Growing Is Good

Alex Massie contends that "in the developed world a growing population is a mark of success, not failure":

Sure, there are problems and strains and pressures associated with immigration and population growth but they're not nearly so terrifying as the prospect of a geriatric and closed society working its few remaining young people to the bone with little to no regard for the future well-being of the people supporting the oldies. Those obsessed by population figures should be asked what they consider to be the ideal worker:retiree ratio.

We Edit, You Decide

A reader illustrates "why I love (and sometimes hate) threads on The Dish":

April 28th: "Yeah. Why hasn't the pill evolved?"
April 29th: "True. It is hard to imagine a drug that alters the body that much without any negative side effects."
April 29th: "Birth control for men? That's the ticket!"
May 5th: "Oh, that's right. The IUD is a superior form of birth control that exists right now. People should know more about it. Except … what? A kind of IUD is known to have injured many women. Hence, some women and doctors worry about its safety and Big Pharma is afraid to innovate. That makes sense."
May 5th: "Oh, that was just one kind of IUD that really was a dangerous product. IUDs in general are AMAZING!"
May 9th: "Hmm, IUDs sound amazing, but this person had a HORRIBLE experience. There's a whole support network for problems associated with IUDs? The pill seems safer/better/more familiar."
May 11th: "IUDs are more like abortion than the pill? I'm not sure I'm comfortable with that. Am I comfortable with that?"
May 12th: "Oh, what a relief. Everything I learned about the IUD being a form of abortion isn't true. The IUD is AWESOME, again!"

I'm starting to realize that I should never feel strongly about a topic until I have all the information … and I will NEVER have all the information.  I look forward to learning more soon.

Drum roll:

With regard to the emails that have been posted about IUDs, I don't see anyone complaining about the drawback for men; namely, the excruciating pain that occurs when the head of the penis rams up against the silk thread coming out of the cervix.  Double ouch!

Update: A reader responds:

An IUD should not be painful! If it is, something is wrong with the placement of the string (which isn't silk, but some sort of plastic wire that is actually pretty sharp). After a while of having no problems with my IUD, its string suddenly started stabbing my partner. Then it started stabbing me. (That's when fixing it became extremely urgent! I can't imagine any birth control any more effective than sharp pain during sex, but that's not really an ideal contraceptive method.) The stabbing can happen if the string was cut too short, so that it can't curl around the outside base of the cervix. When this happens, a gynecologist can try to fix it by cutting the string even shorter so it sits only inside the cervical canal, or they can remove the IUD altogether and replace it. They just cut my string shorter, and then I was free and clear again!

I guess it's worth noting an editorial principle that has increasingly guided this blogazine. It is that what a chronological blog format can do, better than any other, is to unfold the aspects of an issue or argument or experience in real time through an actual conversation between intelligent, reasonable people. That's opposed to an authoritative take on any particular matter, gathered in advance over time and presented as settled fact or opinion.

This may sound very pomo, but, in fact, I think of it as the opposite. The aim is to reach a settled body of fact. We do not allow people their own facts – just encourage those that we may not have absorbed yet or known about. But we do allow people their own perspectives, experiences and arguments around these settled facts. The goal is to flesh out the reality through a conversation, rather than a monologue. Sometimes, these threads will end ambiguously; at other times they will convince any reasonable individual of a particular line of argument. My goal is to host the conversation, as well as present my own view as an occasional anchor for the discussion. And to allow my own attempt to better understand the world be the thread that keeps the whole thing, with any luck, coherent.

But the longer I have engaged this medium the more I have appreciated its potential for truth through honest conversation. We're biased but balanced. At least, that's the goal.

A Now Illegal War, Ctd

Larison insists that the Libyan War is illegal and has been so from the start. A reader is in related territory:

No, you called it just right: the words are illegal, unlawful and unconstitutional. Just because something is "illegal" does not mean it's "criminal," that would only be the case if the law which is violated is criminal in nature. Most public law is not criminal law.

The issue here is a struggle between two of the three branches.

In the fateful deliberations of the Constitutional Convention in 1787, there was a strong consensus that the war-making power could not be granted entirely to the executive, because the executive could use this power–which far outweighs most others–to destroy the balance of powers scheme and establish its total ascendancy. As George Mason famously said, the executive "cannot be trusted with it," and neither was the senate alone able to balance it. "I am for clogging rather than facilitating war," he proclaimed.

So the power to declare war and other key elements of the war-power were given to Congress, as a conscious counterweight–to slow the process and to force deliberation. The War Powers Act was consciously thrown down as a marker to insure there was no "creep" to war through measures that seem to fall just short of it. The Libya operations present one of the clearest challenges for Congress in a generation.

