar…and came to rest above the second candle burning to the left of the Cross (unaware that I was standing in the presence of the Blessed Sacrament). And at that point,

    suddenly a series of miracles unfolded whose indescribable force shattered in an instant the absurd being that I was, to bring to birth the amazed child that I had never been

… At first the hint of these words, ‘Spiritual Life’ came to me… as if they had been pronounced in a whisper next to me… then came a great light… a world, another world of a radiance and a destiny that in one stroke cast our world among the fragile shadows of unfulfilled dreams… of which I felt all the sweetness… a sweetness that was active and upsetting beyond every form of violence, capable of breaking the hardest stone and that which is even harder than stone – the human heart. Its overflowing eruption, so complete, was accompanied by a joy which is the exultation of the saved, the joy of the shipwrecked who is picked up just in time. These sensations, which I find difficult to translate into a language which cannot capture these ideas and images, were all simultaneous… Everything is dominated by the Presence… of Him of Whom I would never be able to write His name without fear of harming its tenderness, of Him before Whom I have had the good fortune to be a forgiven child who wakes up to discover that everything is a gift… God existed and was present… one thing only surprised me: The Eucharist! Not that it seemed incredible, but it amazed me that Divine Charity would have come upon this silent way to communicate Himself, and above all that He would choose to become bread, which is the staple of the poor, and the food preferred by children… O Divine Love, eternity will be too short to speak of You.”

Try and forget that story the next chapel you walk into.

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Vortex Discharges, Snickers and Communism

There are various one-liners ricocheting off each other in my head. The lines are like pliant pets, once in the brain, their sole purpose is to be ready if called to the vortex by some seemingly random triggering event, irrespective of the period they spent dormant. More than one of those lines came from a Woody Allen movie or book [p.48 plz]. One of the lines entailed Allen patiently explaining to his dinner hosts that he would gladly eat any meat they would have cooked, given that he only practices vegetarianism at home. Since then, whenever I spot half-hearted wannabe posers, other than in the mirror, the movie scene plays in my head.

The latest triggering event came as a result of a Catholic men’s group, Emmaus, which I am a part of, and how we handle paying for meals when we get a large group together. [Vortex discharge – Mel Brooks line about the waiter at the Last Supper asking, ‘separate checks?’]. We began to have an issue that those of us who remained to pay for the bill often had to put in additional money. We quickly decided that everybody pays $20 — most of the menu is around $10-12 plus a couple of pitchers and appetizers for the group — problem seemingly solved.

Except that it turns out that if people showed up and weren’t that hungry, had recently measured their cholesterol, or were just allowing their liver’s to dry out, then the $20 flat rate got a little grating. In addition, once the flat rate went into effect, the advantage clearly shifted from the cheap bastards to the stragglers. Now instead of having to fork over more money, we were left with excess funds despite a generous tip. Returning the money was viewed as impractical. [Vortex discharge – Barzini …. ‘after all we’re not Communists’].

I forget what came first, the idea that returning the excess funds was impractical or the Ice Cream Snickers bars. See what we decided to do with the excess monies was to eat Ice Cream Snickers bars until the excess funds were used up. I’ve bought and eaten Ice Cream Snickers bars all across this great country of ours, but none have tasted as good as those paid for by my unsuspecting brethren in the Faith.

Nothing like a little real world research — or as we like to say in Miami, ‘see this is why communism is such a disaster’ — among friends in the faith to expose and confirm certain sociological / economic ideas.

  • Hypothesis #1 – Lack of ownership equals a lack of accountability. When the early leavers [i.e. cheap bastards] left money, they never seemed to account for the pitchers and wings shared by the group. True.
  • Hypothesis #2 – When there is no direct correlation between effort and reward, effort suffers. The stragglers would have gladly figured out who owed more when they had to make up the difference, but deemed it impractical to return excess funds. True.
  • Hypothesis #3 – Collectivism discourages thrift. While the Pilgrim experience is no doubt instructive, the Snickers Saga is the kill shot, i.e. ‘la tapita al pomo.’ True.

My only irrational fear in life is being outside Miami on the day the stench of the Castro brothers is removed from Cuba. I have never really thought about what I want to do that day, but now I know that I will be eating an Ice Cream Snickers bar on that day. So let me officially welcome ‘Snickers, the Collectivists snack of choice‘ to the list of vortex discharges.

No mention of Woody Allen would be complete without repeating the joke at the end of Annie Hall – for youtube video click here.

I thought of that old joke, y’know, the, this… this guy goes to a psychiatrist and says, “Doc, uh, my brother’s crazy; he thinks he’s a chicken.” And, uh, the doctor says, “Well, why don’t you turn him in?” The guy says, “I would, but I need the eggs.”

H/T to Alex for idea.

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Abuelo’s ALF Spells Trouble for Cuban Goverment

Recently, a Cuban government ministry [i.e. the Castros] issued a comically ungrateful statement bemoaning the fact that the recent Obama administration loosening of travel restrictions did not go far enough.

It made me wonder what a Cuban government official would say if they could speak with impunity.

Do you think your statement will have an effect?
No, but it gives our compañeros in the press an excuse to repeat our appeals.

Is pleading for compassion for a such miserably failed state really in your best interests at this point?
Clearly it may have reached its limits, but we are all grateful for the work. If you would of heard of some of the ideas we rejected, perhaps you would understand why we do what we do.

OK I’ll bite, like what?
We have studies which show that Cuban-Americans getting Federal aid through Medicaid are only sending us 19% of their net remittances. That number was in the mid 20’s just a few years ago. We believe they can and should do better.

Why haven’t they been as generous?
Frankly, the trend towards the use of ALF’s–not this kind–has been a serious blow to the Revolution’s financial planning. We hope to see some improvement by the so-called death panels. The end of life spending is just out of control.

What will you do now?
Our options are limited, once a patient is accepted ….

No, I meant the Cuban government.
Well my mandate is to get the remittance number into the 30’s.

Does not seem terribly realistic.
I view it as my personal sugar harvest quota. Look, no one likes to say it, but given the realities of the shift in Congress, a tragic humanitarian event is our best chance to move the needle on this issue.

Like a hurricane?
Yeah, but we’re not even in season. Then again, I was sure in 2008 that Hurricane Ike was our meal ticket. That’s one of the negative side effects of being part of such a lengthy revolution, all our assumptions get to play themselves out. It’s been a problem truthfully.

That was impressive. You just described the government’s ongoing abject failure in neutral terms.
Like Allen Iverson says, practice, practice, practice. In Castro’s Cuba, progress is exclusive to the future.

Seriously, no Plan B.
Hey this is a 50 year old regime. The Mouse That Roared wasn’t just a movie to us, it represented a plan. We’ve been propped up by countries in four continents and outsourced to a fifth — we hate the cold and Australians.

Plan B? We’re on plan Omega brother.

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