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Nullius in Verba

October 8, 2008

Now That it Looks Like the Liberals Have a Chance… Bumped

Filed under: Conservative, Dion, Harper, Liberal, classical liberalism, economics, health care, media, spin — langmann @ 8:21 pm

Now that it looks like the Liberals have a chance…

Stephane Dion states that “Stephen Harper squandered the surplus on.” Then he goes on to insert either tax cuts, innovation spending, the GST or whatever is appropriate for the moment. This leaves me to ask, what exactly would Dion do with the surplus’ which, if I may remind him, come from you and I, and not some magic place. There is no macro economic plan I know of which proposes government keep surpluses accruing over years. Wait, actually there is a plan, its’ one where a dictator puts all that money in his Swiss Bank Account, but I digress. Even companies will invest profits or provide dividends while keeping a small amount to use as a contingency plan - something Paul Martin borrowed from the business world. So what did Harper do with the cash? Three billion spent on the military, which even the outgoing Liberals were planning on doing to refurbish a dying Canadian institution. Four billion spent on Health Care, on which has actually resulted in a reduction in waiting lists according to surgeons I have spoken with (we’ll see the big numbers). Six billion was used to lower the GST, while not the favorite of Economists, Harper was correct in stating that this is a regressive tax which harms the poor more than the rich - something every Economist knows, but the media won’t report (Harper has done more for the poor than the Liberals in 10 years so far).

So what would the Liberals have done? Probably nearly the same thing if in that situation. Or do they suggest not spending on Health Care or the desperate military, which was launched into Afghanistan by the Liberals in the first place?

What depresses me the most is not that Dion can say these things, in fact its what every opposition member would do. It is that the Mainstream Media isn’t all over Dion about this every time he opens his pie hole. Why don’t they ask about the Health Care spending, like “Hey Dion would you not have spent on Health Care, old boy?” There is a bias.

I think it is time to review these articles on the Green Shift, and how it will not reduce emissions but is likely to increase emissions, and moreover how even Jack Mintz, the Economist who helped write the plan, thinks it isn’t necessarily going to work.

Secondly let’s consider the NDP’s plan to increase corporate taxes. During a time when it is even more necessary to reduce taxes to make us more competitive against other leading countries (Stephen Harper plans to reduce our corporate taxes to the lowest in the G-7), Jack Layton wants to raise them. The OECD summarized the findings of the harmful effects of corporate taxes which I describe briefly in this article. In an open economy, Layton will only succeed in helping the blue collar workers lose their jobs. Right now Canada is rated to lead the G-7 in growth, albeit slow growth.

Yes, many economists describe a Keynsian style system of government spending through recessions, but Harper is correct in saying that once you go down that path it is hard to come back. Keynsianism is easy to understand, and lefties like that, but Robert Lucas and Milton Freidman have rightly critisized it and many have pointed out its failures. As both an economist and a politician I think he has good insight into the problems of Keynsian economics, what do you fund? Who gets funding? Are you picking winners and losers? Once a subsidy is given, it is not easy to take it away. Are you pouring money down the drain? Will the public go for it? It is easy as an economist to describe the best methods of targeted subsidies, but the public is as likely not to agree! You are constrained by public foolishness and corporate greed or seeking legalized monopoly establishment. Soon I will describe the critical paper that demonstrated government action extended the Great Depression.

Its not really useful if you read these, get your lefty friends to read the evidence. Or let them know the evidence. They believe in fairy tales.

September 28, 2008

Green Shift II: Robbing Peter to Pay Paul

(Please read the previous Green Shift article first if you haven’t already)

How the Green Shift Causes More Greenhouse Gas Production and is Worse for the Environment

In the 16th Century St. Paul’s Cathedral garnered the displeasure of much of London’s population, protesting against the control of religion and human rights by a foreign power in Rome, the cathedral was pillaged and nearly destroyed. God Himself made His feelings known when He joined with the mob, and destroyed the tower with a lightening bolt, the awesome display quickly sobering all sides in the debate.

During this time and afterwards, the well protected St. Peter’s also known as Westminster Abbey, had remained untouched, and money donated to that cathedral was siphoned off to pay for the maintenance of St. Paul’s, of which we have just stated caused much unrest and finally resulted in catastrophe.

It is from this situation the old English idiom “Robbing Peter to Pay Paul” came into use.*

The problem, as many have found out the hard way, is that quite often both Peter and Paul lose out when the unintended consequences of the enlighted action lead many and money astray. 

Stephane Dion Could Not Convert Canadians As Only the "One" Converts St Paul on the Road to Damascus
(Stephane Dion Could Not Convert Canadians As Only the “One” Converts St Paul on the Road to Damascus)

As I indicated in the previous article on the Green Shift, an unintended consequence of the shifting may actually result in more production of the supposed greenhouse gasses by consumers. In essence this has to do with the price elasticity of demand as well as the income elasticity of demand. These are influenced by the unfortunate fact that there are no real substitute goods for gasoline or many fossil fuels for that matter, as well as the fact that these substances are involved in almost every human endeavor.

