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Chronicle of the Conspiracy Saturday, January 31, 2004 JOKE OF THE DAY QUESTIONED I've gotten many emails from readers who questioned whether the Al Gore quotes in this Joke of the Day were not in fact Dan Quayle quotes. Without wasting a lot of time fact-checking this, the emails certainly raise credible doubts. So buyer beware.Posted by Donald L. Luskin at 4:27 PM |
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Friday, January 30, 2004 BUSH OR KERRY? YOU BET! My SmartMoney.com column is up. It's about futures contracts trading on the presidential candidates, terrorist events and more.Posted by Donald L. Luskin at 4:03 PM |
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Now that the Hutton report is out -- and the Blair administration is largely in the clear while the BBC looks like a villain -- here's what Krugman says in today's New York Times column,
So an opinion poll becomes a last-resort arbiter of the facts when Krugman's expectations are contradicted. Yet here in the United States, Krugman wrings his hands that the public doesn't hate George Bush as much he thinks they should:
Krugman operates like a lawyer in a trial, exposing the jury only to evidence and witnesses that make his case and rejecting all else. There's no interest in truth here -- just advocacy of a pre-existing position. Why bother with evidence at all? Why not just spout one's opinion, as such, over and over? That's easy -- because it wouldn't be persuasive. And this is all about persuasion. So that subtle form of lying that rejects inconvenient facts and enshrines convenient ones becomes the staple of so-called opinion journalism. Posted by Donald L. Luskin at 10:55 AM |
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OKRENT: "I DON'T FEEL REMOTELY INTIMIDATED" That's what New York Times "pubic editor" Dan Okrent tells Bob Kohn, about attempts by editor Bill Keller to trash-talk him. It gets so ugly so fast when sacred cows are questioned, even by questioners put on the payroll to do the questioning. Posted by Donald L. Luskin at 10:50 AM |
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JOKE OF THE DAY Algorisms. Whenever you are having a bad Bush day, just think of what might have been... Posted by Donald L. Luskin at 10:09 AM |
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THE JOURNAL NAILS THE FED Blowing past the Fed-worshiping conventional wisdom in the media, the Wall Street Journal gets it right on how the Fed is getting it wrong. The central bank has blinded itself to a looming inflationary threat. Posted by Donald L. Luskin at 10:02 AM |
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Thursday, January 29, 2004 DOES TAXATION EQUAL SLAVERY? Bruce Bartlett sends along this link, in disgust, to a Paul Craig Roberts column:"Compare an American taxpayer’s situation today with that of a 19th century American slave. Not all slaves worked on cotton plantations. Some with marketable skills were leased to businesses or released to labor markets, where they worked for money wages. Just like the wages of today’s taxpayer, a portion of the slave’s money wages was withheld. In those days the private owner, not the government, received the withheld portion of the slave’s wages.Absurdist? Racially insensitive? Perhaps. But frankly, I take Roberts' point. Much the same point was made by the late Robert Nozick in "The Tale of the Slave" in his classic of libertarian political philosophy, Anarchy, State and Utopia. Posted by Donald L. Luskin at 10:25 AM |
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JOKE OF THE DAY You know it's time to outsource to India when... Posted by Donald L. Luskin at 10:15 AM |
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Wednesday, January 28, 2004 THAT CORRECTION AT LONG LAST The New York Times ran our correction today of a week-ago story mis-stating the unemployment rate. The longest journey... and so on...Posted by Donald L. Luskin at 1:23 PM |
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DEAR PAUL An immigrant who started with nothing and attained a happy middle-class life writes a letter challenging Princeton elitist Paul Krugman on his agenda to seize the wealth of the rich. Nice stuff. Thanks to Caroline Baum for the link. Posted by Donald L. Luskin at 1:21 PM |
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JOKE OF THE DAY Better than the US national debt counter... Posted by Donald L. Luskin at 10:13 AM |
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Posted by Donald L. Luskin at 8:01 AM |
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Well, I'm not confused anymore. Are you, professor? Posted by Donald L. Luskin at 12:30 AM |
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Tuesday, January 27, 2004 KRUGSPEARE I may not know what the definition of art is, but...Posted by Donald L. Luskin at 3:29 PM |
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WHAT'S SO FUNNY ABOUT PEACE, LOVE AND UNDERSTANDING and Dennis Kucinich... Posted by Donald L. Luskin at 11:10 AM |
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JOKE OF THE DAY Posted by Donald L. Luskin at 10:50 AM |
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FRANKEN ATTACKS SPEAKER TO DEFEND FREE SPEECH The New York Post (via Drudge): "EXETER, N.H. - Wise-cracking funnyman Al Franken yesterday body-slammed a demonstrator to the ground after the man tried to shout down Gov. Howard Dean. ... 'I got down low and took his legs out,' said Franken afterwards...'I would have done it if he was a Dean supporter at a Kerry rally...I'm neutral in this race but I'm for freedom of speech..."Nice boys Krugman runs with, eh? Posted by Donald L. Luskin at 10:05 AM |
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KRUGMAN'S ADVICE FOR KERRY AND EDWARDS Take
a look at this chart. No, it's not the astonishing rise and fall of Enron.
It's the price of futures contracts on Howard Dean's nomination as the
Democratic candidate for president, traded at
Tradesports.com.
