What did I miss in ConLaw?

Posted by Marc Hodak on August 31, 2008 under Politics | 2 Comments to Read

Regarding Hurricane Gustav, Obama said:

I’ve instructed my Senate staff to monitor the situation closely, make sure we’ve contacted both FEMA but also private relief organizations just to make sure that whatever happens people are prepared.

The Constitution, Article 2, Section 1, says:

The executive Power shall be vested in a President of the United States of America.

So, what is a U.S. Senator doing interfering with an executive agency? During an emergency?

Obama’s speech

Posted by Marc Hodak on August 28, 2008 under Politics | Be the First to Comment

“I am my brother’s keeper and my sister’s keeper.”

Me, too, Barack. But I’m not your brother. We don’t know each other. I’d rather that you choose who to help with your resources than with mine.

Unfortunately, I’ll probably be making the same plaint to McCain.

Biden’s speech

Posted by Marc Hodak on August 27, 2008 under Politics | Read the First Comment

For those of you who couldn’t listen to the whole thing because you were looking for nickels in your sofa cushions, here’s a summary:

“I was born in Scranton, Pennsylvania. It doesn’t get more blue collar than that. My parents believed in the American dream. My dad fell on hard times, but we bounced back. He said to me, “Champ, when you get knocked down, get up. Get up.” My mother told me, “Joey, God sends no cross you cannot bear.” She taught us to have faith and be tough, and to face down every challenge. Our family has seen more than it’s share of adversity. We did what we had to do, and I am so proud of what we achieved.

So, now that I see so many people struggling, I have to ask, “Why isn’t the government helping all these people?”

He then proceeded to bash “my dear, good friend, and I mean it,” John McCain.

A prostitutes’ convention

Posted by Marc Hodak on August 22, 2008 under Scandal | Read the First Comment

ABC News has finally noticed that the political conventions in Denver and Minneapolis will attract a large amount of prostitution.

Typical for the MSM, they get story all wrong. ABC appears to be implying that politicos draw sex workers in unusual numbers, but that was belied way down in the article itself–all conventions draw sex workers in proportion to the number of attendees.

What ABC missed, of course, is the irony that sex workers, who are offering an honest exchange of companionship for money, have to pretend to hide what they do (well, sort of). In contrast, politicians who are offering a corrupt exchange of favors for money get to pretend that they’re doing something completely different.

Daley appears drunk with outrage

Posted by Marc Hodak on August 20, 2008 under Irrationality | Read the First Comment

There may be some rational arguments for not lowering the drinking age below 21, but Mayor Richard Daley goes off on the proposal with none of them. His most coherent argument:

I’m sorry, you have enough time to drink the rest of your life. I believe in that.

Given the incoherence of the rest of his statement, that point is well taken. His other points sounded like this:

You pay an awful lot of money. You look at the salaries that people get at universities. You pay a lot of money. I’m sorry, they have a legal and moral responsibility when your child goes to [get] an education, what type of environment is set on that university…

And this response to maybe lowering the drinking age to 18:

I think that’s a bad message. I think they better really look at that. Because what, are they going to drop it down to 18 or 17 or 16? I mean, think of that.

…before he starts to sound like the stumbling frat rat holding up an empty plastic cup:

We should not be so whimsical that universities can think they drop the drinking age. You think the president of the university is going to open a beer hall in his house?

What I don’t get is the complete lack of irony with which this tirade was reported.

We care more about you than you do

Posted by Marc Hodak on August 19, 2008 under Collectivist instinct | Be the First to Comment

That was pretty much exactly what Minneapolis police told this doctor.

The Hero Syndrome

Posted by Marc Hodak on August 17, 2008 under Revealed preference | Be the First to Comment

Americans love a hero. The guy who can grab victory from the jaws of defeat. The person who can come from behind to win the title. Wow.

But the hero fetish can be a bit perverted. I was reminded of this by an article today about Michael Phelps where ESPN ranked his eight gold medals in order of “most impressive” based on a poll of readers. Setting aside the inherent silliness of such a ranking, the poll results said something interesting about people.

