As feared, the Betfair oddsmakers have now judged the probability of
us saying "President Andrew Yang" with a straight face in January 2021
to be less than 2%, so we've dropped him from
this week's table. They have also up-bumped Trump to slightly better
than even odds.
I hear a couple of debates are
scheduled
for the upcoming week, and that could mean big changes, especially if
Wheezy Joe starts babbling even less coherently than usual.
I also learned that if you
Google
"Democrat debates", Google will chide you:
Did you mean:Democratic debates
Shut up, Google. I know what I meant.
Despite losing 5.73 million hits over the past week, Trump still is in a
commanding phony lead, with a nearly three-to-one advantage over Bernie,
his closest competitor:
"WinProb" calculation described
here.
Google result counts are bogus.
(paid link)
At Patterico's Pontifications, JVW does an excellent job of
visiting the candidates' websites and
Rating
the Campaign Swag. Recommended because it is funny. Sample:
Julián Castro cartoon portrait stickers
In perusing Secretary Castro’s online store, I see that he makes heavy use of the diacritic (acento in Spanish) over the “a” in Julián, turning it into what I guess is supposed to be a flame. They also feature a bunch of merchandise with a theme of Adiós Trump He’s selling Obamaesque stickers which the store refers to as a lotería, a word I only know to mean “lottery.” Is there another translation of the word that I am unaware of? I guess we can’t ask Mr. Castro himself, since he doesn’t actually speak Spanish, acento notwithstanding.
Sample acento-style sign available from Amazon, at your
right. $15.99 quantity one, but (incredible deal) $49.99 will get
you ten! Because your neighbors will be ten times more persuaded by
ten signs than they would be by one!
[Update, October 2022: that Amazon link broke. Replaced (for now) with a different sign, which
will set you back (as I type) $27.07, quantity 1. A little Googling seems to show that Castro
is on a trajectory to irrelevant obscurity, but who knows? He's still young.]
A bit of Bernie news caused much amusement among minimum wage
skeptics. Some (salaried) campaign workers were able to do enough
math to determine they were being paid less than $15/hr. Horrors!
But that caused Bernie to do the Honorable Thing and raise their
pay cut their hours.
Unionized workers planned to send a letter to campaign manager Faiz Shakir which read that "many field staffers are barely managing to survive financially, which is severely impacting our team's productivity and morale." Some employees, they said, had even left the campaign as a result of the low pay.
Note: the workers "barely managing to survive" will still be
barely managing. But they'll have more leisure time to contemplate
their socialist misery.
(paid link)
Andy Puzder (former CEO of CKE Restaurants, which includes Hardee's
and Carl's Jr.) found himself
on Bernie's
Enemies
List. Because he's against the $15/hr minimum wage. So
(naturally) it was difficult to hide his glee when he penned this
WSJ op-ed:
Sanders
Belongs on His Own ‘Enemies’ List.
At any rate, I don’t hate Bernie, and there’s nothing personal about my disagreements with him. In my recent book, “The Capitalist Comeback,” I note that we got along pretty well the one time we met and I was impressed by his willingness to discuss issues on which we had some common ground, such as worker training and trade.
There are signs Mr. Sanders and I are even closer in our views than I thought. I believe people should take pride in meeting the needs of others. It is the essence of capitalism that individuals benefit personally from doing so. The result is prosperity and abundance. Socialism’s redistribution discourages them from aspiring to create more, causing poverty and want.
In an April Fox News town hall, Mr. Sanders seemed to agree. Asked about his personal wealth, he said: “If anyone thinks I should apologize for writing a best-selling book, I’m sorry, I’m not going to do it.” He was adamant in his defense of capitalist virtue: “If you write a best-selling book, you can be a millionaire, too.” What a great system!
I say: the system is rigged in favor of old socialist blowhards!
Prove me wrong.
South Bend Mayor Pete Buttigieg, who is running for the Democratic presidential nomination, wants to destroy the gig economy in order to save it. That's the takeaway from the Indiana mayor's new proposal, "A New Rising Tide: Empowering Workers in a Changing Economy."
"It's time to help our nation's workforce become more resilient, inclusive, and flexible, and more easily adapt to our dynamic, ever-changing economy," reads the plan, but its focus is to force more regulations on employers and increase unionization among workers, neither of which is likely to make it easier for the economy to grow or the workplace to "more easily adapt" to the needs of suppliers, workers, or consumers.
Wanted: a candidate who will forthrightly say: "I've never actually
run anything, except my mouth. So as President, I would be unwilling to demand, or even
suggest, that businesses bend to my sovereign will."
At Reason, Nick Gillespie read the documents and tried to find out what Senator
Warren's proposed breakup of big tech revealed. Alas:
Warren's
Proposed Breakup Of Big Tech Only Reveals Her Hypocrisy. There's
a lot to wade through, but I appreciated this vignette (warning:
pseudo-math in first sentence):
Warren’s vehemence correlates inversely with her coherence. Back in 2014, the Heritage Foundation worked on a coalition that would reach across political divides to end the Export-Import Bank. The bank is essentially a welfare program for Boeing, with a minor side hustle of lending to small businesses. Heritage contacted the famously anti-corporate Warren as a potential ally.
As Reason quipped, “Looks like the joke is on Heritage.” Said a spokesman to Bloomberg, “Sen. Warren believes that the Export-Import Bank helps create American jobs and spur economic growth, but recognizes that there is room for improvement in the bank’s operations. She looks forward to reviewing re-authorization legislation if and when it is introduced.”
She has had that opportunity, and has supported reauthorization without improvement at every turn. In 2017, President Donald Trump appointed Scott Garrett to lead the Ex-Im Bank. Garrett served in the Congress that voted not to renew the bank’s authorization a few years ago, but he pledged to the Senate’s banking committee to carry out the reforms that Warren has long claimed to want.
During testimony, Warren badgered him for “doing what was politically convenient.” She accused him, as a congressman, of costing Massachusetts “real jobs.” Warren’s melange of anti-corporate, pro-jobs, reformist, and anti-reformist sentiments come together with all the philosophical rigor of a pot of spaghetti.
Why it's almost as if she's just interested in getting political
power, and will say anything, no matter how self-contradictory, to get it.
Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) has built much of her political career as a champion of workers and consumers against the deceptive and exploitative practices of corporations and employers.
But as she navigates the latest chapter of that career arc—a run for the Democratic nomination for the presidency—the Massachusetts Democrat faces criticism from several of her own supporters who said the lowest tier of her campaign structure doesn’t match the image she projects.
Two early converts to Warren described the process for entry into her campaign’s volunteer fellowship program as deceptive and at times exploitative in interviews with The Daily Beast. They said they were pushed toward unpaid positions over paid ones, misled over the availability of financial assistance, and asked to sign highly restrictive nondisclosure agreements that worker advocacy groups concede are irregular. Both applicants verified their accounts with emails and text messages from the Warren campaign.
I am sorely disappointed completely unsurprised when
Democrats run their campaigns more abusively than the businesses
they deride.
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