Monday, July 3, 2023

There's no such thing as debt "forgiveness", existentially, and why do we never discuss the morality of economics?

I'm continually amazed by how liberal economists actually don't understand economics at all.  It's bizarre. 

Consider this, brought about by the Supreme Court's determination that the President cannot forgive student loans by executive fiat (which is actually what it decided):

Total student loan debt that would have been erased for millions of Americans: $400 billion Total cost of the Trump tax cuts that largely benefited the wealthy and corporations: $1.9 trillion This is what I mean when I say the system is rigged.

Debt isn't really "erased".  It's transferred.  Debt that is forgiven is transferred to whomever extended the credit.

In this case, the student debt would have been passed on to the public, which already is heavily in debt with; 1) personal debt and 2) the debt the government has already imposed upon it.

Which raises this question. Would transfer of this debt have been moral?  

This hardly ever comes up in the context of this sort of discussion, but would it have been?  The general population of the United States would have acquired the personal debt of students, largely unknown to them, for what reason?

Well, the reason is that most student loans are bad investments, not yielding a sufficient return to pay for themselves.  That can indeed be a personal tragedy.  It is one that is encouraged by the student loan system, which no longer makes any sense.  Loans should be subject to more criteria than simply somebody wants one, but that is about it.

The Government indeed has some culpability in this, and perhaps that provides a basis for "forgiveness", but only if the Government seeks to address the underlying problem, for which there is no evidence.

At any rate, all the Court said is that Congress has to do this.  Part of the Court's ongoing reminder to Congress that it has a job to do, and to the general public that it's up to it to elect people.  Liberals hate that as, by and large, the public isn't too keen on stuff like this, and they know that.

As for tax cuts, I agree with Mr. Reich that taxes should be raised, but the President can't do that by fiat either.  Hence, why these two items cannot be compared, and the "rigged" accusation here is subject to a logic failure.

Being dim on the laws of other countries.

Among the comments I've seen about the riots in France is one wondering if this would be happening if the French were allowed to own firearms.

The French are allowed to own firearms.

There's a really weird, and dim, assumption that Americans are the only people on earth who are allowed to own firearms.  It's completely in error.  Most countries around the globe allow their citizens to own firearms. Even Japan, which is often cited as an example of complete firearms' prohibition, allows some firearms' ownership.

Lots of countries have considerably more restrictions than the US on firearms' ownership, but not all do.  Perhaps that's what confuses Americans, as we don't pay much attention; 1) beyond our own borders or 2) to anyone who doesn't speak English as their native language.  The UK has very strict firearms laws, as do Canada and Australia.  The latter two are far stricter than they should be, in my view.

But not every European country is anywhere near as strict as Americans seem to believe.  Yes, stricter than the US, but not as strict as apparently Americans commonly believe.

Interestingly, the opposite is true on abortion and surgical/chemical gender related mutilation of minors.

By and large, most European countries, maybe all European countries, are stricter than most of the US on abortion.  The US, thanks to the scientific illiteracy of Roe v. Wade, is far more bloody and liberal than Europe, by and large. FWIW, at least one large European country provides that abortion in general is illegal, but oddly allows it, on a much more restrictive basis than the US, on some odd legal reasoning basis that I don't really follow.

And on transgenderism and minors, Europe is very much beginning to ban  afflicting minors with surgery and pharmaceuticals, taking the approach, correctly, that its completely unsupported by the science.

Blog Mirror: The New York Times' Distortion of Two Major Supreme Court Rulings

 It's not only the New York Times that exhibits what this clear thinking article discusses:

The New York Times' Distortion of Two Major Supreme Court Rulings

Saturday, July 3, 1943. Oak Ridge sees its first residents.

The first residents of Oak Ridge, Tennessee, a government constructed town dedicated to the Manhattan Project, arrived.

U.S. howitzer being fired during battle.

The Battle of Wickham Anchorage on Vangunu concluded in an American victory.

The island today retains a small population of subsistence farmers.

Tuesday, July 3, 1923. Undersheriff to be tried.

 


A killing that stemmed from headlights on bright was not being ignored, even though it was committed by a sheriff's deputy.  Things had taken quite a turn.

President Harding gave a speech commemorating the 1843 initiation of travel on the Oregon Trail in a celebration in honor of the same in Meacham, Oregon.

Amy Howe on the Supreme Court.

