According to John E. Mulligan on the Projo’s Political Scene blog, committee assignments have been determined for the 110th Congress.
Senator-elect Sheldon Whitehouse has received seats on…
- Environment and Public Works
- Judiciary
- Select Committee on Intelligence
- Budget
Senator Jack Reed’s committee assignments are…
- Appropriations
- Armed Services
- Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions
- Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs
Megan McArdle of Asymmetrical Information challenges emerging conventional wisdom that using emergency rooms for routine medical care is a significant contributor to rising healthcare costs (h/t Instapundit)…
It doesn’t seem to me that emergency room care for routine ailments is actually more expensive to provide than clinical care; it’s just that hospitals price it to cover the cost of dead, uninsured trauma patients and so forth. I don’t see how a triage nurse, a doctor, and a waiting room are more expensive to provide because they’re on the first floor than they would be on the fifth. But perhaps I’m missing something there.Agree or disagree? [Open full post]
A few days ago, I posted Rebuilding the RI GOP Part I: Forming a Political Philosophy. I’m still working on a follow up post, but Dan Yorke–inspired by an Ed Achorn column that Yorke characterizes as having been written about a million times already–has a rather provocative proposal of his own: dismantle it. I believe Yorke’s premise is that there simply is neither an effective leader who will/can step forward to rebuild the existing GOP nor will the current hierarchy go away. Yorke avers that too many in the RIGOP leadership are hopelessly pathetic, “Me too” and in bed with Democrats, that there is no hope to really change it. So Yorke thinks that a 40 year walk in the desert is called for (actually, about 5 years). However, Yorke’s premise relies heavily on the Governor calling for the death penalty for the RIGOP. That won’t happen. It certainly sounds extreme and is highly, highly, highly unlikely. But I suppose it’s an option.
[Open full post]According to an unbylined story in today’s Projo, as was the case last year, a budget shortfall for Rhode Island is being projected for this fiscal year…
The state’s budget situation looks bleak, real bleak.As was also the case last year, our neighbors in Massachusetts and Connecticut are not experiencing similar crises. The State Comptroller of Connecticut is projecting a surplus for for fiscal year 2007?
The amount of cash flowing into the state’s coffers this year is estimated to fall $74.2 million short of previous predictions, causing a major headache for all branches of state government.
To further exacerbate the problem, a report due out later this week is expected to show that department spending is far above what has been budgeted. Those added expenses could push the current year deficit well above $100 million, according to state Budget Officer Rosemary Booth Gallogly.
State Comptroller Nancy Wyman today projected the state will end the 2007 fiscal year with a budget surplus of $266.4 million.And while Massachusetts does not provide a comprehensive monthly forecast including both revenues and spending like Connecticut does, according to the Massachusetts Department of Revenue, as of October’s collections, revenue collection by Massachusetts is very slightly ahead (about $16,000,000 out of a total of $18,900,000,000) of what was anticipated.
The estimated surplus increased by $53.5 million over the last month. That growth was mainly due to higher-than-expected revenue from the income tax, especially the capital gains portion of the tax related to investors’ robust returns from the financial markets. Modest job growth of about 1,700 positions in September also produced higher revenue from the payroll-withholding portion of the tax.
Unsurprisingly, the fundamental problem facing Rhode Island has not changed from a year ago…
The fact that our neighbors doing well shows that the Rhode Island budget shortfall is not a problem created by implacable macroeconomic forces spiraling out of control; economic conditions in Rhode Island are similar to economic conditions in Massachusetts and Connecticut.[Open full post]
Rhode Island’s problems are rooted in poor fiscal management and irrational spending policies. They cannot be solved by giving even more money to the government that created this mess in the first place.
