Rebane's Ruminations
April 2013
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Have just a touch of the commercial in you.  Do not merely shop, but trade a little.  Gracian #232

George Rebane

Been on travel with some friends for the last couple of weeks.  We attended the Mercatus Institute’s annual retreat in Scottsdale.  The big issue discussed was socialism’s onslaught on capitalism – ‘Can American Capitalism be Saved?’ – and who is doing what to bring it down.  I’ll cover more of that in a future post.  But here I just want to include an observation gleaned on our way to Scottsdale.

We stopped overnight in a Needles, CA RV park, and were pretty much shocked at the state of that once prosperous gateway town to California that lies on I-40.  The town is an economic disaster area, a relic of former times, and a step away from being a derelict or even a ghost town.  What made the sight of Needles so stark was its comparison with Arizona that lies a stone’s throw across the Colorado River.  We wanted to eat out and also buy some RV items.  Nothing available in Needles.  But a drive across a little bridge brought us into a dynamic and bustling commercial area that was an extension of Bullhead City, AZ which lay twenty miles to the north.  It was like driving back to West Berlin through the Wall at Checkpoint Charlie in the days when communism ruled East Germany.

The most telling part was instantly apparent from the bridge looking northward.  The Arizona side was filled with well-kept and landscaped riverside houses, each with their own boat dock; the California riverside was weeds as far as the eye could see that continued a good piece inland.  Huell Howser, RIP, could have done one hell of program on Needles and what happened to ‘California’s Gold’.

Governor Moonbeam and entourage are heading to China.  Their purpose is to talk the Chinese into making investments in California that people more knowledgeable about the state won’t.  They also want Chinese to buy more stuff made in California that we can’t sell elsewhere at prices that bring a profit.  I can’t imagine China buying anything that we are selling save some technology that they still don’t have and want to copy.  The same goes for making investments.  They would like to take major positions in high-tech companies dealing in IT and genomics.  One thing is for sure, they will not be buying any ‘green technology’ from us.  There they have us beat on both price and performance, and will continue selling the stuff to us.

But come to think of it, they may talk Team Moonbeam into mandating and/or subsidizing the purchase of Chinese green stuff.  Nothing like getting a twofer from being America’s creditor.

Connecticut has now taken the lead in nutty gun control laws, while again demonstrating that all states were not created equal in their ability to sensibly legislate.  Today their Governor Malloy signed the “most sweeping” gun control bill in the nation that is supposed achieve new levels of “gun safety”.  It will, of course, do none of that.  (more here)

Meanwhile, despite President Obama’s national campaign to disarm America, more states are easing gun regulations than are bolstering them (more here).  The message there is clear – don’t disarm sane, stable, law-abiding citizens, but do more to identify and intercede with people who are clearly not qualified to possess firearms, and maybe not even to walk on the sidewalk.  To be fair, Connecticut’s new law also attempts to address that part which was the only germane factor in their Newtown massacre.

[5apr13 update]  Here's a Quote of the Day from the Los Angeles Times about something I strongly believe and wish I would have said.

"Frankly, I don't know what it is about California, but we seem to have a
strange urge to elect really obnoxious women to high office. I'm not bragging,
you understand, but no other state, including Maine, even comes close. When it
comes to sending left-wing dingbats to Washington, we're Number One. There's no
getting around the fact that the last time anyone saw the likes of Barbara
Boxer, Dianne Feinstein, Maxine Waters, and Nancy Pelosi, they were stirring a
cauldron when the curtain went up on 'Macbeth'. The four of them are like
jackasses who happen to possess the gift of blab. You don't know if you should condemn
them for their stupidity or simply marvel at their ability to form words."

— Columnist Burt Prelutsky, Los Angeles Times

Posted in , , ,

29 responses to “Ruminations – 4apr13 (updated 5apr13)”

  1. Gregory Avatar

    Congratulations to the people of Connecticut, whose politicians managed to get their ‘gun safety’ overhaul in place before their police managed to finish and make public their report on the crime that inspired it.
    Also inspiring is the Colorado House Democrat, the prime sponsor of gun bills in the House for the last two sessions, who explained how the freezing of large capacity “magazine clips” works. You see, they’re just bullets, and as shooters use them up there will be fewer and fewer large capacity “magazine clips” in circulation, and they will in the end just cease to exist. She had no understanding that magazines are sold empty, separately from ammo, and can be reused and reloaded hundreds and thousands of times.
    This from a Democrat in office who has been working on legislation for years.
    That gaffe is of the same magnitude as the idiotic “legitimate rape” brain fart of a Republican in the last cycle, but she’ll probably be reelected as her main constituents probably don’t care; they just know big “magazine clips” are icky.
    http://blogs.denverpost.com/thespot/2013/04/03/as-lead-sponsor-in-house-on-gun-legislation-rep-diana-degette-appears-to-not-understand-how-they-work/93506/

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  2. Russ Steele Avatar

    What difference a bridge and pro business state government makes:
    Interesting Facts about Needles, California

    As of 2012, Needles’s population is 4,844 people. Since 2000, it has had a population growth of -2.87 percent.

