Tuesday, November 20, 2012

More Unthankfulness

Thanksgiving is early this year, which also moves up my annual list of things for which I'm not thankful.   

Once again, this list builds on the lists I've made in past years, and are presented in no particular order:

SuperPACs.

One Direction, and any past and future boy bands.

Droughts.


B1G football.

Stories related to vampires or werewolves.

The fiscal cliff.

Cats.

The National Hockey League lockout.

Black Friday becoming Black Thursday or earlier.


Wednesday, November 14, 2012

About That Marijuana Referendum.....

When higher life forms finally emerge from their pods or arrive in their spaceships and take a close look at us Earthlings, there's a lot they will not understand about what our civilization allows.  Things like SuperPACs, or Tim Tebow as an NFL quarterback.  But one of those things will surely be how hypocritical we are in regulating some mind altering substances, while not regulating others.

However, after Washington and Colorado voted last week to legalize (sort of) recreational marijuana, we may have a little less for which to be ashamed.  (How is it that Oregon voted against this?)

Finally, we have agreement, within certain territorial boundaries, that pot is no more regulatory-worthy than alcohol.  Both can be destructive, but both can clearly have therapeutic value within reason.

Unfortunately for now, federal law still considers marijuana possession to be illegal.  And more unfortunately, there are still 48 other states that aren't enlightened on this issue, most not even enlightened enough to allow medicinal pot.

In the meantime, every state allows adults to possess, sell, and consume unregulated amounts of alcohol, often with grave consequences even to those who do not consume it.  Oh, and also, the U.S. spends millions on drug enforcement, and jails fill up with people who are not threats to society.

I've written too often about the benefits of decriminalizing pot in America.  [Search the label 'marijuana' in this blog.]  But no matter how often, the conclusion remains:  There is no intellegent life down here.

Friday, November 9, 2012

About That Presidential Election.....

Many years ago I attended a meeting where an economist was the keynote speaker. His opening line was, "I'm not a member of a major political party.  I'm a Republican."

Never has that line cut deeper than this week.  After all of the campaigning, the SuperPAC money, the advertisements, the blustery predictions, etc., the Rs have gone in reverse.

Their presidential candidate, Mitt Romney, seemed like he was qualified enough to be president.  Certainly qualified enough to defeat an economically-weakened Barack Obama.  So how did this happen?  Let a lifetime independent voter tell you.

If you listen to the Rs, they've got all sorts of reasons why they lost the presidency plus some senate seats.  The only correct reason is that the Rs don't have a big enough tent.  It's comprised of a declining base - whites, males, married females, social conservatives, and, um, that's about it.

Look at America.  It's becoming less white, less dependent female, less socially conservative.  Rs have to start appealing to those constituencies, or at least stop pissing them off.

But what are the conservative pundits framing as their next strategy?  To go even farther right!  They seem to believe that if they simply do a better job promoting their anti-secular, anti-immigration, anti-environment ideals, that we 'moderates' will be more likely to join them.

So, the Rs analysis of the problem is correct, but their solution is exactly wrong.  They think we independent voters don't understand them?  The problem is we understand them perfectly, and we don't like it.  Newsflash to Rs: We aren't going to like more of what we already don't like.

The crazy thing is, the Rs really weren't/aren't so far away from taking power.  Most independent voters are like America - socially liberal, but still fiscally conservative.  If the Rs would spend more time on the fiscally conservative message, and a lot less on the social issues, they'd be fine.

[This is a good time to note and give kudos to the states of Colorado and Washington for legalizing marijuana.  Talk about your trending social liberalism.  By the way folks, it's no big deal - they already have legalized alcohol, a more abusive and dangerous drug.  More about this in a future blog.]

There is plenty to dislike about the other non-major political party, a/k/a Democrats. As an independent, I think they're wrong on union support, wrong on expanded government, wrong on tax policy.  I matured (such as it is) in the 80s, during the Reagan revolution, and I actually believe in supply-side economics.

To a political independent like me, however, the other stuff matters more now.  It's encouraging to see WOITH politicians like Michele Bachmann, Steve King, and especially Bob Vander Plaats struggle so much (and in the latter case, outright lose) this election cycle.  Their message of hate, masquerading as social conservatism, has become the  millstone around their necks.

If they and the rest of the Rs want to appeal to today's independent voter, they need to go farther left, not farther right.

Saturday, November 3, 2012

R.I.P. MLB

The Major League Baseball season ended this week, with the crowning of the World Series champion.  Oh, you didn't know?  That's because only a few people in America care about baseball after late August, and most of the rest of them stop caring after September, much less late October.

How is this possible?  Because as I've previously written, baseball sucks, and it has been sucking for a while.  The games are too long, the season is too long, the players are too forgettable, the teams have too much disparity between them.  What other reasons do we need to not be interested?

This is all exacerbated by America's love affair with college and pro football.  When Labor Day rolls around, we care about football a lot more than we do baseball.

You'd think baseball would figure all of this out someday.  Maybe invoke some type of salary cap like the other pro sports, so every franchise feels like it could be a contender.  And/or maybe end the season earlier rather than later.  Instead, they watch as the ratings for the World Series go down the tubes.

Nice job, baseball.  You suck.