National Review isn’t exactly considered the journal of record for the Ivy League. (William F. Buckley once famously commented that he would “rather be governed by the first 2000 names in the Boston phone book than by the 2000 members of the faculty of Harvard University”). However, last week’s dead tree edition of NR contained a line that may catch some folks a few years (or decades) removed from the college experience by surprise…
Columbia has been the cool school in the Ivy League for a while now, taking that title from Brown…Is it really true, or is NR guilty of propagating a bit of New York hype here? [Open full post]
I don’t think Julian Sanchez understood what I was saying:
… let me just address one qualm about the analogy between skeptical science and liberal societies. Katz doubts it will go through because while scientists have the shared goal of improving science (let this rather rosy view of actual scientists’ motivations pass for the moment), the diverse members of a liberal society are trying improve their own lives. So let me make explicit what I was implicitly gesturing at in the original post: See Mill for the full argument there. With Mill and Nozick, I very much doubt there will be a One Best Way of Life if “Way” is understood to involve much detail, but also expect that people’s self-interested “experiments in living” provide publicly benificial information without that being anyone’s explicit intention.
First, I’d note in passing that my mention of scientists’ shared goal of improving science was merely a rephrasing of Sanchez’s statement that “there are scores of intelligent and skeptical researchers constantly testing and refining its [that is, science’s] conclusions.” On the level of social mechanisms, the individuals’ motivation isn’t what’s important; rather, we can speak of their role in the social model without their having to be consciously motivated by it.
To get to the point, though, my previous post didn’t argue that scientists act toward a shared goal while citizens act toward their own goals. What I was attempting to suggest was that Sanchez’s appeal to science as a model in which systematic doubt enables confidence in the process does not apply to society in the way that he apparently desires. In order for the analogy to work, systematic doubts about particular social views would have to be seen as enabling the improvement of society toward some ideal. In the case of science, the ideal is a perfect understanding of the physical world; in the case of society, it would have to be a perfect vision of morality.
My claim, which perhaps was not sufficiently explicit, is that Sanchez’s “fanatical… defense of liberal societies” is contingent upon his being able to believe that such societies will move toward the ideal that he prefers. In other words, his systematic “doubt” is rigged. If the “publicly beneficial information” that arises out of institutionalized doubt about citizens’ “experiments in living” appeared to be leading toward (to maintain my previous example) a more pervasive Catholic sexual ethic, his confidence in the process would waver. (Alternately, he might insist that the process is not actually being followed.) I expect that Julian will disagree with that claim, but to do so, he’ll have to dispense with the ambiguity whereby he advertises (so to speak) the generation of socially beneficial information about human lifestyles while linking to arguments against society’s acting on that information.
That, however, is merely a problem with Sanchez’s argument as it stands. Stepping back from the intellectual discussion, the notes of evolutionary inevitability that I could not help but hear underlying Sanchez’s initial post continue to give some indication of what he would consider to be “refinement.”
The world anxiously awaits the report from the “Iraq Study Group” (aka the Baker-Hamilton commission) on what major changes the U.S. should make in conducting the War in Iraq. Most media sources anticipate that a key recommendation from the commission will be opening negotiations with Iran and Syria. Here’s some representative speculation from Martin Walker of United Press International…
[T]hese high stakes also involve Iraq’s neighbors in the region, who must somehow be brought into the process if Iraq is to be stabilized. This may well mean sitting down to negotiate with unsavory regimes like Syria and Iran, and accepting that they too have regional interests that will have to be dealt with….What precisely are these regional interests, important to our Baker-Hamilton-approved potential negotiating partners in Syria in Iran, that need to be addressed? Well, here’s a fresh quote from Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, as reported today by Agence France-Presse, that explains pretty clearly the Iranian position on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict…
[T]he wise men will make clear, as they have done before in different contexts, their conviction that Israel-Palestine is the key to the stabilization of the Middle East. It is the running sore, the constant focus of Arab anger and resentment, the blood opera of Arab TV screens, as central to modern Arab political culture as the Trojan Wars to ancient Greece, and rather longer lasting.
According to the Iranian media Monday, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad declared that Israel was destined to “disappearance and destruction” at a council meeting with Iranian ministers.Repeated calls by Ahmadinejad for the destruction of an American ally are the source of hawkish skepticism that negotiating with Iran serves American interests. It’s not that hawks don’t believe in negotiating. It’s that hawks believe that the different sides in a conflict have to recognize the right of the others to exist before meaningful negotiation becomes possible. Without agreement that mutual coexistence is the starting point, negotiation becomes merely war-by-other-means, a tactical maneuver used by one side to continue a conflict against others.
