Tuesday, February 27, 2018

Me (Part Two)

Generally on this blog I look at the world the way a gambler looks at football: I want to predict an outcome, not simply root for one team or the other. Of course the difference between foreign policy and sports is that sports actually has outcomes where foreign policy just keeps going and going and going... In my previous posts I'm sure I have dribbled out a fair amount of rooting interest--I certainly have my prejudices--but mostly I'm just trying to wrap my head around what I encounter when I read about the world. What I want to do here is actually come to grips with what I hope happens or what I think the best or highest outcome for the world as whole.

I don't see the globe as a fractious place where various peoples of the world battle for dominance. Quite the opposite. I see the world as more connected than ever before, where transportation and communication technologies are quickly shrinking the differences between us. I see a rising population of people contributing to a global rather than regional economy (and getting rewarded for it), I see the rules and norms of the world subtly blending into one unified vision of Humanity. I envision a world where everyone is...let me say...on the same page. That needn't be USA's vision of the world, but a larger structure where everyone's interests flatten, come together and prosper in concert rather than in opposition. We're not there yet--might not be for hundreds of years--but I think that's where we're going and each day is a heavy footfall in that direction.

Lovely vision, right? Harmony for everyone, Humanity all in unison as no time since the Garden of Eden (or...well...even earlier than that, huh?). Yeah, that's the long run vision, the Aristotelian Golden Mean writ large, where everyone works and plays in relative equanimity. But that's an abstract. Aristotle tells you that you should average everything out but that doesn't tell you whether your next choice will be good or bad. That doesn't tell you when to say 'yes' or  'no', doesn't protect you from moment to moment defeats, rebukes or disappointments.

Pessismism about the world arises out of 1) the endemic nature of the media, which can only focus on what goes wrong in the world rather than what goes right; and 2) the political world, which sees itself as problem-solving and thus can only see the problems of the world. I am convinced that the good things are vastly more pervasive than the bad things but go unnoticed because our empathy is toward suffering rather than happiness and our attention is to improving rather than maintaining. I am convinced there are more happy people than sad and more happy people now than at any other time in history. But the sad people (and there are more of those, too) get more attention because as problem solvers we focus on the out of the odinary rather than the ordinary.

Social media is a platfrom capable of finding like-minded individuals who in previous times never would've found each other. This is a boon for gamers, gawky teenagers, homosexuals, cat owners, musicians, porn enthusiasts, art lovers, lovely singles, collectors and craftsmen of all sorts, etc., but also for political radicals, the vengeful, the discontented, the aggrieved, the suicidal, the homocidal and (especially!) the passive aggressive. The trick is: those are all the same people drifting back and forth betwen categories. At any rate, these social media platforms bring us in contact with people in a way apart from traditional social and political milieus. We can connect on something more than our immediate surroundings. 

The closer we become suddenly the more we care about the World (yes, capital "W" World). Social media is a full time presence in our lives now (*) and makes us care about People, Ideas, Cultures, etc., in ways Humans never really have before, or have only on the Family level. We are now having those meaningful and productive interactions on the Species level and that's a whole new ballgame historically speaking. Most of the current animosities we see today are ancient but the way we deal with them is entirely new to us as thinking creatures. It also makes the pain more immediate. The fear, the anger, the sadness, the regret, the disappointment all over the world is now front and center all day long.

Imagine the Thirty Years' War. It lasted (as you might've guessed) 30 years and considering the build up to it was probably another 30 years, it was pretty much an ever present reality to an entire generation (or two or three) of Humans. In that time and that place, there was a batch of people that lived with this constant threatening presence called the Thirty Years War. But its worth noting that they fought wars different in those days: they didn't fight when the weather was bad, they generally tried not to interupt planting or husbandry seasons, they didn't fight in the winter, etc. They mostly just got together every now and then, went out into a field and kicked the shit out of each other til one side quit fighting. Then maybe they'd come back the next day and do it again (as long as it wasn't raining). So the "war" as a political issue was every single day of their lives but "war" as a battlefield death match was an occasional feature, probably predictable as clockwork and much more formalized and ritualized than we would recognize today. (**) There was an overal feeling of war and there was an immediate feeling of war that were entirely separte and distinct feelings.

As we gradually advance to the higher state of evolution that we are just now embarking on, each day will come with more calamity than progress. Some calamities will seem shocking and new, some calamities will be as old as time. Some calamities will be minor and local, some will be massive and indelable upon human development. Some will last entire lifetimes, others will be over in the blink of an eye. Some will ultimately make the world a better place, some will fester far into the future.

