Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category
Vice Squad
Well, what can I say? It took only about a day for Charlou and Judy to show why libertarians reject social programs. Although Charlou may have changed her mind. I’m a little unsure about that.
But let’s go to Judy’s question–it’s fine for everybody to make their own choices if they have to pay out of pocket for the consequences, but why should she have to pay for the consequences of other people’s bad choices?
There are actually several good answers to that one, not all of which we’ll get to here.
But I do want to point out one thing: the resistence to Obamacare, and earlier to Hillarycare, was on exactly this point–lots of people expected that a unversal health care system would automatically give people the idea that “since they were paying for it, they got to regulate it.” Given the choice of fending on their own with the consequences, or not being left free to make the choice–they want to fend.
Most of the people who want to end laws against driving without a helmet on a motorcyle or restricting smoking in bars ALSO don’t want universal health care. They do not, in fact, ask you to pay for the consequences of their decisions.
Which brings me to my first point.
1) These programs are instituted by a majority, but not by a universality. It is not legitimate to use the existence of such programs as an excuse to regulat private life, because people do not have a choice as to whether or not to participate in them. The people who have been vigorously opposing the new health insurance reform bill will be required to follow it whether they wanted it or not, and will, in the resulting system, be required to “benefit” from it.
The “benefit” is in quotes because they don’t think they’ll be benefiting. In the calculus of something gained and something lost, they think they will have majorly lost–giving up their autonomy is a much bigger harm than any good that can come from universal health care.
So pick: either don’t regulate private life, or eliminate all the programs so that you don’t feel like you’re paying for other people’s bad choices.
2) If the actual rationale for the regulation of private life is that some choices cost us money, then we ought to be consistant–we ought to regulate ALL the choices that cost us money, and not just the ones we personally don’t like.
And I would therefore call for the regulation of childbirth, specifically as it regards the birth of children with Down Syndrome and spina bifuda, and any other birth defects that cause long term consequences and that can be detected before birth by amniocentesis or genetic testing.
Like, for instance, children who will be born with the genes that will cause eventual Tay-Sachs, Huntingdon’s, or Cooley’s anemia.
Please note: all of the above can be determined well before birth with widely available testing, and abortion is legal and available. The choice to carry such a child to term is just that–a choice. And such children are enormously expensive, far more expensive than seeing a 2 pack a day 30 year smoker through lung cancer.
The most egregiously handicapped spina bifuda children can cost upwards of $400,000 a year to care for. They will never lead “normal” lives or be self-supporting. Day after day, week after week, month after month, year after year, they need expensive and round the clock care. And their parents knew that when they decided to bring that child into the world. Why should I have to pay for their choice?
We should be able to insist that all pregnant women receive the proper testing, and to refuse to care for any child that results if that testing is positive and the mother refuses to abort.
And, of course, on the other end of life–people with severe dementia or other forms of debilitating old age who could live for years but only if they’re given more of that expensive round the clock care–why should I have to pay for their choice? If they want to pay for it out of their own pocket, fine, but we should stop taxing me to pay for it.
Welcome, by the way, to “death panels.’ It wasn’t irrational hysteria. It was fear of the reasoning above, which is not all that unusual even now.
The reason why people responded to Judy’s post by saying she wanted to “punish” certain behavior is that, in absence of a consistent, universal policy to regulate all behavior that might end up costing us money, what is going on IS punishment. It’s essentially moral legislation, and its purpose is to get government backing to encourage styles of life we approve (or tolerate) and those we have decided are indefensible.
3) And none of the above addresses the problems of either pseudoscience or the extension of putative damage from extreme behavior to more moderate forms.
Most of the mothers of my generation–the women who were our mothers–had a cocktail before dinner and wine with right through pregancy, and smoked, too, and yet didn’t produce children with birth defects or fetal alcohol syndrome.
In fact, the entire generation of the Founders was gestated in the wombs of women who drank almost nothing but beer and wine, all day, every day–the water supply was not considered safe in most places in the Colonial and newly national US.
These days, though, even asking for a glass of wine in a restaurant while pregnant will get you a lecture by the bartender at the least, and if the nurses on the maternity floor know you did it–even just once–you’ll be immediately reported to CPS.
The reason for all this is not that we have a new and better understanding of pregnancy, it’s that we have moved from a society where cigarette smoking and a few nips to relax at night were considered understandable and civilized, to one that excoriates both behavior as sin. Except we don’t call it sin. We call it “unhealthy.”
And to justify regulating the behavior, we point to unusual and extreme cases–women who drink a fifth of vodka a day, for instance–and imply that the consequences from a cocktail or a glass of wine will be just as bad at that. It’s all the same. It’s all drinking while pregnant.
Our present understanding of “obesity” and the way it relates to health is virtually all pseudoscience. Go take a look at the studies everybody touts, and what you’ll find, first, is that they’re all correlation results–that is, we know that X and Y are more likely to happen at the same time, but we don’t know why that is. Maybe X causes Y. Maybe Y causes X. Or maybe there’s a third factor that causes both. We have no idea.
And, on top of that, we’ve changed the definition of “obesity” three or four times, so that now even people who in my own school days would have been called “chubby” are suddenly “obese.”
But, but, but! you say. Obesity is a risk factor for heart disease!
All “risk factor” means is that the two things correlate–what it does NOT mean is that “obesity” CAUSES heart disease.
What’s more, virtually everything we’ve been told about “weight control” is wrong, and even the experts will say so–privately. A few months ago, there was a push by some nutritionists to revise the food pyramid to reflect the latest research about what tends to put weight on people and what not. The revision was rejected because, um, well, people aren’t listening to us now, what’s going to happen if they find out we’ve been giving that advice that actually makes they fatter? They won’t listen to us at all any more! They’ll go hog wild!
As for diet and exercise–exercise makes plenty of people gain weight, not lose it. And the single most effective treatment for extreme UNDERweight is a calorie-controlled diet.
That’s right. If for some reason the doctors need to put weight on you, and fast, and keep it on–if you’ve lost a ton due to catastrophic illness or accident, say–what they’ll do to get you there is to put you on exactly the same kind of diet you’re now following from the pages of Cosmo.
No matter what we tell ourselves, we don’t pass laws forbidding toys in happy meals, or requiring restaurants to put calorie counts on menus, in order to respond to “a crisis of obesity” or to make everybody healthier so they won’t cost the health care system so much money.
We do it because “letting yourself go” has become a hallmark of the people we call “trailer trash,” and we disapprove of them.
If that was not the reason we were doing it, we would stop doing it when we realized it didn’t work, and we would try to implement policies that did work, even if those policies were not things we liked, or interfered with our private prejudices.
Children are definitely heavier than they used to be, but the problem is more likely to be lack of vigorous exercises than McD’s fries once or twice a week. That’s not going to get us to change our concerns about children’s “safety” and put back dodge ball at recess, never mind shoving the kid out the door after school and telling him to play outside. Kids might get hurt!
