Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category
Occupy This
I am sitting here this morning in a sort of odd frame of mind. I actually have classes today, which borders on the absurd. Virtually no one will come, and the ones who do will not be paying attention.
I’m also less inclined than I might otherwise be to have a fit about this, because I know something about how hard it can be to get train tickets for the Thanksgiving break.
I’ve tried to buy train tickets for Matt on the Monday before Thanksgiving and lost the place in the time it takes to get the registration form to load.
So I’m just sort of wandering around the house this morning, feeling aimless. And since that’s the case, I’m reading a lot of things I wouldn’t have bothered with if I’d been busier.
And I have a question.
Why do so many people who write stuff insist on thinking–or saying they think–that the Occupy Wall Street movement is “significant” and likely to cause big changes any day now?
Before one side or the other goes into huge paroxysms about how the media is all leftist or all rightest or the police don’t bug the tea party, I’d like to point something out.
I was there the last time.
I not only marched against the war, I got arrested for it a couple of times, and I was on the organizing staff of at least two rallies.
We got a lot more people in those days, and we caused a lot more disruption one way or the other.
But no matter how much people like to claim otherwise, what we did not do was usher in a grass-roots resurgence of liberal (we’d now call it “progressive”) principle.
To the extent that the old anti-Vietnam War movement did anything at all at the grass roots, it ushered in thirty years of steadily growing conservative hegemony.
By the time Barack Obama was elected President of the United States, political discourse in the US had moved so far to the right that it would have been unrecognizable to anybody who had grown up during the New Deal.
This can be a little difficult to recognize, because both sides persistantly refuse to honestly define their opponent’s positions, and the Left especially has a set of complete cliches about what is supposedly going on on “the right.”
Mind you, the right is no slouch in the direction of making a mess of its reports about the other side, but for whatever reason, its operatives have been a lot more careful about making sure that they’re targeting real opponents and not fantasy ones.
The right, in other words, has been considerably more interested in winning elections.
The National Review, for instance–William F. Buckley’s flagship conservative magazine–has spent the last several issues discussing the disconnect between working class white voters and the core conservative base–
The core conservative base wants to end entitlement programs, the working class white voters want to retain and expand them.
And that particular series of articles has been refreshing in what it has not done–it has not ascribed the policy preferences of these voters as somehow arising from their inability to understand what’s in their own interests, or due to their “fear of change’ and all the rest of that rot.
In other words, the articles treat voters with whom the writers disagree with respect in the only sense “respect” be in a case like this–as being fully competent human beings who know their own minds.
You treat people like that, and you might almost get them to listen to you.
OWS, however, seems to be doing all the usual things and receiving all the usual yawn-intensive reaction from the man in the street–unless it does something that gets that man absolutely furious, like blocking an off-ramp to I-84 in Hartford during rush hour.
The OWS thing reminds me of the riots we have to have anytime the G-8 meets–exercises in faux-revolutionary nostalgia rather than serious political statements of any sort, and, as always, claiming to speak for a lot of people who resent the hell out of so being spoken for.
And nostalgia seems to be what is going on for a lot of the writers who are writing about the movement, both in favor and against. Picking up the political magazines this week has been like time travel: there are the liberals proclaiming that Young People are Changing Everything, and there are the conservatives talking about how people on these protests should bathe and get a job.
And buried under all this, of course, are actual issues that both sides agree on–or at least both sides attending OWS and Tea Party rallies.
The banks shouldn’t have been bailed out, and the bankers should have been subject to criminal prosecution in some cases and civil suits capable of doing them serious economic damage in others.
That’s one.
College costs too much. NCLB should be abolished. George W. Bush was a bad president.
Those are some more.
In the meantime, I have to listen to a lot of nonsense about how Authentic they all are (from liberals) and how unwashed they all are (from conservatives).
They’re neither, really. They’re just playing games, and provoking reactions they expect will be largely safe enough.
Then they give press conferences where they declare that obviously the Establishment is against them, or else why do they get pepper spray and riot police when the Tea Party does not.
They expect nobody to notice that Tea Party rallies get all the necessary permits, show up when they say they will and leave when they say they will, and clean up after themselves.
But it’s okay if they don’t notice it, because it’s mostly a game, the object of which is to be able to declare that you’re Sincere and Moral, unlike all those idiots wearing American flags on their hats and talking about the second amendment.
I played that game once, and it ended up making me embarrassed.
These days, it just makes me tired.
Free Whatevers
Well, today has come, and I feel almost human. At least for the moment.
I think I might be able to get back to the Liberal Education thing by the week-end, if the holiday doesn’t kick my ass in ways that require me to rant nonstop for a couple of days.
But let’s get to Michael’s question: how does someone in a free market compete for work against free labor?
And the question confuses me in a number of ways.
The first part of my confusion is that it seems to be an unnecessary question–you can see it all around us as we speak.
A job pays what it has to pay for an employer to find people willing to work for him who have the skills and credentials he thinks he needs to get the job done.
If an employer tries to pay less than that, he gets people without the skills or qualities he wants. If he pays more, he either kicks himself in the butt or he can demand higher skills and credentialing levels–he can count on being sought out by the best of the best in the skill/field/vocation.
There is, of course, no “free labor” in the US at this time, not only because of the minimum wage–which is largely a negligible factor, for a number of reasons–but because of things like antidiscrimination law, which require employers to be very careful about any standard they set that might end up looking as if it has a “disparate impact” by race or gender.
Henry Ford could probably not get away with his famous $5 wage rate (or its equivalent) today, because he’d almost certainly find that the standards he was setting for hiring would be declared discriminatory.
But in spite of the modifications, we compete in the labor market with “free labor” all the time.
Which made it a little confusing as a question.
But I think the underlying assumptions run like this:
Big corporations have all the resources and they control all the jobs. They can set wages anywhere they want. If they are not restrained in some way–minimum wage laws; unions; whatever–they will set those wages at starvation rates, and we will have to grovel and take it because otherwise we will go homeless and starving in the streets.
Actually, the assumptions go even deeper than that, but let me try to work with the above scenario.
1) It’s an incredibly passive way of looking at the world. All productive activity occurs elsewhere. All invention happens elsewhere. “Ordinary people”–meaning people who aren’t, say, Steve Wozniak–have no other choices but to take whatever they’re handed.
But this is not the world I live in. I come from the ethnic traditions I come from–THERE’S a grammar disaster for you–and that of course skews my perceptions some, but one of those traditions feels about working for other people the way Jewish dietary law feels about pork.
Never mind the fact that most people in the US don’t work for large corporations.
What working for a large corporation does–or has done at times–is to afford some people a stable source of employment that comes with lots of perks, like company-subsidized health insurance and retirement pensions.