    The median home cost in Needles is $64,200. Home appreciation the last year has been 0.68 percent.

    Compared to the rest of the country, Needles’s cost of living is 10.10% Lower than the U.S. average.

    Needles public schools spend $5,458 per student. The average school expenditure in the U.S. is $5,691. There are about 21.8 students per teacher in Needles.

    The unemployment rate in Needles is 12.10 percent(U.S. avg. is 8.60%). Recent job growth is Positive. Needles jobs have Increased by 0.28 percent.
    Interesting Facts about Bullhead_City, Arizona

    As of 2012, Bullhead City’s population is 39,540 people. Since 2000, it has had a population growth of 15.30 percent.

    The median home cost in Bullhead City is $114,400. Home appreciation the last year has been 7.39 percent.

    Compared to the rest of the country, Bullhead City’s cost of living is 7.10% Lower than the U.S. average.

    Bullhead City public schools spend $3,487 per student. The average school expenditure in the U.S. is $5,691. There are about 19.4 students per teacher in Bullhead City.

    The unemployment rate in Bullhead City is 9.50 percent(U.S. avg. is 8.60%). Recent job growth is Negative. Bullhead City jobs have Decreased by 1.11 percent.

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  3. Ben Emery Avatar
    Ben Emery

    Looks like some of Nevada County righties are looking to move to beautiful Bullhead City. See Ya.
    “Capitalism will never fail. Socialism will always be there to bail it out.” – Ralph Nader

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  4. Joe Koyote Avatar
    Joe Koyote

    We all know what the right said to war protesters, ” America, love it or leave it.” I think the same thing should apply to California. The left counter to love it or leave was “change it or lose it.” Unfortunately neither of those happened. So here we all are fifty years later still dealing with the exact same issues, like a broken record. Not much has changed in the last half century, it has just gotten worse. The odd thing is that both the left and the right share that same sentiment. Only time will tell whose perceptions are correct and whose are not.

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  5. Michael Anderson Avatar
    Michael Anderson

    George, thanks so much for report on the comparison between Bullshit City, AZ and Nowheresville, CA.
    Seriously? Needles? One of the stupidest places to live on the planet. Let it rot into the earth. This is an Indicator of Nothing.
    Sorry, try again, Gang Who Couldn’t Shoot Straight.
    Michael A.

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  6. Ben Emery Avatar
    Ben Emery

    JK,
    I am not telling anyone to love it or leave but rather observing from the orgasmic description of how great Bullhead City, AZ of all places, is compared to California wasteland.

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  7. Scott Obermuller Avatar

    Joe at 8:46 – ” Only time will tell whose perceptions are correct and whose are not.”
    Ever read a history book Joe? Time has ‘told’, nay, fairly shouted at us what works and what doesn’t. But you have your hate and prejudice as your master, so you just keep waiting for time to tell you what you want to hear. Things have not gotten worse for my family, Joe. Speak for yourself and those like you that sit in the mud and blame everyone else for their own sad lives.

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  8. Russ Steele Avatar

    Drudge Report:
    UNEMPLOYMENT RATE 7.6%…
    Labor force at 63.3%, lowest since 1979…
    JOBS UP 88,000…
    Goolsbee: ‘Punch to Gut’…
    Cramer: ‘Permanent Unemployed Level’…
    ANALYSTS: January tax hikes to blame, not sequester…
    DOW DROPS 100 PTS IN 60 SECONDS…
    People Not In Labor Force Soar By 663,000 To 90 Million, Labor Force Participation Rate At 1979 Levels
    Graphics Here: http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2013-04-05/people-not-labor-force-soar-663000-90-million-labor-force-participation-rate-1979-le

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  9. fish Avatar
    fish

    “Capitalism will never fail. Socialism will always be there to bail it out.” – Ralph Nader
    Ooooh good choice……Political gadfly and perennial loser Ralph Nader!
    He’s right though! Most recently in the 2008 banking crisis the government assumed banking liabilities and recapitalized (and are continuing to do so) and made the banks whole again!
    Enjoy eating cat food in your retirement Ben your government has sold you out yet again!

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  10. Ben Emery Avatar
    Ben Emery

    Fish,
    Here is another quote from the American Hero that explains why we have a corrupt two party government that is in the business of securing wealth and power for a small few people.
    The ‘democracy gap’ in our politics and elections spells a deep sense of powerlessness by people who drop out, do not vote, or listlessly vote for the ‘least worst’ every four years and then wonder why after every cycle the ‘least worst’ gets worse.
    Ralph Nader

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  11. fish Avatar
    fish

    So who did you vote for last cycle Ben? The least bad?