In case you missed it, the Supreme Court decided a boatload of really important cases recently:

Supreme Court rules website designer can deny same-sex couples service

The court handed a major victory to business owners who oppose same-sex marriage for religious reasons on Friday. A six-justice majority agreed that Colorado cannot enforce a state anti-discrimination law against a Christian website designer who does not want to create wedding websites for same-sex couples because doing so would violate her First Amendment right… Read More


JUN 30 2023

Supreme Court strikes down Biden student-loan forgiveness program

This post was updated on June 30 at 3:53 p.m. By a vote of 6-3, the justices ruled that the Biden administration overstepped its authority last year when it announced that it would cancel up to $400 billion in student loans. The Biden administration had said that as many as 43 million Americans would have… Read More

Justices rule in favor of evangelical Christian postal worker

Federal law bars employers from discriminating against workers for practicing their religion unless the employer can show that the worker’s religious practice cannot “reasonably” be accommodated without “undue hardship.” The Supreme Court on Thursday ruled that a trivial burden is not the kind of “undue hardship” that will justify an employer’s failure to accommodate an… Read More

Supreme Court strikes down affirmative action programs in college admissions

This post was updated on June 29 at 4:08 p.m. In a historic decision, the Supreme Court severely limited, if not effectively ended, the use of affirmative action in college admissions on Thursday. By a vote of 6-3, the justices ruled that the admissions programs used by the University of North Carolina and Harvard College… Read More

JUN 27 2023

Court upholds state corporate registration law in major personal jurisdiction case

The justices narrowly rejected a challenge to the constitutionality of a Pennsylvania law that allows any company doing business in the state to be sued there – even if the corporation is not headquartered in Pennsylvania and the conduct at the center of the lawsuit occurred somewhere else. It was a major decision in personal… Read More

Justices throw out Colorado man’s stalking conviction in First Amendment dispute

The Supreme Court on Tuesday threw out the conviction of Billy Raymond Counterman, a Colorado man who was sentenced to four-and-a-half years in prison for stalking based on his Facebook messages. By a vote of 7-2, the justices ruled that the state courts had applied the wrong test to determine whether Counterman’s statements were “true… Read More

Supreme Court rules against North Carolina Republicans over election law theory

In a major election-law decision, the Supreme Court ruled on Tuesday that although the Constitution gives state legislatures the power to regulate federal elections, state courts can supervise the legislature’s exercise of that power. By a vote of 6-3, the court rejected the so-called “independent state legislature theory,” holding that the North Carolina Supreme Court… Read More

Sunday, July 2, 2023

Friday, July 2, 1943. The U.S. Army lands on New Georgia.

Men of the 37th Infantry Division on New Georgia.

The U.S. Army's 37th and 43d Infantry Divisions landed on New Georgia, the largest Solomon Island occupied by Japan.  Fighting would last over a month.

Rendova had been used as a staging area for the operation.

Monday, July 2, 1923: Officers behind bars, French seize Krupp factory

President Harding, continuing his Voyage of Understanding, was allowed to take the controls of a locomotive, fulfilling a boyhood ambition.  It was an early electric locomotive.

U.S. President Harding in the cab of a Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pacific Railroad ("Milwaukee Road") boxcab electric locomotive, July 2, 1923. 

The trip took Harding to Spokane, where he addressed a crowd on public lands.  In his address, acknowledging the growing conservation movement that had received a large boost during the presidency of Theodore Roosevelt, he argued that use of public resources from public lands, rather than locking them up, preserved them.  He also more or less correctly anticipated the size of the US population in 2023.



The sad story of a woman killed by a sheriff's deputy for failure to dim her lights was playing out with officers now behind bars.

And the French seized a Krupp plant.

Pope Pius XI sent a letter to the papal nuncio in Berlin appealing to the Weimar German Republic to try to make its reparations payments and to cease resisting the French.  Basically, an appeal to try to restore the evaporating peace.

On reparations, Allied delegates at the Conference of Lausanne made their final offer to Turkey.

Painted Bricks: Blog Mirror: Historic Casper Theaters For Sale Wi...

Painted Bricks: Blog Mirror: Historic Casper Theaters For Sale Wi...:  

Blog Mirror: Historic Casper Theaters For Sale With Legal Stipulation They Can't Be Theaters Again

 From the Cowboy State Daily:

Historic Casper Theaters For Sale With Legal Stipulation They Can't Be Theaters Again

As the owners they can, of course, do whatever they wish, including putting stipulations in the sale.  It's sad, however.

Assuming that anyone buys them with that stipulation present.

Painted Bricks: Painted Bricks: Tumble Inn, Powder River, Wyoming.

Painted Bricks: Painted Bricks: Tumble Inn, Powder River, Wyoming.

Painted Bricks: Tumble Inn, Powder River, Wyoming.

We recently ran this story. 

Painted Bricks: Tumble Inn, Powder River, Wyoming.:   As this institution is in the news, and as I knew I'd taken these photographs, I looked to see if I had posted them. Of course, I had ...

News now comes that the new owner will have the sign restored, but will not place it back up in Powder River, the reason being that in the process he discovered many broken bottles near the sign.

Well, that's no surprise.

Here's the thing, however. Out of context, it's just a big weird old sign.   