To define it simply, the economic definition of elasticity is the ratio of the percent change in one variable to the percent change in another. The price elasticity of demand is therefore the percent change in quantity demanded divided by the percent change in price. Gasoline is a very inelastic good, meaning that changes in the price of gasoline will have very small effects on the quantity demanded.

In simple terms, the price elasticity of demand defines the percent people will decrease their consumption of a good if the price is increased. The income elasticity of demand is the percent people will increase their consumption of a good if you increase their income.

Alright so lets start with a very basic example. On a simple microeconomic scale, if Peter is spending 100 dollars on fossil fuels and the government taxes it by 20 more dollars, he will reduce his consumption of gasoline by the price elasticity of demand. In layman’s terms he will cut his use of gasoline by a certain amount based upon his budget. If the price elasticity of demand is inelastic because Peter cannot find another fuel source for his car, Peter may end up spending 118 dollars on gasoline with the government pocketing the 18 dollars and Peter reducing his quantity of gasoline by the small amount he can while sacrificing his spending on other more unnecessary things in his budget.

If the government then gives Peter back the 18 dollars it took then Peter may use the extra income to spend some of that money on gasoline depending on his income elasticity of demand. In layman’s terms as his income increases he will spend more of his budget on gasoline for example by making that extra trip to the video store, or out to dinner etc. More than likely he will use the extra money to buy some of the unecessary goods he gave up before the price increase once he has satisfied his gasoline requirements.

Think of what you would do in this simple situation, if you were only buying the amount of gas you absolutely needed before the tax, and then after the tax you got your money back. You will more than likely try and be back where you started. This is why on a micro-economic level, I think the Green Shift is flawed when it comes to greenhouse gas reduction. Soon I will show you the numbers, or the money as they say.

But what happens if the government gives you more money than you started with? This is the situation where you might actually end up buying more greenhouse gas producing products than you ever did before, and also where you might indirectly switch from using friendlier natural gas to deadlier gasoline

The problem is that the consumption taxes and income taxes are not directly linked.

Let’s set this up. The Green Shift proposes the impossible, that it will only target non-gasoline fuels for taxation. According to Natural Resources Canada data, residential natural gas contributes to 32.2 Mt of CO2 per year. It is a large segment of of the total residential production of CO2, on par with electricity. Oil is minor with only a 6.8 Mt contribution and will be ignored in this simple estimate. The estimated long run price elasticity of demand of natural gas is -0.36 according to the U.S. Department of Energy. The Green Shift will increase the price of natural gas by ~18.0% at the end of four years. Therefore the reduction in CO2 production is calculated to be 2.09 Mt (18.0%*(-0.36)/100*32.2 Mt).

According to the Green Shift somehow the majority of Canadians are going to get more money back due to income tax reductions. You only have to go to their website to see that somehow you are coming out ahead after playing with their calculator. (The plan implies the wealthy will not but in actual fact it will likely be the poor who suffer most.) Government projections have the revenue from National Personal Income Taxes in four years at roughly 143.375 billion dollars. Increased personal income due to Green Shift, 7.54%**. The income elasticity of demand for gasoline has been calculated to be on average to be 0.88 from a meta analysis by Espey. Natural Resources Canada has greenhouse gas emissions at 89.4 Mt CO2 for gasoline transportation. The increase in CO2 use from the increased income spent on gasoline is 5.93 Mt.  

Income elasticity of demand will also effect the consumption of natural gas. Income elasticities of demand differ between countries widely, and are greater in Europe. Ashe et al. in the Energy Journal show a 1.3 to 6.1 income elasticity of demand for natural gas in the long run between Europeans. I will use a more conservative number calculated by David Brightwell at Texas A.M. of 1.46 as it is likely an underestimate of Canadian elasticity. The increased consumption of natural gas due to increased income is 3.31 Mt ((32.2 - 2.09))*(0.0754*1.46)).

The Green Shift alone results in an increase in CO2 greenhouse gas production by consumers of 7.15 Mt (5.93 + 3.31 - 2.09 Mt).

Limitations to this analysis include the cross price elasticity of coal, oil, natural gas, and gasoline. In simple terms by making one more expensive relative to another there may be a consumer switch to the cheaper fuel. As has been shown by many authors substitution effect between any two is very small if not insignificant, except for the substitution between natural gas and oil, and natural gas and gasoline for some reason. Either way, the cross price elasticity would make the increase in CO2 production from the Green Shift larger if at all. Another obvious limitation is the increase in over-all fossil fuel use due to increasing incomes as GDP rises over the next four years. This would change the numbers somewhat, but more important to note, would increase fossil fuel use overall and greenhouse gas production. It is also important to consider the linearities, in this case the differences in elasticities faced by people with different incomes. People in the low income bracket tend to have a more inelastic price elasticity for necessities and a higher income elasticity. This is due to the fact that the richer you get the less likely you are to spend any more money on gasoline. In essence you reach a point where you are using as much gasoline as you like. Therefore while I have used average elasticities, it is likely that my number is an underestimate as most of the apparent Green Shift income transfers are to the low income bracket who are more likely to buy more fossil fuels than the middle income bracket.

A note to those in British Columbia who face a gasoline tax based carbon tax. It is likely that due to the income elasticity of demand you will also see an increase in greenhouse gas production.  

