Archive for November, 2009

Israel, Gaza and the Palestinians

Tuesday, November 3rd, 2009

UPDATE: Commentary is critical of this piece and they are absolutely correct on this item.

NEVE DEKALIM, Gaza Strip – Palestinians looted dozens of greenhouses on Tuesday, walking off with irrigation hoses, water pumps and plastic sheeting in a blow to fledgling efforts to reconstruct the Gaza Strip.

American Jewish donors had bought more than 3,000 greenhouses from Israeli settlers in Gaza for $14 million last month and transferred them to the Palestinian Authority. …

Palestinian police stood by helplessly Tuesday as looters carted off materials from greenhouses in several settlements, and commanders complained they did not have enough manpower to protect the prized assets. In some instances, there was no security and in others, police even joined the looters, witnesses said.

That story was well known and I was disappointed to see him bungle that issue.

Lawrence Wright is an expert on the Middle East and militant Islam. He is the author of The Looming Tower, the best book I’ve seen on the rise of the Muslim Brotherhood and al Qeada. He had a piece in the New Yorker that I think it is important to read. There has been quite a bit of misinformation about the Israeli invasion of Gaza that was called “Cast Lead.” The recent report by Richard Goldstone, is as anti-Israel as one would expect in a report coming from the UN. The report can be downloaded from that link. It is very popular on the left, as one might expect give the left’s infatuation with militant Islam lately. Of course the Jews and gays on the left are too smart to actually go to see for themselves. That might be dangerous. Haaretz, the self hating leftist Israeli newspaper is on the case with all venom one could expect. Just for a microsecond, imagine a newspaper in the Muslim world that would attack its own government like that. They even claim that the fact that Goldstone is Jewish inoculates him from the anti-Semitism claim. I would remind them that there is an American member of al Qeada who was raised Jewish.

Anyway, I will accept Lawrence Wright as a fair observer.

Every opportunity for peace in the Middle East has been led to slaughter, and at this isolated desert crossing, on June 25, 2006, another moment of promise culminated in bloodshed. The year had begun with tumult. That January, Hamas, which the U.S. government considers a terrorist group, won Palestine’s parliamentary elections, defeating the more moderate Fatah Party. Both parties sent armed partisans into the streets, and Gaza verged on civil war. Then, on June 9th, a tentative truce between Hamas and Israel ended after an explosion on a beach near Gaza City, apparently caused by an Israeli artillery shell, killed seven members of a Palestinian family, who were picnicking. (The Israelis deny responsibility.) Hamas fired fifteen rockets into Israel the next day. The Israelis then launched air strikes into Gaza for several days, killing eight militants and fourteen civilians, including five children.

I think the artillery shell story has been debunked. The wounded children were taken to a Palestinian hospital and something was done to them, possibly removal of telltale shrapnel fragments, before they were allowed to go to Israel for definitive care. One version of the story is here but there are inconsistencies. Even this story notes the odd incident with the shrapnel.

The victims had initially been treated by Palestinian doctors who removed almost all shrapnel from the bodies of victims before they arrived at Israeli hospitals for treatment.[26] Representatives of the Tel Aviv Sourasky Medical Center said that Palestinian doctors at al-Shifa Hospital in Gaza, who had treated a woman wounded during the blast, had made unnecessary cuts all over her body in an effort to remove all the surgically reachable shrapnel. The Israeli hospital said they had never before received a patient from which all possible shrapnel had been removed.”[27]

To go on with the story.

Amid this strife, Mahmoud Abbas—the head of Fatah, and the President of the Palestinian Authority, the governing body established by the Oslo peace accords of 1993—put forward a bold idea. The people of Palestine, he declared, should be given the chance to vote on a referendum for a two-state solution to its conflict with Israel. Perhaps it was a cynical political maneuver, as the leaders of Hamas believed. The fundamental platform of Hamas was its refusal to accept Israel’s right to exist, yet polls showed that Palestinians overwhelmingly supported the concept of two states. A referendum would be not only a rebuke to Hamas; it also would be a signal to Israel—and to the rest of the world—that Palestinians were determined to make peace. Abbas set the referendum for July.

A paranoid person would suspect that Hamas and their al Qeada allies would try to create an incident to derail this olive branch.