To be clear, the question in the first instance is not whether the operations in Libya are smart or ill-advised, it is whether Congress is capable of recognizing and dealing with its constitutionally delegated powers. The deadline is now a week away, and Congress is filled with irrelevant chatter about extension of the AUMF in the wake of the bin Laden killing. But no one seems to recognize the Libya issue which is front and center. Congress, particularly the Republican leadership in the House (but there's plenty of blame to share with the Democratic leadership as well), are demonstrating their constitutional illiteracy yet again. And just think: they started this session reading the Constitution! Would that they really read it.

Wasillan Rhapsody, Ctd

A reader writes:

If Bohemian Rhapsody caused such an uproar for the high school, does this mean that they don't play "We Will Rock You" or "We Are the Champions" at the local hockey games?  Those are classics in the sports world!

I also can't imagine they don't play Gary Glitter's "Rock'n Roll Pt.2" at hockey games in Wasilla. The pounding of hockey sticks on the ice to the beat of this song is a mainstay in most hockey leagues. If they do play this famed song, does that mean that while a song written by a homosexual like Freddy Mercury is outrageous, songs by Gary Glitter, a man with a history of child pornography and statutory rape, are ok?  What makes his truly abominable actions acceptable?  The fact that the victims were female, so at least he's straight?

Another writes:

It is striking that on this measure, Wasilla High School is less open and tolerant than Iran.

Another passes along a parody from "the comments section on the Wasilla flap over Bohemian Rhapsody. This MUST be circulated:"

SondraTompkins: May 13, 2011 at 3:00 am

Is this the real life?
Or is it just fantasy?
Caught in the Valley
Not a part of reality…

Open your eyes
We don’t like gay guys
You see…

I’m just like Sarah
I have no empathy
I like Jesus Christ (and Prevo)
I’m hetero, not homo

Anyway my cash grows
That’s what really matters to me
To ME!

Mama.
The Paliban.
Put a gun up to my head.
Pulled the trigger
But I’m not dead.

Mama.
They can’t shoot a gun.
Or else
They would
Have blown my ### away.

Mama, oooo (anyway my cash grows)
Didn’t mean to make you cry
If my chin implant’s not in this time tomorrow
Carry on, carry on, cause the look is all that matters

It’s too late.
Bin Laden’s gone.
Sends shivers down my spine.
Why can’t the glory all be mine?
Goodbye, everybody, I’ve got to go
To get a nip and tuck so I can face the truth…
Mama, ooo (anyway my cash grows)
I don’t want to lie
I sometimes wish I could tell the truth at all.

(Opera Section)

I’M WEARING LITTLE RED STILETTOS ON MY FEET!

SARAH LOU!

DO YOU THINK

BRISTOL’S SHOW IS LIKE MANDINGO?

BLUNDERS DOLTS INFIGHTING

TELL-ALL BOOKS ENLIGHTENING

ME!

GALLERIA! GALLERIA!
GALLERIA! SHOES FOR ME-A!
GALLERIA! And ZAPPO’S!

MAGNIFICO!

I’m just a poor girl, everybody HATES me!
(SHE’S JUST A POOR GIRL, FIVE SCHOOLS FOR ONE DEGREE!)
McCAIN SPARE US ALL FROM THIS MONSTROSITY!

(Easy come, easy go, rolling in the dough!)

PEPTOBISMOL! NO! IT WILL NOT LET US GO!
(LET ME GO!) PEPTOBISMOL! IT WILL NOT LET US GO!
(LET ME GO!) PEPTOBISMOL! IT WILL NOT LET US GO!
(LET ME GO) WILL NOT LET YOU GO!
(LET ME GO) Will not let you go (let us go) Ah
No no no no no no no
(Oh mama mia, Galleria) mama mia let us go!

Thomas Muthee’s pulled a DEVIL from inside of ME!
From ME!
From ME!
From ME!

(guitar solo)

So you think you can NOMINATE me, then spit in my eye?
So you think Katie Couric’s the apple of your eye?
Oh baby, Barry’s a Kenyan maybe!!!
Just gotta get out
Just get the white vote out of here!

Ooh yeah ooh yeah
Nothing really matters
Anyone can see
Nothing really matters
Nothing really matters to me.

(Anyway my cash grows)

Gong!

Why Huntsman Is Different

GT_HUNTSMAN_110512

Michael Medved says his Mormonism won't count against him because Romney has cleared the way and the LDS has become much more mainstream. My own view is that Medved's strongest point is this one:

Huntsman will run as the most centrist of the major contenders, with positions on immigration, civil unions, the environment, and service in the Obama administration (as ambassador to China) that already make him anathema to many leaders of the conservative faith community. He counts instead on the less fervently religious Republicans and independents (who can vote in many key GOP primaries) and who, according to polls and history, are much less likely to harbor strident anti-Mormon attitudes.