It's no coincidence, you know. Enron and Howard Dean have something in common: Paul Krugman was a consultant to both of them. The only difference is that Enron paid Krugman directly. But Dean hasn't had to pay a penny -- Krugman's consulting fees were picked up by the New York Times, since it's been on the op-ed page of America's "newspaper of record" that Krugman has been dispensing his campaign advice. Let it never be said that Krugman isn't a full-service consultant. He has been touting Dean in the Times, too -- just as he once touted Enron. But now, evidently, it is time to move on and look for another client. In today's column, America's most dangerous liberal pundit offers his advice to the whole Democratic field:
What can this "ongoing budget con" be? It must be pretty important, because less than a month ago a Krugman column lectured America's reporters to "Actually look at the candidates' policy proposals," yet now he himself casts "details of your proposals aside"! So, Mr. Kerry and Mr. Edwards -- listen good! Krugman says the con begins with an "urban legend" promulgated by conservative think tanks that President Bush is "allowing runaway growth in domestic spending." Oddly, one of those conservative think tanks must be the Krugman Foundation, because only last December Krugman was warning of the "spectacle of a government launching a war, increasing farm subsidies and establishing an expensive new Medicare entitlement." Even in today's column he allows that recent farm subsidies were "lavish budget increases" and that there has been a "surge in defense and homeland security spending." Well, actually he can't quite make up his mind on that latter point. Last August he wrote that for "homeland security, small-government ideology reigns. The Bush administration has been unwilling to spend enough on any aspect of homeland security, whether it's providing firefighters and police officers with radios or protecting the nation's ports." But putting those pesky "details aside," as Krugman might say, what is his actual proof that the growth in domestic spending is no more than an "urban legend"? First, Krugman says there can't possibly be an increase in education spending because "No Child Left Behind is rapidly turning into a sick joke." Everyone knows that sick jokes are free. Second, Krugman says that "many government agencies are severely underfinanced," and cites as his single point of evidence that "the head of the National Park Service's police admitted to reporters that her force faced serious budget and staff shortages." Tough for Yogi and Boo-boo, I must admit, but hardly evidence of widespread fiscal restraint. Okay, all you Democratic candidates -- are you with the program so far? Repeat after Paul: "There's really been no big federal spending increase. It's like the alligators in the New York City sewer system." Now we're ready to take the next step in the "ongoing budget con." It's time to talk about tax cuts. Bush's tax cuts, according to Krugman, explain why the federal government's "revenues have plunged." Burst bubble? Tech wreck? Recession? Never heard of it. It's those tax cuts for "the richest 5 percent of families." And what about those across-the-board cuts, famously advertised by the president as being "for everyone who pays income taxes"? Forget about them. According to Krugman, "most people don't feel that their taxes have fallen sharply. And they're right: taxes that fall mainly on middle-income Americans, like the payroll tax, are still near historic highs." But not according to the Urban Brookings Tax Policy Center -- who tax analyses Krugman has called "impeccable." They say that the fraction of the total tax burden falling on the richest 5 percent is actually higher now -- after Bush's tax cuts -- than it was before. That means that proportionately, the little guys got the bigger tax cut. More "details," I suppose. But Krugman has more for the Democratic hopefuls to go on. You see, it's not just the tax cuts. Krugman claims that the drop in federal revenues "probably reflects an epidemic of tax avoidance and evasion" by "wealthy people who don't feel like paying taxes." Krugman's evidence for this? None, really, except to recommend that readers buy a book on the subject by fellow Timesman David Cay Johnston. Operators are standing by. Repeat after Paul: "Ignore that couple thousand bucks you saved in taxes this year! Only the rich got a tax cut! And the greedy bastards are still cheating." We're almost there. Now let's put it all together into the "ongoing budget con". Here, Mr. Kerry and Mr. Edwards, is what you are supposed to explain to the American people:
So repeat after Paul, one last time, Mr. Kerry and Mr. Edwards: "If elected, I will raise taxes and increase government spending." Hey, wait a second... with advice like that, just whose side is Krugman on, anyway? Posted by Donald L. Luskin at 6:44 AM |
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Monday, January 26, 2004
Now when will the Times correct Edmund Andrews' even worse January 10 error about unemployment -- his invented-out-of-whole-cloth statement that in December "the labor force shrank by 309,000 workers. Many of those were people who had simply become too discouraged to keep looking for work." As I pointed out at the time, the statistics show the number of discouraged workers falling, not rising. Posted by Donald L. Luskin at 7:44 PM |
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COURAGE AND INTEGRITY Mutual fund giant Dreyfus stands tall against its own lobbyist, rebuking the Investment Company Institute for its regulatory initiative to ban so-called "soft dollars," which would destroy independent securities research. Bravo. Posted by Donald L. Luskin at 12:43 PM |
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JOKE OF THE DAY Posted by Donald L. Luskin at 12:29 PM |
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AREN'T MARKETS WONDERFUL? You can trade anything. Here's an online exchange for trading the virtual money used in online multiplayer games. Thanks to Ken Prevo for the link. Posted by Donald L. Luskin at 10:33 AM |
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Sunday, January 25, 2004
"Unbeknownst to most in the sold-out Berkeley Community Theater audience, they were beta-testing a show that East Coast promoters are developing into a national barnstorming tour. The promoters were impressed; dates in New York and New Haven, Conn., are expected to be announced in the next week on what's being billed as the 'Rolling Thunder' tour. Posted by Donald L. Luskin at 11:41 AM |
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