The victory voted “most impressive” by 60 percent of the readers was Phelps’ win in the 100m butterfly. This was the race he almost lost; the only one where he didn’t break a world record. Getting almost a quarter of the vote was the other come-from-behind victory in the 400m freestyle relay anchored by Jason Lezak. None of the other races where he or his team won convincingly by shattering world records got as much as four percent of the votes. Maybe it’s just me, but I would consider the races he dominated as pretty impressive. In sports, though, excitement often means the last second save.

The infatuation of the press and public with the “last second save” is understandable in sports, but it doesn’t translate well to business. For my money, too many American companies are built upon what I would call the “heroic management” model. They would never invest in better management systems when things are going well; they see their success as evidence that they don’t need them. When things turn south, they can’t afford advice about systems; they need (and prefer) to invest in heroic measures. If they pull out of the dive, their faith in heroics is reinforced; a company of heroes doesn’t need better systems. That’s how they think.

My attitude is that any system that depends upon heroics to succeed is a system that is designed to fail. In fact, most of the companies I work with regard “heroic management” as a retarded model. They see the need for heroics as a failure in some management process.

My first experience with this alternative model was at Toyota, when I went through their manufacturing training program at their plants in Fremont and Lexington. Toyota as a company, just like their auto manufacturing, is designed for continuous improvement. I have since seen and implemented similar systems at other firms that, from the outside, don’t look much different from their peers, until you see the results over many years at a time.

Still, I can see why the “heroic management” model remains so popular. Steady performance and continuous improvement are BORING. It doesn’t get you on the cover of Business Week. Bold strategies get you there, win or lose–with the shareholders often being the losers.

Do legislators read the Constitution?

Posted by Marc Hodak on August 16, 2008 under Politics | 5 Comments to Read

U.S. Constitution:

nor shall any person be subject for the same offense to be twice put in jeopardy of life or limb… nor be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law

Pennsylvania state Sen. Jeffrey Piccola has said

he plans to introduce legislation that would allow authorities to keep potentially dangerous sex offenders in prison after they have finished serving their sentences.

Illegal immigrants on ICE

Posted by Marc Hodak on August 14, 2008 under Unintended consequences | Be the First to Comment

Today I saw two stories that illustrate that people pay more attention to behavior than words.

Both stories had to do with illegal immigrants. Most Americans debate immigration policy as if the government is to be considered a trustworthy rational actor in a complicated scheme. In fact, while each agent of the government might be individually rational with respect to their personal incentives and constraints, anyone dealing with the government’s regulatory or enforcement machinery know they are up against a frighteningly irrational and amoral, if not retarded creature.

Illegal immigrants, especially, feel like they have been screwed so much for so long in their dealings with ICE that it’s laughable to consider any program that depends upon their trust and cooperation.

The first story recounts a familiar tale of someone in ICE custody:

In April, Mr. Ng began complaining of excruciating back pain. By mid-July, he could no longer walk or stand. And last Wednesday, two days after his 34th birthday, he died in the custody of Immigration and Customs Enforcement in a Rhode Island hospital, his spine fractured and his body riddled with cancer that had gone undiagnosed and untreated for months.

What the story left out was that the behavior of the authorities, while cruel, was exactly what the system required of them. Yet, the ICE authorities who set up that system act truly surprised when plans that depend on the trust of illegal immigrants work out like this:

A program to induce illegal immigrants to turn themselves in to U.S. federal authorities for a “scheduled” deportation has failed to attract substantial interest. Eight days into the scheme, only six people have surrendered, out of thousands who are eligible.

The ultimate conservationist policy

Posted by Marc Hodak on August 13, 2008 under Patterns without intention | Comments are off for this article

I don’t understand. How can all this be happening without the government telling us what to do?

Consumers are buying fewer sport-utility vehicles and more energy-saving washing machines. Some trucking companies have rejiggered their engines to max out at lower speeds. Gridlock is easing in California. Americans drove 9.66 billion fewer miles in May than they did a year earlier, a 3.7% decline, according to the Transportation Department.

With shipping costs surging, companies are rethinking overseas production, slimming down packaging and retooling distribution networks. Yogurt maker Stonyfield Farm is only sending out fully loaded delivery trucks. Procter & Gamble Co. is filling smaller bottles with more-powerful laundry detergent. Locally made products, from beets to beer, are becoming a more attractive choice.

I must have missed the big rallies where these solutions were laid out by our dear leaders.