The VA and Government-Run Health Care

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With Obamacare already on thin ice with the public, the problems at the VA are reinforcing the disadvantages of government-run health care. And if ACA proponents consoled themselves that the law was merely a step toward the “inevitable” single-payer system, the VA monopoly should not inspire hope. As noted elsewhere, one of the biggest costs of socialized medicine is always in the wait, a cost which is absent from official accounting reports.

The VA debacle is very bad news for the Obama Administration, not because it is their fault, though they have known about the fraudulent waiting lists for at least a year. Instead, for Obamacare, it is a public relations nightmare, as noted in this article: “Most Important Casualty of Veterans Affairs Scandal Could Be Obamacare.”

In another disturbing development, fit for an honored place in the pantheon of dumb government incentives, a new IRS ruling holds that employers who “dump” employees onto the federal exchanges will be fined up to $36,500 per year per employee! Granting the employee a raise to pay the premium will not gain the employer a dispensation. Only by firing the worker can they avoid the penalty. This is discussed here.

Here’s some commentary from the Onion that gets right to the heart of the VA problem: VA To Improve Veterans’ Health Care With New $500 Million Waiting Room. See the photo above for The Onion artist’s rendering of the new VA waiting room.

Keeping Politics Off The Proxy

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Bravo to Groupon (or its voting shareholders) for approving a “content neutral” policy with respect to the customers it will serve, provided a customer is offering a legal product or service. The proposal came from an activist organization which purchased enough Groupon shares to qualify, under an SEC rule, to have the content policy placed on the company’s shareholder proxy statement. In so doing, they outmaneuvered PETA, which had hoped to propose a ban on circuses on a future proxy.

Stephen Bainbridge thinks the idea should be extended to prevent the kinds of political witch hunts we’ve witnessed lately: Let’s use Rule 14a-8 to fight the Purge of Conservatives

Big Brother Is Choking You!

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The Obama/Holder DOJ is targeting legal businesses it regards as undesirable by pressuring banks to cut off their accounts under “Operation Choke Point,” as described by Glenn Reynolds at the link. Denying these businesses their sources of funds is of questionable legality to say the least. “It seems almost like some sort of conspiracy to deprive people of their civil rights.” Um, yes!

The DOJ’s criteria for targeting appear to be rather arbitrary. Reynolds quotes from the WaPo law blog: “The ability to destroy legal industries through secret actions to deprive them of banking services has obvious political consequences. . . . In principle, of course, the logic of Operation Choke Point could be extended to groups not currently targeted.” If you’re okay with seeing this sort of abuse targeted at porn performers, ammo dealers and payday loans, just wait until another party takes office. See how you like their list.

Luddites Demand Control Over Agricultural Technology

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It’s great to see a few anti-GMO writers and activists come to grips with the anti-science nonsense festering within their community. This article in Reason mentions a few of those positive developments. Almost every day I see an article posted on Facebook or elsewhere filled with scare tactics, fabrication, and poor scientific reasoning about the impact of GMOs. This is not necessarily or always malicious, though it often violates the norms of civilized debate, to say nothing of it’s potential human impact. I believe that opposition is a product of superstition, a misplaced faith in what GMO opponents falsely construe as “natural” or “sustainable.” 

Here is an example of reasonably balanced reportage, in this case, on the debate over the benefits of golden rice

Piketty’s Capital Data Fudge

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Capital In The Twenty-First Century author Thomas Piketty is in some hot water, having been exposed for a series of data problems and even data manipulation by a thorough investigation published in the Financial Times. You may recall that Piketty’s book has been called a “Das Kapital” for the 21st century, heralded by the likes of such leftist lights as Paul Krugman and Joe Stiglitz. But his sweeping conclusions regarding inequality were suspect even before the new revelations; many have noted that his conclusions don’t really follow from the data he presents. Now the data itself looks fudged; when corrected, PIketty’s results do not hold up. 

The author of the blog linked above, Pejman Yousefzadeh, is pretty tough on Piketty, and I’m inclined to say he deserves it based only on his advocacy of a destructive wealth tax. Tyler Cowen urges more restraint. Cowen’s first report on the matter is here

Greed-Free Government? Good Luck With That

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“The Progressive perspective on ‘greed’ is that it’s a constant problem in the private sector but somehow recedes when government takes over. I wonder exactly when a politician’s self-interest evaporates and his altruistic compassion kicks in?” That quote is from Lawrence Reed in The Freeman discussing one of the ditzier Cliches of Progressivism. The existence of large government creates the very mechanism for circumventing market forces, for the cronyism reviled by honest thinkers on the Right and the Left. Indeed, large government has always been demanded by established interests who wish to destroy competition, establish monopoly power, and secure lucrative public contracts.