A Shocking Mystery

There exists a mystery in regards to the Green Shift. No where in the pdf can I find any mention of household increased electricity costs due to their increased tax on coal. Coal plants produce a large share of electricity in North America. Obviously electricity contributes a significant household cost. Considering that with the income tax decrease most Canadians are barely ahead adding the increased cost of electicity would certainly put most Canadians into the red.

Why do Economists Like the Green Shift?

Economists do not necessarily like the Green Shift. Many economists favor a change in our tax strucure from income taxes to consumption taxes. I agree with this but have some reservations, one of which is that the change has not been well studied with real occurances. Basically the theory is that by reducing our focus on income taxes, taxes that cause a negative strain on productivity and employment, we will increase GDP. Moreover by taxing pollution we will account for the negative externalities caused by consumption and increase GDP. This is called the double divident effect. The argument out there is whether this effect is real, weak or strong.

An economist who I respect, Dr. Ross McKitrick, has calculated the GNP rise due to the double dividend in Canada to be positive, (0.6%) with a 21 dollar (1989) per tonne CO2 tax. I don’t know whether he factors in the income elasticities into his reduction of CO2 model or whether he simply accepts a reduction. 

It is also important to note other studies such as by Carraro et al. that show that in the short run the double dividend effect can increase employment, but in the long run has no effect. Dr. Stephen Smith presents a review of the possibilities of the double dividend and its possible negatives and concerns.

Some of my concerns regard the implications of a shift from capital to labor in an open market. If labor is made cheaper relative to capital it may occur that the productivity of labor relative to other countries decreases. Essentially this is due to the disincentives to reinvest in productivity. As productivity falls, so does wages and Canadians may become poorer relative to other countries. Other concerns regard to the increased costs of energy and it’s obvious effects on production, manufacturing, industry, and even the service sector. Fossil fuels are an integral input in almost any good or service.

Many of the people who advocate a Green Shift use Finland and Sweden as an example of success. Fortunately for the Fins and Swedes, they have alternatives or substitutes in the form of nuclear power and hydroelectricity respectively. Finland is expanding its reliance on nuclear power and Sweden has placed its reduction on reliance on nuclear power on hold as they have come to realize the the difficulties of renewable energy. Sweden has 44% of electricity  produced by hydro and 47% by nuclear energy, total 91%. In comparison Canada has 24% of it’s electricity generated by CO2 producing sources, and this doesn’t appear to be changing as provincial governments have no real policies for energy production.

 

Mt = mega tonnes 

* It is likely that the idiom “Robbing Peter to Pay Paul” has been in the vernacular for much longer, and may indeed hark to the 12th century latin vernacular. However the event must have well suited the expression for those aware and cynical enough to turn it to English.

** It is hard to know, reading the Liberal Green Shift plan, which year the dollars are adjusted for due to inflation. I am assuming 2008 dollars. I hope they thought of inflation.

September 5, 2007

How Government Gets Corrupted

(As Promised, Monthly Blog Update) 

When it comes to the market place the Government is like a fat kid on a teeter-totter. One knows which end is coming down, and its sure to be as balanced as an elephant on ice. But how do governments in a democracy become corrupted? Surely with the voting public and the vociferous media hounding them there is no way for the fat evil merchants of capitalism to stroll in and take things from the collective?

If you have a moment, I’ll tell you how it happens.

It comes from our own best intentions gone wrong.

The latest squawking to come from the Liberals is the revival of the Income Trusts issue. For those of you unaware of what the big deal about income trusts is, I’ll explain briefly. Income trusts are a method corporations use to avoid income taxes. Plain and simple, and while some people will deny this, mature corporations wouldn’t be doing it if it weren’t advantageous to them. As any accountant knows deep down inside, the more convoluted a tax system is, the more loopholes there are. It’s called Langmann’s Law which states: l=n/5, where l is number of loopholes, and n is the number of tax legislative sections or something.

And seriously though, as economist James R. Hines points out, the more government attempts to fix tax loopholes, the more they actually encourage the implementation of new loopholes. This is one of the main reasons the old Reform Party of Canada proposed a flat personal and corporate income tax with your only deduction being your children and the basic personal exemption.

Anyhow, in case anyone didn’t notice, the Conservative government did the unthinkable late last year by taxing Income Trusts and thus slamming the lid down on this particular avoidance strategy. They did this against the promise of not doing this, which is a clear violation and a shameful act. I personally am not completely against governments changing their promises based upon new evidence as long as they were sincere in their previous promise, that the new evidence is decisive,  that keeping a promise will result in a catastrophe, and that their decision isn’t for simple political gain. We must also bear in mind that a government which makes mistaken promises should be taken to the crucible for ineffectively analysing the data. This all being said there is nothing worse than the old Liberal strategy of promising action, not doing anything, and still promising action, ie: Kyoto.

Angry in the Great White North writes about slim shady Garth Turner (a man I mistakenly used to believe was a straight shooter even while he was burning the Conservatives from within) and his grand Canada tour railing against the Conservative actions on income trusts and how the great Liberal party will do all in its power if it gets elected to make everything better for the holders of income trusts and the corporations who created them. Angry points out several interesting flaws in Garth’s argument that the taxing of income trusts hurt seniors and instead points out that income trusts were in some cases preying on ignorant seniors.

