Showing posts with label books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label books. Show all posts

Thursday, December 11, 2008

Sam's Club Socialism?

I just finished reading Richard Spencer's review of Grand New Party by Ross Douthat and Reihan Salam. Here's where I get into trouble on these matters: I really like the ideas presented by Ross and Reihan, the populist approach, getting more people invovled, but I have to in the end agree with Spencer--inflation is the silent killer of all these plans, and of much of liberalism in general. Spencer tackles the notion of more people going to college and basically states that the more people who go, the less the value of the degree becomes, and the lower the standards become to even attain the degree in the first place.
Regarding higher education, and the cultural divide between grads and dropouts, Douthat and Salam’s propose a plan that would essential inflate the Bachelors Degree into oblivion. So that more Sam’s Club voters “get in,” the authors throw out the idea of “class-based affirmative action.”
Well I couldn't agree more.

I'm still amazed at the (lack of) quality of many of my former fellow students. And let's face it, the bachelor's degree is the new high school diploma. We'll make it even more worthless if we keep letting more and more students into colleges. This, too, is made worse by the easy money students have access to to get into college regardless of merit--it allows schools to keep jacking up their tuition and their enrollment at the same time. This, I have to say, is the wrong way to fund our universities. It may sound liberal, but I think the better tactic would be to simply actually fund the universities through State budgets (with a little help from tuition) and get rid of all these easily gotten Federal subsidies. We'd have lower tuition but students would still have to actually pay for it or get scholarships rather than merely take on boatloads of debt. In my mind, this is actually a more conservative approach.

Spencer also tackles wage subsidies. He's fairly gentle in his reproach--and exhibits a great deal of admiration for Douthat and Salam--but he lays bare many of the fallacies in their approach:

If there’s a kind of “theme” running throughout Grand New Party, it’s the authors’ total obliviousness to the concept of inflation—that dolling our more of something almost always decreases its value.

This is most obvious with their plan for “wage subsidies.” I think most high schoolers who passed the AP Econ exam could explain to Douthat and Salam that simply giving workers more money inflates prices of everyday items (a classic case of too many dollars chasing too few goods). In this way, there’s no real distinction between, say, giving everyone $10,000 and one million—in both cases prices would jump at a clip reflecting the size of the handout.
This is basically the "good-intentions pave the road to hell" critique. Of course it would be good to have everyone make more money--except that if everyone has more money, prices will simply go up and in the end, everyone will have the same or less money. This is also the problem with continuing in this vein of mass-debt, massive-spending, etc. Everyone feels as though they are prosperous, but that is simply because they can spend a great deal more than they can earn. It's all an illusion. Populist policies can be helpful when restrained, but can be devestating when they begin to cause high inflation. Unfortunately it is almost impossible to restrain populist policies. Entitlement programs like to grow. Just watch this bailout to see what I'm talking about. Throwing money at a problem can work, but not if the money in question is play money. The American dollar is looking more and more like Monopoly money all the time.

It's tricky to know what's best. I'm the first to admit that the more I know, the less I know. That's the paradox of knowledge. Ignorance leads to boldness and blustering, the claiming of certainty sans fact. Knowledge, on the other hand, breeds confidence and uncertainty in a sort of perpetual duel. The more I learn, the more I question.

what I've been reading

Let's see, I've kept my reading fairly light lately. When I'm not reading articles and blogs and pouring over politics and theology and other heavy subjects, I'm typically reading fantasy, science fiction, or historical fiction/non-fiction.

Recently I've read the amazing and terrifying The Devil in the White City, a story of serial murder and the extraordinary Chicago World's Fair. It is historical non-fiction with some liberty taken. The prose is darkly beautiful, and the story compelling. It's one of those books you can't set down, and yet wish you could at times there are moments so appallingly sad. Quite a strange juxtaposition of destruction and creation, and a slice of our history that all Americans should read about. The ingenuity of mankind at its best, and the brutality of mankind at its worst.

From there I decided I needed to go light, and read the Amulet of Samarkand, the first in a trilogy of young adult fantasy. Quite clever. Not fantastic, but fun and witty.

I know I'll likely leave out something. It's hard to keep track of all that I read (often two or three books at once). I ought to keep a spreadsheet.