At this point the most far-reaching shocks to the system will be financial more than military. And the great power that strong countries will exert on weak countries will be economic rather than military. China is attempting to clear out and reconfigure Central Asia and there will be much conflict. But most of that conflict will be in stock markets, currencies and local economies rather than raining fire from the sky. (There will be some of that, as well) India and Japan are going to be bribing as many nations as they can find to choose Japanese or Indian Coke over Chinese Pepsi, but they won't be doing it with tank divisions or fighter bombers. They'll be co-opting nations through bond purchases and trade packages and infrastructure development (and kickbacks and slush funds and propaganda campaigns...these Asian political systems are as advanced as the West!).

So while I see things getting better over time, in the short run there will be no shortage of accidents, wars, atrocities, skirmishes, embarassments, and setbacks. Things may even appear to get worse. In the past, imperial armies raged through territories prized for their food production or simply because of an inherent military advantage; but now we have well-delineated nations and a system of int'l law that seeks to protect the agreed-upon borders. This hasn't stopped war nor are the lines drawn in a manner that pleases all people, but it is the beginning of a world order where war is less likely and, more importantly, less advantageous. Wars are harder and less profitable than ever before because of a system of alliances that punish even the victors of battle. But individually we are more free from our national or tribal alliances than ever before. Like the 30 Years War, the abstract reality of conflict  will always be there but the day-to-day reality free from great power war will expand to more and more people.

In all of this must come a consideration of simple population. As the numbers of humans rises, there are more people living good lives and more people living bad lives simultaneously. There are more people with more access to wealth and privliege and more people with less access to wealth and privelege. There are more people pleased with the order of things and more people displeased with the order of things. The borders are drawn but the borders are still brand new and not everyone will agree on the current configuration. The riches are growing but they will not be evenly distributed--they never were in the past and they aren't likely to be in the future. (***) And regardless there will always be sad stories, there will always be people that don't have enough, children that don't make it to adolescence, disasters that upend entire cities even as the threadcounts of sheets continues to soar.

Does the slow sleazy spread of int'l finance (what the kids would call "capitalism") and crony Democracy (ehh, I'm using the term loosely, really I just mean some sense of nationalist popular representation regardless of its electoral composition), across the globe worry you? Ehh, it ain't the greatest but it has a soothing effect on the overall mood of the world. The interlocking nature soothes more than it ruffles--though the ruffles are felt most immediately.

Beware: the danger of this world is that the "haves" never have enough, so while the "have nots" get steadily marginialized, their numbers will be perpetually regenerated, though with ever-changing but permanently mal-formed grievances. What I'm painting is a world of abstract stability but local instability, where the great powers generally agree on stuff but individual citizenry virtually never agrees on enough. This is called "World Peace" and we're getting closer to it every day. And though the wars will fade away, the battles will never cease. They will just move from bigger to smaller (re: fewer to more numerous).

The aforementioned Chinese incursion into Central Asia, for example, will (I believe) eventually lead to a more incuslive, larger, healthier, better educated population of humans in those territories in the long run; but in the short run, revolutionary elements (Uighars specifically and jihadis in general) will be fought (and I suspect defeated), leading to a new future of chaos, oppression, paranoia and full fledged war. And in the long run, even if those populations find themselves living longer, healthier, more productive lives, they will want even longer, even healthier, even more productive lives and will still burn with resentment of their foreign overlords. Do you see how it works? Wealth produces stability, which only produces a desire for more wealth. We can empathize with suffering and while suffering will never cease, the nature of suffering will become something all together frustrating and harder to sympathize because stability produces restlessness.

"Better" only creates a new threshold of want. Survival only creates a new threshold of bitterness. Education only creates a new threshold of anguish and frustration. Helping disadvantaged people reach modernity will not necessarily create more happiness. But it is where markets and governments feel compelled to go. And the people will be brought along whether they like it or not.

Wait...what happened to lovely vision? It's still there. The good and the bad are simultaneous and will remain so as the world gets better (or worse, depending on where you stand). Yes, the borders are in place, the international relationships are in place and they will create a steady move toward stability. But they have much evolution ahead.