However lets look deeper into what is going on. Garth is a member of the Canadian Parliament and within the Liberal Party of Canada’s caucus. Garth is going on a trans-Canada tour who’s theme is how the Conservatives ripped off the poor senior citizens and that we should instead vote Liberal so they can fix this tragety. The sponsor of Garth’s little anti-government tour is an organization called CAITI which is in fact made up on a number of organizations that sell income trusts. Basically what we have here is the direct efforts of a series of corporations to have a government elected that will give them a market advantage simply by setting up legislation. Your vote cast for the Liberals because you feel bad for the poor ripped off seniors is how they get you to vote for their personal advantage.

That is, folks, how corruption happens.

Boston Tea Party Sarony & Major, 1846
(The Boston Tea Party - A government granted monopoly to the British East India Company culminated to this famous riot, provided evidence for the new liberal philosophy of the proper role of government and created the U.S.A. under a constitution which was supposed to protect people from the government itself)

Milton Friedman used to use the Interstate Commerce Commission as an example of how the government tries to act in the best interests and protect citizens by setting up regulatory bodies but those same bodies end up becoming a direct method corporations use to lobby governments into giving them specific entitlements to markets.

In economics this is known as regulatory capture. In Canada we have several such groups, the Canadian Wheat Board is one currently in the news as the Conservatives try and end that bloated travesty.

How does one prevent regulatory capture of a market? Simple. Define property rights and then stay out of a market no matter how tempting it is. In the case of taxes, a simple flat tax is the best way to prevent loopholes and provide equality.

Update:

I few times I have hinted at ways to responsibly help out other people while not relying on either government ineptitude and/or corporate foundations that steal most of your donated money to pay for employees, computers, or glossy pamphlets. I’d like to point your attention to a non-profit organization I think appears to be doing the kind of giving a libertarian can only dream of.

Kiva.org is a website at which you can set up private loans to other people in third world countries who are trying to better their lives by working and being entrepreneurs. All of your donated money goes directly to the borrower. You can also make a small donation to Kiva to keep them running but its not compulsory. The money gets transferred to a private bank in the borrower’s country. They then pay you back over a period of set time.

So far this looks to be on the up and up. Recently they have been covered by bloggers and media. I have tried it out and I’ll see how it goes. Let’s hope this works out.

Why is Kiva responsible giving? Because you are helping someone become self sufficient and they are paying you back. You’re also watching the borrower’s report to make sure that your investment is being used for what it was meant for. The worst kind of subsidy is one that never gets paid back.

July 11, 2007

Myopiology Becomes a Course Credit in the Department of Dumbology

Filed under: Liberal, political correctness, spin, unions — langmann @ 11:16 pm

I have been a union shop steward in more than one union. I have been involved in unions, hung around enough unionists, and moreover now that I am occasionally forced to practice medicine, I have handed out more than my share of “get out of work for spurious medical reason” forms than I ever should.


(In truth, it was the free flow of capital, investment, property rights, capitalism and mercantilism that has done more for the common peasant then Karl Marx, Unions, government or any other pretender.)

In my honest opinion about 1 out of 50 grievances are valid. Maybe less. Quite honestly some people deserve a frigging boot to their lazy hides.

I’ll put it this way. I have no problem with people forming a monopoly in order to bargain for higher wages or changes in their workplace. BUT employers should be able to fire them all if they want to and hire new people. If your skills are worth something, employers won’t be so eager to fire you off. And honestly for the most part I have found employers reasonable people.

In fact unions are such a waste of time these days that they actively seek obscure issues to mobilize around because in reality they have nothing better to do. The great majority of people in a union are apathetic and therefore the union leadership gets taken over by busy-bodies who love raising stink and trying to be more important than they really are.

So in the end union leaders tend to be either one of two types. A busy-body of self importance or a thief who is trying to steal as much as he can from other member’s paychecks. Or both. The lackies who attend union meetings are the kind of people who fit into the above categories but aren’t quite able to clamber to the top of the dung heap yet. 

At a union meeting I once said that one way we could increase our employee’s wages is by lowering our union dues. I’ll tell you the blank stares of disbelief I received were worth it. Or the other time when our teacher’s union was trying to “make a bold statement in defence of Palestine and in condemnation of Israel” I said that there were quite a few members who were Jewish in our union and that perhaps we should consider only relavent issues pertaining to employer and workplace in order not to uneccesarily ostracize other members. Whew.

I kind of liked to imagine myself at that time as a sort of Deep Throat or Voice of Conciousness within the union. In reality I was probably just more of a big prick. But there is no more firm a believer than one who was once an anthiest.

I was once a socialist but when I saw the light, it was bright and it showed socialism for the dirty thing it is.

Socialism is racism, it’s modern day Nazism. It discriminates, condemns groups of people, sets societal norms, dictates to the media, controls and corrupts politicians, employers, and people. And it tells lies about utopia to hide its true objectives: putting power into the hands of a select group of people. Racism you ask? Is hiring people based on color anything but racism? Is keeping groups of people on aparthied like slabs of soil not racism?