And that, of course, is very nice. It’s a lot easier than what my grandparents (and a fair number of my cousins) did and are doing. It takes a lot less effort, at least seems to eliminate a lot of uncertainty and worry, and provides that “middle class way of life” whose standards are always steadily marching upwards.
But it’s an illusion to think that it was ever the life for more than a tiny minority of people in this country, never mind on this planet.
Of course, there are also
2) Unions, which are kind of a mixed bag.
Unions may work for their members, if the conditions are right. They did very well by auto workers for decades, for instance, but they did so because:
a) manufacturing could not be shipped internationally. It had to be done here, which limited the available labor in one way and
b) it consisted largely of skilled work, which limited the available labor in another way and
c) the companies involved were not only prosperous, but prosperous in such a way that they had no significant competition from anywhere else.
Given those conditions, labor unions do a wonderful job for their members.
Some of what they do will even spill over to their nonmembers.
But one of the things I have always found curious is the tendency of people proclaiming the Postive Unalloyed Good of Unions to face the fact that for nonmembers, unions often don’t look like such a good deal. And that goes for forced members, too.
Go down to your local community college, and you’ll find a nice handful of highly educated people who are liberal in every other sense who froth at the mouth at the mention of unions. They’re “adjuncts,” and they are required to pay for “representation” by the local college teachers’ union which sees its job as protecting the perks and pay of full time faculty against the very part time faculty they claim to also “represent.”
This system has resulted, by the way, not in better pay and conditions for college teachers, but for better pay and conditions for a small handful of college teachers and largely worse pay and conditions for the part timers.
And that’s in teaching, which is a profession that fits the above three conditions.
Union demands pretty much killed off newspapers in most major cities, because in a world where newspapers had to compete with television and radio, they couldn’t pay the demanded salaries and benefits and still produce a product at a price people were willing to pay for it.
So unions will modify the landscape for some people under the right conditions.
What modifies the landscape for all people is labor law, which is something very different.
It’s more stable, but it ends up hitting reality in the face in the same way as above, it just takes longer.
3) But the REAL underlying assumption is this: somebody else has put his life, his effort, his money into building a business. If he wants to hire people to work for him in that business, he automatically owes those people (irrespective not only of the market, but of reality) a certain standard of living.
Why?
The guy who invents the automobile can make his product himself by hand in his garage and get rich selling each individually crafted project to people who want it.
In fact, that happened.
Henry Ford, among others, figured out that he could make even more money mass producing them.
But the choice was not between “having a good job with Ford” and “having a bad job with Ford.” It was between “having a job” and “not having a job.”
The jobs did not need to exist. They aren’t a natural resource, just there for us to stumble upon.
And, hell, natural resources require all kinds of inputs from actual human beings before they’re worth anything.
Change is inevitable. You cannot protect yourself from it in the long run. None of us is guaranteed that the world we’re born into will look anything at all like the world we leave when we die.
All life is risk and uncertainty.
And in reality it can never be anything else.
Fair
I’ve probably used that as a post title before.
I’m too wrung out to go look at the moment.
But I knew, all the way back two weeks ago, when the electricity had been out for five days, that what was going to come of that was that I was going to get sick, and I got sick.
I got royally sick.
This morning, though, I just feel–after eleven hours of sleep–as if I’d run two marathons back to back and will never want to move again.
But I can type, so here I am.
I’ve been watching with a certain amount of interest the discussions in the comments, and I want to make a few observations:
First, I’m with Robert on the issue of “sustainability.” What cannot be sustained will fail. Sometimes what would fail needs to be accounted for in some way–say, the generators at the local hospitals, which were not meant to go continuously for nine to eleven days–but other times it does not, and the present distribution of wages in corporations seems one of the latter.
But the thing that really struck me was the thing about how, even though American workers have become so much more productive, their wages have not risen accordingly.
And it struck me because it’s one of those things whose particulars are never spelled out.
In this way, it reminds me of the thing about “back in 1970, families could afford to have mother stay at home full time with the children.”
The problem with that one is that its underlying assumption–never actually stated–is that the only reason most mothers are now in the workforce is that their families can’t afford to have them stay home.
I think that is probably demonstrably false, and that if we went back to a family-wage system with lots of money for the breadwinners, most women now would still elect to work, even when their children were fairly small.
The problem with the productivity and wages of American workers is this: it does not indicate in any way why American workers are more productive or if those workers are the same ones who were doing the jobs 40 years ago.
The way the proposition is stated makes it seem as if what is going on is this:
Susan works as a typist. Through her own effort, industry and talent, she has made adjustments to the way she works that result in her greater productivity for her employer. Therefore, it is only “fair” that her salary should have risen with her productivity.
I don’t really like the whole “fair” thing. I’m with the people who say it’s mostly a childish world, meant to demand a world that does not exist. JFK was right, life isn’t fair, and never will be–and it probably shouldn’t be. Justice is one thing. Fairness is–well, nobody quite knows what it is.
In this case, though, I think the underlying, unstated assumption is almost certainly wrong.
If Susan is more productive at her job, it is not because she worked and innovated to get that way, but because somebody else, somewhere else, invented new machinery or processes that make it possible for her to be more productive, even if she’s done nothing about how she herself works at what she does.
In that scenario, I don’t see how even a vague standard like “fairness” would require us to pay Susan more. Susan’s greater productivity is not the result of anything she has contributed to the enterprise.
And even with that, I’m outside the realm of the real world, where even if Susan HAD behaved as in the first scenario above, her salary would be determined by the law of supply and demand.
But let’s leave the law of supply and demand for the moment and look at the other part of the problem:
The “is it fair” scenario assumes that the worker whose productivity has risen is the same worker, or at least a worker with similar qualifications as the first.
But this is not necessarily the case. In fact, it’s not even likely.
Fifty years ago, a worker who could barely do arithmatic couldn’t work as a cashier. With the old, non-digital cash registers there was still quite a lot of arithmatic to be done.
You can see the issue clearly in those few restaurants and bars where “servers” still run banks–that is, they’re given a set amount of money at the start of the night and expected to make change for customers from it. When the night is over, they dump their money out, pay back the house the amount in the original bank (they’ll have given the money collected from tabs to the house as the night went on) and whatever is left is their tips.
This is a lot harder than it sounds.
But these days, a worker whose arithmatic is rank awful, or nonexistent, can still work as a cashier in anyplace where servers don’t run banks, because digital cash registers have taken all the guess work and side problems out of cashiering.
Hell, in some places, workers can be cashiers even if they can’t read. Some of the fast food restaurants have cash registers with pictures of their products on them, and the cashier doesn’t even have to punch in the price.
Forty years ago, a worker with these skill levels would not have been working as a cashier, and would have been working at something (if at all) paid much less than cashiers were paid then.
That worker has seen her wages rise, even if the wages for the position have not–it is a position she could not have held before the technological changes, and all the positions she could have held would have paid much less.