I believe bringing more people into modern economies and cultures and educational and professional systems will bring more inventions, more innovations, more discoveries, more cure for diseases, more saving of lives, more improvement of lives (and tons and tons more art). But it will also produce huge chunks of people that do not see the benefit: some because they will not have access to it, others because they don't believe in it, others because they're simply unlucky, others because they yearn for something that is long gone (or never was to begin with). The world is moving toward longer life spans, more opportunities for personal enrichment and fulfillment; but this will only create a larger population of people who want more stuff, more respect, more recognition. The demand curve for happiness never goes down, thus can never be satisfied.

I had meant to discuss what I wanted for the world but really I just ended up talking about where I think it will go. In short, large institutions with the most financial resources and large gov'ts with the most military resources will continue to bend the world's humans into its sway. And even though most people will be better off physically and materially, they won't necessarily be any more satisfied philosophically or spiritually. And while that sounds bad....my assumption is that's what was going to happen anyway...and I think it'll will come with a lot less bloodshed that the direst of us imagine.

A quick example of what I mean: the Islamic State is a Sunni Arab creation meant to harken back to the days of the grand pan-Arab Caliphate from the 7th century (that, more or less, went out of business in the 1920s); the organization as we know it arose from Western Iraq where the Sunnis had been pushed from power and took to terror tactics and hit-and-run military techniques to amass an impressive swath of territory along the Euphrates River. The organization was militarily defeated but most of the adherents simply returned home where they will wait until called back into service (which has actually happened several times before already). They will continue to fight modernity and yearn for a by-gone time...by staying connected on Facebook, Instagram and YouTube on their iPhones in their SUVs.

So you tell me: has the West defeated the Islamic State? The Islamic State will come back again and again...but only if Western technology survives. The West has created a digital platform that will keep its enemies intact and fighting ad infinitum; but the enemy would eventually turn to dust without the West's technological innovations. (Interconnectedness is a bitch, man)

So in short: I see the world falling intro regional collectives like Europe, NAFTA, East Asia, Arab League States, Sub-Saharan Africa, Mercosur States, Central America/Caribbean, with Russia, Australia and maybe India, Israel and Iran always staying relatively distinct). It is in these larger structures where technological advances are made, where economic smoothing and cultural integration gradually become a set of agreed-upon standards. Then ever larger standards can emerge built around politics and commerce rather than warfare. What I'm suggesting is a world where more people live longer, more productive, more stable lives; though unfortunately, these things, strangely enough, rarely lead to true happiness or fulfillment. The world is getting better but that in and of itself will only lead to a grander feeling of dissatisfaction.

The lot of wealthy individual is a steady diet of malaise and such is our collective fate. Personally, I'm looking forward to it.



(*) Facebook as a company is the leader at the moment. What it does is invaluable to us as a people, but Facebook itself can be replaced by next Tuesday. It may have a first mover advantage on the business end but it can flame out and die on the cultural end that could be catastropic and immediate. The technology will advance and continue on, but the culture may well reevaluate Facebook out of existence with a quickness.

(**) In the West we have more or less replaced these pitched battles with soccer and football (both actually derived from rugby). We have turned the grubby, ugly, dangerous business of battle into a money making mass entertainment. Not to everyone's tastes but I enjoy it and there are a plethora of other educational and/or time killing endeavors out there for those that don't care for sport.

(***) Basically put: wealth is not equal in society because it was not equal in nature. The Arabs got all that sand, the Eskimos got all that snow, how do we ever make them "equal"? What would that mean and what would be the purpose of it? Is there a single definition of "equal"?

Wednesday, February 21, 2018

Me (Part One)

I listened to a podcast the other day of two foreign policy gurus trying to rigidly define their own philosophical beliefs. Frankly I thought it was an annoying conversation and kinda pointless. But I invariably found myself trying to define my own views in reference to their beltway delineations. I'd like to get to an examination of my larger philosophical views but I feel like I have to place myself within the contemporary political milieu before I move on.