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  12. Ben Emery Avatar
    Ben Emery

    For President? Just as I have 5 of 7 Presidential elections, and independent candidate. I left the Feinstein office empty. Myself for State Senate. Dahle for Assembly. Reed for Congress.
    Fish in 2010 at a League of Women voters forum/ debate we were asked if we would like President Obama to support our campaign? I said sure but I doubt he would since I have been actively opposing his policies that I believe should be considered war crimes. Also believe he should be impeached for the violations of our civil liberties.

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  13. Joe Koyote Avatar
    Joe Koyote

    Scott 10:24 “But you have your hate and prejudice as your master”–What on earth are you babbling about this time? I didn’t say a word about outcome. I am just curious as to whom is the more stupid, the left or the right. Your knee jerk reaction to a neutral statement suggests that perhaps it is you who might want look at yourself for hate and prejudice.
    You seem to just go off on a rant of personal attack every time I post something regardless of content. I am sorry if the suggestion that the jury isn’t in yet bothers your staunch views that your perceptions are the only correct ones.

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  14. Ben Emery Avatar
    Ben Emery

    JK,
    To Scott’s “Ever read a history book?” remark. It depends on who writes the book.
    “Chapter 4: Tyranny is Tyranny
    http://www.historyisaweapon.com/defcon1/zinntyr4.html
    “Around 1776, certain important people in the English colonies made a discovery that would prove enormously useful for the next two hundred years. They found that by creating a nation, a symbol, a legal unity called the United States, they could take over land, profits, and political power from favorites of the British Empire. In the process, they could hold back a number of potential rebellions and create a consensus of popular support for the rule of a new, privileged leadership.
    When we look at the American Revolution this way, it was a work of genius, and the Founding Fathers deserve the awed tribute they have received over the centuries. They created the most effective system of national control devised in modern times, and showed future generations of leaders the advantages of combining paternalism with command.
    Starting with Bacon’s Rebellion in Virginia, by 1760, there had been eighteen uprisings aimed at overthrowing colonial governments. There had also been six black rebellions, from South Carolina to New York, and forty riots of various origins.
    By this time also, there emerged, according to Jack Greene, “stable, coherent, effective and acknowledged local political and social elites.” And by the 1760s, this local leadership saw the possibility of directing much of the rebellious energy against England and her local officials. It was not a conscious conspiracy, but an accumulation of tactical responses. “

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  15. George Rebane Avatar

    BenE 1003am – A tidy little narrative of the colonial elites’ perfidy. Given that it has some truth to it, I wonder why other colonies (or even autocratic nations) since then haven’t been able to pull off a revolution that bequeathed its citizens the prosperity and well-being that was the inheritance of Americans and those who successfully became Americans thereafter.

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  16. Joe Koyote Avatar
    Joe Koyote

    Probably the most important American history book ever written was Howard Zinn’s “People’s History of the United States”. It tells the stories the robber barons don’t want you to know about how this country was born and evolved to be what it is today.

    Like

  17. fish Avatar
    fish

    Fish in 2010 at a League of Women voters forum/ debate we were asked if we would like President Obama to support our campaign? I said sure but I doubt he would since I have been actively opposing his policies that I believe should be considered war crimes. Also believe he should be impeached for the violations of our civil liberties.
    Okay Ben perhaps I’ve jumped to an inaccurate conclusion.

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  18. Ben Emery Avatar
    Ben Emery

    George,
    Despite the Zinn quote the US established form of government was the best form ever devised. Just because it has had good success in many areas doesn’t mean it doesn’t have many problem as well. Zinn tells the history we aren’t taught by the “victors” he tells history from those on the other side of the fight.

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  19. George Rebane Avatar

    BenE 1226pm – your 1003am required the 1226pm addendum to make clear your point, else it sounded like the usual anti-American screed often heard from liberals and taught in our public schools. Thank you.

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  20. Ben Emery Avatar
    Ben Emery

    George,
    My 1003am comment wasn’t trying to make any other point than history has different views depending on who is writing it and which side of history it is being told.

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  21. Gregory Avatar

    “So who did you vote for last cycle Ben? The least bad?”
    Fish 11:30, not the ‘least bad’: the ‘even worse’.
    I see the RudeWhineFart site is atwitter about George’s account of Needles, not quite grokking how Needles started low and got even worse. With California over $100 billion in the hole before considering a few hundred billion in unfunded retirement benefits, we ain’t seen nothing yet.