The Best Post of the Week of June 25, 2023

The best post of the week of June 25, 2023

We'd note, in posting this, that June 2023 had the second-highest readership tally of any month since February 2017 at which time we used to post a lot of threads to Reddit (which we learned we weren't supposed to do) and we were tracking the Punitive Expedition, which ended in February 1917.  We've hit this marks nearly this high since then twice, but only because there were suddenly days with high tallies. This was just steady readership.  Typically, we run around 500 readers per day, but recently it's been over 1,000 per day.

Thank you for reading, whether you just stop in once, or often. And please feel free to comment.

GMC New Design flatbed truck.


At war with nature.


Uprising In Russia? What just happened?















The Steer. 1942.


 Annual agricultural show at the state experimental farm at Presque Isle, Maine. Prizewinning "baby beef", raised by a daughter of a Farm Security Administration client.


The girl with the steer. Maybe we can't go home again, but you can sure see why we wish we could.

Saturday, July 1, 2023

Blog Mirror: The girl with the steer. Maybe we can't go home again, but you can sure see why we wish we could.

The girl with the steer. Maybe we can't go home again, but you can sure see why we wish we could.

We just linked this in.

I'm doing son again.

Lex Anteinternet: The Steer. 1942.:  

The Steer. 1942.


 Annual agricultural show at the state experimental farm at Presque Isle, Maine. Prizewinning "baby beef", raised by a daughter of a Farm Security Administration client.

I don't know how old this woman is, but given that she's indicated to be the "daughter of a FSA client", my guess is that she's in her late teens.  Probably somewhere between 17 and 19..

Looks older, doesn't she?

She certainly looks more mature.

I hate to go down that "everybody was better" in the past road, as it simply isn't true.  But a lot about this photograph is really remarkable. A young woman, some would say girl, but she looks too mature for that, is posed with a serious animal.  She has a serious look on her face.

She's clean, turned out in a dress, and not bedecked with tattoos. Her hair no doubt isn't green, violet or pink.  She undoubtedly isn't having doubts about her gender or fascinated, like so many are today, about her own organs to the extent she basis her identity on satisfying them.

Some things, indeed, truly were a lot better in the past.

Sunday, July 1, 1973. Birth of the DEA, Sealing Indochina's fate.

The United States Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) was created to enforce the Controlled Substances Act, which had come into existance in 1971.  The new entity was a merger of the Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs and the Office of Drug Abuse Law Enforcement.



President Nixon signed the Case–Church Amendment, which prohibited further U.S. military activity in Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia without prior Congressional approval.

Thursday, July 1, 1943. Romania seeks a way out, Cadet Nurse Corps established.

Romanian Foreign Minister Mihai Antonescu met with Benito Mussolini in an effort to secure Mussolini's cooperation for both countries to leave the Axis and exit World War Two.  Mussolini was non-committal.

Romania clearly saw which way the war was going and that the time had come to get out.  It likely figured it couldn't get out on its own, however.

The Women's Auxiliary Army Corps became the Women's Army Corps, reflecting it having achieved permanent status.

On the same day, the Cadet Nurse corps was established.

The organization hoped to relieve wartime and peacetime nursing shortages.

The Japanese Ministry of Health and Welfare issued it's An Investigation of Global Policy, with the Yamato Race as Nucleus.  Based on Nazi concepts of racism and Lebensraum, it justified the ongoing attempt at expansion of the Japanese Empire and planned to impose Japanese names, the Japanese language and the Shinto religion on all minorities within the Empire.

President Roosevelt commuted the death sentence of German-born Detroit restaurant owner Max Stephan to life imprisonment.  Scheduled to hang in just seven hours, Stephan had been convicted for harboring a German POW who had escaped captivity in Canada, and even taking the fellow to a tour of Detroit restaurants.

An item about keeping your radio working from this month in 1943, something vitally important as there was no wartime radio production.

Keep Your Radio Working: 1943

Sunday, July 1, 1923. Chinese exclusion and untimely death.

For those who may have followed yesterday's drama about a policeman (actually sheriff's officer) shooting into a car that refused to dim its headlights, the story plays out today:


The paper was just packed with accidental and untimely death, for that matter.

The Chinese Immigration Act, which we posted about earlier, and which banned Chinese immigrants from entering Canada, save for a few exceptions, came into effect.

A Rin Tin Tin movie was released.



Blog Mirror: Along With Conservative Triumphs, Signs of New Caution at Supreme Court

 

Along With Conservative Triumphs, Signs of New Caution at Supreme Court

Wyoming Catholic Cowboys - raw and real: Oatmeal

Wyoming Catholic Cowboys - raw and real: Oatmeal: Breakfast is the most important meal of the day. Though I like to mix it up on special occasions, oatmeal is my standard breakfast of choice...