I've written this here before but just to reiterate: I grew up in a Libertarian household. I am not a Libertarian but I highlight this for two reasons: 1) I have never been a Democrat or a Republican and feel no fealty to either party and 2) I believe the gov't's purpose is to protect and promote the citizenry's access to free markets, anything else discussed is just politics, not gov't. I am not a natural born political person, indeed I eschew all that partisan stuff with a fury. The parties are not the gov't and their manipulative bickering is utterly self-serving and only tangentially beneficial to the republic (if at all). The flaw of the Republican Party is that they want unlimited economic growth but they don't want anything to ever change socially (which clearly ignores the fact that economic growth is a result of innovation (re: new stuff) which by its very nature is either a cause or effect of some change in the society); the flaw of the Democratic Party is they want unlimited personal expression but they don't see that as a function of living in a thriving economy (I'm not going to make the argument that rich people are better than poor people, but its clear that wealthier people have more opportunities of expression and by extension more self to express and by locking people into poverty you are cutting off their ability to grow as human beings; thus the point is to grow as many people wealthy as possible)). Also, I'm a foreign policy watcher as opposed to being a domestic political animal, which makes the Libertarian Party pretty much useless to me, as they seem to think that beyond America's borders is nothing but ocean. So I have no political affiliation and I find our contemporary cultural fascination with making everything political to be self-defeating (and really annoying).

The current political obsession (at least what I get from NPR each morning when my alarm goes off) is Donald Trump's relation to Russian provocateurs during the 2016 election. My gut feeling is that in an investigation of this sort Trump and his crew are the easiest part to follow, such that anything there is to find has already been found. What smoking guns could possibly be out there at this point? In the political realm, this doesn't matter. The point is to extend the investigation merely to besmirch Trump's reputation (wow, that's like throwing rotten fruit at a pile of rotten vegetables!) and I expect the investigation to last at least through the mid-term elections in November with or without new revelations. Do I have a rooting interest? No, not really. This is just what politicians do to each other nowadays. Ever since Newt Gingrich went full throttle after Bill Clinton in the 1990s, this is just par for the course (I'm sure this behavior goes further back than that, but that's my personal recollection). And if Trump is guilty (or guilty-looking enough) to get impeached, what do I care? We'll just get a new president that I probably won't pay much attention to and who will inherit a large chunk of population dedicated to thwarting him on day one regardless of his interactions with Russian trolls (indeed, if we think of Trump as illegitimate, wouldn't we think that even more of Pence?).

Do I think Donald Trump is guilty of collusion with Russian agents? No, but that doesn't really matter. I have no doubt that foreign agents are cyber-attacking the USA every single day, which is why I paid no mind to the original accusations against Hillary Clinton before the election. Dude, I assure you the Pentagon and the State Department are getting hacked right now (and will be again if you read these words again), it's just the way of things these days. I doubt Hillary Clinton did less than her duty in protecting the contents of gov't servers and I doubt Donald Trump did either--which is not to say that either or both of them are innocent of malfeasance. Cybersecurity is a full time job and I doubt Hillary Clinton or Donald Trump (or Vladimir Putin) have ever held that job or pondered very deeply on the topic. And why stop at the gov't? Amazon, Wal-Mart, Facebook and Google have much more valuable stores of info waiting to be hacked--the difference is they're actually going to do something about it whereas the gov't is always last to figure out what's going on.

I'll go ahead and say something controversial: I believe that Donald Trump won the 2016 election because Americans went to the polls and voted for him. I don't know why they did and I'm convinced that Trump was as surprised by that as I was, but I believe the Americans chose the person they wanted to be president free from Russian interference. Were Russians interfering? Oh, undoubtedly, as Russians hackers attempt to interfere with everything all the time, whether or not there's an election on. But Americans aren't swayed by Facebook, it is a place to confirm what they already believe, not a place to encounter new ideas.

Investigations have already proven that Russian agents took out numerous Facebook ads in 2016...this is proof to me that there was no Russian interference. How many Japanese Facebook ads were there in 2016? How about Ethiopian? French? Lithuanian? Or do we assume that Russia is the only country that has access to Facebook and a rooting interest in American elections? And let me get this straight: is the Mueller investigation trying to prove that Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin met in a hotel room in Atlantic City so that Trump could help Putin....buy some Facebook ads? Hmmm, I doubt that happened and even if it did, it doesn't have anything to do with the election. Were Russian hackers meddling in American affairs? Yes, of course they were. They still are and have been for as long as computers have been available in Russia. What does that have to do with Donald Trump or Hillary Clinton? Nothing. Why would it?