I also like this: “… in a free market, you quickly realize that to satisfy the self-interest that some critics are quick to dismiss as ‘greed,’ you can’t put a crown on your head, wrap a robe around yourself and demand that the peasants cough up their shekels. You have to produce, create, trade, invest, and employ. You have to provide goods or services that willing customers (not taxpaying captives) will choose to buy and hopefully more than just once. Your ‘greed’ gets translated into life-enhancing things for other people.”

“I Wake Up Every Morning Thinking About Who To Blame”

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The New Obama Narrative: Epic Incompetence. As I said two years ago on Facebook, before the election, this president is likely to earn the distinction of being the worst performer in-office of all time, and that conclusion does not necessarily require an ideological perspective. He’s not even good at being a progressive! To call him ineffectual or Carteresque would be too generous. And now, as Charles Krauthammer has noted, we’ve heard the most absurd excuse for inaction of all time: Obama says that he learned about the VA scandal from media reports, even though he’s been working on it for six years! Wait, did Biden write that?

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Can the Carbon Tax

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Economists often fall victim to the naive view that government technocrats can measure the external costs or benefits of an activity accurately. Having performed the necessary calculations, the idea is that optimal taxes or subsidies can be promulgated through the political process and applied to an activity in order to correct or “internalize” these kinds of social effluents. In their focus on private market failure, many economists fail to appreciate the extent to which governments usually “fail” in these and many other efforts. At best, one might hope that such intrusions are directionally correct, but even that is fraught with risk.

A particularly good example involves the presumed social costs of carbon emissions. Carbon tax proposals are very much in vogue, but they are not without controversy. The well-meaning assertions of climate alarmists rely on rather fatuous claims about anthropomorphic warming and an overly broad and unwise application of the precautionary principle. There is a vocal minority of climate researchers who do not believe we have sufficient knowledge about climate sensitivities to make judgements about the true social costs and even some likely benefits of a warmer climate, should that be an ultimate consequence. Moreover, accurately measuring the presumed costs is out of the question. Meanwhile, carbon taxes impose costly burdens in the here and now that are difficult to justify.

This response to Irwin Selzer on carbon taxes is worth reading (with a link to Selzer’s article).

Here is a review and further links regarding the disastrous Australian carbon tax.

And here is Robert Murphy on carbon taxes, in which he discusses some prominent estimates of costs and benefits which show the sometimes enormous danger of setting non-optimal carbon taxes (granting the conceit that an optimal tax is positive).

FYI, the unfortunate Julia in the cartoon above refers to Julia Gillard, the former PM of Australia who pushed for the country’s ill-fated carbon tax.

Latest Manipulations In Climate “Science”

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Science corrupted: Peer reviewers suppress a scientific paper coauthored by a highly distinguished scientist for political reasons, reported in Friday’s London Times. The East Anglia scandal in 2009 demonstrated not just fraud in the climate science community, but also dysfunction in the peer review process in climate science. Now we’re seeing evidence that the corruption has gone unabated. “Lennart Bengtsson, a research fellow at the University of Reading and one of the authors of the study, said… ‘The problem we now have in the climate community is that some scientists are mixing up their scientific role with that of a climate activist.'”

Roy Spencer has some thoughts on a closely-related controversy involving Bengtsson here. Perhaps encouraged by the record of the past 17 years, which shows no warming in global temperatures despite drastic predictions from the mainstream models based on CO2 forcings, the public is becoming increasingly suspicious of climate science. Unfortunately, the media (including local weather reporters) has not quite caught on. Spencer: “As I have always said, if you fund scientists to find evidence of something, they will be happy to find it for you.”

Steve McIntyre discusses the Bengtsson case here. It is a reflection of a widespread effort at thought-cleansing in the mainstream climate science community.

Check My Privilege? Check Your Depth

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I think the best response is to ask whether the privilege monitor thinks one’s success or happiness, or one’s parent’s success or happiness, is undeserved, and what that has to do with the issue at hand. I’m amused by this piece, though he draws a pretty hard, simplistic line between those who “work” and… others. Yet he makes a good point: the “check your privilege” meme is a cheap rhetorical device aimed at delegitimizing a point of view based on one’s background or other superficial characteristics, or even one’s success, things unrelated to the content of the argument. As if success were a disqualification for entering into debate. The objective is often to silence those who would otherwise expose progressive delusions.