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To whom does Polanski owe a debt?

October 2nd, 2009, 3:57 pm by by Alan Bock, Register editorial writer

I kept having mixed feelings about Roman Polanski, but Don Boudreaux, chairman of the econ dept. at George Mason University has helped to clarify my thinking. Polanski doesn’t owe a “debt to society” but a debt to the person he wronged. My understanding is that he has reached a private settlement with her. Here’s Don:

Wondering if Roman Polanski’s rape of a 13-year-old girl in 1977 should be forgiven because of the tragedies that Polanski himself has suffered, Meghan Daum notes that “Part of what makes the Polanski case fascinating - as well as repugnant - is that it’s infused with these sorts of existential questions about what evens the scales” (”Polanski’s pain isn’t penance,” Oct. 1).

Here’s one thing that does NOT “even the scales”: imprisonment.  Imprisonment is justified to restrain violent persons, and perhaps also to serve as a deterrent to others who might commit serious crimes.  Contrary to popular myth, though, being imprisoned does not amount to “paying one’s debts” to society.  Imprisonment isn’t a process whereby prisoners compensate their victims.

Furthermore, Polanski’s victim isn’t society; it’s Samantha Gailey.  He damn well owes HER something - and if she wants, she should collect.  But let’s be clear that imprisoning Polanski would in no way promote the worthy goal of having him pay for his crime with compensation paid to his actual victim.

Sincerely,
Donald J. Boudreaux
Professor of Economics
George Mason University
Fairfax, VA 22030

What do you think?

China: 60 years of slaughter

September 30th, 2009, 3:40 pm by by Alan Bock, Register editorial writer

I was going to remark the irony that they plan to light the Empire State Building in red and yellow to commemorate 60 years of communism in China, but my friend the Wine Commonsewer has said much of what I would have said and perhaps more eloquently. Sixty years of mass murder and near-genocide? At least 48 million people killed to establish utopia? If that’s worth celebrating . . .

The other irony, of course, is that China is becoming more capitalistic even as the U.S. has been going in the opposite direction, and China may have more of a free-market system than the U.S. does. But those gerontocrats, now only interested in hanging onto political power and seeing a CP monopoly on power as the best way to do so, still claim to be communist. We should deny — as is realistic given history — that communism has anything to do with idealism and more to do with slaughtering people to hang onto power, thus taking a step toward denying them whatever shred of legitimacy they get by being associated with something once erroneously viewed as idealistic.

McChrystal’s blueprint for nation-building

September 23rd, 2009, 3:08 pm by by Alan Bock, Register editorial writer

I have finished reading Afghan Gen.-in-charge Stanley McChrystal’s “assessment” on the Afghan war and am somewhat blown away by how thoroughly nation-building it is. I probably shouldn’t be surprised. McChrystal was chosen because he’s supposed to be an expert on counterinsurgency, and this assessment basically consists of plugging what can be garnered from the facts on the ground into classic counterinsurgency doctrine. The trouble is that while the doctrine is well-established among military intellectuals (if that isn’t an oxymoron) it has hardly ever worked in the real world. Basically, it involves winning the “hearts and minds” of the populace first by protecting them and offering economic development (roads, infrastructure projects, etc.) and effective, credible governance, thus neutralizing the appeal of the insurgents — as opposed to seeking out and killing the insurgents. The traditional doctrine, however, dictates force levels that would transfer to something like 500,000 foreign troops in Afghanistan (there are 68,000 now) and at least 10 years of patient nation-building.

Herewith a few key excerpts:

“To execute the strategy we must grow and improve the effectiveness of the Afghan National Security Forces (ANSF) and elevate the importance of governance.”

“Our strategy cannot be focused on seizing terrain or destroying ninsurgent forces; our objective must be the population.” [an admission that neither the government nor the coalition forces "have" the population now]

“the objective is the will of the people, our conventional warfare culture is part of the problem”

“resources will not win this war, but under-resourcing could lose it.”

“the international community must provide substantial assistance to Afghanistan until the ASfghan people make the decision to support their government and are capable of providing for their own security.”

“The second threat [the first is the existence of the insurgency] … is the crisi8s of popular confidence that springs from the weakness of GIRoA [Afghan govt.] institutions, the unpunished abuse of power by corrupt officials and power brokers, a widespread sense of political disenfranchisement, and a longstanding lack of economic opportunity.” In McChrystal’s view, the US must fix all this — good luck — for success to be achieved.

“There are no clear lines separating insurgent groups, criminal networks (including the narcotics networks) and corrupt GIRoA officials. Malign actors within GIRoA support insurgent groups directly, support criminal networks that are linked to insurgents, and support corruption that helps feed the insurgency.”“Hard-earned credibility and face-to-face relationships, rather than close combat, will achieve success. This requires enabling Afghan counterparts to meet the needs of the people at the community level thrugh dynamic partnership, engaged leadership, de-centralized decisin-making, and a fundamental shift in priorities.

