Quotes

  • Adages,  America,  Middle East,  Military,  Politics,  Public Choice,  Quotes,  Russia

    Wars in the Middle East are officially a vested interest

    I read this article on CNN.com

    White House taps general for ‘war czar’ post
    President Bush has chosen Lt. Gen. Douglas Lute, the Pentagon’s director of operations, to oversee the fighting in Iraq and Afghanistan as a “war czar” after a long search for new leadership, administration officials said Tuesday.

    In the newly created position, Lute would serve as an assistant to the president and deputy national security adviser, and would also maintain his military status and rank as a three-star general, according to a Pentagon official.

    and was reminded of this Albert Jay Nock quote:

    Experience has made it clear beyond doubt or peradventure that prohibition in the United States is not a moral issue; it is not essentially, even, a political issue; it is a vested interest.

    and this H.L. Mencken quote:

    The New Deal began, like the Salvation Army, by promising to save humanity. It ended, again like the Salvation Army, by running flop-houses and disturbing the peace.

    We have this horrible tendency in our culture to see the means (a big new bureaucracy) as an end in itself, nay, an achievement. What endeavor has failed because there are too few managers? The right managers, sure, lots of failures due to a lack of them. But too few?

    Plus an additional bureaucracy just creates it’s own principal-agent and knowledge problems.

    Functionally Lute will probably serve as a dedicated adviser, but why the title Czar? All of the Russian Czars were an odd combination of stagnant, incompetent and murderous. Why is that some role model.

    Sigh.

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  • Movies,  Quotes

    The Sniper

    I finally finished watching The Sniper, a good film noir from 1952. It’s a good tense drama about a compulsive sex killer (who uses an M1 carbine, heh). One funny moment comes after the protagonist burns himself on a stove and goes to the emergency room. In addition to the memorable scenes of doctors smoking in hospitals, it has the line

    E.R doc: A man’s got no business messing around with stoves, it’s strictly a woman’s business.

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  • Adages,  Economics,  Quotes

    More wisdom from my old econ professors

    The same professor mentioned in the previous post said that it is the natural order of things for

    “Those who study the very big see the study of the very small as true, but not relevant. Those who study the very small see the study of the very big as relevant, but not true”.

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  • Iraq,  Quotes

    Two good reads

    • From Col. Lang (on partial withdrawal)

      Iraq, (Mesopotamia) has always been held together (in various eras) by force and coercion. The enmity among the “Iraqis” is not a matter of misunderstanding, or a failure to communicate among themselves.

    • From Michael Scheur (on George Tenet’s book)

      But Tenet’s resignation would have destroyed the neocons’ Iraq house of cards by discrediting the only glue holding it together: the intelligence that “proved” Saddam Hussein guilty of pursuing nuclear weapons and working with al-Qaeda.

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  • Movies,  Quotes

    Quote of the moment

    I’m watching Elia Kazan’s “A Face in the Crowd“. Andy Griffith plays a Southern lowlife who stumbles into a major media role, sort of a cross between Elvis and Oprah, with the personality and accent of John Edwards on PCP.

    The quote is “Well, he’s got the courage of his ignorance, I’ll give him that.”

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