I say all that to dismiss this political witchhunt stuff pronto. I doubt that anything nefarious happened, I doubt that it would matter even if nefarious things did happen, I doubt there'd be proof available to find if anything happened anyway, and I doubt that any of it had any effect on the election. And even if I'm completely wrong and Trump is guilty, I still don't care. I am convinced this is all just political noise (*). Putting the executive under permanent investigation isn't necessarily a bad thing, though in this environment, it's just prurient entertainment rather than serious inquiry, which is sad and wasteful but not atypical in our culture. I would note at the moment that the waste is mostly on the Left: every morning that NPR babbles about Trump it's a morning they're not babbling about the environment or labor relations or healthcare or race issues, etc. NPR is abrogating their responsibility to a myriad of other issues because they'd rather feed the schadenfreude of their Hillary-voting listeners. Oh well, their loss.

Do I like Donald Trump? No. The nicest thing I can say about him is I rather enjoy having a president that I can comfortably ignore. My problem with Barack Obama for example was that I kept trying to like the guy, but what was there to like? His empty rhetoric was more gentle and soothing than most politicians...but every bit as empty. At least with Trump I am confident I have no chance of liking him or in any way needing to hear anything he says. A friend of mine recently lamented the awful spectacle kids today are growing up with, but I think its good for children to learn early on that the President of the United States is not really someone worth paying attention to. POTUS is a fungible commodity and as I've suggested in previous posts, it is a purely political position with more responsibility than power and thus mostly just a suffering of slings and arrows. I don't need the President to reassure me or entertainment me or whatever it is people get out of listening to the President talk. And with Trump around, that feeling is only magnified.

As a foreign policy guy, have I seen any changes in American policy in Trump's first year? Not really. North Korea has dominated Trump's agenda so far but I would suggest that North Korea is a can that presidents have been kicking down the road for decades and the end of the road seems to be approaching. Trump has seized on it for the purpose of selling weapons systems in Asia the way Obama seized on Putin's adventures in Ukraine to sell weapon systems in Eastern Europe. Trump is a little louder than previous presidents but the policy itself is no different. (I think as soon as the Winter Olympics is over all the rhetoric from both sides will ramp back up and I think military action is a strong possibility; I'll expand on this in a future post)

Trade policy is clearly something Trump...well, talks a lot about. Yes, he kinda talks like a Neanderthal but rhetoric is part of the process. The reportage of rhetoric is part of it too: NAFTA re-negotiations were set to take place regardless of who won the election but if Hillary had been elected I'm sure we'd hear less about it. The American public would probably just get random vague updates of 'everything's fine' whether it was fine or not; whereas Trump's style is to bluster around in public when this is the kind of thing most politicians would soft pedal in the press. Oh well, that's the man's style. Maybe it'll work, maybe not. I dunno. I can understand why people wouldn't like his style but I wouldn't say that the style in and of itself is illegitimate or guaranteed to fail. I don't know that it is. Is the actual negotiation any different? Probably not. The negotiations themselves will be handled by a variety of under-secretaries steeped in farm subsidies and tobacco regulations and emissions measurements and blah blah blah details that no single person could possibly understand. I think the public relations is unique to Trump but the actual deal itself is not likely to be wildly different from what President Hillary would've ended up with.

Both disavowed the TPP (which actually perfectly dovetailed with Trump's wariness of China though he never seemed to notice that), with Trump suggesting that multi-lateral deals are inherently bad; I don't mind more bi-lateral deals but to suggest the multi-lateral deals are a priori bad is just a dumb thing for a president to say even if he actually believes it.

Trump removed USA from the Paris Climate Accord. Meh. The Accord itself is nothing but symbolism and removing USA from the Accord is also nothing but symbolism. And when the next president puts USA back in the Accord, it'll still be nothing but symbolism. I don't see that it has any effect whatsoever on the actual environment or even on the nature of int'l environmental negotiation. In short, the Accord never meant anything to me so USA not being in it doesn't mean anything to me (and USA inevitably triumphantly returning to it will still mean nothing to me). Removing USA from the Accord was just a piece of pure rhetoric designed to be a finger in the eye of Trump's political enemies (because...well, honestly, the Accord doesn't have any other purpose). Yeah, I think it's stupid but the way politicians talk to each other has been stupid for hundreds of years (**).

Trump pledged to move the American embassy in Israel to Jerusalem, causing much uproar around the globe. But why? Do you realize that Congress just passed that same resolution last summer? Do you realize that every American president since HW Bush (and most all of the losing candidates) have made the same pledge? Moving the embassy to Jerusalem is something that has been pledged numerous times in the last 20 years, why does everyone care now? Moving an embassy will take at least 10 years, no way this happens until after Trump's well out of office--which is the same as saying it won't happen. So this move that won't happen that has been promised many times before...why does everyone care now? Y'all pay much too attention to Trump. He's just a doofus with a Twitter account. But he's president, you say; yeah, the president is a doofus with a Twitter account. He's president so most everything he says is gonna be empty nonsense and he's Donald Trump, which only ups the percentage of empty nonsense to come from his mouth. So why does everyone pay attention to him? I don't get it, I find him very easy to ignore.