I pay for the consequences of your motorcycle accident because I expect you to pay for the consequences of my parent’s decision to have me even though I might get Cooley’s anemia.
None of our choices are revenue neutral, and that fact is not an excuse for regulating them.
Those Who Can’t
It is Sunday, and I have, on the CD player behind me, Vivaldi’s Four Seasons. This is not my usual thing on Sunday mornings, but today it kind of fits. Maybe that’s because we’re in our fourth day of storms, sort of storms, almost storms, it’ll be a storm in a minute, it’s a storm if there’s lightening even if there isn’t rain…
And that kind of thing.
In the meantime, however, I want to go back to the question of what we do about people who “can’t” help themselves, who can’t survive on their own or with their families.
And on one level, that question is very simple. For people who truly and unambiguously can’t–parapelegics, the mentally handicapped, people dying of debilitating catastrophic illnesses without family resources–we of course provide aid, both financial and (if necessary) professional.
Whether we do that through federal, state or local initiatives is a policy question, and unimportant for our purposes here.
The real question is: where on the continuum between “absolutely can’t” and “absolutely can” should we be providing “help.”
I put the “help” in square quotes for a reason.
If there is one thing I’m sure of in this, it is that help isn’t help if the person who gets it doesn’t want it.
For me, the fact that Ayn Rand may have been “better off” in some way for having been forced to pay into Social Security does not justify coercing her into doing it.
There may be other reasons for wanting Social Security–in fact, FDR’s reasons had nothing to do with seeing to retiree’s “own good,” they were based on the hope that such old age pensions would convince older workers to retire and open job places for younger ones–but it is never acceptible to me to pass a law coercing private behavior because they WOULD want it if they only had any sense.
One of the reasons why I oppose regulations issued by unelected bureaucracies that have the force of law is that they have, over the years, all too often had this character: we could never get this past an elected legislature, because the people don’t want it, so we’ll do it by regulation, because IT’S FOR YOUR OWN GOOD.
Here’s the thing: even if it is factually true that you will be in some sense “better off” for having been so coerced, you STILL suffer harm when you’re forced in this manner. You lose the very essence of your humanity, the right to make your own choices about your own life.
And if you are not allowed to make the “wrong” choice, then you’re not allowed to choose at all. You are not free unless you are free to make the wrong decision.
And take the consequences.
The courts have been maddeningly squiffy about this. When the coercion gets obvious and egregious enough, they tend to come down on it with both feet. That’s why we can’t get the mentally ill homeless off the streets and into mental institutions. Decades of allowing doctors and family members to lock up people they’d decided were “mentally ill”–including women who wanted a divorce–finally made the whole process of involuntary commitment look suspect. New rules were handed down. The housewives who didn’t want to be housewives were now safe. Some mentally ill people who really would be “better off” on a mental ward could no longer be coerced to go there if they didn’t want to.
Short of such egregious situations, however, the courts have tended to refuse to allow coercion “for your own good” if the “you” in that sentence is competent to make decisions.
Smoking is definitely bad for you, but the courts have stopped all efforts to outlaw it outright because, well, you’re all grown up, you get to go to hell in your own handbasket.
This restriction on the power of government, elected or otherwise, to make personal decisions for citizens is very important, because the foundational assumption of democracy is that adults are competent to make their own decisions not only about their own lives, but about the conduct of their government.
People who want to help always start by assuming that the people they want TO help will welcome their efforts. After all, being a drug addict or an alcoholic is a lousy way to live. And, hey–ergonomic chairs are better for you if you’re working on a computer. If you’re not using one–if you’re not using one, it must be because some evil, greedy employer is trying to save money at the expense of your health.
The problem comes when the people to be helped reject the help, and a lot of them do.
The quintessential case of this was, I think, the psychological services offered by both federal and state agencies in the aftermath of 9/11. Hundreds of mental health workers were hired, only to find themselves with virtually nothing to do. The vast majority of the first responders–police, fire departments, EMTS–wanted nothing to do with therapy, thank you very much.
The workers then started going door to door, knocking on apartments, offering their services–and, in the vast majority of cases, getting turned down.
And this is where the trouble starts. MMjust got angry at Mique’s contempt for the “helping” professions, but I get it–and one of the things I think those professions could use is some insight into why so many people respond that way.
Historically, the first response of the helping professions when their help has been refused is NOT to go “oh, hmm. Well, obviously, I’m not wanted here. He must have his reasons.”
It has been, rather, to assume that the person in question is “in denial” in some way, that he doesn’t know his own mind, that he can’t be taken seriously–he DOES need help, even if he thinks he doesn’t, and it’s in his own best interests if we force him to get it.
The courts, though, as I’ve said, have been wary of this kind of thing, and not only when it is being wielded against the choices of adults. Courts have affirmed the rights even of schoolchildren to refuse the “help” of “grief counselors” after school shootings and other tragedies.
Which is interesting in and of itself, because usually the best way to install a regulation of private life by government fiat is to declare that it is “for the children.” Children are, in most cases, considered to be by definition unable to know their own interests or make their own decisions.
But if you are a helping professional who wants to help people who do not want your help, your best bet is to find a way to redefine them as mentally incomptent to refuse.
And the best way to do this is to find a rationale that will allow you to declare more and more kinds of behavior as outside the willful control of human beings. Habits become “addictions.” Human temperamental variations outside a small proscribed area of “good function” become ‘disorders.”
A citizen has free will and can make up his own mind–and his mistakes are his own, and none of your business. A patient is sick, unable to make his own decisions, and in need of professional care and expert advice. It’s nice if he understands why all this treatment is good for him, but it isn’t surprising if he doesn’t. That’s part of his illness.
It’s that attitude, right there, that makes Mique angry and contemptuous of the helping professions, and that makes me want to insure that regulations with the force of law be required to pass AS laws in an elected legislature.
But I think I leave the rest of this until tomorrow, at the earliest. It is Sunday. I have tea.
But I do want to say one last thing–I think the people who evade attempts to help them quit their addictions “even though they want to quit”–don’t actually want to quit. I think they say what they know what they’re supposed to say. After all, in terms of what can happen to you if you continue using and admit that it’s your choice–like say, going to jail–being treated as a patient may be the lesser evil.
More tomorrow.
90% Perspiration
Before I start, I have to say this:
Blasting Gustav Leonhardt playing The Goldberg Variations first thing in the morning before you’ve had your caffeine…does very strange things to the mind.
Anyway. I’ve got tea now, and Gustav is still blaring away. It’s a good thing I like harpsichords at any time.
Yesterday I talked about differences in the environment that might cause differences in the outcomes of people’s lives.
Today I want to look at the genetic and innate, the fact that some of us are born talented in ways that others of us are not, and that some of us are not born talented at all.