Just before dawn on June 25th, eight Palestinian commandos crawled out of a tunnel into a grove of trees in Kerem Shalom. A new moon was in the sky, making it the darkest night of the month. With mortar fire and anti-tank missiles providing cover, the commandos, some of them disguised in Israeli military uniforms, split into three teams. One team attacked an empty armored personnel carrier, which had been parked at the crossing as a decoy. Another team hit the observation tower. The two Israelis in the tower were injured, but not before they killed two of the attackers.

The third team shot a rocket-propelled grenade into a Merkava tank that was parked on a berm facing the security fence. The explosion shook the tank; then its rear hatch opened and three soldiers tried to flee. Two of them were shot and killed, but a third, lightly wounded, was captured. The attackers raced back into Gaza with their prize: a lanky teen-ager named Gilad Shalit.

That was the beginning of the Gilad Shalit hostage story. It is pretty clear that the provocation was planned well. It has ended all chance of reconciliation and eventually ended in the Gaza invasion. The entire story is worth reading as it contains what I consider to be a fair account of the invasion and the circumstances surrounding it. Wright may occasionally lean toward the Palestinians in his account but he is fair.

It has been said that the “Palestinians never lose an opportunity to lose an opportunity.” The militants have little interest in governing. They are conducting a war with Israel. He even recounts stories of young women being harassed at the beach, the only feature of Gaza that is not a slum, even though they are fully dressed.

I would like to visit Israel and hope it might be possible next year.

The lordlings

Sunday, November 1st, 2009

UPDATE: This is an interesting observation.

I have a friend who is a currency trading legend (and also a major AEI money man) whose conservative credentials are beyond doubt. He’s a little older and can remember what it was like to trade the markets during the Carter administration. When I was lamenting Obama’s impending election with him last year he said to me, in a glass half full fashion which is typical of him:

“It’s never easier to make money in the markets than when there is a Democrat in the Whitehouse who thinks he’s smarter than everyone else”.

Wretchard has an excellent post today on the state of the nation. The comments are also excellent. He begins with Peggy Noonan’s column in the Journal last week.

Among the things swept away in 2008 was public confidence in the experts. The experts missed the crash. They’ll miss the meaning of this moment, too.

The biggest threat to America right now is not government spending, huge deficits, foreign ownership of our debt, world terrorism, two wars, potential epidemics or nuts with nukes. The biggest long-term threat is that people are becoming and have become disheartened, that this condition is reaching critical mass, and that it afflicts most broadly and deeply those members of the American leadership class who are not in Washington, most especially those in business.

Noonan was an Obama fan last year and dismissed Sarah Palin as unworthy of consideration for vice-president. An election followed in which Joe Biden, a fool if I ever saw one, was elected to that office instead.

Wretchard writes:

Peggy Noonan adopts a meme that has been sweeping the blogs of late, the idea that America’s elite is broken; so broken she says, that it doesn’t know it’s broken. In a WSJ article, she describes the current and disastrous reign of “callous children”; people who have “never seen things go dark” and are leading their nation into the abyss. For the first time, she says, the national mood is one of despondency. There are no solutions because the problems come from within. The heirs have grown strange and wayward. They have gone off into the dark to return at whiles speaking in odd voices. Noonan describes the sense of loss she feels in the current economic and political crisis.

Noonan continues:

they don’t feel anxious, because they never had anything to be anxious about. They grew up in an America surrounded by phrases—”strongest nation in the world,” “indispensable nation,” “unipolar power,” “highest standard of living”—and are not bright enough, or serious enough, to imagine that they can damage that, hurt it, even fatally.

We are governed at all levels by America’s luckiest children, sons and daughters of the abundance, and they call themselves optimists but they’re not optimists—they’re unimaginative. They don’t have faith, they’ve just never been foreclosed on. They are stupid and they are callous, and they don’t mind it when people become disheartened. They don’t even notice.

One of the comments, obviously by a physician, reminds me of my own experience.

He pointed out that, in a wild city-county hospital such as ours, there was indeed a need for speed quite often but that, also, it was very, very easy to just keep doing more. “You can always think of something else to do but the critical question is: ‘Should I?’ ”

This also comes up in end-of-life care but the point is, in government as in medicine, you’re often judged by how much you do and seldom on the need for it. Hence tax-spend-elect, etc.

What we used to say was “Don’t just do something, stand there.” It was a play on a cliche we’ve all heard but it contains the same concept. There are times when doing nothing is better. The comments also contain an example that I have thought of many times but never see mentioned in the newspapers. The Clinton intervention in vaccines.