One thing socialism does well, which parallels Nazism in an extraordinary manner (Read Hitler’s Scientists) is to infect Universities and chase out voices of reason by hiring those who fit their political standard. John Cornwell does a great job of showing that while not only did Hitler appoint politico hacks as Department heads, there were many Nazis and those of like mind within the universities already. The 1930’s were a different time in some ways. If you don’t think so, read Tommy Douglas’ Master’s thesis sometime. The one where he argues that poor people should be sterilized. Remember also that Nazism involved state control of production in ways similar to socialism, not capitalism like some socialists seem to want one to think.

When I first saw that the Britain’s University and College Union (UCU) enact a motion to boycot any Israeli university seminar, meeting, journal, and scientist/academic I though to myself wow boy that sure is myopic and typical of bored unions with nothing better to do but sit on their ivory tower jobs. But I forgot about it like most people tend to do.

So why is a university professor’s union doing this? Well to solve the problem with the Palestinians not having a country, naturally. Why is this myopic? Because the reason the Palestinians don’t have a country (they do have one) has a lot to do with it being their own fault lately, especially since the Palestinians receive more aid per capita than any other nation yet manage to elect stupid leaders like Arafat who steal most of this money and fund gangs of terrorist that kill their own people. Palestinians kill many more Palestinians than Israelis do. Under pressure from the United States Israel has made many accomodations and appears ready to make more. The Palestinians from the start have been the bouncing-ball plaything of the national goals of Iraq, Iran, Syria, Jordan, Egypt and Saudi Arabia since Israel first clawed itself into a nation. An objective look quickly demonstrates who has hurt these people more. (Before the second intifada for which Arafat held a high degree of blame, a peace existed where 20 percent of Palestinians went to work in Israel daily and the Palestinian GNP grew at 5% a year).

My favorite part of Stephanie Gutmann’s book, “The Other War: Israelis Palestinians and the Struggle for Media Supremacy” in her chapter, Travels With Faraj were these lines which sum up pretty much the entire problem. She’s speaking with a common Palestinian shop owner, a nice guy who she describes as wanting a variety of things just like the rest of us.

The proprietor soon had a new, seemingly “saved up” question for the Westerner who had landed in his restaurant: “Why do the Americans hate the Palestinians?” he demanded.

“Our government doesn’t hate the Palestinians,” I said. “They support an independent state next to Israel. They send money to the Palestinians, millions a year. Why do you think they hate the Palestinians?”

“Because they do no kill Arafat,” he stated matter-of-factly. “They don’t like Saddam; they go get Saddam. So why not Arafat?”

Given the news accounts had recently been full of heads of state and such calling Arafat “the personification of the ideals of the Palestinian people,” I groped for the words for a few seconds, and then stated carefully: “I think… the Americans believe… that Arafat is your guy; that you elected him; that he speaks for you… ”

“He is a crook and a thief,” the proprietor interjected.

Anyhow, does the UCU expect that every Israeli is going to commit self immolation in order to resolve this issue because a bunch of university professors expect them to based upon their myopic view of things? Israel contributes much to scientific literature, and it’s a democratic country where each person gets one vote including the non Jews who become members of their parliament. It’s a Middle Eastern country most intellectual liberals should be proud of.

Well there’s nothing like insanity to fuel the flame of irrelevance. With a smug backhanded blow from the ammunition of the press release, my Queens University stated that they deplore the actions of the UCU.

is antithetical to the core value of academic freedom, which is cherished by Queen’s and other universities around the world.

Freedom of inquiry and expression carries with it responsibilities – to encourage open debate and dialogue, and to listen to and learn from the views of others. We must defend these freedoms of speech and inquiry even as we engage with those whose views may differ greatly from our own. Contemporary society calls for leadership that respects but can also bridge social, cultural, economic and geopolitical divides. I therefore denounce the actions of the UCU and absolutely reject its approach.

Those of us who devote ourselves to the learning and discovery that characterizes the academy must defend the freedom of individuals to study, teach and carry out research without fear of harassment, intimidation or discrimination.

Accordingly, I join with many of my colleagues in stating that, if the British UCU pursues its ill-advised course, we will have no choice but to add Queen’s University ­and many other universities around the world ­ to its boycott list. We are proud to align ourselves with those  who deplore the UCU’s unacceptable attack on the values and principles that define us.

Of course they say one thing. But do another. Queens wants to select more minority admissions so we can all pat ourselves on the back about how progressive we are. Like minorities cannot decide for themselves where they’d like to go in Canada so we have to tell them.

These socialists. If there is one thing that the Middle East has given to universities that the academics want to recognize, instead of the actual historic scientific contribution from the East, is the keffiyeh. These socialists all around the university wear the traditional male arabic headress around their necks in the form of a protest against anything western and in support of Palestine because, I suppose, Arafat wore one. What they don’t want to recognize is that western  culture stands for democracy, human rights, liberties, property rights, peace, tolerance, secularism etc. The only thing I think these gangs in Palestine stand for is terrorism, thievery, chauvanism, religious fanatacism, and indiscriminate death. They keep proving it. These Imams are so revered that if they issued a fatwah on how killing people is satanic, the Middle East would probably be as peaceful as downtown Mariposa. So why don’t they?

