Wednesday AM ~ TheFrontPageCover

TheFrontPageCover
~ Featuring ~
The Road to Crony Capitalism An Introduction 
1LBrvYgTz5UDB66QgDzuCRZrU63gSoN_VFHju5VUmjG4kENUL8uTCEuNjQbKQpzbcwMWzRPSmjDnRNnsl6N4uOxMTc9fGDabsp8ydH3cQw7NrGJ3e6auJ3nJ=s0-d-e1-ft#%3Ca%20rel%3Dnofollow%20href=?width=400 
by ROBERT M. WHAPLES  
AGHnzvDgAIc_dkrUO59jF21LrUmiQ79dA3RIshU-YlAdfSFPOhc54BmJs1OTRtvnrEX-cCbeiMVXdurlydL03p7YzXsWg_6cAavWTIOYU1PogQU4ftAjtXM=s0-d-e1-ft#%3Ca%20rel%3Dnofollow%20href=
.
Congressional GOP Is Why America 
Doesn’t Have a Wall
kpX93I28wauNtbUDZ6lt2xCSHkRD3kwfuQkTRue259rul6uU6LpoJr8PdEdIvpXyWHimu3ihNuaPI_5zeIlJAdXVhqYztpRO0R0WBO8RpBS9AfuFi_hMWPg-3F7Hv9LP0L9HnCGhYidVw_yRw_ARXk0yYqJitU1fGr4=s0-d-e1-ft#%3Ca%20rel%3Dnofollow%20href=?width=400by BRANDON J. WEICHERT
{spectator.org} ~ In a recent poll conducted by Harvard University of all places, 80 percent of all voters say the United States needs a secure border — including 68 percent of Democratic Party voters... Meanwhile, 79 percent of voters polled by Harvard want immigration status to be conferred to those who have the “ability to contribute to America” with 87 percent of Republicans and 72 percent of Democrats agreeing with that claim. Essentially, despite what the punditariat may claim, President Donald Trump is on the right side of one of the most pressing issues of our time. This comes on the heels of another tragic story involving the murder of a police officer conducting a routine traffic stop in California at the hands of an illegal immigrant. One of the most striking differences between this tragedy and similar ones involving illegal immigrants murdering peace officers is the fact that the policeman in question was himself an immigrant. In this case, Corporal Ronil Singh of the Newman Police Department, a legal immigrant and proud father of a young, baby boy, was slain by an illegal immigrant known to law enforcement, who possessed a long record of criminal gang activity and other nefarious connections. Unfortunately, the Democratic Party’s sanctuary city policy in California prevented law enforcement from contacting the federal immigration authorities to begin deportation proceedings. Corporal Singh would still be alive today — living the American Dream as so many of his friends and neighbors said of him — had it not been for Democratic Party orthodoxy. The dominant opinion among the elite in the United States is that those who desire stronger immigration enforcement and border security are somehow throwbacks to a bygone era; they must be white supremacists seeking to maintain their monopoly on political power or something. Yet, Corporal Singh is just the most recent in a long line of innocent Americans who have suffered because of the destructive immigration policies of the Democratic Party as well as their enablers in the Republican Party establishment. Presently, the federal government is undergoing a purportedly devastating shutdown at least that’s what my Swamp Dwelling neighbors tell me in Alexandria, Virginia mainly because the Republican Party couldn’t get its act together what else is new? You see, the GOP was given a great gift by the American voter: they were granted dominion over the United States House of Representatives, the Senate, and the presidency in 2016. Yet, don’t tell that to the Republican establishment. After dominating every aspect of government for two years, the GOP has little to show for their monumental electoral victory in 2016...  https://spectator.org/congressional-republicans-are-why-america-doesnt-have-a-wall/?utm_source=Daily+Afternoon+Email&utm_campaign=d00b891eb5-EMAIL_CAMPAIGN_2018_12_31_06_41&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_d65fc4e11e-d00b891eb5-104762253 
Giuliani says dirty cop-Mueller’s investigation
deserves to be investigated as well
sAtozKkUTK7h3jJToO-W0Uw6uSzftsrd5VyeB9l8qetyEsEY5l2lqVRvxNCpGcSpZoP0mMJ_K-jJ0x4NOuPTA_hXkamWHNTxzhGt0ZmnN4q2IhdBqE0iFNAvd9wa6yTJqvr_DmO6IdmUK_ud=s0-d-e1-ft#%3Ca%20rel%3Dnofollow%20href=?width=300by Ben Marquis
{patriotnewsalerts.com} ~ There are times in life when the hunter becomes the hunted and the predator becomes prey, and in those moments, when the targeter finds himself targeted can be incredibly panic-inducing... perhaps even to the point of causing a heart attack. Special Counsel dirty cop-Robert Mueller may very well have felt his heart skip a beat this week when he heard one of President Donald Trump’s top attorneys, Rudy Giuliani, suggest that the Democrat-heralded anti-Trump investigator was worthy of being investigated for his own wrongdoings as well. Giuliani recently suggested to Buck Sexton and John Solomon of The Hill that 2019 could see something of a reversal in that dirty cop-Mueller may soon find himself on the wrong end of a government investigation. “dirty cop-Mueller should be investigated for destruction of evidence for allowing those text messages from Strzok to be erased, messages that would show the state of mind and tactics of his lead anti-Trump FBI agent at the start of his probe,” Giuliani said.The former New York City mayor was referencing the revelation from the Justice Department inspector general that thousands of text messages between former FBI agent Peter Strozk and former FBI lawyer Lisa Page had been erased during the time period in which both overtly anti-Trump individuals were working for the dirty cop-Mueller investigation. “That should be investigated, damn it, that should be investigated fully. You want a special counsel, get one for that,” Giuliani added...  https://www.patriotnewsalerts.com/giuliani-muellers-deserves-investigated/
.