And, I will admit, my best guess is that what we’re seeing is more like scenario three than the original set of unstated assumptions.
And at that point, what we’re seeing is not only not “not fair,” but the whole thing about “workers’ wages are stagnating” is mostly an illusion.
And that is especially the case if the worker with the skills required for the original position as cashier has gone on to another job which, due to technology, now requires her skills instead of the greater ones she doesn’t have that would have made her ineligible for it.
Okay, I can type this morning, but maybe I can’t write.
I can see a lot of things that I think are illegitimate in this system as it stands.
I don’t think it’s “socialism” as of yet–the largest difference between socialism and capitalism is not whether or not business are regulated (there’s always some regulation) or whether or not social programs exist (there have always been some of those) but whether redistribution of resources is seen as a fundamental function of the government–and we are, thankfully, not there yet.
I do think that we’re rapidly going down the road of corporatism, and that is just as bad and possibly worse.
That is, there should have been no bailouts, and the people at the heads of the banks and the coroporations that engaged in that spree of risky lending should have been allowed to crash and been held liable in courts for the money they bilked people out of.
But the bubble and the crash came about precisely because we didn’t make that a principle up front–because through Fannie and Freddie we guaranteed risky mortgages that were likely to fail, thereby making banks feel they had nothing to lose by making such mortgages, since they couldn’t get hurt if they DID fail.
And that was as much a matter of Democratic Party policies as Republican ones. It was the Clinton administration that demanded that the banks make more loans to low-income people and Barney Frank that led the charge requiring Fannie and Freddie to lower their accounting standards in order to guarantee such loans.
It was both Bush and Obama who pushed for bailouts. The big difference there was that the Bush administration was just bailing out the banks. The Obama administration seems to have been bailing out everybody.
“Fair” is not only not possible, it’s not even advisible.
Rational, however, is both, and nobody is being rational here.
I’m going to go have some tea and music.
I throw this out
http://lareviewofbooks.org/post/12835528594/the-educational-lottery
as being on the subject we started talking about all those weeks ago.
102
So, here we are. It’s Thursday, and after spending nearly a week feeling sort of yuck, I now have a fever good and proper and everything looks like glass.
I’m not necessarily complaining about this. It was more or less inevitable when the electricity–and the heat–stayed out for eight days and four hours.
And I have nearly a week coming up, after tomorrow, when I have virtually nothing to do at all but collect a kid from the train station.
But in the meantime, I’m not very coherent.
That said–
I think the problem is defining “a family could live on one standard.”
Many years ago I came across a book called The Way Home by a woman named Mary Pride.
She was then–and may be now–a big noise in the Christian homeschooling movement, but her book was about how women could choose to stay home full time. And her big caveat thing was this–it’s always possible to do this if you’re willing to live on your husband’s income.
And her point, of course, is that most families are not willing to live on one income. When they say it’s “impossible,” what they usually mean is that they’re not willing to go without the things that would make it feasible.
My guess is that most families could live on one income if they were willing to live the way our families did when they only had one income–houses in the 900 to 1200 sf range, no air conditioning, no cable, one family car, new clothes bought at the start of the school year and restricted to what was absolutely necessary (shoes, for instance, consisting of one pair of school shoes, one pair of dress shoes, and one pair of sneakers of the cheap variety).
I think we vastly underestimate the difference in the definition of “a middle class standard of living” between the 50s and late 60s and now. I came from a very well-off family, and I got a new coat, new dress and new dress shoes for Easter, plus maybe five skirts and sweaters for “school clothes” and a pair of school shoes, plus a winter coast if I’d outgrown the last one, plus those inevitable Keds for gym. When I got to high school, my father let me have a purse.
One.
And that was pretty much the shot for all of us, including those of us from families who were undeniably rich. My mother was the full time wife of a “prominent” and very well paid attorney, and she cleaned her own house.
So my guess is, most of us, even in the Great Recession, could live on a single salary IF we were willing to live on it. Mostly, we aren’t.
As to ab’s suggestion that there might be a link between restrictions on the workforce–no children allowed, women at home–and higher salaries for working class and middle class men: a couple of things.
First, working class wives always worked, even back then. They were just restricted as to what they could work at. Aside from nursing and teaching, they were largely barred from the better paying working class jobs. Men worked the shop floor, and only men in the best paid places. Men were the firemen, the policemen, even the garbagemen, and a lot of unions worked very hard to keep women out.
Which makes me think that there should be some connection between higher wages and the restriction of the workforce (keeping children and women out), because limiting the supply vis a vis the demand drives wages up. That is, after all, what unions do. They restrict the workforce at a company to a subset of all possible workers in the economy and then use that restricted supply to force up wages and benefits.
As to whether women went out to work because men were no longer making a living wage, or women went out to work to raise their family’s standard of living–
If I remember rightly, being of the generation when women first went out to work, my guess is that the answer is: neither.
Women of my kind and class weren’t interested in raising the family’s standard of living, because we weren’t interested in getting married and having families.
What we were resisting was largely the idea that what we were supposed to do with our very extensive educations was to settle down somewhere and housewife, or–more and more common for the “girls” who came just before us–work for a few years as a secretary or assistant and then chuck it as soon as we got a wedding ring.
I can say with some confidence that, for myself, I wouldn’t have been interested in that narrative. And it got less and less interesting as public pressure brought an end to the more obvious forms of discrimination–the policy at Time, for instance, to hire men right out of college as writers, but women right out of college as researchers, at half the money.
Or the policies at most of the top law and medical schools of restricting the women admitted to any class to single digits.
But after all of this, I still think that the real reason wages have been stagnating is this: the period at the end of WWII represents an historical anomaly that won’t come again.
We’re just not the only industrial country in the world any more.
There’s actually competition out there.
And, unfortunately, we got to a place where it looked so natural to us to be the only man standing that we have convinced ourselves that:
a) we should just live like that without having to work very hard for it or to practice self-control or deferred gratification and
b) that if we don’t get it, there must be some vast conspiracy somewhere that’s denying it to us.
And now I really feel awful, and I’m going to go off and find some tea.
Today, unfortunately, I do have things to do.
Liberte, Egalitie…
In a way, it’s odd to be talking about this when the post I’m mapping out to start the second phase of “places where a resurgence of the liberal arts education seems to have led to a society-wide rise in moral standards” is largely bound up with just this conflict between liberty and security, and therefore almost necessarily between individualism and unity.
And I am, you know, what I am. I am not the kind of perso who “fits” very well pretty much anywhere–to the point where I sometimes think I subconsciously react against any and all attempts to allow me to fit by getting very prickly. I’m not a Republican or a Democrat. I’m not a liberal or a conservative. I’m even an introvert or an extrovert depending on where I am and what I’m doing.