“The western powers created the Zionist regime in order to expand their control of the area. This regime massacres Palestinians everyday, but since this regime is against nature, we will soon witness its disappearance and destruction,” Ahmadinejad said.
Unfortunately, there is little potential for finding a good faith negotiating partner in a radical Islamist government prone to describing other governments as “unnatural”. Ahmadinejad’s choice of words reflect a central tenant of Islamic radicalism — that it is “unnatural” to expect harmony on earth where Islamic law (the immutable system, created by God, for governing relations between men) is absent and that any institutions not based on Islamic law must be destroyed, because such institutions stand between man and Islam, the only path that will bring harmony to relations amongst men.
Those optimistic about Iran’s potential as a peaceful negotiating partner (like the Iraq Study Group) obviously discount the Iranian government’s official fundamentalist rhetoric. Both realists (aka “Republican Marxists”) and progressives are comfortable dealing with governments that are based on violent, intolerant ideas, becasue they believe that economic forces ultimately erase all else in foreign affairs. Stanley Kurtz provides a pretty fair rendering of the negotiate-at-any-price position in today’s National Review Online…
Those who favor a grand bargain believe that a faction of the leadership in Tehran is more pragmatic than the radicals who support Ahmadinejad. And while the Iranian public is nationalist enough to favor a nuclear program (many Iranians believe the government’s line that the program is strictly for peaceful purposes), the public’s first concern is the economy.But it can hardly be called “realistic” for the U.S. to ignore the fundamental beliefs of any government that it intends to negotiate with. If negotiations with Iran have any hope of creating a lasting peace, they must include the question of whether the Iranian government believes that governments and social institutions not based on Islamic law — including Israel — have a basic right to exist. If the Iranians cannot answer such questions in an unambiguously tolerant, pluralistic manner, then the United States has no obligation to provide Iran with any assistance or security guarantees. [Open full post]
So those who favor a grand bargain (Kenneth Pollack, for example) believe that a combination of big economic carrots and big economic sticks might bring Iran’s public over to the side of the “pragmatists.” In a showdown (provoked by tough economic sanctions) between the pragmatists and Ahmadinejad’s radicals, power would shift to Tehran’s own “realists.” The Iranian economy is in bad shape. Instead of being plowed into investment, Iran’s oil revenues are doled out to the regime’s core supporters through a web of patronage/corruption. Hold out the possibility of a national financial bonanza on the other side of tough economic sanctions, and Iran’s long-suffering public will side with the pragmatists against the radicals.
Here we go again…
After the post entitled Senator Chafee: The Gift That Keeps on Giving, most of us thought the psychodramas would die down. Silly us.
With a H/T to Jim in the comments section of the earlier post, comes the Investor Business Daily editorial Lincoln’s Assassination.
Then there was Holding to the Center, Losing My Seat , a Chafee editorial in the NYTimes.
Patrick Casey said it best: “In the end, Rhode Islanders preferred a real registered Democrat over one who just pretended to be one.”
From yesterday’s Meet the Press interview transcript with Senator Joseph Lieberman of Connecticut…
MR. RUSSERT: Jim Jeffords of Vermont crossed over and joined the Democrats.Earlier in the interview, Senator Lieberman did reject the idea of any immediate switch to the Republican party…
SEN. LIEBERMAN: Yeah.
MR. RUSSERT: And they gave — they gave him his committee chairmanship.
SEN. LIEBERMAN: Yeah.
MR. RUSSERT: You’re, you’re not ruling that out at some future time?
SEN. LIEBERMAN: I’m not ruling it out, but I hope I don?t get to that point?
MR. RUSSERT: You will caucus with the Democrats?Senator Lieberman is now the independent maverick swing vote on the Senate’s Homeland Security, Armed Services, Environment and Public Works and Small Business committees. [Open full post]
SEN. LIEBERMAN: I will caucus with the Democrats. I said that to my constituents throughout. I’m going to caucus with the Democrats both because it’s good for my constituents in Connecticut, because I retained my seniority, I become a committee chair, but also I want to continue to work to bring the party back to its historic traditions of, of strength on national security, foreign policy and innovation, and progress in domestic policy — the, the Harry Truman/John F. Kennedy Democrat that, that I was raised to be.