The Law Of Clintonian Consequences

August 2003 – [In] August 1993, when Congress passed Clinton’s Vaccines for Children program. The plan, promoted by the Children’s Defense Fund, was to use federal power to ensure universal immunization. So the government agreed to purchase a third of the national vaccine supply (the President and Mrs. Clinton had pushed for 100 percent) at a forced discount of half price, then distribute it to doctors to deliver to the poor and the un- and under-insured. As a result: Where 30 years ago, 25 companies produced vaccines for the U.S. market., today only five remain, and there is only one producer for a number of critical shots. Recent years have brought shortages of numerous vaccines, including those for whooping cough, diphtheria and chicken pox.

October 2009 – Where is the H1N1 vaccine manufactured? There were four manufacturers’ products approved for use by the US FDA and CDC:Melbourne-based CSL Ltd.; Novartis AG based in Basel, Switzerland; Sanofi Pasteur of Sanofi-Aventis SA, based in Paris; and MedImmune, LLC, the Maryland US based Subsidiary of London’s AstraZeneca.

The Clintons were fended off when they tried to take over US healthcare but they did manage to take over vaccine manufacturing. We see the results today with no US vaccine manufacturing remaining and a shortage of vaccine.

I also think this is an interesting observation:

Obama is the fourth consecutive Ivy League President. There have been 18 Presidents over the last 100 years. From Taft to Reagan, 14 Presidents and 80 years gave us 4 Ivy Leaguers at the helm. Since then, it’s been 4 out of 4. And it’s been badly downhill with them.

Now, as our host ably demonstrates, not every Ivy League grad is a bungling fool. Many highly capable people come out of those institutions. However, I suspect the Ivy League environment, along with all the other self-elected “elite” environments such as Hollywood and MSM newsrooms, fosters the worst aspects of the public-minded who pass through.

The Contemptuous Boor (Obama, Clinton, Wilson) become the Arrogant Crusader, convinced they’re not only better than everyone else, but called by destiny to lead the masses to the promised land against the ignorant fool’s wishes. The Obliged Nobles (both Bushes, Taft, perhaps FDR) learn to ignore feedback, feel no great need to explain their policies, and become unintentionally disconnected from the people they want to lead, leaving them confused and disheartened.

I think there is something to this and I fear that Noonan was infected with the Noblesse Oblige like the elites she supported. I fear we are still headed for very serious trouble. I don’t see how we can repay the debt that is being incurred. In theory, the federal reserve money being created can be recovered by the Fed in the same manner it was created. That will require political will that I just don’t see in the present generation of politicians of both parties. The political left seems to have taken leave of its senses but maybe Noonan and Wretchard’s explanations are the answer. This reminds me of another recent column I read online. It is called Lament for a Nation.

Mikhail Gorbachev was to the late great Soviet Union, what Barack Obama is to the surviving United States — the leader who reforms so many things so quickly that his country suddenly disappears. One recalls the speed with which the first Soviet head of state to be born after the October Revolution became its last head of state. It took him about three years: just less than the time of one U.S. presidential term. (Though he had already taken three years to warm up, as General Secretary of the Communist Party.)

The results produced by these leaders may be quite similar.

[T]hey do have one major thing in common, and that is the belief that, regardless of what the ruler does, the polity he rules must necessarily continue. This is perhaps the most essential, if seldom acknowledged, insight of the post-modern “liberal” mind: that if you take the pillars away, the roof will continue to hover in the air.

Gorbachev seemed to assume, right up to the fall of the Berlin Wall and then beyond it, that his Communist Party would recover from any temporary setbacks, and that the long-term effects of his glasnost and perestroika could only be to make it bigger and stronger.

There is a corollary of this largely unspoken assumption: that no matter what you do to one part of a machine, the rest of the machine will continue to function normally.

A variant of this is the frequently expressed denial of the law of unintended consequences: the belief that, if the effect you intend is good, the actual effect must be similarly happy.

Very small children, the mad, and certain extinct primitive tribes, have shared in this belief system, but only the fully college-educated liberal has the vocabulary to make it sound plausible.

The Obama administration, and the Democratic Party for the most part, seem to believe that citizens exist to pay taxes. I suppose they really believe they can take over US healthcare and not end up like the Clinton vaccine program. Many incompetent people believe they are capable of things they cannot do successfully. These people, as Noonan says, are the product of a period of prosperity previously unknown in human history. The United States was formed of poor immigrants who came seeking their fortunes, escaping a world that did not allow success for those without the right connections. We were extremely fortunate to have the men who wrote our Constitution and who operated the government in the early years.