Trump constantly threatens to revoke (or rescind or not renew or whatever the proper language is) the Iran nuclear accord. Critics of Trump suggest this is simply a move to un-do the Obama legacy and while that is certainly part of Trump's calculus, I think these critics are underestimating the power this talk has on Iran's actions. The recent protests in Iran were largely about the Iranian population's dissatisfaction with gov't spending and foreign policy signaling a desire for a gov't more responsive to the citizenry. Now I don't think the Iranian leadership is feeling particularly threatened by this but they have been warned that the people will be pissed if the economy returns to its pre-nuclear deal state. And Trump can exert a great deal of leverage over that. Most presidents are more politic about how they use their leverage, most aren't as naked as Trump, but all presidents do what they need to do to get the best deal. All of them. So, again, while his style is kinda crass, in this case the end effect is not wildly out of line from what US presidents do all the time.

Trump's obsession with border walls, travel restrictions and trade embargoes strikes me as a serious step backward that I cannot endorse in any way. But realistically they are tools available to an executive and politically speaking they're not wildly out of left field. Bill Clinton built most of the wall we currently have with Mexico (which was initially built by Mexico, incidentally). Countries have borders, sometimes delineated by walls but virtually always accompanied by some kind of bureaucratic formality. I personally don't believe more walls are necessary, barriers work both ways and I'm never in favor of more of them. But discussing how best to protect our borders is not inherently racist or even xenophobic. It wouldn't be the top of my agenda if I were president--and I don't agree with Trump's position--but the fact that he has a position is not shocking or particularly threatening. This is all part of the debate that gov'ts have.

As for travel restrictions I'll resort to another contemporary political argument: gun advocates like to suggest that regulating guns will only leave guns in the hands of the criminals as the laws are only effective on the law-abiding. Likewise with travel restrictions: the 'bad dudes' you're trying to keep out will find some other method to get here because they're not coming here to follow the laws. The only people affected by travel restrictions are the people that will honor our customs--which is precisely the people we should welcome! This is is the one area of Trump's potential alienation of our allies that worries me: we're more likely to keep out allies than enemies with policies or even rhetoric like this.

Trade barriers are stupid 100% of the time. Trade should be unfettered forever. Even in the middle of war, I'd be inclined to trade with our enemies. Trade is a human right not a hostage of the State!

Trump wants to increase military spending, but that's certainly nothing new. I perceive this as a subtle reach toward bi-partisanship more than militaristic bluster.

Trump is critical of NATO and while I don't want to say I agree with him, I do think he has a point: Europe should be embracing their own defense as a means of establishing a common identity and to funnel their energies into their own protection rather than waiting for someone else to do it. I don't say that as an aggrieved American but as someone that wants to see a strong Europe. I think Europe is missing a big opportunity to coalesce and industrialize and become truly more independent. The EU merely takes baby steps in this direction and Trump hasn't actually instituted any kind of diminution of American influence in NATO, which I think even he would see as a mistake. I would suggest NATO is a clear example of the difference between his rhetoric (riling up voters for America first-ness) and reality (NATO gives USA ungodly amounts of control over Europe, foolish for any president to give that up).

Cyber-security, for better or worse, is something Trump is going to reshape considerably. I know nothing about that stuff but I can tell it's high priority in the bureaucracy these days. I can only hope the powers that be (and that surely does not include Trump) will make the right choices and allocate wisely. (Won't stop Russian trolls--or other foreign entities--from meddling in our elections, though. Just saying...)

Domestically, Trump was able to push through a tax cut, which his benefactors must've truly appreciated (and given the looming interest rate hikes coming in 2018, probably not a bad idea for economic stimulation). And he was more or less able to deconstruct Obama-care but I'm undecided on that topic: the larger population needs something but I don't know that Obama-care was it. I was impressed by its ability to make insurance available to more people but not impressed with its ability to make AFFORDABLE insurance available to more people. (And, oh by the way: insurance is not healthcare, it is the monied bureaucracy behind healthcare, which is not at all the same thing. The fact that we started with more bureaucracy rather than more healthcare was the red flag that Obama-care was not the savior of our republic. That said, scrapping it without a new plan in place is hardly a bold leap forward) I suspect that after November Trump may introduce some new health care plans (I recall him being a fan of dedicated savings accounts for healthcare, which isn't a bad start).