I think most of us think that this is the easiest case, if the most recalcitrant one. There is a very real sense in which it is “not fair” that some of us are simply born better equipped than others of us are. Some of us are born smarter. Some of us are born prettier. Some of us are born with more athletic ability.
There’s a reason why every Olympic gold medalist in certain track events has been, for decades now, not only of African descent, but of East African descent. These are people the muscles of whose legs are literally different than yours and mine–and so much better at making you run fast that people who lack that particular muscle structure might as well give up before they try. No amount of training and hard work will compensate.
The same is true of the genes that go to make a face like Gene Tierney’s at twenty. Plastic surgery can help some, but it is limited. It will not take a lumpy, pie-faced girl and turn her into a supermodel.
The first thing that is obvious here is that inheriting talent, or not inheriting it, is a lot like inheriting money. The person who so inherits did nothing to deserve his good fortune.
What’s more, inheriting talent is much more strongly correlated with later success in life than inheriting money. For one thing, lots of people who do not inherit money go on to make smashing successes of themselves in many different fields, international and national and local. Nobody who does not inherit a good voice goes on to success as an opera singer. Nobody who does not inherit athletic talent makes the NBA. Or, hell, even most high school teams.
Interestingly enough, although the people of the 18th century–and the 19th, and the early 20th–knew about this, it did not, at the time, appear to be an instance of “unfairness.” This may have had something to do with religion. God gave each of us our unique talents, and the only “unfairness” was in a society where rank and wealth prevented the naturall talented from exercising those talents.
It was “unfair” if the King’s daughter got to sing the lead in Carmen because she was the King’s daughter, when the butcher’s daughter had a much better voice. It was not “unfair” that the King’s daughter had been born unable to achieve the vocal quality of the butcher’s.
This was Jefferson’s idea of a “natural aristocracy.” The country would open up opportunities to all its citizens, rich and poor. The cream would rise to the top.
In more recent times, though, the idea that there’s nothing “unfair” about the unequal distribution of talent has been less and less in favor, and I think that’s for two reasons.
For one thing there is the continual problem of people born so completely without talents–mentally handicapped, I think we say now–that they will never be in a position even to make their own livings without help.
This is, as I said, nothing new, and the idea that society should take care of such people is not particularly controversial. Anybody short of a doctrinaire Randian sees nothing problematic about taxing the populace to make sure there is some provision for such people.
The other concern is more interesting, although I think it is misplaced.
It’s the idea that we are developing a world in which such differences in inherited talent will be fixed by heredity in certain classes. Smart people will marry smart people while stupid people will marry stupid people. Their smart children will marry other smart children while the stupid children will marry other stupid children. In five or nine or fifteen generations, there will be a gap the size of the Grand Canyon between the two sets of people, never to be bridged. If you are born to the stupid people, there’s no chance that you will be able to compensate for your lack of inborn smarts. Welcome to the world of the “cognitive elite.”
I think that what most people find so frightening and repellant about this scenario is that it sounds so plausible. It is, after all, nothing but evolution in action.
It is also something about which we seem to be able to do little or nothing, at least in our present state of technology.
And imagining a world in which we can do something about it doesn’t make us any happier. We imagine rich and smart people running off to get their children’s genes “fixed” while poor and stupid people have no access to gene therapy, therefore making their children further and further behind in intelligence and talent.
But to anyone who looks at the actual historical record of what has happened over the last century, or even just the last 30 years, there is no shortage of evidence that cream is still rising out of the bottom of the barrel.
And that cream is not all made up of people with special innate talents. Some people are simply born without the ability to be Michael Jordan. Nobody–except the mentally or severely physically handicapped–is born without the ability to be Sonny Bono, or my immigrant Chinese family with their ever-more numerous local businesses.
It is, in fact, not the case that everybody who is born with a special talent is successful because of that talent, or successful at all. Even exceptionally talented people have to work at it, or they will be bested by people with less talent but more drive. That’s how Michael Jordan ended up not making his high school basketball team one year.
There are thousands of geniuses out there who have done nothing in particular with their lives, because they just wouldn’t work at it. At the end of the day, it doesn’t matter what a brilliant literary talent you are if you never finish a book. It doesn’t matter what a brilliant actor you are if you never prepare for auditions. It doesn’t matter if you’re Michael Jordan if you won’t practice and spend all your time on the court hot dogging as if you’re the only one there.
You’re far more likely to fail through no fault of your own than you are to succeed that way.
But although lack of inborn natural talent will prevent you from doing certain things, it won’t prevent you from doing everything. My Chinese family is not made up of Einsteins and Rudolph Nureyevs. It is simply willing to do what it takes to put themselves on a safe financial and social footing–and that, I think, is open to almost everyone.
The question then becomes: what does it mean that somebody “can’t” take care of himself, and what should we do about it?
I’ll get there tomorrow.
I need to go back to the harpsichords.
And Not Really All That Balanced
Okay, I’m sorry–I couldn’t help it.
Reading the comments this morning was amazing–mm is quite right. She never said anything about equalizing outcomes, and neither did I.
What I DID say was that most of us are comfortable with the idea that people should be rewarded differently for making different choices.
We think hierarchy is “fair” if people acquire their places in it through their own effort, work, and decisions.
It is only when winning and losing are based on something outside our control that most of us have a problem with different outcomes for different people.
I tried to point out some of the problems with the “it’s okay as long as it’s based on our own effort and decisions” position last post, let me try to say something about “environment” in this post.
The first thing I want to do is to remove from the discussion something that is “environmental,” but that actually functions more like what is genetic: problems that are the result of permanent damaged caused by something experienced in the womb.
For better or worse, things like fetal alcohol syndrome, birth defects due to exposure to toxins and that kind of thing tend to be grouped, in ordinary conversation, as things people are “born with.” So I’m going to leave the discussion of those things to part about what we’re born with.
Differences due to environment are actually what we usually mean when we complain that outcomes are “not fair.”
And we don’t usually discuss the fairness or the unfairness of the adults in the household. It’s not the adults for whom poverty is “unfair,” but the children–to the extent to which children are born with more or fewer material advantages, we believe that the outcomes of their lives are affected. And if some people will have better outcomes merely by having the luck to be born to better parents, the entire system begins to look corrupt.
In some ways, the reason why we feel this way is fairly clear-cut. I call it the Paris Hilton Syndrome.
The woman has done little or nothing to earn the money she spends. She barely bothered to finish high school. She’s not talented, accomplished or hard working–or at least that’s the perception. Even so, she spends on a single handbag an amount of money that would save some family’s home from foreclosure for months.
One of the things I find interesting is that Hilton herself doesn’t actually quite fit this description, but that’s another story for another day.
At the most basic level, environmental unfairness begins with things like nutrition–can the family afford all the food it needs, and the right kinds of food? do the parents know what the right kinds of food are? do they care?