George Washington was the greatest of them all in that he refused to be a king when it was offered to him. He retired to his farm when his work was done. He even declined a third term when it would have been a mere formality. It is fashionable now, in this era of poor scholarship and deluded ideals, to dismiss the founders as slave owners and abusers of the Indians. Children are taught that Columbus Day should no longer be celebrated because Columbus brought genocide. They are even taught falsehoods, like the myth of infecting Indians with smallpox by infecting blankets. That was allegedly attempted by one English officer in the colonial period and didn’t work. In fact, the first contact between the populations of Europe and America brought rampant infectious diseases to both. The Indians got smallpox and the Europeans got syphilis. Few of these poorly educated academics acknowledge, let alone teach, that slavery is alive and well right today among the Arabs who were the original African slave traders. Slavery was a common practice in the age of human and animal power and had nothing to do with race.

The economics of the progressive movement are still incomprehensible. Teddy Roosevelt had valid targets as the monopolistic trusts of his era were inefficient once their original valid purpose was accomplished. Building of railroads and the first steel mills needed capital and that was more easily accumulated by trusts when the stock market was rudimentary. JP Morgan was able to almost singlehandedly stop the Panic of 1907 because he could gather the men who controlled the nation’s capital in his library. That was the last time it could be done.

“Morgan planned to leave for Europe in mid-March 1907, but the combination of monetary shrinkage [largely due to financing of the Boer and Russo-Japanese Wars] and a rumor that Roosevelt would make some dramatic new move against the railroads called him out of his ‘Up-Town Branch.’ He went to Washington on March 12 and spent two hours discussing ‘the present business situation’ with the President. As he left the White House he told the press that Roosevelt would soon meet with the heads of leading railroads to see what might be done to ‘allay public anxiety.'”

There is another theory, that I subscribe to, that the cause of the Panic was the enormous insurance losses from the 1906 earthquake in San Francisco. The 9/11/2001 attacks may well have led to the 2008 collapse in a similar scenario. Alan Greenspan’s encouragement of the real estate bubble may have been an attempt to prevent a collapse but it made things worse. The Federal Reserve Act of 1913 and the Glass Steagall Act of 1933, which founded the FDIC, were in response to the Panic of 1907 and the collapse of 1929 but the results of Fed intervention is now the subject of dispute. The Obama administration seems to be trying to reinflate the housing bubble with predictable results. Look at the slope of that curve !

The end of World War I brought a vicious recession in 1920 that the Harding Administration treated with a variation of “Don’t do something, just stand there.” The story is here.

The economic situation in 1920 was grim. By that year unemployment had jumped from 4 percent to nearly 12 percent, and GNP declined 17 percent. No wonder, then, that Secretary of Commerce Herbert Hoover—falsely characterized as a supporter of laissez-faire economics—urged President Harding to consider an array of interventions to turn the economy around. Hoover was ignored.

This makes the point that Hoover, far from the “do-nothing president” of left wing histories, was a progressive like Wilson and FDR. His response to the 1920 recession would have been similar to what he did in 1929-32. Who knows how that would have turned out ?


Instead of “fiscal stimulus,” Harding cut the government’s budget nearly in half between 1920 and 1922. The rest of Harding’s approach was equally laissez-faire. Tax rates were slashed for all income groups. The national debt was reduced by one-third. The Federal Reserve’s activity, moreover, was hardly noticeable. As one economic historian puts it, “Despite the severity of the contraction, the Fed did not move to use its powers to turn the money supply around and fight the contraction.” 2 By the late summer of 1921, signs of recovery were already visible. The following year, unemployment was back down to 6.7 percent and was only 2.4 percent by 1923.

It is instructive to compare the American response in this period to that of Japan. In 1920, the Japanese government introduced the fundamentals of a planned economy, with the aim of keeping prices artificially high. According to economist Benjamin Anderson, “The great banks, the concentrated industries, and the government got together, destroyed the freedom of the markets, arrested the decline in commodity prices, and held the Japanese price level high above the receding world level for seven years. During these years Japan endured chronic industrial stagnation and at the end, in 1927, she had a banking crisis of such severity that many great branch bank systems went down, as well as many industries. It was a stupid policy. In the effort to avert losses on inventory representing one year’s production, Japan lost seven years.”