And, yeah, Trump talks talks talks in a manner that the NPR crowd really can't stand. But what do I care? 30 seconds of NPR and I'm out of bed turning off the radio like a champ. Otherwise...I dunno....is there something truly noteworthy about Trump? He's an idiot (Touche. But hardly America's first idiot). He's sexist and racist (Oh, he's a pig but I'm not sure how deeply that touches his legislative or foreign policy agenda; his weakness is blind support for the people that support him). He's bad for our children (Too much TV or social media is bad for everyone and that's where you're most likely to see Trump, so to preserve your health, turn it off). He's bad for gov't (I'd say the worst part of Trump on that level is that he was so shocked to win that he was way behind on a proper transition team which has left him with numerous unfilled posts and surrounded by folks that can't survive the political tribulations; but I can't help thinking that that's his problem, not mine). I dunno....are there other complaints?

I don't like Trump, I just don't care about him or his pointless talk (I suspect I'd think the same of President Hillary). I wanted to like President Obama but he was such a weak executive and he wasn't a foreign policy guy. I wanted to dislike George W. Bush and Bill Clinton, but rather liked them both. I didn't realize how much I liked HW Bush until he was long out of office. To echo the author David Halberstam: I didn't care for President Reagan but a lot of folks that I respect liked him a lot, so I feel conflicted. I only vaguely remember Jimmy Carter (but my studies have led me to believe he was one of the worst presidents we've ever had and that the mid-1970's in general were among America's most difficult periods to govern in a variety of ways). I don't remember Ford (and he doesn't really count anyway) and Nixon was gone by the time I was of TV-watching age. Those are the presidents of my lifetime. (***)

I was hoping to avoid ever talking about Trump on this blog but I felt I had to get a belch of it out of the way before I moved on to other things. So in future posts I will return to the opening paragraph and try to define myself as myself now that I've tried to place myself within the contemporary landscape. (Whew! I look forward to never thinking about most of this domestic junk ever again!)


(*) If the goal is to get Trump impeached, I'd suggest going after these porn star liaisons that are coming out of the woodwork. If he's paying them off out of campaign funds, then lawsuits start happening and Congress gets moving. This Russia stuff is not really meant to be discovered--do you think Congressional Republicans really wanted to know what was going on in Benghazi? No, they just wanted to look like they were trying to get to the bottom of something. And Mueller is hoping every day that he finds only enough to string this along and let other events dictate whether he condemns Trump or not.

(**) Go back and study the election of 1800. Thomas Jefferson and John Adams--those guys are on your money!--saying the most embarrassing, mean-spirited lies about each other just to be president. Its sad and stupid and wasteful and the way we've been doing it since the very beginning. If you think it used to be better then you've never studied history.

(***) And just for good measure, here's a quick rundown of the thwarted candidates of my lifetime: Mondale (good god, I think he would've been awful), Dukakis (such a poor candidate, so uninspiring, had so little to offer), Dole (born to be in the Senate, don't see why he even wanted the White House), Gore (don't get me started: one of my least favorite humans of all time), Kerry (didn't even looked like he wanted to be president, though I thought a shockingly competent Secretary of State), McCain (meh, he was too old, didn't really think one way or the other about him), Romney (the ultimate stuffed shirt Republican), Hillary (I've written on this blog that I thought her presidency would have been like George W. Bush's presidency with a bit more success in pragmatic bi-partisanship).

Monday, February 19, 2018

The Mueller Investigation

After a year of diligent searching, the Mueller investigation has finally handed down its first indictments: a handful of Russian hackers working for a few minor Russian corporations. The crime was identity theft and some mail fraud, etc.: Russian agents stole identities to create bank accounts which in turn were used in social media events. Their aim seems to have been thwarting Hillary Clinton and using American social networking sites to generally spew out hamfisted propaganda against her and in favor of her opponents. There is no mention of Donald Trump or Vladimir Putin being anywhere near this stuff, though we may assume that this is the initial volley of indictments rather than the culimnation of the process.