This is a matter of money, and the money issue goes a long way. Wealthier families can afford good private schools if the local public ones are inadequate. Those private schools have more resources than most public schools do. The parents can afford private tutors if Johnny is failing, expensive academic enrichment summer activities (think space camp), extensive travel and other amenities that we think will give a child an edge in school.
What’s more, some parents, even though they’re not necessarily all that well off, are more capable of giving their children advantages in other ways–because the parents read books, there are books around the house; because the parents are concerned with politics, there are discussions of current issues at the dinner table.
A few months ago a story broke about a principal in, I think, Georgia, who had required all students in AP classes in his high school to sign a pledge not to do any homework at home or to discuss the AP coursework with their parents. This was, he said, because some students might have access to more resources at home than other students, and if they were allowed to use those resources the competition for grades on AP courses would not be “fair.”
I spent a fair amount of time this morning trying to find one of the articles about this and couldn’t. I remember the story, though, becaues Matt and Greg and I discussed it at the time.
And also because, of course, its premise is true–if you have me as a parent, you’re going to have at least some scholastic advantages over a kid with a parent like, say, my cousin Chris.
When my sons were small, I used to make them earn the right to watch television during summer vacations by passing quizzes. One year, Greg’s right to play video games during the summer required him to be able to recite the entire Bill of Rights, verbatim, and to explain each one.
When Greg got to American history in eighth grade, he not only already knew most of the material, he could argue positions on issues using Supreme Court rulings, and cite those rulings by title and date.
This did, inevitably, give him a head start on the rest of the class. In a public school where levels of parental support for education would have been wider, it would have given him a HUGE head start on some people.
For most people, though, those kinds of inequalities are acceptable–after all, somebody worked for them, even if it was the parents instead of the children. We also tend to find the actions of parents who do this kind of thing admirable. They are taking care of their children. They want what’s best for them and they work hard to get it.
Still, we can’t help but be aware of the fact that some children have more than others, and we’re fairly convinced that when this is the case, the children who grow up with more are automatically advantaged on the road to “success” over those who grow up with less.
We support this belief by pointing to statistics that show that children from more affluent families have higher academic and career achievements that children from poor ones. A school that is 95% white and middle class will produce higher scores on standardized tests than a school that is 95% black and Hispanic and on welfare.
In point of fact, the issue is even more complicated than it seems, because not only do poor schools have fewer resources–crowded classrooms, not even textbooks, no science labs–but they also tend to have teachers that are not only from the bottom of the barrel of the applicant pool (mixed metaphor alert!), but who think that the children they teach aren’t really smart enough to learn.
Yes, that’s what I said. Go back and read it again. That’s the secret behind the cheating scandals in Atlanta, Pennsylvania and now at least one school in Connecticut. These are schools whose teachers and administrators are convinced that their students are incapable of meeting basic academic standards.
And if you don’t think it matters if teachers think their students are capable of learning–well, you’ve got more faith in native talent than I do.
I think most of us would agree without too much argument that all schools should have the necessary textbooks and other equipment required to teach.
Beyond that, though, what’s going on here is not as clear as it looks.
For one thing, there are plenty of successful people–often very successful people (think Bill Clinton and Barack Obama)–who came from families who were poor, dysfunctional and on welfare. One of the more interesting things about reading Too Big To Fail was noticing that a big chunk of the most powerful CEOs in America had come from families that were no better than working class, and often less, and from schools that were–well, inadequate. Poor-kids-made-good were grossly overrepresented in the land of the eight figure bonus.
And that means, of course, that rich kids with all the advantages were underrepresented, which brings me to another point:
It is not the case at all that kids from rich or quasi-rich families, who get to go to expensive private schools and who won’t need to take much in the way of loans for college–it is not the case at all that all of those kids, or even a majority of them, “make good” in the sense of going on to high paying and prestigious careers.
One of the great secrets of American upper middle class life is the way in which it must be reearned in every generation, and the way in which bringing a kid up with “all the advantages” often makes that goal difficult to attain.
In the highest performing public high schools–the Wiltons, the New Triers–a solid core of overachieving workaholics gets into the Ivies and their equivalents, while most of their just-as-advantaged peers scrape by and settle for second, third and fourth tier. Their parents write the checks that mean they can go to the University of Denver or Colby-Sawyer or wherever, but they don’t end up at white shoe wall street law firms or with the presidencies of banks.
Maybe what’s really going on here is this: all things being equal, differences in environmental advantages will have a big impact on eventual outcomes.
But all things are almost never equal.
And I’ll get to genetics, and natural talent, tomorrow.
But, in the meantime: to the poster who said that the dramatic unities were thought up by the French and produced only mediocre drama–
The dramatic unities are from Aristotle’s Poetics, and they describe perfectly that actual dramatic plan of all the plas of Sophocles, including Oedipus Tyrranus.
Shakespeare may never have written a play like that, but many dramatists of the Classical period in Athens did, and they wrote good ones. Not only the Oedipus cycle of Socrates, but the Oresteia of Aeschylus and many more were written according to the unities.
Aristotle was not laying down rules, but describing what the greatest playwrights of his day actually did.
Those plays remain, to this day, among the greatest ever written–and yes, at least as great as Shakespeare.
Fair
I have been thinking about the way one poster formulated the–ack, I don’t have a word for it. Maybe instead of “formulated” I should have said “described.”
The poster said that the students in our classes show varying degrees of ability and achievement, and that those varying degrees of ability and achievement are sometimes genetic, sometimes environmental, and sometimes behavioral, and always some combination of the three.
What interested me was not so much the formulation itself as the unstated but clear assumption that we need to “do” something about this situation. It’s an interesting idea, on a number of levels, not the least of it being the fact that it is thoroughly modern. The world existed for millennia without doing anything about what most of its inhabitants would have considered the obvious state of things.
The assumption exists because of another assumption, also unstated but very widely held: that if differences exist in the material well being of individuals and families, then those differences need to be justified. If there is no justification for them–if the individuals who get the most haven’t “earned” it–then the situation is not fair, and should be either eliminated or alleviated.
The unstated assumption goes farther than this, I think. It assumes that “earning” it means that you have obtained whatever advantage you have from a deliberate act of your will–from working hard, and not from advantages you were born with and did nothing to acquire on your own.
Gene Tierney was born looking like that. She did nothing to earn it, and yet it made it possible for her to be rich and famous in a way most other women could not. There was no level playing field between Tierney and the girl who worked at the drugstore in her town. One of them was born beautiful and the other was not. Therefore, Tierney’s relative wealth and happiness was not fair and should not be tolerated without some attempt to allieve the lesser fortune of the drug store clerk.
I am, of course, simplifying this enormously. I do not, however, think I’m misstating the position.
