I have received from a couple of different people a reforwarded message of the same title as this one including a resume for Herman Cain. I won't repeat that here, since you can go to the Herman Cain campaign web site and read their version of it. The resume I received by email does seem to be accurate.
Wednesday, October 5, 2011
Technocrat and Company (Part III)
And the beat goes on, and the beat goes on.
Today the Wall Street Journal picks up the T-word to describe Mitt Romney. First used for that purpose ten days ago by William Kristol on Fox News Sunday, it is the word that describes Romney, Barack Obama, and Bill Clinton best: technocrat. Slick Willy Clinton was known as a wonk, but he believed in the idea of economic management by five smart guys in a DC room and repeated their notions and nostrums ad nauseum to any TV camera in reach.
Of Romney, the WSJ says
Today the Wall Street Journal picks up the T-word to describe Mitt Romney. First used for that purpose ten days ago by William Kristol on Fox News Sunday, it is the word that describes Romney, Barack Obama, and Bill Clinton best: technocrat. Slick Willy Clinton was known as a wonk, but he believed in the idea of economic management by five smart guys in a DC room and repeated their notions and nostrums ad nauseum to any TV camera in reach.
Of Romney, the WSJ says
Wednesday, September 28, 2011
Technocrat and Company ( Part II )
In response to my criticism of Romney, a long-time friend wrote
Within those limits, I do think that we can do better than Romney.
- Glad to see your last sentence:
- "Unless, of course, the only choice is a progressivist Democrat."
- I am with Dennis Miller for Herman Cain. How about a Cain - Romney ticket?
Within those limits, I do think that we can do better than Romney.
Mitt Romney, Technocrat
Here's how you run health care if you're Mitt Romney. You know there just has to be a system. You also know you aren't smart enough to manage it yourself. So you call together experts from all the stakeholders -- a word that always makes me think of vampire hunters -- you lock them in a room, and you get behind whatever plan comes out of the room.
Tuesday, September 27, 2011
Obama Woke the Bear!
Now and then a columnist says something I've been telling Sherry. Then I get to say "See!" especially if it's someone with whom she agrees.
I'm so seldom right that I really can't... er... bear not pointing it out when I am.
I've been saying that Obama and his leftist coterie, better known as the Obamarama, have really angered the independents of the electorate.
I'm so seldom right that I really can't... er... bear not pointing it out when I am.
I've been saying that Obama and his leftist coterie, better known as the Obamarama, have really angered the independents of the electorate.
Monday, September 12, 2011
A New Day in Politics
It's a new day in politics. Issues are now everywhere, impossible to ignore, as everyone is constantly immersed in the water of political life.
Ethnography is no longer electoral destiny. Jews used to be liberals first and Jews second. NY-09 is set to prove that they are intelligent pragmatic people who follow the issues of the day, and, though they are centered on the left, they are not politically immovable.
Ethnography is no longer electoral destiny. Jews used to be liberals first and Jews second. NY-09 is set to prove that they are intelligent pragmatic people who follow the issues of the day, and, though they are centered on the left, they are not politically immovable.
Sunday, September 11, 2011
Central Planning's Calculation Problem
Now that Keynesianism is receiving last rites, we can hope that the next progressivist idea to fade from the scene will be... wait for it... central planning itself!
Robert Tracinski flogs that old canard unmercifully in this paean to free market ingenuity, pointing out that again and again government planners have had even worse luck than the futurists who regularly fail to predict next year's next big idea much less the hundreds of new ideas of the next decade.
Why is that?
Robert Tracinski flogs that old canard unmercifully in this paean to free market ingenuity, pointing out that again and again government planners have had even worse luck than the futurists who regularly fail to predict next year's next big idea much less the hundreds of new ideas of the next decade.
Why is that?
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