BP CEO Tony Hayward testified before the House Energy and Commerc Committee. It did not go well. Given that the U.S. Attorney General has announced an investigation into possible criminal charges, it seems noteworthy that no one thought to read Hayward his Miranda rights. Indeed, the congressmen rather seemed to expect he should make a wide variety of assertions on the basis of which he and others might later be pilloried, sued, and jailed. The highlight of the committee session was the assertion by Rep. Joe L. Barton (Republican of Texas) that the $20 billion escrow account BP has agreed to set up under threat from President Obama was “a shakedown.” This is what is known in Washington lingo as a “Kinsley gaffe.” (The term arises from a remark by Michael Kinsley: “A gaffe is when a politician tells the truth.”)
A story by Don Clark and Kara Scannell (of the WSJ) suggests that the investigation into Dell (mentioned yesterday) will bring to light the question of Intel rebates. "Such rebates have been a focus of government antitrust suits against Intel in the U.S., Europe, Japan and South Korea, which allege that the chip giant has improperly used financial incentives to its customers to discourage major computer makers from buying chips from rival Advanced Micro Devices . Intel denies the allegations, arguing that the rebates it gives customers are a lawful form of price discounting to meet competition."
Jeff Skilling Speaks Out. Fortune magazine carries a prison interview with the former CEO of Enron. Regime Uncertainty. Washington Post columnist Robert Samuelson is beginning to realize that demonizing business makes people reluctant to do business. “Given the housing and financial carnage, most of today's cautiousness and risk aversion-by both businesses and households-were unavoidable. But the Obama administration's anti-business rhetoric and controversial health ‘reform’ may have compounded the effect. These created uncertainties and, in the case of health ‘reform,’ raised the cost of future full-time employees. The administration believes these policies don't jeopardize the economic recovery. Historians may conclude that the goals were at cross-purposes.”
There has to be some word that conveys a level of effrontery far beyond “gall,” “brass,” “nerve,” and “chutzpah.” We need a concept that is capable of referring to Saddam Hussein’s practice of shooting political opponents and then charging their relatives for the cost of the bullets. And we need this concept right now, in order to refer to U.S.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel is not returning U.S. President Barack Obama’s calls. I’m being theatrical. Obama is demanding that Germany pull its weight in the global-recovery effort by aping the U.S.: spending more and producing less.
As readers of this Journal know, over the past few months the Institute has been fighting socialized medicine, sponsoring a lecture series..
Twenty years ago, on February 24, 1990, George Walsh and David Kelley stood before a crowded lecture hall in New York City to announce the
The Gulf Spill Once again, journalists are speculating about the possibility of bringing criminal charges against BP CEO Tony Hayward...
The following is Chapter 5 from the book The Contested Legacy of Ayn Rand: Truth and Toleration in Objectivism, by David Kelley.
For as long as there has been an Objectivist movement, its ranks have periodically been thinned by schisms and excommunications, power...
For Once, Thomas Frank Gets It Right. Commenting on Joe Barton’s description of Obama's demand for an escrow fund, WSJ columnist Frank wrote : “And this, in turn, is merely an expression of the permanently upside-down political universe of the right, in which the law is criminal, cynicism is a form of idealism, and bleeding-heart liberals are really soulless monsters in love with the power of the state for the same reason that gangsters are fond of their Uzis: because it is the weapon that allows them to plunder and loot the productive members of society.” I could disagree with a word choice here or there: For “law” substitute “politician’s arbitrary demand” and for “cynicism” substitute “the virtue of selfishness.” But other than that, yeah: basically correct.
I do not think I am indulging in the broken window fallacy to call attention to this story by Nicole Norfleet of Associated Press regarding the improved prospect that the Gulf oil spill has brought to non-Gulf shrimpers. The broken window fallacy says that destruction is economically advantageous because it gives work to those who must restore the former infrastructure. In the case of the Gulf oil spill, the broken window fallacy would be involved if one cited the economic benefit now being given to those employed in stopping the oil leak and cleaning up its consequences.