And the position is so common–the idea that there can be no justification for differences in outcome that are not caused entirely by “merit”–that most of us spend little time thinking about it, never mind examining it.
And yet it is, really, a new thing under the sun. It would not have been considered obvious to most people even 50 years ago. It didn’t exist as an idea when Shakesepeare wrote his plays.
Let’s look, for a minute, at the three possible reasons for unequal outcomes:
1) genetic–some people just are born prettier, smarter, more talented than other people.
2) environmental–some people have better families, live in places with better schools, come from countries or family background that just have access to more resources.
3) behavioral–some people work hard and perservere. Some people spend their time drinking Smirnoff out of the bottle and buying scratch tickets.
Of the three categories above, I think we tend to think of the third as the least problematic. Of course people who work hard and behave themselves should do better than people who slack off or indulge in mind-altering substances to the exclusion of all else.
The fact is that category (3) is very problematic, and in numerous ways.
Let’s take, for instance, the case of firefighters, police officers and soldiers–and, for that matter, stray civilians who take the responsibility of helping their fellows in a crisis of some kind.
The guy who leaps into the street and pushes the three year old out of the path of the oncoming truck, only to get hit himself, may have behaved admirably only to be rewarded by a lifelong disability. That disability will almost certainly make him less materially successful than he would have been without it–or at least the percentages run that way.
And his single act of heroism may impact not only himself, but his family–may make it impossible for him to put his kids through college or to take care of his mother in her old age. His marriage may not survive the years of care he’ll need. His mental health may not survive it, either.
I think we all respond instinctively to this scenario–that it is “not fair,’ and that something should be done to alleviate the afteraffects of the man’s decision.
And underneath the confusion of “fair” talk–and talk about what is “fair” is always confused–there is something real and important: the reason we feel that category (3) outcomes should be accepted as merited lies at least as much in the fact that we want to encourage good behavior and discourage bad.
What we want is to ensure that more people take responsibility for their lives and contribute to society and fewer contribute nothing and become destructive to themselves and the world around them.
But the first responders–the people who take responsibity even when they don’t have to, especially–are the most important contributors to any society. The more of them we have, the less will be the damage from any crisis, large or small.
Think about those nursing home residents left to drown as the staff at their facility fled the waters of Katrina. The staff members were condemned and investigated even though doing what we wanted them to do–staying with the patients and putting their needs first–was not in their immediate or long-term self interest.
Doing what we wanted them to do, however, might have made the destructive effect of that storm just a little less awful than it was.
It would have done so even if the staff had been able to do nothing but calm the fears and panic among the elderly patients before they all died anyway.
What also makes the third category problematic, however, is that it makes another assumption that doesn’t quite work out in the real world–that the harder you work, the more successful you’ll be, and you’ll definitely be more successful than somebody who does not work as hard.
In some areas of life, this is pretty near absolutely true. In my town there is a family who has recently come over here from China. The children, who are in local schools, are beginning to speak halfway decent English. The parents and grandparents do not, and probably never will.
What they do do–all of them–is work like slaves. They began working in local Chinese restaurants. They lived in cheap rental apartments, often sleeping six or seven to a room, buying their clothes from thrift shops, socking away every cent. Then they opened their own small restaurant, and worked that too. Then they opened a laundry next door.
Give them another ten or fifteen years, and they’re going to be very well off. Give them another 25, and you’ll probably going to be able to call them rich.
When I bring up instances like this, I often get told that “everybody can’t do that.” And I think I’ll hold with Larry Block’s old proverb–everybody can’t, but anybody can.
Chance can certainly intervene–accidents, sickness–but in general, my father was right: anybody can get rich if that’s all he wants.
The squiffy thing about “work hard and you’ll get ahead,” though, is that in some fields, how hard you have to work will be determined at least in part by factors outside your conscious control (inborn talent, say).
A naturally gifted actor who works hard will definitely have more success than a naturally gifted actor who coasts, at least in the long run–but both of them will have more success than an actor with no talent, no matter how hard he works.
It is the recognition of this that accounts for so many actors and actresses being so determinedly lefty. If we only deserve what we have worked for, then the fact that we only manage to get where we are through inherited advantages like good looks, charisma and natural acting ability means we don’t deserve what we have.
It’s difficult to find anybody, anywhere, who becomes successful “by merit alone.” Or, as Thomas Sowell insists–and I think he’s right–performance. It’s how we perform that makes the difference, not some innate quality of “merit.”
The question then becomes whether it is possible for anyone to fail entirely “by merit [performance] alone.”
And that I think I’ll leave until tomorrow, along with the other two categories.
It’s going to be a wretchedly hot and humid day.
My Beautiful Balloon
So, over the last several days, I have been trying very, very hard not to comment on the debt ceiling, or the debt ceiling debates, or the whole crisis-mode 24-hour news cycle that has been making finding out what happened locally–like whether they’ve caught the runaway leaping cow–nearly impossible.
Now that it’s all over, though, I find myself absolutely flabbergasted. And mostly I’m absolutely flabbergasted because, in fact, nothing actually happened.
Here’s where we are, as of this morning:
The Tea Party did not get any actual cuts in the funding of government programs. The government will spend more money next year than it did this year, on practically everything.
The “cuts” supposedly in the deal are only cuts to possible projected expenditure.
And that’s the first way nothing changed–we do this all the time. If government spends $100 on Head Start today and wants to spend $200 on Head Start tomorrow, but we only let them spend $150, we call this a “cut.” In fact, we call it a drastic cut. We come up with some ridiculously extreme sounding percentage (Head Start funding cut by 25%!), even though in fact the budget increased by an even larger percentage.
If what the Tea Party wanted to do was to roll back government expenditure, it failed.
I’m not actually sure that that’s what the Tea Party wants to do, but we can get to that another time.
On the other side of the aisle, Progressives also failed to raise taxes on the “wealthy”–and yes, at the standard that $250,000 a year is “wealthy,” that deserves scare quotes.
In a way, Progressives lost less heavily than the Tea Party did. The Tea Party failed utterly. The Progessives got at least some growth in government.
And, in fact, they were never interested in taxing the wealthy anyway. If you want to tax the wealthy, you don’t raise income tax rates on people making more than $250,000 a year, or even $1,000,000 a year. You go after specific provisions in the tax law and target them narrowly, you hit the estate tax rates–and then you recognize that even when you do that, you’re in danger of catching ordinary, non-wealthy people in the web.
In case you wonder why we never get a raise in the capital gains rates: it may have less to do with fat cat Wall Street lobbyists and more on the senior citizens’ lobbies. Why? Because, for most Americans, the only time they’ll come into contact with the capital gains tax is when they sell their big family house for one in order to buy a cheaper one and live on the difference during their retirement. Every time you raise the capital gains rates, you’re in danger of making it impossible for Grandpa to retire. Every time you provide a loophole for him to get through, a lot of richer people will find a way to use it to shield their own money.
