Posted on 09/13/2010 6:42:30 PM PDT by Kaslin
This summer was filled with bad economic news. But lets not dwell on the 9.5 percent unemployment rate. Lets be optimistic -- rationally. After all, life is good, and getting better.
Thats the theme of a new book, The Rational Optimist, by Matt Ridley.
Since 1800, the population of the world has multiplied six times, yet average life expectancy has more than doubled and real income has risen more than nine times, Ridley writes. And, even with all those extra mouths to feed, The United Nations estimates that poverty was reduced more in the last 50 years than in the previous 500.
Why is that? Because humans keep getting better at producing and delivering food. Ridley is optimistic that well keep right on feeding the multitudes, even as the human population peeks in the middle of this century.
Of course, Ridley is a rational optimist, so he admits theres a catch: if big governments impose foolish policies, they may blunt international progress. Ridley cites biofuel mandates as an example.
Between 2004 and 2007 the world maize [corn] harvest increased by 51 million tons. But 50 million tons went into ethanol, he writes. So the extra food that should have been available to feed the hungry wasnt there. In effect, American car drivers were taking carbohydrates out of the mouths of poor people to fill their tanks.
Its the sort of policy that only a government could come up with, and Ridley has little use for such bureaucratic foolishness.
Strong governments are, by definition, monopolies and monopolies always grow complacent, stagnant and self-serving, he writes. They also fall for the perpetual fallacy that they can make business work more efficiently if they plan it rather than allow and encourage it to evolve. Look no further than the recovery summer, promised by the Obama administration.
Officials announced in June that theyd tour the country, highlighting successful projects funded by the presidents $800 billion-plus stimulus package. But the victory lap turned into a death march, as unemployment edged up and job growth remained slow.
In a farewell address before she left the administration to return to the academic world, Christina Romer, the head of Obamas Council of Economic Advisers, admitted she had no idea why the stimulus package failed. To this day, economists dont fully understand why firms cut production as much as they did or why they cut labor so much more than they normally would, she told reporters at the National Press Club in late August.
Well, some experts seem to understand whats happening.
In June almost 100 economists drafted a letter to the president explaining that his policies are impeding economic growth. Peter Roff summarized their views in a U.S. News & World Report blog post.
There are, they say, a series of hurdles ahead on the road to economic recovery including the new burdens being placed on small business by the federal government, the threat of tax hikes, and the newly-enacted healthcare law, which will discourage hiring, increase the deficit and, the chief actuary of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services recently concluded, raise healthcare costs, Roth wrote.
Exactly the sort of big government interference that could derail the economic growth humanity needs to build a better future.
Economists are quick to speak of market failure, and rightly so, but a greater threat comes from government failure. Because it is a monopoly, government brings inefficiency and stagnation to most things it runs, Ridley writes. Yet despite all this, most clever people still call for government to run more things and assume that if it did so, it would somehow be more perfect, more selfless, next time.
Still, Ridley is confident we can overcome bureaucracy and build a better future for our children. Over the flow of time, he notes, life has gotten better for rich and poor alike.
The rational optimist invites you to stand back and look at your species differently, to see the grand enterprise of humanity that has progressed -- with frequent setbacks -- for 100,000 years, he writes. When you have seen that, consider whether that enterprise is finished or if, as the optimist claims, it still has centuries and millennia to run. If, in fact, it might be about to accelerate to an unprecedented rate.
A better future awaits us. Lets get there.
I question the rationality of that mindset.
But lets not dwell on the 9.5 percent unemployment rate’
It’s not 9.5, it’s 9.6. Well that’s the latest Number decpetion Obama is pushing.
Look at our lives. Even the poor among us live like kings. We are fat dumb and generally happy. We have hundreds of channels of entertainment options, and life expectancies that would be scene as a miracle jsut a few short generations ago.
This Obama crap is a flash in the pan. i believe he has done terrible damage to the country, but we can and are in the process of fixing that damage.
I for one believe that Obama has shown many formerly moderate people who where always uninterested in politics that they must be more careful when voting.
I may be wrong about the world getting better, but their is no denying that we are much better off as a species than past generations, valve repair and cancer treatment have extended previously terminal illnesses into treatable ones.
As far as the damage Obama has done, much of it is reversible and must be reversed because IT is unsustainable. As little as people want to know the truth, they are catching on. I agree that many of the voting public are less than intelligent. A good purging of the rolls is already underway in many locations, including the county in which I live. Detroit voter rolls where purged last year and over 130,000 dead people that voted for Obama in the last cycle where taken off the rolls. at least they won't be voting for him in the future.
I doubt the country will split up in the next fifty years, and if it did, would it necessarily be a bad thing.
The best we can do is work for positive change, vote accordingly, take care of our own as best we can, be charitable, kind and strong. Other than that, negativity, no matter how hard it is to avoid, is absolutely useless, and is wasted energy. Look to the good things in life. Regardless of what you think, say or do, our lives are vastly improved over the lives of our forbears and with the proper leadership, things should get even better in the future. It is not a given, but it is a certain possibility.
If all else fails, consider decaff, and stock up on Ammo.
I for one believe that Obama has shown many formerly moderate people who where always uninterested in politics that they must be more careful when voting.
I may be wrong about the world getting better, but their is no denying that we are much better off as a species than past generations, valve repair and cancer treatment have extended previously terminal illnesses into treatable ones.
As far as the damage Obama has done, much of it is reversible and must be reversed because IT is unsustainable. As little as people want to know the truth, they are catching on. I agree that many of the voting public are less than intelligent. A good purging of the rolls is already underway in many locations, including the county in which I live. Detroit voter rolls where purged last year and over 130,000 dead people that voted for Obama in the last cycle where taken off the rolls. at least they won't be voting for him in the future.
I doubt the country will split up in the next fifty years, and if it did, would it necessarily be a bad thing.
The best we can do is work for positive change, vote accordingly, take care of our own as best we can, be charitable, kind and strong. Other than that, negativity, no matter how hard it is to avoid, is absolutely useless, and is wasted energy. Look to the good things in life. Regardless of what you think, say or do, our lives are vastly improved over the lives of our forbears and with the proper leadership, things should get even better in the future. It is not a given, but it is a certain possibility.
If all else fails, consider decaff, and stock up on Ammo.
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