UK “Office of Fair Trading” to investigate IPO offerings. According to a story by Erik Larson (of Bloomberg.com): “Britain’s antitrust regulator plans to investigate fees charged by investment banks for arranging initial public offerings and rights offers, work that generated 2 billion pounds ($2.9 billion) for securities firms last year. “The probe, which will start later this year, will include fees, rights issues and other types of equity-raising following complaints of “dissatisfaction” from corporations, the U.K. Office of Fair Trading in London said today in a statement. “
Were there compelling factors—other than improving aviation security—at work in the passing of the Aviation and Transportation Security Act (ATSA) of 2001? Yes, says attorney James Slepian, who as a law student in 2003 penned the first legal analysis of three key sections of the act, including the little-known “Section 108.” (James is the son of Charles Slepian.) The responsibility for federalization fell to the newly-formed Transportation Security Administration (TSA). By 2003, some $12 billion had been spent on the hiring and training of 60,000 new federal workers. Slepian observes that by setting the hiring bar low, individuals who worked as screeners before 9/11 could be re-hired under the supposedly elevated standards.
Apparently, the SEC has been investigating certain financial relationships between Dell Computer and Intel Corp. All that is being reported (by Miguel Helft of the NYT ), and his sources are mostly anonymous, is that the matter relates to “how Dell accounted for payments and rebates that it had received from Intel.”
Brooke Sopelsa (CNBC) writes that “about 6,000 claims have now been filed against BP since its massive oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico, and hundreds of them have been filed by Robert Gordon, chief trial lawyer for Weitz & Luxemberg, on behalf of fishermen affected by the spill.” Gordon is quoted as saying: “It may be a generation before they’re able to go out and fish the way they were before.”
Royalist Trust-Busting Annually on this date, the Justice Department honors the founder of the FBI: Charles J. Bonaparte--yes, those Bonapartes (he was the great-nephew of Napoleon I). As Attorney General under Theodore Roosevelt, Bonaparte was an ardent trustbuster. This anti-business alliance of American and French aristocracy reminds us of the truth the anti-bourgeois movement is very often a movement ostensibly for plebians but led by patricians. Surprise: Demonizing business is bad for business Tad DeHaven of the Cato Institue takes note of a Washington Post editorial that seems to flirt with the concept of “regime uncertainty.” That is the view that says: When you h
When forced to assume [self-government], we were novices in its science. Its principles and forms had entered little into our....
"The twentieth-century statesman whom the Thomas Jefferson of January 1793 would have admired most is Pol Pot," head of the totalitarian....
You asked “Are we any safer?” I have to ask you, safer from what? If we are talking about a repeat of the 9/11 incident, I think we are.....
BP CEO Tony Hayward testified before the House Energy and Commerc Committee. It did not go well. Given that the U.S. Attorney General has announced an investigation into possible criminal charges, it seems noteworthy that no one thought to read Hayward his Miranda rights. Indeed, the congressmen rather seemed to expect he should make a wide variety of assertions on the basis of which he and others might later be pilloried, sued, and jailed. The highlight of the committee session was the assertion by Rep. Joe L. Barton (Republican of Texas) that the $20 billion escrow account BP has agreed to set up under threat from President Obama was “a shakedown.” This is what is known in Washington lingo as a “Kinsley gaffe.” (The term arises from a remark by Michael Kinsley: “A gaffe is when a politician tells the truth.”)
A story by Don Clark and Kara Scannell (of the WSJ) suggests that the investigation into Dell (mentioned yesterday) will bring to light the question of Intel rebates. "Such rebates have been a focus of government antitrust suits against Intel in the U.S., Europe, Japan and South Korea, which allege that the chip giant has improperly used financial incentives to its customers to discourage major computer makers from buying chips from rival Advanced Micro Devices . Intel denies the allegations, arguing that the rebates it gives customers are a lawful form of price discounting to meet competition."
Jeff Skilling Speaks Out. Fortune magazine carries a prison interview with the former CEO of Enron. Regime Uncertainty. Washington Post columnist Robert Samuelson is beginning to realize that demonizing business makes people reluctant to do business. “Given the housing and financial carnage, most of today's cautiousness and risk aversion-by both businesses and households-were unavoidable. But the Obama administration's anti-business rhetoric and controversial health ‘reform’ may have compounded the effect. These created uncertainties and, in the case of health ‘reform,’ raised the cost of future full-time employees. The administration believes these policies don't jeopardize the economic recovery. Historians may conclude that the goals were at cross-purposes.”
There has to be some word that conveys a level of effrontery far beyond “gall,” “brass,” “nerve,” and “chutzpah.” We need a concept that is capable of referring to Saddam Hussein’s practice of shooting political opponents and then charging their relatives for the cost of the bullets. And we need this concept right now, in order to refer to U.S.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel is not returning U.S. President Barack Obama’s calls. I’m being theatrical. Obama is demanding that Germany pull its weight in the global-recovery effort by aping the U.S.: spending more and producing less.