And I have been, over the course of my life, on the receiving end of several attempts to fix me. I suppose it was a piece of good luck that I landed in school only at the very beginning of the craze for “diagnosing” children with all kinds of “disorders” if they didn’t conform to what everybody else thought they should be doing in school.
Even at the very beginning, though, there was a fair amount of clucking about my being “unbalanced” (all she ever wants to do is read and write–she needs to do some sports and get out and have fun) and a lot of consternation about the fact that I would not only challenge teachers, but refuse to back down.
And I admit to being a little astonished that my own generation, which was so militantly opposed to conformity in principle for much of its youth, now seems to revel in a system whose entire purpose it to impose conformity by any means necessary.
Because, you know, that’s what this is.
All of it–from seat belt laws to freshman orientation “diversity training’ to the labeling of any diversion from a narrowly defined “normality” a “disorder” to be medicated–is a systemic attempt to impose universal conformity by force.
We talk a lot about diversity, but it’s really the last thing we want. We are required to think alike in all things deemed important–and even where we’re encouraged to find our “individual voices,” we’re only encouraged as long as those voices produce the generally accpeted platitudes.
Any real diversity–a black guy who is opposed to affirmative action, a woman who thinks sexual harrassment law is unjust to men, a Latina who wants to stop illegal immigration–and the system begins to give evidence of being about to pop an aneurism.
We’re not even subtle about it.
It’s what gets me about the nature of the climate change debate.
Forget, for a moment, about the specifics of the science, and look at the argument as it tends to be presented.
What is that argument? “A consensus of scientists…”
This is the ad populam fallacy. It amounts to saying “it’s true because everybody says so!”
And no, the status of scientists as “experts” does not change the nature of that argument. Stampeding experts have been wrong before. They’ve been wrong often.
The mere fact that the majority of scientists accepts conclusion X does not in and of itself make conclusion X true.
We do everything by consensus these days, and it’s really frightening. And we have far less tolerance for real diversity than we had in the Fifties. We are determined not only that we will all think alike–smoking it bad, helmets increase safety when riding a motorcycle, the only possible reason for the differences in test scores among racial groups is that the test itself is racist, killing off old people when they fall deeply into illness or dementia is a kindness, sexual orientations include only those kinds of sex we approve of–but that we have the right and duty to legislate in any case where it appears we don’t.
Or, better yet, we’re so sure that our way is the only way that we think we have a right and duty to impose our will even in the absence of law, under the guise of “protecting children,” for instance, or on the assumption that anybody who disagrees with us must be either stupid or mentally ill.
It’s this ultimate belief that there is Only One Right Way and that any dissent from that way is Mental Illness or Stupidity that makes it possible for the OWS people to claim that they “are the 99%”
Are they, really? Is it really the case that 99% of the people in the country agree with them?
There are certainly some points of agreement–the Tea Party is just as determined to “do something” about rogue bankers and banks too big to fail–but my guess is that on a lot of the issues they have only a small minority of their fellow citizens on their side.
On those issues, though, they’re perceived to be on the “right” (meaning conformist) side–and therefore the press is about how legitimate they are, not about how they’re too stupid to know their own interests or are being manipulated behind the scenes by sinister forces.
The Mental Illness ploy is particularly vicious, because it circumvents the usual American resistance to the imposition of conformity–a Mentally Ill person is not really making the choices he’s making; he has no control of those choices. And since he has no control, he cannot be said to be choosing. Therefore, we can interfere with and prevent him from making this bogus “choice.”
It’s a free country for those of us who are Mentally Well, but the Mentally Ill are in the grip of compulsions outside their control, and they cannot even be said to be capable of freedom until they’ve received “treatment.”
And we’ll know when they’re fully functioning adults again–because then they’ll make the same choices and think the same things that we do.
In pursuit of total conformity, we have turned out schools and even our doctors’ offices into mentally therapeutic watch zones. “Mandatory reporter” laws mean it is dangerous to the point of lunacy not to turn in the kid and/or his parents if there is anything at all that looks odd about him. After all, to report and be wrong only harms the child (or the old person) and his family. Not to report will get your license taken away.
And watch that get a lot worse in the wake of the Penn State thing, where an honorable and accomplished man (Paterno, now) who did absolutely everything right, ended up getting fired in disgrace anyway.
(And yes, Paterno did everything right. He was told a story by a colleague about abuse and he reported that story to the Penn State administration, who were the people charged with bringing in the police. The person who actually witnessed the absue has not been fired. As far as I can tell, Paterno simply had the bad luck to be the most famous person in the vicinity of the problem.)
I’ve made myself thoroughly depressed, I think.
So I’ll go off and actually get some work done.
On Topic Sundays
So it is Sunday, and I have music and Harriet Vane.
And, like I said, I’m still not inclined to do a lot of work right now.
So, I want to make explicit the question that keeps popping into my mind.
When I talk about small government here, I am usually fairly explicit about what I mean.
I mean putting an end to government intrusion into the private decisions of private life.
I mean things like seat belt laws, childhood obesity campaigns, bans on Happy Meals, motorcycle helmet laws–the entire panoply of regulation and legislation meant to make us behave “for our own good” and sometimes justified by saying that “it’s for the children, and we need to protect them when their parents are stupid.”
As soon as I start talking about that here, a half dozen people start talking about evil corporations despoiling the Arctic wilderness and food safety laws meant to keep us from running into the E-boli bacteria.
But saying that the government should not be allowed to tell me I have to wear a seat belt if I ride a motorcycle, or that CPS shouldn’t be allowed to issue a degree (not voted on in any legislature) that makes spanking “child abuse,’ is not the same thing as food safety laws or the Glass-Steagal Act.
And I’m in favor of bringing back Glass-Steagal, and I think we should never have gotten rid of it.
I’d read the “study” in Michael’s article–the 43,000 corporations that supposedly “rule the world”–and I thought it silly the first time. The article posted here said that people have had “some problems” with its methodology, but in fact they’ve had a lot of problems with its methodology. Never mind the fact that any secret conspiracy to control everything that requires 43,000 anything to maintain is dead in the water before it starts.
But it’s still not the issue I brought up, and it still has nothing to do with what I’m talking about.
In fact, what I’m talking about makes it MORE likely that corporations will get to control your life.
There is, for instance, the new trend for courts to allow employers to demand that you behave OFF the job the way they want you to–that you not only not smoke at work, but not smoke at home, either.
To me, this amounts to a reinstitution of slavery. In a captialist economy, I sell my time to my employer, and when I’m off the clock what I do is none of his business.
But since the government already thinks of me as a child whose behavior has to be manipulated and regulated even in the confines of my own home, it naturally enough sees nothing wrong with my employer controlling my behavior in the same way.
And in what way will the food supply be threatened if we require OSHA to enforce laws and not make them? Or if we insist that OSHA has no right to issue regulations with the force of law that will allow them to enter my private residence at will and inspect my home office to make sure it meets “safety standards”?