The worst thing is that the very gangs like Hamas that these UCU folks support, would in a minute turn on their supporters and cull them for being apostates.


(The woman in the top photo wears a keffiyeh “in support” of Palestine at a rally, meanwhile the guy holding the sign up at the bottom is saying what every socialist there is thinking. In reality the gangs they are supporting, like Hamas, are simply criminals who couldn’t give a damn about human rights. hat tip zombietime)

April 12, 2007

Can You Say Sell-out

Filed under: Dion, Liberal, politics — langmann @ 10:52 pm

Apparently the Liberals are now a second rate party as they aren’t going to run a candidate in Peter McKay’s riding of Central Nova so that Green Party leader Elizabeth May can parachute into the area and try and win the “progressive” vote. This kind of concoction kicks the degenerating relevancy of the representative riding system in the nards right when it is down. What a way to sell out all those happy Liberal voters in Central Nova.

Dion the Judas
(Dion and Judas Iscariot should meet for dinner, at least the tip should be worth it: silver)

A while ago I predicted something stupid like this happening in one of Janke’s discussions about what May was thinking trying to take on one of Harper’s top dogs (no Belinda’s hurt in this blog). I figured that something fishy might be going on to try and make a big scene or that possibly a gang of fools provoked by the media would launch a “take out McKay” campaign behind a mediaphile like May. Here’s how Central Nova broke down in the last election:

MacKay 17 134
Alexis (NDP) 13 861
Liberal 10 349
Green 671
Marxist 124 (are there really 124 lunatics in that riding?)

If the NDP and the Liberals team up they could gain enough votes to topple McKay. This is the kind of thing that might happen during a University student council election so why not in the esteemed Parliament of Canada?

In the future there are two things that I can see happening:

The Conservative manage to win a majority. The Liberals under a socialist moron like Dion and the NDP decide to merge to try and form a mega “progressive” lunacy party.

Or this current minority thing keeps happening so the Liberals and the NDP merge to from a mega “progressive” lunacy party.

This would require one thing, an ivory tower socialist with no clue to how economies work or how normal people live in charge of the Liberal party. And currently, bam the dog Dion is just that kind of glittering fool.

Fortunately not all Liberals believe in socialism and some will tack their votes onto the Conservative party once they realize what kind of Liberal-NDP disaster would be. That being said, the Conservatives need to remember their roots in sound economic theory that they seem to have forgotten lately.

April 11, 2007

Why the Liberal Party is Out of Touch

Filed under: Dion, Liberal, politics — langmann @ 8:33 pm

It really doesn’t get any stupider than this. It is bad enough that we still have this state supported aparthied system in Canada where natives are somehow separated and many live in 3rd world conditions.

The following story is the reason why the Liberal party is for the most part composed of morons. And why Dion should move back to the Ivory Tower where he really belongs. In fantasy land.

Ivory Tower
(Ivory Tower ideas are fragile like ground glass)

Coderre urges military base for natives

Liberal defence critic Denis Coderre is calling on the federal government to build a Canadian Forces base for native soldiers. “I think that we have to show sensitivity since Canada is also composed of first nations,” Mr. Coderre said yesterday. “The Canadian Forces have always reflected what Canada is,” he said.

The base, which would be a first in Canada, would be built in the Restigouche area of northern New Brunswick. The idea was first floated by Serge Noel, a local resident who noticed that many natives from the area were crossing the border to join the armed forces in the United States.

“The Canadian Forces have taken steps in the past to attract more aboriginals to their ranks and have achieved a certain level of success, but not as much as they would have hoped for,” Mr. Noel said. Mr. Noel added that Defence Minister Gordon O’Connor has already rejected his idea. However, Mr. Coderre said the issue could resurface during the next election campaign. “I promise to speak about this project with our leader, Stéphane Dion, and I hope that it can become a campaign promise,” Mr. Coderre said. Mr. Coderre also said he plans to meet aboriginal leaders to gauge their support for the native base.

Sounds like a great idea. We should also have a special army for dumb politicians…

March 23, 2007

They’ll Complain and Complain and Complain and…

Filed under: Conservative, Dion, Harper, Liberal, budget, complain, economics, politics — admin @ 2:28 pm

Note: Clicking the Links is important to understand my rambling)

The New Government of Canada released its federal budget this week with much fanfare and progressive words like achieving our country’s full potential™ and other such big word terminology.


(Why are they smiling? Conservatives are so green they’re now hitch-hiking.)

Now lets make some things clear before I ramble on. In my humble opinion this budget is, for the most part, a big waste of my money. But then again as the Canadian Taxpayer’s Federation (CTF) laments, Legislators are incapable of demonstrating restraint. [...] And they are also unwilling to return the surplus where it rightly belongs, namely the taxpayers of Canada



(hey, 24% off, times 5% GST)

The ides of March rolled on, and Imperator Harper managed to wriggle away from the steely knives and duck his way out of something nobody wanted at the moment: a repeat of the 2006 civil war. Many libertarian conservatives watching their blood-money swirl clockwise down the toilet are left thinking Et Tu Brute? But libertarians will always feel that way (more on this later) since from the beginning of time we’ve always been bullied by what enterprising politicians manage to call “What Society Wants”.


