22 July 2024
How Personal Is Politics?
19 July 2024
Divisive National Disputes: Women’s Rights and Immigration
Is there as economically existential a cultural issue in America today as slavery was in the middle of the 19th Century? Certainly, women’s right to choose vs. the right to life of an unborn child is as fundamental a cultural conflict in the 21st Century, but economic self-interest is probably more closely tied up with the issue of immigration.
A national dispute could
arise over this issue owing to the different relationships that certain sectors
of the national economy have towards non-native labor. The intellectual sector earns income
primarily from strategic work, whereas the income of the agricultural,
extractive, and manufacturing sectors relies mainly on physical
implementation. (Aptly referred to in Grainger
advertising as “getting it done.”) Consequently,
welcoming the additional physical labor needed to enable people to devote
themselves to lucrative intellectual activities (like planning, design, and finance)
in certain parts of the country (mainly urban areas) contrasts with limiting the supply of guest
workers elsewhere to the number needed only for the performance of the most
tiring physical tasks so as to protect peoples’ livelihoods where human welfare
is identified with producing comfortable living through desirable physical activity.
In one sector of the economy intellectual and artistic activity
is recreation; in the other, people recreate by engaging in physical activity.
Therefore, liberal immigration regulation is a threat to one lifestyle, while
it is necessary for achieving the other style of life.
Women’s liberation was forced by the growing realization of
women’s equal qualification to perform the intellectual tasks of the modern
economy. However, women are also still tasked with the biological inconveniences
of pregnancy; only slowly are they reaching gender equality in performing the
tasks of child-rearing. The more equal this division of labor becomes between
the sexes, the more critical does the need for immigrant labor become for the
intellectual sector to fulfill the demands of household management and the
performance of necessary manual labor or clerical tasks.
Therein lies the conflict between sectors of the national
economy that differ in their attitudes towards immigrant labor. In the intellectual sector immigrants are
necessary for accomplishing basic household and other less desirable tasks; in the material
sector they are resented as cheap usurpers of well-paid and satisfying jobs
held by average native workers. The two economic
sectors are interdependent on a national macroeconomic scale. But the location of international borders follows
geography, and not economics.
The decisions of Governors Greg Abbott and Ron DeSantis, for
example, make sense to bus newly arrived immigrants north to the
national economic sectors where they are theoretically needed to fill employment
vacancies. In
fact, the cost of transporting them should probably be absorbed either by the federal government or
the destination states. Until that
equitable allocation of the costs and benefits of immigration policy is accomplished, the divergence
of regional attitudes will continue to allow demagogic exploitation of the
issue and distort the country’s politics.
14 July 2024
Who Causes Polarization?
It is puzzling that those on the right believe they can get away with blaming increasing violence in America’s politics on liberal media and the leaders of left-wing groups. Particularly ironic is that the frightening assassination attempt on former President Donald Trump is being attributed to “ANTIFA” rhetoric when it has been a usual feature of MAGA rallies for Trump to encourage the crowd to discipline dissenters with physical force.
02 July 2024
A Collective Presidency
It’s too late to replace Joe Biden as the Democratic Partypresidential candidate in 2024. He is the only standard bearer who is a credible and demonstrably forward-looking decision-maker for thoseof us who fear that the risk of a destructive second Trump administration is high and who believe that not enough time remains to build public confidence in any individual replacement for Biden before election day.
Fortunately, the 25th Amendment to the Constitution provides an escape hatch. There are several well-qualified executives in the Democratic stable, in addition to the Vice President and eventually-confirmed Cabinet officers, whose collective experience and wisdom could supplant the possibly failing future performance of the man whocurrently occupies the Oval Office. They could form a committee to which Biden would pledge to defer if and when they decide he loses the ability to govern. His Vice President would similarly pledge his or her deference if Biden were forced to resign under the terms of that Amendment.
Such a contingency plan could be adopted at the Democratic Convention to obviate the danger to the republic that would be posed by reelection of Donald Trump.