The OSHA thing isn’t something I made up, by the way. They tried that on a few years ago and had to back down because of public outcry. But they have not retreated on their position that they have a right to make such inspections of my home.
And that they do not have to follow any form of due process, do not have to have probably cause that I’ve committed a crime, and do not have to have a warrant.
If the history of bureaucracies is any judge, they will float the idea every year or so until they manage to get it through when nobody is looking.
And, if they ever do, there will be no more Gregors.
I cannot sit in ergonomic chairs. My back just won’t handle it. This already bars me from being hired for all kinds of things I am qualified to do–nope, OSHA says you have to sit in that chair, you can’t sit in that chair and you can’t work–but if such a rule was carried into my own home, I wouldn’t be able to work at all. No more sitting at the computer. No more writing in the morning. And what am I complaining about? It’s for my own good. I must only think I can’t use those chairs. They’re really better for me than the one I do use, and I’m just to stupid (or have too little common sense) to know it.
I will say, however, that even if I didn’t have a problem with those chairs, I’d still be opposed both to OSHA being able to issue such a regulation that would have the force of law, and for any agency of the government, federal or state or local, to be able to enter my private home without that warrant or probably cause.
I will also say that I find it very curious that so many of the people I know who call themselves liberals, and who would have a complete raging fit if the cops entered an apartment without warrant or probable cause to look for weapons or drugs–find nothing wrong with this kind of thing.
I had a friend of mine tell me, very earnestly, that you didn’t need things like warrants and due process for these things, because they were “helping” and not prosecuting, and that unlike police officers, who were mostly bad and brutal and racist, social workers had good intentions and were trained to know how to handle these situations.
For what it’s worth, this is the big issue with the Tea Party, the one that Democrats get wrong. When they’re talking about “big government,” they’re not talking about health and safety standards for handling raw meat.
They’re talking about the nattering, nitpicking, endless micromanagement of their private lives and the lives of their communities.
We complain in this country that too many people are apathetic, or that they’re “low information voters.”
But they’re apathetic because they have nothing to be enthused about. If they go to the polls and vote for the local school board, what does it mean? It means that they get to run their school by rules they disapprove of that were made somewhere else by people they did not elect and whose judgment they don’t trust.
And they’re not “low information,” either. They’re just taking a calculated gamble.
Shrinking government just MIGHT get rid of some of those micromanaging rules.
A politician who wants to expand government might do a lot of things they like–universal health care, for instance–but he’ll almost certainly use that expansion to put even more of those rules in place that they want to get rid of.
Liberty before security.
Every time.
I’m going to go listen to Bach.
Saturday in the Morning
This is going to be very short, because I find myself in the curious position of still being mostly exhausted. It turns out that I’m just the sort of person all those doom and gloom writers write about–take away my technology, and I go completely to pieces.
Oh, I got all my stuff done, I even met all my classes–I think I may be the only person in the department who didn’t need to sign up for extra classroom space to make up for a day–but at the end of it, and nearly a week later, I find myself wanting to do nothing more ambitious than rolling myself into a ball and going back to sleep.
And I can’t. I have things to do. I have pieces of trees, still.
All that said, I think I would disagree on one very important point here: I think there is something inherent in bureaucracies that make them behave as they do.
And I think they all behave alike.
It doesn’t matter if they’re public or private, nonprofit or for profit, religious or secular. The first imperative of a bureaucracy is to protect itself. The second is to expand its power as far as it can possibly go.
The private sector bureacracies used to be less intractable because the people who worked in them were subject to being fired at will–they lacked the kind of job security the public sector bureacracies had through civil service laws.
These days, though, a complicated web of regulations and court decisions and law meant to “protect’ workers from everything from “sexual harrassment” to “discrimination” has made it politically impossible for any large organization with deep pockets to fire at will, so that they have developed internal controls meant to protect them from legal challenges that effectively make it difficult or impossible to fire anybody for cause.
Certainly, bureacracies often contain good people who want to do good jobs and even to help–but it only takes a minority for a bureacracy to behave like a bureacracy, and it always does.
Beyond that, my primary concern is with the relationship between citizens and their government, which SHOULD be that of an employer to an employee–that is, the citizens are the employers of government, and not the children of it.
“Preventive” and “protective” legislation and regulation of the kind some people have advocated here seems to me to be in direct violation of that concept of the relationship between a citizen and his government.
It assumes, rather, that the government possesses wisdom of a kind that the mere citizen–being not much better than a child, and probably both malevolent and self-destructive–cannot possess, and that government therefore must regulate for the citizen’s own good even behavior that is completely private. After all, if the citizen was a fully functioning adult human being, he wouldn’t make these silly choices.
I would say that governments should not be allowed to make laws “for your own good” at all, and should restrict themselves to what can clearly be seen to be behavior that harms other people, and even then only when it harms them in a significant way–except that I’ve spent the last thirty years watching governments embrace pseudo-scientific crap in order to produce a “significant harm” where none in fact exists.
If you don’t believe me, I suggest you find yourself a first rate math major and let him take you through the protocols of all those studies “proving” that secondhand smoke is going to kill you.
And no, I don’t smoke. And neither does anybody else in my family that I know of.
So let me go farther than that. Let me say that governments should not be allowed to make laws about private life at all unless they can show that such things are absolutely necessary to allow society to run at all. That would strike off not only all the anti-tobacco regulations, but the federal ban on bake sales in public schools, and most of the drug laws.
As for families and what happens in them, I think that the case of the person who used t knife to make an 8 year old’s vagina large enough to get a penis into should of course be prosecuted for assault. The laws for that kind of thing already exist.
But to assume that the fact that such people exist at all–they are not, obviously, common–is excuse for subjecting every family with a child to what amounts to the tactics of a police state is not just wrong, but worse than wrong.
A parent who has committed a crime against a child–or for whom there is probable cause to assume so–should be prosecuted like any other person accused of a crime, and that means with full due process of law and full recognition of both his right to the presumption of innocence and his other rights.
There should be no case in which a government should be allowed to mete out punishment to a citizen–and having your child taken away from you is punishment, as is having to attend “parenting skills classes” or being forced to interact with your child only under the obswervation of a social worker–until it can be proved beyond a reasonable doubt that such a crime occured and that the defendant has committed it.
It should certainly never be the case that supposed “social experts”–social workers, psychologists, teachers, nurses–should be allowed to require parents to make decisions for their children that are opposed to the parents’ own understanding of what is good for that child, such as whether or not to put him on Ritalin or sending him to one “therapy’ or another.
And laws about what constitutes a crime against a child should be passed by legislatures, not issued as regulations by departments and then given the force of law.