Nate Silver agrees:

According to the most recent survey — from CBS News in August 2010 — just 37 percent of Republican voters hold the position that gay couples should have no legal recognition. Instead, 59 percent of Republicans supported either civil unions or gay marriage.

Huntsman is a reminder that moderate Republicanism can flourish – even in Utah, where he won re-election with 78 percent of the vote. Just don't expect to hear that on Fox. But I suspect he's really running for 2016. After the dust of the GOP's lurch to the loony right settles some more.

(Photo: Jon Huntsman, U.S. ambassador to China, speaks during an interview on the sidelines of the 2009 World Economic Forum Meeting of New Champions in Dalian, Liaoning province, China, on Friday, Sept. 11, 2009. By Nelson Ching/Bloomberg via Getty Images.)

Malkin Award Nominee, Ctd

A reader writes:

Rand Paul does not deserve the nomination.  You have confused positive rights and negative rights.  What Americans have is the right to health, and that is a negative right.  Nobody can take our health away from us, and if they do we can pursue legal action for damages incurred.  A right to health care would be a positive right.  It would entail giving something to someone – in this case, medical care, as opposed to taking something away from someone.  Someone has to provide that health care!  A right to health care can logically lead to slavery.

I support the ACA and Obama on the health care issue.  I don't like Rand Paul and I despise the Tea Party, but Paul is 100% right on this issue.  We have a right to health, not to health care.

Do we also have a "right" to be terribly sick? I take the philosophical point. But it's perfectly possible to make a case for universal healthcare insurance that is not based on positive rights, but on mere prudence and even justice, as many Republicans have argued over the years, and that Hayek himself supported it:

There is no reason why, in a society which has reached the general level of wealth ours has, the first kind of security should not be guaranteed to all without endangering general freedom; that is: some minimum of food, shelter and clothing, sufficient to preserve health. Nor is there any reason why the state should not help to organize a comprehensive system of social insurance in providing for those common hazards of life against which few can make adequate provision.

There is no greater example of a "common hazard" than poor health. Here's Newt Gingrich:

"Personal responsibility extends to the purchase of health insurance. Citizens should not be able to cheat their neighbors by not buying insurance, particularly when they can afford it, and expect others to pay for their care when they need it." An "individual mandate," he added, should be applied "when the larger health-care system has been fundamentally changed."

I think health is different from most other goods. You can see this in the American law that guarantees emergency healthcare for anyone. Why not leave people to die in their homes or the streets if you have an absolute standard of libertarian purity? Because at some point, morality and humanity come into play. And once you have conceded this principle, then the question becomes: which is the least inefficient and cheapest way to achieve public health? The evidence is overwhelming that America has not solved this problem. Another reader writes:

The Paul quote about health care and slavery might seem outlandish, but it's lifted more or less straight from the libertarian thought of Robert Nozick. Any taxation outside of the necessary amount for a military and judicial apparatus is "forced labor" and therefore slavery. Check out the "self-ownership" section from Nozick's entry in the Encyclopedia of Philosophy:

But what follows from it, in Nozick’s view, is the surprising and radical conclusion that taxation, of the redistributive sort in which modern states engage in order to fund the various programs of the bureaucratic welfare state, is morally illegitimate. It amounts to a kind of forced labor, for the state so structures the tax system that any time you labor at all, a certain amount of your labor time – the amount that produces the wealth taken away from you forcibly via taxation – is time you involuntarily work, in effect, for the state. Indeed, such taxation amounts to partial slavery, for in giving every citizen an entitlement to certain benefits (welfare, social security, or whatever), the state in effect gives them an entitlement, a right, to a part of the proceeds of your labor, which produces the taxes that fund the benefits; every citizen, that is, becomes in such a system a partial owner of you (since they have a partial property right in part of you, i.e. in your labor).

Another:

Isn't this the same basic argument he used in the Rachel Maddow interview regarding the Civil Rights Act and whether someone had the right not to serve black customers in a restaurant? The argument that he's giving "free" health care – wouldn't whatever insurance the person have under Obama's Affordable Care Act pay Dr Paul for his services?

Another:

Could someone please ask Rand Paul if he thinks lawyers are slaves, since anyone charged with a crime is entitled to a legal defense?  Under the Constitution, no less.

Another:

If Rand Paul's medical practice didn't get about 50% of its revenue through Medicare, he would be a bit more credible on this subject.

Marriage Equality In Virginia

This is a striking poll result:

W-vasocialpoll

More Virginians now support marriage equality than oppose it. The same sample backed George Allen over Tim Kaine in 2012. Five years ago, Virginians voted to ban any civil rights for gay couples. Note, though, the passion index – a five percent edge for the Christianists among strong feelings on the issue.