Okay...so what? Russian trolls are hacking the United States in some way every single day and have been for years. I would submit China, Israel, France, UK, Iran and any number of Latin American countries have been, too. This is the way of modern technology, it has little to do with politics. If I were a hacker I wouldn't care about the gov't, I'd rather get into Amazon or the banks (who get hacked all the freakin' time!), those are the places with worthwhile information. And, as for American elections, well, as an American I've been unimpressed with them my whole lifetime, don't really see why any foreinger would care. But the scuttlebutt around this is Putin was angry with Hillary Clinton (and Goldman Sachs, another great target for hackers) over the release of the Panama Papers in 2015, which damaged Putin's money laundering schemes and which he took as a personal attack by Hillary. The 2016 election meddling seems to have begun with an 'anyone but Hillary' mindset that favored Bernie Sanders initially and Donald Trump later on.

Does this prove collusion? No. It doesn't even suggest collusion. Foreign agents wouldn't need collusion--indeed, trying to reach out to any American politicians in the middle of this would probably be a really bad idea! They wanted to rile up the voters--not the politicians--and with Facebook, etc., that is easily done because Americans are in a permanently riled up state anyway.

So does this prove that the Russian interference made a difference in the 2016 election? No. To my mind, it shows the exact opposite. Americans are primed to support the candidate they like and to hate the candidate they don't like and any piece of info that confirms their initial prejudices is likely to be seized on regardless of its source. Undecided voters (the ones that actually swing the elections in America) are probably less prone to this kind of propaganda because they're likely to give it very little of their attention.

Americans tells lies about each other all day long, why would a foreigner saying it make any difference? Foreigners with access to the internet can participate in this on-line discussion just like everyone else, doesn't strike me as illegal or out of the ordinary in any way. Now identity theft and wire fraud are a different story and that's why these folks will get prosecuted (if they ever come to America). (Incidentally, identity theft, foreign or domestic, is going to be the real scourge of the digital future and something we as a society ought to be more worried about)

The thing that gets me is that it took Mueller a year to get to some rather minor identity theft and not much else. Well, this is pretty ordinary Russian spy stuff, this undoubtedly went on all through the Cold War, nothing special about this at all. But Obama suggested in a press conference before the election that there was Russian interference and there is a kinda famous (though possibly apocryphal) story that Obama pulled Putin aside at the G-20 Summit in September 2016 and told him to stop meddling in USA's elections. What info did Obama have at the time? Surely he had more than these minor incidents that it took the Mueller investigation more than a year to come up with.

I don't have a problem with the FBI investigating foreign interference in our culture (though that's basically what the NSA was invented to do, why aren't they more prominent in this?), actually I assume there is a division of the FBI that does nothing but track down foreign hackers. And it does seem like there is credible reason to specifically aim at interference in the 2016 election, that investigation should be taking place. But we needn't talk it about 24 hours a day, cranking it up to the most important story of the day is ridiculous, unrealistic, interferes with the investigation and is precisely what our enemies were trying to accomplish.

But why haven't investigators discovered anything more than this in the year and a half that we've known about it? And is this what Obama knew back in September 2016? Come on man, there must have been more indication than this back then for the Presdeint of the United States to pull the leader of another country aside to comment on.

Initially I tried to characterize this story as the confluence of two other recent stories: the FBI's inability to prevent a school shooting in Florida despite warnings of the assailant's potential for violence and a number of Russian mercenaries killed in combat with American forces in Syria (who worked for one of the companies indicted by Mueller, by the way). Something about the FBI's lack of will to detain someone simply because of nonsensical rantings on Facebook and the Russian gov't using private citizens to perform state-related functions but this is just a collection of rabbit holes I'd rather leave uninspected. Suffice to say, citizens do things their gov'ts can't stop but may manipulate to their own ends sfter the fact.

Hackers, Russian and otherwise, are at work 24 hours a day on the internet. Potentially deadly killers are out there, too, plotting the next atrocity. The FBI can investigate but can't predict their crimes or prevent them; the Putin administration can pay agents to commit acts of Russian nationalism but won't acknowledge them or protect them or give them a state funeral in the end. And all the while Ameicans will continue to look to the collective madness of Facebook for self-definition, where soundbites, snapshorts and initial impressions lead to vitriole and suspicion rather than knowledge. 

At any rate, we're no closer to impeaching Donald Trump, protecting our digital Republic, or concluding the endless swirl of propaganda this story has unleashed. We live in a stream of digital propaganda, Mueller's mission is to step in it twice.