I am inherently suspicious of all forms of centralized power. But I am worse than suspicious of centralized power that claims it is only working “for my own good,” or that it is staffed by people so virtuous and well-intentioned that the danger of finding a Nurse Ratchet among them is close to nil.
Nurse Ratchets are drawn to bureaucracies like bees are to flowers, and in the end they run every bureaucratic organization ever built.
I have to go to the post office before it closes.
Back To Normal, But Not in Oklahoma
So, here’s how it looks–we seem to have gone back to real life just in time for what the British would call a bank holiday. Tomorrow is Veteran’s Day, which means no mail and no banks.
This will not be a holiday for me. Partly that’s because I don’t take them. I like to write, and right now I’m sort of writing frantically. Maybe fiction is my drug, because I think that week of not being able to put me into a kind of withdrawal.
Part of it is because school isn’t taking the day off. It’s “observing” the holiday on Tuesday the 15th instead. This is a little difficult to understand. My place is not only not anti-military, but is positively military friendly.
Part of it is surely that very few of us teach on Friday, so taking Friday off is like taking nothing off for most of the teachers. But then, why not take off Monday, when practically everybody is teaching?
Never mind. This is the kind of thing that occupies my mind when I’m tired. And I am, at the moment, fairly tired. It’s exhausting to have nothing to do.
So, still in disorganized mode, a few notes for the day:
1) As to laws that have to be passed because some people have no common sense–I’d say that describes, exactly, what laws I think should NOT be passed.
And it’s not just that grown ups should be allowed to take their own risks, which I think is true enough.
It’s also that one person’s idea of what’s “common sense” is another person’s idea of sheer idiocy. I know a lot of people who ride motorcycles. Most of them think helmet laws are not only not “common sense,” but put them in active danger–they may or may not be more likely to survive an accident while wearing a helmet, but they’re definitely in more danger of getting into an accident in the first place, as the helmet plays hell with peripheral vision.
I have no idea who”s right or wrong on this issue. The last time I rode a motorcycle I was 25, and I rode in back while the man I was dating did the actual driving.
But I do know that this is just the kind of law that makes me both crazy and angry–it is government treating its citizens not as citizens, but as children, or patients, who have to be disciplined “for their own good.”
I’d support a Constitutional amendment that would bar the government from ever passing laws for such a reason, and I’d change the laws having to do with children so that government was no longer allowed to judge or interfere with anybody’s “parenting skills.”
In cases of assault or clear physical neglect (not feeding the kid till he starves would be a case; homeschooling would not be one), I’d use the crimninal justice system and give the accused parents full due process rights, including the presumption of innocense.
And that brings me to
2) I’m with Cheryl and Robert. I don’t think “compassion” means supporting some government program or other. Compassion can only be an individual trait, and it can only be practiced on an individual basis.
That doesn’t mean that there should be no institutional provision for the people who are truly unable to take care of themselves. And I’m pretty sure I’ve been vocal on this blog in support of a vastly expanded version of the Earned Income Tax Credit for people who do for themselves but don’t have the intellectual ability to do much better than the minimum.
But I know for a fact that what “compassion” is NOT is supporting programs that look as if they’re doing more harm than good.
And the program described in that essay by the last psychologist (I wish somebody would tell me if it’s psychologist or psychiatrist) is a system that is postively malevolent.
A system set up to bribe people into redefining themselves as “sick” is not an act of compassion, and it is not helping anybody.
Every single person who takes that bait is worse off in the long run than he would be if he was left to starve in the street.
There is more to being human than eating, breathing, copulating and defecating. A person who is entrapped–and there’s a lot of entrapment in these programs as described in that article–into lying, cheating and faking to get mere subsistence has not been helped–he’s been destroyed.
So I’ll repeat–if that’s really what we’re doing, we should stop. We’re not helping anybody with that.
My EITC approach would at least treat people as actual people, and not as children or patients.
And that has to be a step in the right direction.
3) I forgot mm’s thing about the mythical liberal university.
And I don’t doubt Cathy is right that she doesn’t deal with universities like the ones we were describing. I don’t either, these days.
But that such exist is not in question, and you don’t have to take my word for it.
Go here
That’s the website for The FIRE–The Foundation for Individual Rights in Education.
They were founded as a sort of ACLU for college students forced into some truly bizarre and Orwellian nightmares by campus speech codes, brainwashing-technique “orientations” and other administrative depredations of the modern upscale university.
The latest upset has to do with Department of Education regulations–issued by unelected bureaucrats, don’t forget; I want to get rid of that for a reason–
Anyway, by regulations that say colleges and universities must, when dealing with allegations of rape on campus, apply a “preponderance of the evidence” standard in determining guilt, and not the usual “beyond a reasonable doubt” standard.
Why is that?
Well, one university official explained, the “beyond a reasonable doubt” standard gives “too many rights to the accused.”
Right, exactly.
For what it’s worth, ROTC returned to Harvard just this year, and you can’t major in business in the Ivy League.
Yes, they’ve got business schools, but those are graduate schools. You want a BA from the Ivies or the Seven Sisters or the Little Three, business is not a major on offer.
And then:
4) I have been reading things. Lately, what I’ve been doing is rereading Gaudy Night by Dorothy L. Sayers for the first time in close to thirty years. And on that I’ve got one thing to say.
This is not only my favorite Dorothy L. Sayers novel, it’s the favorite Dorothy L. Sayers novel of just about anybody I’ve ever met who reads Sayers.
That’s good, as far as I’m concerned, but I’d like to point out one thing:
This is a mainstream novel, not a genre one.
Not only does it barely qualify as a detective novel on any level, what detective elements it contains are largely ignored while the plot concentrates on character and character relations.
I’m having a very good time with this thing, and it’s a very good book. And I’m hardly the person to complain about calling something a detective story because you can get it into print, while actually writing a different kind of novel altogether.
But, you know, I just thought I’d mention it.
I have to go give an exam to students who probably ought to be shipped off to day jobs for a few years until they grow up enough to know if they actually want to be in school.
Trees
The problem, I think, is that I can’t really get myself into the mood to do anything serious. Even real work didn’t get very far today.
For one thing, as soon as it gets light out, I can see out the windows of my office–which is really a kind of sun room–into my back yard. That’s usually a good thing. I’m not one of those writers who has to face a blank wall in order not to be distracted from writing things. I write very naturally.
At the moment, however, what I see when I look out back is a lot of pieces of trees all over the yard. The storm was hell on trees. For a while, I thought that the big one had come down on the house, but it hadn’t exactly. It had just been bowed down under the weight of the snow, and when the snow melted it went back up again.
One other piece of that same tree did fall down on the roof, but so far I haven’t been able to find any damage, and it was only a branch. But lots of pieces of that tree have gone everywhere, and one smaller bush-like thing actually split in half.
So I spend a lot of time sitting here going, “hmmm, I wonder how long it’s going to take to clean that up.”