I am not, for my part, much interested in the level of taxation. Maybe I would be if income tax rates were higher than they are, or much higher than they are. But my primary concern is with the areas into which government is allowed to intrude.
The core functions of government are the military, the police, and the courts, and the legal structures that go to maintain them–Congress, for instance, and the Department of Defense.
The secondary functions of government are those things that must be done if society is going to function at all–building and maintaining roads and bridges, establishing currency, and that kind of thing.
After that we get into lots of things that we may want to do, and that we may even have good practical arguments in favor of doing, but that are not strictly necessary to a functioning society. We know they’re not strictly necessary, because society has functioned without them before, and societies in the world today function without them.
Any sane approach to the budget would cut those things in the third category first, and would start with cutting those things in the third category that don’t seem to be much more than busybodying for the sake of busybodying.
I mean, I’m sorry, but I don’t care how fat the children of America are getting. It’s none of Washington’s business. How will be cure the “epidemic of obesity?” you ask. We won’t. Just because there’s a problem doesn’t mean government is supposed to solve it.
The same for the literally thousands of little programs meant to “address” problems like school bullying, self-esteem, body image, drug and alcohol abuse awareness (note the last word), and on and on and on–literally thousands of them, all of them small, all of them eating up money in the form of salaries, pensions and benefits for staff and administrators.
Just above those are the programs that are bigger and have a constituency, but are just as expendible in a time when we don’t really have enough money to fund things that matter: The National Endowments for the Arts and the Humanities, NPR and PBS.
Of course, I’d do more than that, if it was left up to me–I’d get rid of the entire Department of Education, for instance, because education in this country is supposed to be a local (or at best state) concern, not a federal one. I’d get rid of the Department of Homeland Security and put its necessary functions into the Defense Department and get rid of the duplications. And there are lots. I’d abolish the Departments of Health and Human Services, Housing and Urban Development, and Labor, elminate about three-quarters of what they do and put the rest in a single smaller department.
And while I was at it, I’d get rid of the right of departments to issue regulations with the force of law. If it’s going to be a law, it will have to be voted on by elected representatives who can be held accountable for what they do and how they do it.
But now I’m past the budget and on to other things.
But it doesn’t matter, really, because we’re just back to the same old same old. Budget “cuts” that aren’t really cuts, taxing the rich who aren’t really rich.
It’s what we do.
First Novels
For the last several months, I’ve been reading and rereading–almost obsessively–Golden Age detective novels.
I’m not entirely sure what this is about. Maybe I’m just trying to recapture what it was that made me love detective novels to begin with. “Murder mysteries” is what they were called when I was younger, and “murder mysteries” is what I think of them still.
I’ve been aided in this endeavor by good friends who have sent huge packaged of books, replacing many of the ones I had that are now out of print or very expensive to get.
This week I’ve been looking at two in particular, mostly because they surprised me, especially taken as a pair.
The books are Whose Body? by Dorothy L. Sayers and The Mysterious Affair at Styles by Agatha Christie.
Before I go on to what I want to go on to, I should note a couple of things.
These two novels are both first novels, both in the absolute sense–the first ever written by these two authors–and in the relative sense–the first appearance of their most famous detectives.
For Christie, that detective was Hercule Poirot. For Sayers, it was Lord Peter Wimsey.
These two novels were also written and published very close together in time–The Mysterious Affair at Styles in 1920 and Whose Body? in 1923.
And there are, of course, other similarities. Both women were British. Both used Conan Doyle and Sherlock Holmes as her template.
The similarities are important because they rule out many of the usual explanations for why two novels might be dissimilar. Christie and Sayers were both writing for the same audience. They were writing at a similar time in their own lives and in the history of the world. They were coming out of the same tradition. They were writing their first novels. They were being published at the same time.
And their books, even so, could not be less alike.
Let me start out by saying that I have always thought of myself as really loveing the work of Dorothy L. Sayers, and I am willing to say, even now, that Gaudy Night and The Nine Tailors are two of the best works of fiction in the detective genre.
The first Sayers novel I ever read was Murder Must Advertise, and I remember loving it. I think it’s weaker now, but I’m older, and I’ve read and written a lot more.
The problem with Whose Body is not that it is genuinely and truly awful–although it is that–but that it is genuinely and truly awful in ways it did not need to be.
Everything that is wrong with this book is wrong because of a decision made by Dorothy L. Sayers herself, and everything that is wrong is not wrong with The Mysterious Affair at Styles.
There is, to begin with, the fact that there is no establishing information of any kind at the beginning of this book. We are plunged into the plot not just in media res but in media life. Lord Peter is already well known to Scotland Yard and welcomed to help investigate even with his amateur status. We don’t know why, or under what circumstances, he came to be so. There is a body in a bath, stark naked except for a pair of pince-nez. We not only don’t know who he is–that’s the point of the title, after all–but anything about any of the circumstances surrounding either the death or the people in whose home the death was discovered.
We are introduced to a pack of characters without being given any background on any of them. What very little characterization there is consists of throwaway stereotyped lines about stupid police detectives and consceintious Jewish financiers.
As for Lord Peter himself, he is, almost entirely, a caricature. The endless and unrelieved stress on his bizarre mannerisms, the attempts to reproduce his dialect in speech, brought me to a point where, around page 30, I was ready to shoot him. The constant dropping of the final g in words like “thinking” and “doing” were enough to make me think that Cromwell hadn’t been entirely wrong to want to get rid of the aristocracy.
And then there’s the matter of that aristocracy. Aristocrats litter this book, all drawn with the broad lines of music hall comedy, stupid and vapid young men idling away at clubs if they can and being miserable about jobs if they have them. The aristocratic set could have been done by Monty Python as part of one of those sketches about upper class twits.
Through all this, it’s perfectly possible to see how Sayers has attempted to imitate Conan Doyle. We are first introduced to Holmes in media life, too. He is already a consulting detective with something of a reputation among the police. Holmes works where Sayers doesn’t, I think, because Watson provides the set up and background that makes the reader feel the story has some kind of foundation, rather than being sort of shot out of a cannon without warning. Watson explains things to his readers because he needed to have them explained to himself. Sayers has provided no Watson, and plot elements and clues come flying out of nowhere at random intervals.
It’s also easy to see how Christie was imitating Conan Doyle. The Mysterious Affair at Styles is written in first person from the point of view of Poirot’s own Watson, the amiable idiot known as Captain Hastings.
In this book, however, there is due time taken to introduce first Hastings himself and then the people with whom he is staying, the people among whom the murder will occur. What’s more, Poirot’s career and reputation are explained–briefly, but explained–before we ever see him, and well before he ever finds himself involved in helping to solve the crime.
And although Poirot has some elements of caricature, he is not written so broadly as to be unbelievable, and the other characters are not caricatures at all. Even Hastings isn’t a caricature.