Let's see, I just finished Son of a Witch, the sequel to Wicked. I liked it a great deal, though it was not as good as its predecessor. Perhaps the novelty of Wicked had worn a bit thin by the sequel. In any case, it was a bitter-sweet read. Lovely prose, but oddly unlikeable characters once again. I'm a sucker for at least one or two "good-guys" in a book. I like dynamic characters, but I prefer more redeeming qualities, and this book came up rather short of that.

Then I read the surprisingly short "Tales of Despereaux" which was a lovely little fable about a brave mouse and a damsel in distress. It was, as I said, extremely short, so this is one of those books you can do in an evening (or two). It's not terribly deep, but it's fun, and the author does a fantastic job inserting herself in a sort of quasi-narrative style with many "Dear readers" and little questions and warnings. A good book for young adults and adolescents, and I actually think you could read this one to much younger children as well.

Then I read The Giver, and I think I'll dedicate an entire post to this one later. Amazing book. Somehow I missed this one growing up. I generally read everything as a child, so I don't know how this masterpiece slipped by me. The themes of tradition and memory hit home, to be sure. Like I said, a great deal to ponder on this one, so I'll leave that for another post. If you haven't read this book go buy it now--it's important reading.

Now I'm about half-way through The Dead by James Joyce. It is supposedly the "perfect" story, so for a writer it's a must read. From there, I'm not sure what I'll read. I'm planning on getting into the Naomi Novik books soon, but before I delve into epic fantasy I think I'd like to get some classics out of the way. Perhaps I'll tackle War and Peace. Or Reflections on the Revolution in France. Or, The Histories.

Any suggestions?

Wednesday, November 26, 2008

Winter Reading List

Samuel Goldman defends the elite academy, and provides us with a handy winter reading list (especially if you're thinking of applying to Harvard's Government program...)
Here, for example, are some texts that every Government concentrator at Harvard is required to study: The Declaration of Independence, The Articles of Confederation, Locke’s Second Treatise, The Federalist Papers, The Anti-Federalist Papers, Tocqueville’s Democracy in America, Tocqueville’s Ancien Regime, The Lincoln-Douglas Debates, Mill’s On Liberty, Arendt’s Origins of Totalitarianism, Thucydides’ Peloponnesian War.
Happy reading!

Monday, October 13, 2008

A Lion Among Men


Sweet.

But I haven't even read Son of a Witch yet, so I guess that first. Wicked was phenomenal.

In any case, Gregory Maguire is the author. Looks like another good take on the Dorothy series...

Monday, October 6, 2008

What I'm reading....

Okay, I just finished The Devil in the White City, and after that a memoir called Loose Girl that just completely scared the hell out of me in anticipation of my daughter entering her teens. Of course, she's one-year-old, but they say time flies...

Now I'm reading The Amulet of Samarkand, a young adult fantasy novel (often the best fantasy is for this age-group, like Harry Potter) and the 9/11 Commission Report, which I'm ashamed to say I haven't read yet...

Oh, and check out these creepy old ads...we are evolving, sort of...

Wednesday, October 1, 2008

What I'd like to start reading but can't because I don't have the books yet...

First off, I'd like to start Naomi Novik's series, Temeraire. This is supposed to be a rather phenomenal fantasy series, the fifth book of which has recently been published. I'm very, very hard to please when it comes to fantasy, especially adult fantasy which is usually less imaginative than young adult fantasy.

My favorite adult fantasy is the tremendous (but unfinished) Song of Fire and Ice series by George R. R. Martin (the slowest writer of all time). This series raised the bar in a pretty major way for me. Fantasy has just not been the same since. I can say quite confidently that the only other fantasy I've enjoyed since has been Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell by Suzanna Clarke, and the books of Neil Gaiman.

Indeed, one of the books I'd like to start but can't because I don't have it yet is The Graveyard Book, by Neil Gaiman. It looks spooky. Black humor, Gaiman's forte.

In any case, Novik's work looks very promising.

Young adult fantasy has always been one of my favorite genres, and it seems to be supplying no end of good novels, from Phillip Pullman's Golden Compass books to the wonderful Harry Potter series.

Two other series of young adult books have grabbed my attention:

The Stoneheart Trilogy looks quite unique, and has in fact been likened to Gaiman's work, though for a younger audience. An alternate London full of living statues...

...and the Bartimaeus Trilogy which is supposed to be quite funny. This is another alternative England, where powerful and apparently rather wicked sorcerers rule.

This is the light summer reading I should have been doing, instead of the political heaviness. I did read the very dark and very fascinating "The Devil in the White City" also. I'll have a review up soon....