As readers of this Journal know, over the past few months the Institute has been fighting socialized medicine, sponsoring a lecture series..
Twenty years ago, on February 24, 1990, George Walsh and David Kelley stood before a crowded lecture hall in New York City to announce the
The Gulf Spill Once again, journalists are speculating about the possibility of bringing criminal charges against BP CEO Tony Hayward...
The following is Chapter 5 from the book The Contested Legacy of Ayn Rand: Truth and Toleration in Objectivism, by David Kelley.
For as long as there has been an Objectivist movement, its ranks have periodically been thinned by schisms and excommunications, power...
For Once, Thomas Frank Gets It Right. Commenting on Joe Barton’s description of Obama's demand for an escrow fund, WSJ columnist Frank wrote : “And this, in turn, is merely an expression of the permanently upside-down political universe of the right, in which the law is criminal, cynicism is a form of idealism, and bleeding-heart liberals are really soulless monsters in love with the power of the state for the same reason that gangsters are fond of their Uzis: because it is the weapon that allows them to plunder and loot the productive members of society.” I could disagree with a word choice here or there: For “law” substitute “politician’s arbitrary demand” and for “cynicism” substitute “the virtue of selfishness.” But other than that, yeah: basically correct.
I do not think I am indulging in the broken window fallacy to call attention to this story by Nicole Norfleet of Associated Press regarding the improved prospect that the Gulf oil spill has brought to non-Gulf shrimpers. The broken window fallacy says that destruction is economically advantageous because it gives work to those who must restore the former infrastructure. In the case of the Gulf oil spill, the broken window fallacy would be involved if one cited the economic benefit now being given to those employed in stopping the oil leak and cleaning up its consequences.
UK “Office of Fair Trading” to investigate IPO offerings. According to a story by Erik Larson (of Bloomberg.com): “Britain’s antitrust regulator plans to investigate fees charged by investment banks for arranging initial public offerings and rights offers, work that generated 2 billion pounds ($2.9 billion) for securities firms last year. “The probe, which will start later this year, will include fees, rights issues and other types of equity-raising following complaints of “dissatisfaction” from corporations, the U.K. Office of Fair Trading in London said today in a statement. “
Were there compelling factors—other than improving aviation security—at work in the passing of the Aviation and Transportation Security Act (ATSA) of 2001? Yes, says attorney James Slepian, who as a law student in 2003 penned the first legal analysis of three key sections of the act, including the little-known “Section 108.” (James is the son of Charles Slepian.) The responsibility for federalization fell to the newly-formed Transportation Security Administration (TSA). By 2003, some $12 billion had been spent on the hiring and training of 60,000 new federal workers. Slepian observes that by setting the hiring bar low, individuals who worked as screeners before 9/11 could be re-hired under the supposedly elevated standards.
Apparently, the SEC has been investigating certain financial relationships between Dell Computer and Intel Corp. All that is being reported (by Miguel Helft of the NYT ), and his sources are mostly anonymous, is that the matter relates to “how Dell accounted for payments and rebates that it had received from Intel.”
Brooke Sopelsa (CNBC) writes that “about 6,000 claims have now been filed against BP since its massive oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico, and hundreds of them have been filed by Robert Gordon, chief trial lawyer for Weitz & Luxemberg, on behalf of fishermen affected by the spill.” Gordon is quoted as saying: “It may be a generation before they’re able to go out and fish the way they were before.”
Royalist Trust-Busting Annually on this date, the Justice Department honors the founder of the FBI: Charles J. Bonaparte--yes, those Bonapartes (he was the great-nephew of Napoleon I). As Attorney General under Theodore Roosevelt, Bonaparte was an ardent trustbuster. This anti-business alliance of American and French aristocracy reminds us of the truth the anti-bourgeois movement is very often a movement ostensibly for plebians but led by patricians. Surprise: Demonizing business is bad for business Tad DeHaven of the Cato Institue takes note of a Washington Post editorial that seems to flirt with the concept of “regime uncertainty.” That is the view that says: When you h
When forced to assume [self-government], we were novices in its science. Its principles and forms had entered little into our....
"The twentieth-century statesman whom the Thomas Jefferson of January 1793 would have admired most is Pol Pot," head of the totalitarian....
You asked “Are we any safer?” I have to ask you, safer from what? If we are talking about a repeat of the 9/11 incident, I think we are.....