(Tower of Babel: What Society Wanted)

Canada’s conscience, CTV newsmedia, seemed to be so bored with this complicated budget that, like a college student sweeping dirt under the couch in preparation for his girlfriend’s visit, they quickly swept it off into a hard to find area on their web page (I challenge you to find it). Then they filled the section with a variety of opinion from people who are usually totally against everything in general. The only memorial moment in CTV’s reporting is from the old weasel, Craig Oliver who is so stunned by the copiousity (word I made up to describe silliness) of the shiny presents that he must have had a hallucination that he was living in the glory days of P.E.T. again and randomly challenged anyone to find anything wrong with the big bonanza (paraphrase).

So WTF does “Society Want?”. Well a recent (and suspect) poll shows:

When respondents were asked what they thought to be the most important issue for the budget to address, social programs were the clear favourite:

  • Increasing spending on social programs: 50 per cent
  • Cutting taxes: 19 per cent
  • Transferring funds to the provinces for their use: 15 per cent
  • Reducing debt: 13 per cent.

AND

When respondents were asked whether they thought the claim of a so-called fiscal imbalance was believable, the majority said yes:

  • Very believable: 31 per cent
  • Somewhat believable: 43 per cent
  • Total believable: 74 per cent
  • Not too believable: 11 per cent
  • Not believable at all: 6 per cent
  • Total not believable: 17 per cent

So the CTF just reiterates this truth: “A democracy will continue to exist up until the time that voters discover that they can vote themselves generous gifts from the public treasury. From that moment on, the majority always votes for the candidates who promise the most benefits from the public treasury, with the result that every democracy will finally collapse due to loose fiscal policy, which is always followed by a dictatorship.” - Alexander Tytler


(I smell sulfur and it ain’t GW Bush)

Anyhow there are quite a few analysis out there on the budget and I’ll get to my point in a minute. First though I have to say that one thing the Conservatives have been doing that the Liberals seem to have a pretty crappy track record on is funding disabled people. However this is something conservatives generally favor strongly. Moreover the Status of Women has its funding back, but it appears that the Conservatives are actually trying to fund real things like shelters rather than silly university professors and other wastes of money.

So anyhow back to my point.

Stephen Harper is probably the most intelligent politician we have had in Canadian politics since P.E.T. and also likely one of the most elegant schemers we have had for a long time. (I do think he is a decent guy with a genuine personality). I guess that basically Harper looked at the way the country was feeling (look up at those polls) and he also pondered on the new Religion of the Kyoto:

Religion of the Kyoto

And its resurrected son Al-Goreacle.

And Harper knew that he had to “head em off at the pass”, to borrow a stereotypical Western phrase (from Westerns not Western Canada).

And so we have a budget that basically fixes the fiscal imbalance, whatever that is, as well as handing out a bunch of money to mystical feel good targets such as the Holy Grail of Global Warming and other fuzzy stuff. Once again the Conservative party of Canada does the real environmental work that the Liberals are always talking about.


(The Greenest Chin Ever: The Leprachaun who laughs last, laughs…
and gets the pot of our gold)

Enraged they are, the Liberals. Deep down inside that particular and peculiar socialist waste of space, Stephane Dion, wishes he could have come out with the exact same budget except with more spending (from where the pot is dry?) and perhaps a lower rate tax cut of 0.5%. However they are so angry that they cannot get any play that they just decide they ain’t playing at all and bail out without even reading the budget.

Guys like Dion plagued the halls of every university I went to, wasting both taxpayer money and tonnes of CO2 credits along their way to social justice - whatever that is… Because for these guys equality of opportunity isn’t the classical meaning, but rather the equality of some being more equal than others. Its equality of outcome they are after. In other words no matter how much evidence that the unintended consequences of their actions are hurtful, or how BS their schemes they will decide who gets what and how; they are going to make us all pay for it. You’ll see what I mean when I write next about the minimum wage Ontario is considering. However the rats are jumping the ship, because if there really is one thing American that Harper brought to Canadian politics it is the ability to buy out and collude with the other side. And so Cormuzzi (Lib) drawn to the musky odor of the well cooked golden pork promise, burns out like a fly in one of those electic patio zappers as Dion punts him from caucus.


(And then the car goes by and bam, the Cormuzzi. Now go to sleep.)

Because Harper knows that for some reason his party cannot break the 40 percent mark that makes a majority in these parts. Conservatives of all stripes have wandered in the wilderness for so long now that it seems they just aren’t willing to wander in the wilderness anymore. They’ve watched the Liberals feasting in Sodom forever, perched on their high place and enjoying the fat of the land while the Conservatives have had to quench their thirst by beating their heads against the stone of balanced budgets and tax cuts taking whatever scraps that fell from the sky from a stupid media that wouldn’t know the difference between basic economics from NeverNeverLand.

And so they re-forged that old idol, the Paternalistic fatted milk-cow god of Conservative old and towed it out in front of the people to see if perhaps the foolish ones would eat it.


(Party like it’s 1999 B.C.)

