Logical Talk About the ‘Big Three’ Automakers

Logic is in short supply these days, but there are still rational, thinking people out there writing columns, making statements, and talking sense . . . the trick is finding them. While many American politicos in Congress, the White House, the media, and the blogosphere have gone on an incredible ‘bailout bonanza’, committing your and my tax dollars to all kinds of crazy, counterproductive causes without hardly a second thought, we really need to sit back, take a breath, and look at these things in a rational context.

Bernard Avishai is doing that with regard to Ford, GM, and Chrysler’s shameful begging for large amounts of tax dollars to counteract their own mistakes. In a column that appeared in today’s Washington Post, he makes a case not for a bailout (though he does not necessarily oppose one) but instead for a sea-change in how the ‘big three’ operate.

I certainly don’t agree with all of Avishai’s proposals. First, any government money or government equity investment (in reality, a partial nationalization) must be absolutely off-the-table. The ‘big three’ dug their own hole, and they alone have an obligation to find their way out of it. Second, I don’t agree with his proposed patent changes since they would potentially stifle rather than increase innovation as companies will be fearful of their competitors benefiting from their good ideas.

Having said that, Avishai’s core thesis is right: we can’t scream “NEED MONEY NOW” and wave our arms around, we need to look at the real problems and the ‘big three’ U.S. automakers need to find real solutions.

Fans: ‘Solace’ Among Best 20 Bond Films

Fans of the long-running 007 film series agree, nearly universally, that Quantum of Solace starring Daniel Craig as James Bond is easily one of the best twenty films in the series. According to a recent study, which polled over 500 self-affirmed fans of the James Bond films, Solace is viewed very favorably when compared with the two bad films in the series, Moonraker and Diamonds Are Forever.

Since Ian Fleming’s fictional British Secret Agent, James Bond, first came to film portrayed by Sean Connery in 1962’s Dr. No, there have been 22 official films in the series and an additional ‘unofficial’ film, Never Say Never Again, also starring Connery. Five other actors have played James Bond in the long line of films: George Lazenby, Roger Moore, Timothy Dalton, Pierce Brosnan, and Daniel Craig.

Obama Cabinet Beginning to Take Shape

President-elect Barack Obama (D) is beginning to make his selections for his cabinet. The cabinet is a group of senior presidential appointees who head various government departments, and is the premeire ‘advisory board’ providing guidance to the president, and most are in the presidential line of succession.

The cabinet is currently made up of the Secretary of State, Secretary of the Treasury, Secretary of Defense, Attorney General, Secretary of the Interior, Secretary of Agriculture, Secretary of Commerce, Secretary of Labor, Secretary of Health & Human Services, Secretary of Housing & Urban Development, Secretary of Transportation, Secretary of Energy, Secretary of Education, Secretary of Veterans Affairs, and the Secretary of Homeland Security. In addition, several other administrative officers are considered ‘cabinet level’ including the Vice president and the White House Chief of Staff.

Obama has thus-far officially announced his intent to appoint Eric Holder, former Deputy Attorney General under President Clinton (D), as Attorney General and Tom Daschle, former Democratic Senate Majority Leader, as Secretary of Health & Human Services. In addition, media speculation indicates that Senator Hillary Clinton (D-NY) will be Obama’s appointment as Secretary of State and Timothy Geithner, President of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, as Secretary of the Treasury.

Violence Happens Everywhere

A few people have asked me why I’m a gun owner. I live in a safe, suburban, middle-class neighborhood; I stay aware of my surroundings and alert; and I don’t engage in any behaviors (drugs, crime, etc.) that might put me at a greater risk of being victimized. I am a practicing Christian, which is clearly a non-violent religion (when practiced correctly). The county I live in has an active police force and a very low crime rate.

Well, there are a few reasons. One, however, stands out: violence happens everywhere.

That safe, suburban, middle-class neighborhood I live in just made the local news because a woman who lived nearby—in a building I can bike to in about five minutes—was found murdered less than a mile from her home. Based on preliminary evidence, it would appear she was assaulted in her apartment parking lot (motive unknown), stabbed to death, and then driven a short distance away to be left dead in her own car.

Self defense is a right and, indeed, a responsibility. Erika Yancey, the woman who was murdered, apparently tried to defend herself as best as she could as an unarmed citizen. There is evidence that she fought back but, sadly, it was not enough. Perhaps, had she been armed with a gun or even a readily accessible knife, she might still be alive today. (As an aside, it is worth noting that—being committed with a knife—this murder could never have been prevented with gun control, even if criminals were to start caring about gun laws.)

The Nuclear Genie

You can’t put the Genie back in the bottle. The twentieth century brought about a weapon of such magnitude that we now, for the first time in the history of our existence as a species, have the power to utterly destroy our entire planet. I’m not talking about fossil fuels, though their use ranks with many as a greater danger, but rather nuclear technology.

Of course, like many things, nuclear technology is in-and-of itself neutral. It can be used for good, providing clean energy to the entire world (solving Al Gore’s problem). It can also be used for evil, the creation and use of weapons with enough power to make the mind boggle. The United States is the only country in the world ever to have used nuclear weapons in war, and we have only done it twice during a single conflict (World War II). Thankfully, the nuclear powers of the world have thus far used discretion.

I can accept the existence our nuclear arsenal, since we are extremely unlikely to ever use it except in response to somebody else using nuclear weapons on us. I don’t mind Israel, for example, having nuclear weapons either, since they are clearly only going to use them as deterrent and defensive weapons. I’m a little more wary of Russia, China, India, and Pakistan having them, but I’m not too worried since their leaders have shown enough sense not to commit suicide (the doctrine of ‘Mutually Assured Destruction‘ is, indeed, still alive). India, Pakistan, and Russia are, at least nominally, democracies like Israel, the United States, and the nuclear-capable European powers. China is non-democratic, but its leaders for the last several decades have limited themselves to only committing evil acts against its own citizens.

Scott Bradford is a writer and technologist who has been putting his opinions online since 1995. He believes in three inviolable human rights: life, liberty, and property. He is a Catholic Christian who worships the trinitarian God described in the Nicene Creed. Scott is a husband, nerd, pet lover, and AMC/Jeep enthusiast with a B.S. degree in public administration from George Mason University.