Part of it is that, as I said yesterday, I’m just exhausted. I met all my classes and did all the things I was obligated to do right through that endless outage. And that is, of course, exactly what I should have done. But–sheesh.
So let me weigh in on a couple of things that went on here while I was in the blackout, and see where they go. I’ll try to get back to the Liberal Arts tradition on the week-end.
1) I think it’s interesting that Cathy F and I had such different reactions to that article by the “last psychologist.” Or psychiatrist. I can’t remember.
My first reaction on reading that thing was to go: well, if that’s what’s going on, we’d better put a stop to it right this minute.
And if what we get is rioting in the streets and a lot more crime, then we arrest people and put them in jail.
But I don’t see how it can ever be a good idea to encourage an entire subclass of people that the world owes them a living, and that if they don’t get it their proper response is to take violent revenge in one way or the other.
That’s a kind of blackmail I’m not willing to put up with, although I am willing to let my tax money go to people who are genuinely unable to fend for themselves.
Some of the problem might be alleviated by requiring people with the vaguer sort of psyochological diagnoses to be committed to psychiatric facilities, or group homes, in order to get benefits. I think it would put an end to people falsely making those particular claims.
But I do know that in a world where psychological “disorders” and “disabilities” are invented on almost a daily basis, the system as the last psychologist describes it is not sustainable on a long term basis.
It’s not all that sustainable in the short term.
2) As to Elf’s question about what the difference is between someone on welfare and a trust fund baby–it’s not the difference between the recipients that matters.
If I set my children up with trust funds, I may ruin their characters, or not–but I do nothing at all to my fellow citizens.
It’s not just that I don’t take their money against their will. It’s that providing welfare from government departments fundamentally changes the relationship between a government and its citizens in ways that are very disturbing.
It’s not just that such a system requires not just that we give people money, but that we hire and maintain armies of administrators, case workers, and other personnel.
And in establishing this system we tend to–we have–subtly shift the boundaries of what is allowable government interference into private life.
We get “social policy”–why, exactly, is the government allowed to have any such thing as “social policy”?
What starts with “some people are just not capable of coping on their own” becomes “we have the right to police your behavior and decide whether you’re competent to run your own life or not.”
And then we get not just the war on drugs or compaigns against obesity and smoking, but Hillary’s infamous suggestion that every parent who takes home a newborn should be visited several times by social workers to make sure there’s no abuse or neglect going on in the home.
I think there are ways in which we could avoid this–but one of those ways is not to start with the assumption that a significant proportion of our population is incapable of taking care of itself, or of learning anything useful, and instead must be accommodated or attended to by a theoretically benevolent state.
The fundamental assumption of the American revolution was, after all, just the opposite: that ordinary citizens are fully capable of running their own lives and running their own government.
3) As for the thing about how automation, etc, is steadily climbing the skills pole and there will soon be just a little group of people at the very top who “own everything” and have all the jobs while the rest of us have nothing–
The thing that bothers me about that argument is that it assumes that people stand still.
It assumes that what we see today is all we will ever see, that what amounts to a job today is what will be a job tomorrow if it isn’t just eliminated, that we will never invent new things, new industries, new ways of living.
And I suppose it’s possible that American society is so culturally exhausted that that is indeed what will happen, but I don’t see it. People living in 1911 couldn’t imagine most of the things we make money working at today. I expect that we cannot imagine most of the things people will make their livings at in 2111.
I will point out a couple of things here.
First, innovation tends to take place in areas that are not yet regulated.
Or not yet very regulated.
The problem here is entry costs: how much money and how many resources does it take for you to get into the business?
It would be virtually impossible for somebody to start a car manufacturing company in the US today unless they already had significant resources. They could not do what the early car manufacturers did and start building machines in their back yards and work up from there.
This is not to say that there should be no regulations, only to point out the obvious: the more expensive it is for new people to start up, the less innovation there will be.
And the less competition there will be.
And the more the regulatory system will be coopted by existing large firms as a method of fending off competition.
So I’d say you can’t look to any large existing industry to tell you what’s going to come next.
Second, we might want to reconsider the last century’s worth of local regulations that prevent people from making a living outside the formal system of “employment.”
And, for that matter, some of the federal ones.
We talk a lot of bilge in this country about “the immigrant experience,” but we don’t like to get into particulars.
My Greek grandparents, arriving on these shores, probably couldn’t get “a job.” There were often no jobs to be had, and when there were, lots of employers wanted only “real Americans.”
So what did the immigrants do?
They got themselves pushcarts and sold everything from household goods to shoes and clothing, they did a hundred other things on their own to get by.
And most of their descendants are now at least middle class.
Some of them are George Stephanopolous.
If you want to operate a pushcart these days, you need a license, after which you will be given a deisgnated place on the street. You need health inspections if you’re selling food, and you’re forbidden altogether from selling certain kinds of products. Then you’ve got (in NYC) city, state and federal income taxes, plusy social security taxes (you’re self employed, so you’re paying both halves on your own), and a host of other legal requirements that will force you to hire legal and accounting help.
In other words, if you want to operate a pushcart these days–you can’t. There are still pushcarts in NY, but they’re owned by corporations that have the resources to pay for all that legal and accounting help. They guys who run them have “a job.’
Well, that is, as long as the pushcarts are operating legally. There are plenty of independent operators out there operating illegally, and not just with pushcarts. It’s virtually impossible to find household help in Manhattan these days unless you’re willing to pay in cash, because most of the housecleaners are working off the books.
The simple fact is that they don’t make enough money to pay all the taxes and the registrations and the licenses. They can no longer legally make a living in the way their grandmothers could.
We might try to fix some of that.
And don’t tell me that all those regulations were put in place to protect the health and safety of consumers.
They were put in place at the urging of the owners of brick and mortar stores who didn’t want the “unfair competition” (meaning any competition at all) from all those nonAmericans willing to work for less and sell for less.
Finally, I’d like to point out what nobody else seems to.
Everybody making the jobs argument points back to the Fifties and Sixties and says–see? Prosperity! That’s when we had lots of regulations and higher taxes on the rich!
But what we actually had in the Fifties and Sixties was a completely anomalous situation.
For most of that period, we were the only game in town. WWII had decimated the industrial capacities of Europe and Japan both.
We could have run this country by ouija board and still done very well.
But there was never a chance in hell that that was going to last.
What’s happened to American incomes and American jobs is not the result of Republican policies or Democratic policies.
It’s the result of a world that got competitive again.
I’m going to go do something.
So, Here’s What Happened
It’s Monday, November 7th, and I can say with some certainty that although I spent most of the last week sleeping–because there was virtually nothing else to do–I am completely exhausted.
For those of you who have not been following the news, or don’t know I live in Connecticut, we had a freak snow storm last week, eight inches of the stuff on October 29th.