It feels to me, reading them side by side, as if the two women approached their first books with entirely different attitudes and intentions.
It feels to me that Sayers set out to write a murder mystery, but Christie set out to write a novel.
If I’ve just punched all your buttons, stop. I’m not talking about “the novel” as a superior form to “genre.” Christie’s first book is very much “genre.”
Many genre novels are very good novels as well as being very good examples of their genre.
But Whose Body? isn’t a genre novel. It’s an intellectual exercise, a sort of elongated crossword puzzle, in which the usual strengths of fiction–for characterization, setting, even for plot as more than just a string of events–are almost entirely absent.
I wonder how much of this difference can be laid at the feet of the one really striking difference between the two women. Agatha Christie left school at the end of what Americans would call “high school” and married and settled down. Dorothy L. Sayers became part of the first contingent of female students ever allowed to study at Oxford and eventually one of the first women ever to receive an Oxford degree.
University training being what it is, maybe the difference is that Agatha Christie assumed that in writing a detective story she was wring a novel, and that Sayers assumed that in writing a dectective story she wasn’t.
Obviously, of course, somewhere down the line, Sayers must have changed her mind. Gaudy Night is certainly a novel, and not just an exercise in creating a puzzle.
The nature of the two books, though, explains why I have always kept a copy of The Mysterious Affair at Styles around the house–and replaced it every time it fell apart, as it did this morning–but I had to be reintroduced to Whose Body by a friend.
I’m going to go put on some harpsichords.
Plays Well With Others
So, I’ve been looking over the comments for the last few days, and I’ve decided it’s time to be explicit about what I always thought should have been obvious. I mean, I don’t have anything else to say, and it’s late in the afternoon, and I’m tired.
Also, it sort of strangely fits in with one of the odder things about the faculty meeting.
So.
First, this is a blog, not a discussion group, and I’m not a moderator. It exists for me to blither every once in a while, when I feel like it. Me being me, I feel like it a lot.
Back in the days when I did participate in Internet discussion groups, I refused to touch any that were moderated, on the assumption that all moderation is first and foremost an attempt to restrict speech.
“Civil” is as “civil” does, and mostly it defines anything OUR side says as constructive criticism, and anything THEIR side says as harrassment, intimidation, bullying and extremism.
Been there, done that, have that t-shirt.
That said, however, there are two people that I know of who would not be allowed to post here if they ever tried to register. One of them is the person who drove me off my last Internet discussion list. The other is the single most dishonest human being I’ve ever met, digitally or otherwise.
It’s my blog. I can do what I want to.
Second, other than the two people in question, I’m perfectly happy to have people blither, rant, fight and whine in the comments, as much as they want, as long as everybody understands, up front, that it is not my job to police the action.
What I really won’t do is throw a commenter off the blog because another commenter is upset–is commenter a word?
Anyway, I know nobody commenting here now has made any such request, but the requests have been made, from time to time, directly and indirectly. In the case of the direct request I declined, and in the case of the indirect request I ignored. Both got me called a lot of names.
But it’s like my father used to say–if you haven’t heard it before, you don’t know what it means; and if you have heard it before, it hasn’t killed you yet.
I do wish some of you–and that’s a PLURAL, because half of you do it at least some of the time–would be less quick to infer that somebody else’s comments is saying something distinctly–I don’t know how to put this.
Let’s just say we’ve all got buttons that are more or less easily pushed. And sometimes it would make sense to go back and reread the comment you think offended you before you decide it’s actually saying what you think it’s saying to offend you.
Okay–diagram that sentence.
Finally, my own and only reason for writing this blog is to have fun. There are things I’m interested in–politics, yes, but also literature, movies, harpsichords, the middle ages, Catholic theology, Renaissance painting, education, the murder mystery past and present–lots of things.
I write the blog because I want to talk about them.
If you write a comment to the blog and I don’t respond to it, it means nothing at all except that it’s not a subject I feel like writing about today.
It doesn’t mean I agree with it or disagree with it or love it or hate it or anything. It’s just not catching my interest in the way it needs to if I’m going to WRITE about it.
And it’s harder to write about things than it is to read about them, or talk about them.
And to go further than that–if I do respond in contradiction to some you said, I don’t necessarily disagree with you.
When I was growing up, my father made a big point of teaching us that in order to understand our own arguments, we had to fully understand the arguments on the other side.
He also said that it was never legitimate to engage in straw man arguments.
So when I see people saying things that aren’t exactly true, I tend to jump in and make the opposite case, or correct the definitions.
This is how I once got called a right wing extremist and a socialist moonbat on the same discussion group on the same day.
It’s been worse in fan mail.
In the end though, is this: I like the comments, whether I agree with them or not. I want lots of comments. I wish the lurkers would comment more.
But right now, I’m in the middle of writing a book in a new series, or at least finishing this part of it. With all new characters, my cheat sheet looks like crib notes for a dissertation defense.
And the term is about to start.
I’m a little distracted.
Thou Shalt Not
One of the really nice things about this summer is that a friend of mine has been sending me books, mostly classic mysteries, or things having to do with classic mysteries. One of those books was a collections of essays, articles and other material about “the detective story,” published in the 1950s. I’d remember the name of it if I could, but at the moment I can’t, and I can’t look it up.
I’ve got a faculty meeting today, so I’m sitting around waiting for it at a computer at school. The book, of course, is at home.
Maybe I should have waited to get home to write this.
Except–probably not. I’m going to be exhausted by the time I get home, and in the meantime I remember wha it was that bothrered me.
Part of the book consists of a section of various advice by professional writers of detective stories on what you should and should not do in a murder mystery. Some of this advice is just good sense–don’t include untracable poisons, for instance, or make your murderer somebody nobody has ever heard of through the course of the novel.
It did interest me, though, that so much of the advice in these four or five articles–one was not an article but the ceremony for induction into the Detective Club–was negative. It was all about what not to do. And there was a lot that was proscribed, too. So much so that if I actually followed the advice, I’d never write a mystery novel again.
Among the various thou shalt nots, for instance was “thou shalt not do any part of the novel from the murderer’s point of view.”
I should point out here that the articles and essays were talking about detective novels, and fair play ones at that, and that the problem seemed to be that doing a section from the murderer’s point of view without revealing the fact that that was the murderer wasn’t fair play, and revealing the fact made the detection part of the book superfluous.
My sentences are really getting impossible today. I have no idea if that’s fear of faculty meetings or just getting up early.
It seems to me that excluding any writing from the murderer’s point of view does two things to a murder mystery, both bad: it makes it impossible to truly get into the murderer’s mental frame of reference, to understand the motive and the personality that was susceptible to the motive; and it limits the number of points of view that can be presented under any circumstances.