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  22. Paul Emery Avatar

    RE: Rebane 05 April 2013 at 10:26 AM
    Yes indeed George,our 19th Century coast to coast romp of plunder and pillage (taught in the schools as “manifest Destiny” did indeed lead to prosperity and freedom to those who were in the charge. Since then we have resorted to traditional imperialism to keep the cheap resources and labor flowing with mixed success. It doesn’t matter much anymore since we’re now cowering to the might of international corporations and financial institutions that are indeed running the show as this link illustrates.
    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/04/03/eu-trade-deal_n_2994410.html

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  23. Paul Emery Avatar

    Here’s a teaser
    “The U.S. Chamber of Commerce has been advocating for a new trade deal between the U.S. and EU for more than a year, and President Barack Obama endorsed the project in his 2013 State of the Union address.
    Since EU nations and the U.S. are already party to World Trade Organization treaties, there are relatively few tariffs that could be eliminated among the countries. In written reports, the Chamber, a lobbying group representing large corporations, has pushed for increased “regulatory compatibility” and “updated and comprehensive” investment terms to “prevent discrimination against investors” in the trade pact. The Chamber declined to discuss the deal for this article.”
    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/04/03/eu-trade-deal_n_2994410.html

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  24. George Rebane Avatar

    PaulE 610pm – when you emailed me this link and asked for my take, I responded as follows –
    Hi Paul – I’ve been leery of multi-national corporations, and this seems to up the ante re their ability to operate independently or and/or end run governments. While the article is skimpy on the overall impact of the new WTO proposal, it does state that corps will have peerage in filing suits against other nation-states in WTO recognized international justice and adjudication institutions. I am basically against that entire concept. I see that kind of integration as a back door to binding together all kinds of power structures in the world – i.e. a sneaky way to promote one-worldism.
    I believe that corporations are chartered under the laws of one nation-state, and that they can operate within other nation-states only under treaties forged and adopted by such nation-states. If a nation-state feels one of its corporations is being treated unfairly by another nation-state or a corporation therein/therefrom, then it has to be the first nation-state that goes to bat for its corporation using whatever adjudication instruments apply under the treaties the nation-state has entered into.
    In sum, I abhor seemingly ‘stateless corporations’ that play fast and loose on the international scene, often pitting one nation-state against another (after all, governments are where all the dodos congregate, so that is not so hard). Corporations should be kept on a tight leash internationally. If they’re worth fighting for, then it should be their chartering government that is their champion in the international arena.
    Good topic.
    Gjr

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  25. Paul Emery Avatar

    George
    Here is the irony on this. The main proponents of this trade deal is the Chamber of Commerce That’s consistent with my view that they both parties are indeed the same party when it comes to catering to the ruling class. If indeed this is a step towards world government then the Chamber of Commerce is paying big bucks to insure Republican support. Republicrats? For sure
    “The U.S Chamber of Commerce, which helped Republicans make big gains in the 2010 congressional elections, is planning its most aggressive push yet to send business-friendly lawmakers to Washington in the Nov. 6 election.
    “Thomas Donohue, the president and CEO of the powerful business lobby (Chamber of Commerce), on Tuesday said the Chamber planned to get involved in 11 or 12 Senate races and 35 to 37 races for the House of Representatives.
    “We are planning on having a good year,” Donohue told hundreds of members of the U.S. small business community at a meeting in Washington.
    “Yesterday, reporters asked me how much money we’ll spend,” he said, adding that journalists suggested the group spent $50 million in the last election cycle. “It’ll be a lot of money,” Donohue said, “This is a more important election than the last election.”
    http://www.newsmax.com/Newsfront/chamber-commerce-gop-/2012/05/22/id/439938

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  26. George Rebane Avatar

    PaulE 1258am – Agreed. To me it is disconcerting that the Republican party is such a champion of big corporations that must lean on government to survive. But as I said in my 701pm, peerage of corporations and nation-states in any form to me is anathema, especially on the international scene.

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  27. Steve Frisch Avatar
    Steve Frisch

    I am much more offended by the fact that the author of the update above, and George by extension endorsing it, did not know that there are only three witches in the opening scene of Macbeth, than by the inherent misogyny of use of gender as a frame to describe four female legislators George finds obnoxious.
    I think it says something when the people who profess to want to protect our culture don’t know their Shakespeare.

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  28. George Rebane Avatar

    SteveF 957am – thank you Steve for the Shakespeare lesson. Again, a more careful read of the Prelutsky statement would have informed you that he did not claim the number of the Macbeth witches to be four, but did liken the character of the witches to those of the named legislators (“… the last time anyone saw the likes of …”). However the “inherent misogyny of use of gender” stands for these uniquely ignorant and abrasive women in high places.
    And I do believe that had these women been in public life at the penning of Macbeth, Shakespeare would have appropriately increased the count.

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