“Success will be achieved when GIRoA has earned the support of the powerful Aghan people and effectively controls its own territory. This will not come easily or quickly. It is realistic to expect that Afghan and coalition casualties will increase until GIRoA and ISAF [international forces] regain the initiative.”

“GIRoA cannot fund its operations because of its inability to raise revenue, a situation made worse by the illicit economy. Poorly paid officials may resort to petty corruption, contributing to the peoples’ crisis in confidence. The international community [us taxpayers] must appropriately supplerment revenues until these problems are addressed.” The fact that foreign aid usually increases corruption rather than reduces it isn’t addressed.

And so on. It’s a heck of commitment. No wonder Obama is trying to buy time before he makes a decision. I’m guessing it will be a commitment to 2-3 years to make Obama appear serious before starting to withdrawal. If McChrystal is right, that’s just a half-hearted commitment enough to guarantee failure, with serious loss of U.S. lives and treasure.

Bernanke: could the choice possibly have been worse?

August 31st, 2009, 3:48 pm by by Alan Bock, Register editorial writer

I don’t often disagree with Robert Samuelson, but I didn’t quite applaud his column suggesting that Ben Bernanke was the only possible choice to have another term as head of the Federal Reserve. Of course if I had my druthers we would abolish the Federal Reserve — have you noticed that recessions, panics, etc. have been deeper and longer and more volatile since the Fed was established, supposedly to moderate them but actually to manipulate the money supply to benefit politicians?

Anyway, the major problem with Bernanke is that as a governor before being chairman he was one of the most go-go enthusiasts for expansion of the money supply post-9/11 and has never come close to acknowledging the key role — some say the dominant role — of the Fed’s expansion of the money supply in bringing on the housing bubble that led to the financial crisis.  An institution that should have been punished for betraying the American people has instead been rewarded with more power to “fix” a crisis it in large measure caused. The only thing he seems to have learned from his supposedly deep study of the Great Depression (and allowing one to fail) is that institutions deemed too big to fail should never be allowed to fail. Perhaps Larry Summers, widely considered the most likely non-Bernanke candidate, would have been worse, but I’m not sure I agree. If anything his arrogance would have made the Fed more independent of political influence than it has been under Bernanke.

Why not abolish headless agencies?

August 24th, 2009, 4:14 pm by by Alan Bock, Register editorial writer

The NYT today has a tut-tutting story noting that 7 months into his administration Obama still doesn’t have most of his key players in place. Only 43% of the 500 senior policymaking positions have been filled. Obama has more national-security people in place then Bush did at this point, but there’s no Secretary of the Army while fighting two wars, no head of the Agency for International Development, etc. There’s still no Obama head of the Transportation Security Administration, the Customs & Border Protection Agency, the DEA, the Department of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, no intelligence chief at Homeland Security. And the person charged with filling empty posts has already left to become ambassador to South Africa.

Here’s a modest proposal: If a new administration doesn’t have a top dog in place after six months, abolish the agency. Would anyone really miss the Truly Superfluous Agency? The Drug Enforcement Agency and BATFE enforce laws that shouldn’t be on the books at all and may be unconstitutional. Foreign aid tends to entrench despots more than help poor people. And on and on.

Unfortunately, being lax or over-careful about filling top posts leaves permanent bureaucrats or Bush-era holdovers in charge of various agencies rather than raising questions about whether they should be filled at all.

Suspicions confirmed, Chapter 3,452

August 21st, 2009, 1:39 pm by by Alan Bock, Register editorial writer


So in his new book (forthcoming in September, being leaked for publicity now) former Homeland Security adviser and first head of the Department of Hooha and Scaremongering Tom Ridge says that during election season in 2004 he was pressured to issue Code Reds and terrorist alarms in ways designed to bolster Bush and do political damage to Kerry. Ridge names Rumsfeld and Ashbrook as doing the pressuring (spokescritters for the two have denied it). Does this really surprise anybody? I’m willing to entertain the possibility that there were some legitimate terrorist scares, but it seemed transparent most of the time that Code levels were raised and lowered largely to manipulate the American public, not necessarily for direct electoral purposes always but  to keep us alarmed.

The Department of Homeland Security, cobbled together from existing, sometimes unrelated agencies with the glue of paranoia, strikes me as one of the worst excesses of the Bush years (though there are many candidates to choose from). Of course it was a bipartisan outrage; Bush endorsed the idea after Democrats proposed it in Congress and it seemed likely to get done whether he liked it or not. The only thing to be said for it is that the use of the word “homeland” made it pretty clear that the United States is now an empire, not a republic.

H.L. Mencken had it figured out in the 1920s: The whole aim of practical politics is to keep the populace alarmed (and hence clamorous to be led to safety) by menacing it with an endless series of hobgoblins, all of them imaginary.

And this little piggy cried . . .?

August 21st, 2009, 1:25 pm by by Alan Bock, Register editorial writer

Does anyone have any idea what Obama meant when he said “There’s something about August going into September where everybody in Washington gets all wee-weed up.”? Is this some idiom I’ve never heard of? The online dictionary only says “to urinate” in baby-talk.