The snow started in the late morning and fell hard and fast all day, but possibly not as hard as I thought it did. I do live in New England. We get many absolute beauts of the things, often a couple of feet or so on and off throughout January, February and early March.
But we only got eight inches, and those eight inches somehow managed to leave almost a million people without power across the state of Connecticut.
That was on Saturday, October 29th. My power went out at 7:19 pm.
On Tuesday, we threw out every single thing in our refrigerator. On Wednesday, we threw out everything in both our freezers.
My power came back on on Saturday, November 5th at 10:59 pm.
Tthat’s eight days and more than three and a half hours without light, heat, computer, hot water, or landline–and the cell phones screwed up for three days.
And, as I type this, there are still “thousands” of people without power in the state.
I write “thousands” like that, in quotes, because I can’t seem to find a place where CL&P, the utility involved, is actually admitting to a hard number this morning.
This may have something to do with the fact that the company spent the last week insisting that it would have 99% of its electricity-deprived customers back up and running by midnight last night night, only to hit yesterday morning with a press conference saying that, well, okay, maybe…Wednesday.
There are school districts in this state that have been closed for a week already and that did not open again today.
There are situations in some towns that are downright frightening. In Vernon, at least as of yesterday afternoon, there was a neighborhood that had not only been without power for more than a week, but that was impassible to anybody, including emergency vehicles. Downed wires were stretched across the road and still live, so that it wasn’t safe to step over them or to drive vehicles over them.
All attempts to shut the electricity off altogether seemed to have failed, and there was an elderly woman who needed daily oxygen and hadn’t been able to get it.
Several of the smaller water systems have been contaminated, so that you have people living in houses without electricity who have been told to boil their water, and who can’t.
I do, now, have power–obviously, since I’m writing this–but I also have some observations:
1) This was an eight inch snowstorm. Eight inches. That’s nothing up here in the winter. As I said above, we routinely get a foot or more every week in the winter.
And granted, this was unusual not only because of the time of year, but because there were leaves on the trees and that caused a lot of tree damage.
But still. If CL&P can’t get the power back up for over a week on eight inches, what’s going to happen the first week of March, when we usually get our big nor’easter, with two feet and more?
2) There was a time when people who were hired to be corporate public relations people had to know something about public relations. That time seems to have passed.
Toyota and BP were bad enough, but watching CL&P’s public relations performance over the past week has been stunning.
There was, first, the constant assurances, starting the Sunday morning after the great Saturday blackout, that the company was “assessing the damage” and would have power restored no later than midnight on November 6th.
The “assessing the damage” thing sounded a lot like “we haven’t actually done anything yet, and you might as well not get your hopes up about getting power back soon, because we haven’t even started.”
This was, by the way, pretty much what was happening, so that actual operations on the ground didn’t even begin until sometime Monday.
Never mind the fact that the projection was, in fact, insane.
And the time it’s actually taking is even more insane.
3) As the days went by, the state government and everybody else began to get thoroughly angry, and they seem to have had a right to.
The story presently circulating in the local press is that CL&P was unable to get outside contractor crews to come in and help with the mess because it had either failed to pay many of those outside crews after they came in to help after Hurricane Irene.
Did I mention that? There was a hurricane here–well, it was only a Tropical Storm by the time it hit the Long Island Sound, but it started as a hurricane–less than three months ago.
Some of the people now going without power for a week and a half, the ones that aren’t likely to be back up before Wednesday, also went without power for a week and a half during that. My friends Carol and Richard lost power during Irene for eleven days, and they weren’t in the worst hit part of the state.
4) Part two of corporate PR incompetence was the constant announcement that clearing roads and downed wires was the first priority, followed by getting power back to businesses, government buildings and schools, so that residents could “access essential services.”
I have no idea who thought this would be received as good news, and the company behaving well.
The fact was that the days during the past week have been rather nice, with temperatures in the high 50s and 60s. The nights, on the other hand, have been brutal, the worst of them going down into the 20s.
So, with businesses up and running, what happened was that we all went to work during the nice part of the day when we could have survived pretty well without heat anyway, and then went home to cower under blankets and quilts until we could leave again in the morning.
Then there was the claim, made by company spokespeople, that the utility could not be blamed because it had no idea there would be so much snow. You had to blame the local weather people, who hadn’t predicted it.
Not only was that lame, it was a lie–the weather people had actually been predicting more snow, and predicting it for a week. I know. I’m the original news junkie.
All CL&P got for that piece of nonsense was constantly replayed clips of weather men across the local stations predicting twelve inches, fourteen inches, you name it.
5) Half the hotels were also without power. The other half were booked up within hours, and generators were sold out across the state by Tuesday morning.
At least one college in the Hartford area closed its doors and sent all its dorming students home for the duration. As far as I know, they’re not up yet.
6) Several groups of people have filed lawsuits against CL&P, and the state attorney general’s office has launched an investigation, as have the regulatory agencies.
One of the people filing the lawsuit pointed out that he really had no other choice. CL&P is a public utility and therefore a monopoly. He couldn’t take his business elsewhere.
Quite a few other people agree with my younger son, who wants something to happen that will personally affect people like Jeffrey Butler, CL&P’s COO, rather than the usual thing, which is just fining the company.
It’s a similar demand to the one made by both the Tea Party and OWS about the men at the head of the big banks and brokerage firms who got bailed out after the 2008 crash.
And it’s a policy proposal that has a lot of merit. I had the same thought after Enron collapsed.
You have, at this point, at least in certain segments of society, a culture of money. In some of those segments–sports, say, or entertainment–irresponsibility just causes personal trouble and leaves the rest of us mostly alone. In others–banks, and utilities, and like that–irresponsibility direly affects the rest of us.
For that segment, I say we change the laws so that if they blow things up, they lose, personally, their money. If money is what they care about, then let’s go after that.
7) In spite of all this mess, many local municipalities are holding their elections tomorrow. In pursuit of this, the roads are strewn with signs advocating for one political party or another.
One of these signs occurs at a major intersection I have to pass through on my way to and from school. I get it right in front of me on the way home. It’s a big, green thing with giant letters in white, and what it says is: HAD ENOUGH YET?
It was–oh, I don’t know. Perfect. I hope the Indpendent Party wins a few seats on the strength of its having a prescient message for the times it is living through.
8) This is the longest period of time I’ve gone without writing since I was a teenager. I’ve hated it. I write even when I’m sick.
I’m glad to be back to it.
9) But first, I need to go out and replace $782.40 of food, medical supplies that aren’t safe if they’ve been too cold, and various and other sundries destroyed not by the storm, but by being without power for more than eight days.
I have a friend who says she’s getting all her receipts together and taking the money she’s out of pocket off her next few electric bills, but I know it won’t work.
That’s just going to make them shut off her power again.