And, in fact, among the other “thou shalt nots” in these pieces was the insistance that a detective novel should be about a detective detecting, and any other focus on any other character, murderer or not, was a bad thing,
Even at first glance, it must be obvious that adhering to any such rule would wipe out some of the most famous classic mysteries of all time–The Murder of Roger Ackroyd, Murder on the Orient Express–as well as doing in all the work of P.D. James, Elizabeth George, Martha Grimes, and dozens of others.
In fact, a mystery written with this rule taken as a rule would not be a novel at all. It would be an intellectual puzzle with a little narrative, like a kind of interactive, video-game version of a crossword puzzle.
But even the rule about never writing from the murderer’s point of view is bad enough. If the reader knows, going in, that the writer will never write from the murderer’s point of view, then he is able to discount any character from whose point of view the author does write. Aha, he says, clues rule out Sheila and Lancelot, but point of view sections also rule out Martin, Jacob, Gwendolyn and Miles–that leaves only Stedman to be the murderer!
In fact, all the thou shalt nots seemed to me to unduly restrict the scope of the mystery novel, to take it out of the real of literature and make it something else, and something far less interesting.
I don’t, I suppose, have much problem with writers urging each other not to engage in genre cliches. I’ve got a list of genre cliches I’d like to see die a natural death myself.
But why should mystery writers, any more than any other kinds of novelists, be restricted in which or how many points of view to use, or restricted to a relentless hammering on the detection to the exclusion of all other issues, or prevented from writing about current events or philosophical issues or politics?
It seems to me that a mystery novel is first and foremost a novel, and that that is true even of the fair play detective story. There’s nothing inherent in the form that should mean it must be penned into a very small place, and the smaller the better.
And now this room is full of people talking, and I have to go.
It feels like half a post. Maybe I’ll get back to it tomorrow.
Getting To Be Fall
Well, okay, maybe not this second. We just went through the week-end from Hell, almost literally. It was hot enough. And it’s not even August yet.
But today is the first time in months that I actually have to be somewhere by eight o’clock in the morning, and tomorrow I’ve got something going, too.
I’m not sure why the “have to be somewhere” thing is so important. It’s not like I usually sleep past the time I got up this morning anyway. My almost invariable rule has been to wake up between four and four thirty in the morning and go from there. It’s a good, quiet time to write in. If either of my sons is up, it’s because he’s been up, all night long. I don’t feel any compunction about packing him off to bed so that I can be alone to think.
But having to be somewhere at eight is what I associate with teaching, and although today has nothing to do with teaching–Greg has a doctor’s appointment–teaching is definitely on the horizon. Last term, I did very little of it. Greg’s medical problems and my mother’s on top of them became pretty much all I had room for.
This term it looks like I’m going to be doing a lot more, which is kind of nice. And yes, I know I complain. But still.
Complicating the teaching situation at the moment are the effects of Connecticut’s big round of problems with its state government, now led by a man named Dan Malloy, a Democrat.
During the entire Wisconsin public workers union flap of a few months ago, Malloy, who was faced by a similar mess, was interviewed by one of the cable news networks. His statement was that, unlike Wisconsin, Connecticut would have a different and more balanced approach to the budget deficit problem, one that wouldn’t hurt so many people.
Malloy then went to our state government and asked for a package of tax increases, which he got. This, he said, was the first step in a two-step process. The next step was for Connecticut state workers to agree to cutbacks in wage increases and benefits.
Our sales tax went from 6% to 6.35%. Our state income tax rates were raised slightly at the top end. We lost a decades old $50 sales-tax-exclusion on clothes. The real estate tax credit went from a maximum of $500 to a maximum of $300.
All of these were tax increases that would be felt by pretty much everybody in the state. The real estate tax credit cutback is going to hit just those families who are struggling to pay mortgages. The end of the $50 sales tax exclusion for clothes is actually the end of Connecticut’s long series of attempts not to put sales tax on clothes for children. The sales tax hike has weird effects everywhere. My McDonald’s speciality coffee, which I admit I only get about twice a month, is now 1 penny more expensive.
But if you’re going to share the wealth, you’ve got to share the pain. Malloy was convinced that, having had his tax increases (or most of them) passed by the state legislature, he would have no trouble getting the state employee unions to come to an agreement about cost of living wage increases and benefits general.
He was especially sure because the tax increases were not enough, and everybody knew it. If he couldn’t get concessions, he was going to have to go for lay offs.
Well, he’s had to go for lay offs. We’ve now had three or four rounds in the negotiating process, and although some of the state unions are willing to play ball, at least two of them are not. And the way bargainng works in this state, all the unions have to agree, or there’s no deal.
Malloy has started some cautious layoffs, but he’s started them as if he’s doing the thing where politicians try to scare the public into agreeing to higher taxes–in the first round, he laid off state police, and corrections workers.
The hold out unions aren’t impressed. They know all about those tactics, and the seem to think they’ll be fine, just sitting still and waiting for the man to cave.
In the meantime, the budget shortfalls are having direct effects on just about everything.
Some of the local community colleges have cancelled Saturday classes–to save money on opening and heating buildings–even though Saturday is the only day many working people can get to a class in the daytime.
At the closest of the community colleges to me, the number of composition course sections has been cut in half and the maximum number of students per class has been raised to 32. Composition, even in classes that are not remedial, requires teachers to assign and closely monitor several papers a term, often more than five. Nobody can possibly do a decent job of teaching composition to 32 students at once, never mind to 64 or 96–and full time faculty teach 4 courses a semester. I suppose the saving grace is that all 4 won’t be composition.
And as of yesterday afternoon, the unions are not budging.
During the whole Wisconsin thing, there was a lot of talk on the Internet about how awful what’s-his-name was being, trying to destroy the rights of workers to collective bargaining.
After several months of this, though, I have a little sympathy for Wisconsin’s governor. The way these people are behaving, I can easily see getting to the point where you think that only going nuclear could possibly get you anywhere.
We have raised taxes on the rich in Connecticut. We’ve raised them on everybody else, too, including on people who are living on welfare and food stamps, since they still shop in stores and buy gasoline. We have changed the sales tax code so that online stores with partnership arrangements–such as Amazon–can no longer afford to partner with Connecticut-based web sites.
And, to be fair, the majority of the unions have voted to accept cutbacks–no cost of living increase this year, a little more every month of employee contributions to health care packages, a small (very small) scale back in pension benefits, some furlough days.
The two (I think) that aren’t moving, though, aren’t moving.
And so we’re running up against a wall, with schools starting next month on every level, and the people who are getting kicked to the curb are all the people who can afford it least. While the unions protect full time employees, the part timers and adjuncts are geting killed: less work, fewer courses, worse times.
I can’t remember hearing whether the Wisconsin governor got what he wanted in the end.
Malloy is definitely not getting what he wants here.
Maybe a “balanced” approach doesn’t work if too many of the people in the mix are unbalanced.