But think about it. Can you blame Harper? Lets pretend he came out with a sensible prudent budget. It would be like injecting the Liberals with amphetamines and bringing them a Timmies strong caf. to boot.

Because right now there is so much freaking largesse everyone wants a place at the table or they’ll shriek so loud that Hades will seem like just your average day dull roar.


(There’s enough pork for everyone!)

Stephen Taylor at Blogging Tories, himself an independent journalist, has a series of interviews with several groups, many of whom are not happy with their slice of the pork.

The interesting thing is that the pork got ate all up and still no one is happy. Obviously the alternative would have been to bleed us serfs dryer than Liberal money at the laundromat.

And at last this brings me to my point. No matter what they’ll complain and complain and complain…

Because if they stop then they just won’t have jobs left and so as Milton Friedman once said, “No, you would not become unemployed. You would only have to move to a more beneficial kind of employment”.

Tim Robbins made a low budget movie a while ago called Bob Roberts. For those of you who have not seen it, you should. Basically it is about this right wing guy running as a Senator who rewrites all the folk music protest songs of the 60’s in a sort of counter-culture reversal. All of the songs are clever in that they do have an ounce of truth to them. According to Wikipedia, Robbins’ intentions for the film seem to be less partisan, and more about the political system in general (Roberge 1992).

One of the songs:

Complain

Some people will have / Some simply will not / But they’ll complain and complain and complain and complain and complain / Some people will work / Some never will / But they’ll complain and complain and complain and complain and complain / Like this: / It’s society’s fault I don’t have a job / It’s society’s fault I’m a slob / I’m a drunk, I don’t have a brain / Give me a pamphlet while I complain / Hey pal you’re living in the land of the free No-one’s gonna hand you opportunity.

Except in this case, the people complaining are the ones who are getting grants to fund their complaining.

I’ll examine one part of the budget, the equalization strategy part. Equalization payments are like a mini-cosmos economic study as to why subsidies don’t work. We’ve been funding Quebec for years and they don’t seem to be getting any more equal, in fact it appears they just get less equal all the time - sucking up money like a sponge.

Right now everyone has their nuts in a knot about the next round of equalization payments. Here’s a summary:

Following are the 2007-08 per-capita equalization payments for the receiving provinces with the 2006-07 payments in brackets. (All figures in millions):

  • N.L.: $477 ($632)
  • P.E.I.: $294 ($291)
  • N.S.: $1,308 (1,386)
  • N.B.: $1,477 ($1,451)
  • Que.: $7,160 ($5,539)
  • Man.: $1,826 ($1,709)
  • Sask.: $226 ($13)
  • B.C.: N/A ($260)

Basically the formula is meant to bring those up to the 10 province average. Danny Williams is as pissed as ever because he doesn’t get to write off 100% of natural resources, and here Guinty is pissed because Danny Williams gets to write off 50%. Saskatchewan is pissed because basically they’re getting more money.

Anyhow this convoluted mess proves one thing. When it comes to “equalization” or social transfers or basically robbing one guy to pay another, you end up pissing everyone off.

Here’s how it should work: No equalization payments. Let people move to where the jobs are. Equalization payments just prop up failure, like any other subsidy. Its been that way since the beginning of time and no one has ever made it work without hurting someone else and enabling people to do unsuccessful things. No one.

In fact what subsidies do is prop up the very people socialists hate: rich fat influential businessmen - because it props up their business.

For example the other day that Jack Layton guy railed on CHRA radio about how we should be both forcing and paying North American car companies to produce efficient cars instead of those crappy heaps they make now.

Excuse me? We should give taxpayer money to Detroit to prop up their failing businesses because they’re too stupid to make cars people want? And the Unions who are too stupid to realize the realities of global trade? (Anyone who wants to learn the theory of how subsidies always result in negative outcomes click here and scroll down to the Impact of Subsidy.)

And you can be sure that Stephen Harper, a trained economist, believes in subsidies about as much as Stockwell Day believes in fossils.

So then what would have been the ideal budget for those budding libertarians?

Andrew Coyne has a great summary of this which has been discussed amongst those who both:

a) care about what happens to people and,
b) are educated in economic theory

I mean would you trust your health to some guy at a store or would you trust a trained doctor more? Why are people so eager to trust politicians who have never read a simple macro/microeconomic theory text? Maybe for the same reason a certain bunch of moonbats only trust witch doctors and quacks.

With half of all the money spent in the last two budgets (11 billion), you could reduce all the income tax rates to 20%. In other words two rates, 15.5% and 20%. Also you could increase the bottom allowable deductable so that poor people aren’t taxed on money they don’t really have.

Yes folks, now ask me, what does more? Letting people spend their own money or having the government do it for them?

To Those Moonbats who are worried that the Government isn’t spending enough:


(StatsCan, compiled by langmann)

(One good thing about the conservative budget is the working income supplement or a “negative tax”which was originally proposed by the genius, Milton Friedman and which I may discuss in greater detail at some point later.)

Update:


(Like I said)

And even after all this, “poll numbers show the majority (55 per cent) of Canadians thought Quebec benefited most from the transfer of funds under equalization, a majority of Quebecers (51 per cent) believe they received less than their fair share.

Hmmm. Remember what I said about equalization payments? Sure you do.

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