We Are Russia In Ukraine

In case you haven’t noticed we just declared war on our independent neighbor Canada.  We haven’t sent an army yet, but that’s only because we think we can win with financial weapons.  But there’s no mistaking it—it’s war.  And our declaration of war was beyond ludicrous—for few immigrants, just about no fentanyl, and a balance of payments deficit that has nothing to do with protectionism.  The real reason is no better—a vanity project so that Trump can say he personally added the extra territory to the USA.

That’s pretty bad, but it is certainly not the worst of the lying going on.  For that, you can point to all the talk about getting rich. We’re constantly told that everything going on, no matter how painful or immoral is about getting rich.  But no one has any intention of creating a world where the population gets rich. This is government of, by, and for big corporations.

There is no linkage between all the firings and the well-being of the population—the money being saved is to justify the tax cuts for rich people and Wall Street.  The tariffs are a sales tax paid by buyers—a regressive tax.  The deportations will raise prices even on basic foodstuffs and essential services such as elder care.  Finally and most importantly, as even Adam Smith understood and the entire nineteenth century demonstrated, the big corporations are not going to shower golden paychecks.

If you want to understand what’s in store for the population just look at what uncontrolled free enterprise did in the nineteenth century.  The picture was very much like the story Trump tells—the European powers dominated their colonies and brought all the profits home.  Industrialists made fortunes, controlled government, and kept the work force desperate.  Uncontrolled capitalism is good at making money for itself full stop.  Most people are in no position to bargain.

There is no miracle world of uncontrolled free enterprise—the only people who preach that religion are handsomely paid to do so.  Governments can do bad things too, but without the countervailing power of government there is no one to speak for the well-being of the population.  Just look at some problems facing us today: 

– AI (with robotics) is already becoming a hit on employment. Musk’s savaging of government jobs is actually a foretaste of what to expect throughout the private sector.  Someone will have to help.

– Climate change is real—whether Trump likes it or not—and there will be major changes to be managed if the population is to be kept whole.

– Education and healthcare are necessary for personal financial success and stability.  The private sector is not going to fund it.  Punting it to the states is something business interests do to avoid paying for it.  Musk goes a step beyond that—preferentially hiring H1B slaves whose education was paid-for by someone else, and who can’t quit or change jobs.

– The technological environment is changing faster and faster.  No one predicted just how far generative AI would be able to go.  Unless we are prepared to spend real money on pure research we will be left behind.  That means not only missed opportunities in the economy but these days also military weakness.  Regardless of what politicians may say—the private sector does not do basic research.

Trump’s golden world does none of these things. It’s not good for the vast majority of people.  Except in the very near term it’s not even good for the billionaires.

In business I’ve been to plenty of meetings where someone proposes a new idea—different and exciting, thinking outside the box.  Frequently what makes it new, different, and exciting turns out to be that it’s wildly unethical—kind of like invading Canada.  Wildly unethical may be different, but that does not mean good.  In fact most of the time it’s terrible.  And with Trump that’s what we’ve got.

Nuclear Proliferation Needs Its Own Story

From a comment to the Washington Post:

There is one effect of Trump’s destruction of the international order that hasn’t received enough notice—nuclear proliferation. Every country—even Canada—now has to think seriously about nuclear weapons for defense. Otherwise they are sitting ducks for conquest.

Any kind of nuclear non-proliferation agreement is out the window. This is terrible. It not only increases the risk of use by national actors, it greatly increases the risk of theft for terrorism.

In our greed for conquest we are inviting catastrophe.

Two Views of Government

It seems to be taken for granted that everyone knows the objective of government:  it exists for the good of the country.  However it’s not obvious what the “good of the country” means, and that ambiguity leaves plenty of room for confusion.  There are two models.

Model number one is more or less derived from the family.  The good of the family is the well-being of its members.  Government exits for the well-being of the population. Reasonable enough.

Model number two is a business.  The goal of a business is returns to its investors.  The employees are a cost center, and every dollar earned by the workforce is a dollar lost to investors.  The population is at best a necessary evil, with fewer and fewer really required for business operations and with available slave substitutes (who can’t quit or change jobs) as Musk’s beloved H1B’s.

We are currently seeing model two in full operation.  Everything has to be sacrificed to the 4.5 trillion dollar tax cut for rich people and businesses. Despite all the rhetoric about a golden era, all the money from the cuts and firings ends there.  It’s golden for the people with the gold.

And that’s not the end of the story. As even Adam Smith understood perfectly, the private sector is actually not good at providing for its own success. Left to its own devices it rutherlessly sacrifices everything to immediate profit, which leads to longer-term collapse. Think about the cuts to education, research, and climate change. So as far as the two models of government are concerned, we’re running headlong into a worst of both worlds–sacrificing both the population and the economy.