Japan would do the same thing when the real estate bubble of the 90s popped. What followed has been called the “lost decade” but it isn’t over yet.

The role of the Fed in the present crisis is the antithesis of the Harding-Coolidge treatment of the 1920 recession, not called a depression only because of its prompt resolution.

Ludwig von Mises and F. A. Hayek both pointed to artificial credit expansion, normally at the hands of a government-established central bank, as the non-market culprit. (Hayek won the Nobel Prize in 1974 for his work on what is known as Austrian business cycle theory.) When the central bank expands the money supply—for instance, when it buys government securities—it creates the money to do so out of thin air. This money either goes directly to commercial banks or, if the securities were purchased from an investment bank, very quickly makes its way to the commercial banks when the investment banks deposit the Fed’s checks. In the same way that the price of any good tends to decline with an increase in supply, the influx of new money leads to lower interest rates, since the banks have experienced an increase in loanable funds.

This fed the real estate bubble in 2001 to 2007 and, I suspect, this was an effort to avoid a crisis due to the twin catastrophes of 2001 and the end of the internet bubble of the 90s.

What is the common thread in these stories ? The federal government has grown enormously during the past 70 years as the progressives assumed more and more power to deal with self-identified problems. The elites who took on all this responsibility were no more competent than their forebears who tried to deal with slavery and ended with a Civil War. Teddy Roosevelt was wise enough to call in JP Morgan and even had his Secretary of the Treasury transfer government gold to private banks to help Morgan deal with the crisis. Can anyone visualize Obama asking businessmen ( like Boeing ? ) to help with a financial crisis ? The people in the administration, like Geithner and Rubin, are politicians like Obama who switch back and forth between government and financial institutions that depend on government for their success. Rubin engineered the Mexican Bond Bailout that made his New York banker friends whole but screwed the Mexican middle class that it was purported to be assisting.

Mexico is still paying on bonds it used to buy bad debt from banks that faced failure after the currency fell as much as 65 percent in December 1994 and Treasury-bill rates shot up to more than 80 percent. The government wasn’t able to ease the credit crunch, and the bailout also altered Mexico’s financial system, eventually putting the country’s four largest banks and 77 percent of all banks by assets in foreign hands.

The lesson to be learned was not the lesson learned. Moral hazard was greater than ever as the New York banks learned that the US government would bail them out. The Mexicans got the shaft. It is no wonder that the New York bankers all support Democrats. Now, in Reverend Wright’s words, “The chickens have come home to roost.” The elites and the politicians have no clue about the extent of the crisis they created this time. What is worse, they seem to be ignoring it and are intent on spending more money and taking over more of our lives. That way lies disaster.

I’m not the only one who is very worried.

[I]nside the Beltway they seem to be pixilated (the old definition) these days with Magical Thinking. Both the White House and Congress somehow believe – despite all evidence that big, top-down and bureaucratic initiatives no longer work in our Web 2.0 world – that they can grab entire sectors of our economy and impose on them a whole new regime that will magically work without any unexpected and catastrophic side-effects. No business in America, from the corner dry cleaners to a Fortune 500 company would ever contemplate something this crazy, at least not without preparing the most detailed road map imaginable and getting every employee on-board – not passing massive and sweeping laws that nobody has read, whose consequences are unclear, and the majority of the citizenry is against.

By the same token, the lesson I’ve learned from thirty years working in a volatile place like Silicon Valley is to pray for the best-case scenario, but prepare for the worst. The smart companies around here scale up fast during the good times, but are always worriedly looking ahead for the next downturn. That’s why, Cisco’s John Chambers told me a few months ago, he hoarded cash during the last boom – just so Cisco would be able to navigate through this current crash, keep its employees and outrun its weakened competition.

The best-case scenario for this economy right now is that the Stimulus (or the proposed second one) actually works, the U.S. economy rights itself, and grows sufficiently fast over the next five years to absorb all of this new debt and produce enough new jobs to bring unemployment down to reasonable levels. And it is upon this best-case scenario that we are now preparing to embark on one of the most sweeping eras in government-run social engineering in our nation’s history.

It won’t work and, if the stock market crashes tomorrow, it will begin to be obvious. The 250 point drop Friday looks suspiciously like another warning of a black Monday. We’ll know in 24 hours.