The Divine Right of Democrats to Drool
qDz-GrRmYpMDzRVw-GcNUevi-OQU0XAFYKztGm4VLKh8ZbhHOd_NCBAQoR4tldJvT53CqaGWFukIPQxlvdafZ21186yS2fqJiWeQfBgT0SUTg7vc9V7CEO1fRzWyxOU3PuUlvcfBn5fIqid56nkHp0h7D_qlfklk2eo=s0-d-e1-ft#%3Ca%20rel%3Dnofollow%20href=?width=400by DAVID CATRON
{spectator.org} ~ Many longtime liberals find themselves bewildered at the continued antics of the Democrats at a time when they have a real, albeit small, window of opportunity... to demonstrate that they have some acquaintance with the art of responsible governance. Thoughtful people like law professors Jonathan Turley and Alan Dershowitz, who understand that the nation’s polity will be far healthier if both major parties approach real issues seriously, are unable to understand why so few Democrats see that the perpetuation of puerile nihilism driven by unabated hatred of President Trump will end in disaster. Turley puts it thus: In this age of rage, voters seem to have no patience, let alone need, for leaders speaking of abstract principles. They want immediate unequivocal action.… For Democrats, that all consuming purpose has led to the abandonment of core unifying values, including many that first drew me to the Democratic Party. The explanation for this loss of the party’s soul to an unquenchable and wholly emotional desire to destroy Trump is captured in a one-sentence observation by Cicero with which Turley is certainly familiar: “Those who do not know history will forever remain children.” There is very little chance that the kindergartners of the Democratic resistance would recognize Turley’s allusion to the fabled “Days of Rage.” Nor do they grasp that their collective tantrum and lurch to the left is reminiscent of that which eventually produced the suicidal Democratic nomination of George McGovern and President Nixon’s 1972 landslide. Thus, like so many angry children, nothing less than Donald Trump’s head on a platter will mollify them. It doesn’t matter to this bumptious brood that someone has to produce at least a plausible case proving his guilt of the “crimes and misdemeanors” without which no majority in the House of Representatives will try to impeach the President. This is what Alan Dershowitz, who leans farther to the left than Turley, has been trying to tell anyone who will listen, but that’s an ever shrinking audience in the media. Most want to hear that Trump is going down. In a recent discussion with Joe Concha for the Hill, he said: I used to be, for example, on CNN more often than on Fox. I was a regular, not paid, but just a person who was on all the time debating with Toobin, debating with others…. I haven’t been on CNN, now, since the summer, and Fox calls me all the time.… I’d love to be available to people who watch all channels.” But Dershowitz is in the unfortunate habit of dealing in realities not well suited for les enfants en colère. They want Trump impeached pursuant to the meandering dirty cop-Mueller investigation. Unfortunately for them, that farce is unlikely to do the job or it would have been leaked to the media by now. What about Flynn? What about the great Cohen bust? The Flynn plea was obviously a piece of FBI legerdemain whereby they entrapped him using a law designed to manufacture crimes rather than detect them and there’s nothing there than can hurt Trump. As to Cohen, this is what Dershowitz has been trying to explain...
.
House Republicans abruptly end
scumbag/liar-Clinton probe as they lose power to Dems
aC3CpeoQcrQIZn9pDUfLOmQIvymoHjo95Dg2CeYP_8nyig646ikoWoClOrS7gnyDgn3CgvT9quyaGZ7F31ODBDnM-zxg4tqYIPXcYFxWK6Tkj3MX7be7fZOUZdMkDY_OBf0jNrvtEZs=s0-d-e1-ft#%3Ca%20rel%3Dnofollow%20href=?width=300by Ben Marquis
{patriotnewsalerts.com} ~ With a Democrat majority set to take control of the House of Representatives, it was made abundantly clear that all Republican-led committee investigations would be killed... and a whole new swath of Democrat-led investigations into President Donald Trump would be launched.  No doubt with that in mind, the Republican leaders of two major committees have formally ended their joint investigation into how the FBI had handled the investigation of former Secretary of State scum bag/liar-Hillary Clinton’s private email server scandal, though they shared their remaining concerns in a publicized letter. Outgoing committee chairs Bob Goodlatte and Trey Gowdy — of the Judiciary and Oversight Committees, respectively — sent a six-page letter to Acting Attorney General Matt Whitaker, Department of Justice Inspector General Michael Horowitz, and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell informing them of the closure of the investigation. They also documented their many “serious questions and concerns” about the “thoroughness and impartiality” of the FBI’s scumbag/liar-Clinton investigation, especially as compared to how the Trump-Russia investigation had been handled...
.
Victimhood Culture and Traditional 
Justice Are on a Collision Course 
5I1hc5xb6-n3EF2EfUXMGvWyD0oS5eQOqI_w0YYxUavJbFNjyw8rrWOuTqGKLdE6o6eP8TuaFd3nLeIZn29tNK0vhr0H4lbOAypOdboNPCivJ6fiLnrzR0e_TgPGRg=s0-d-e1-ft#%3Ca%20rel%3Dnofollow%20href=?width=400
by Wendy McElroy
{thehill.com} ~ “I just want to say to the men in this country, just shut up and step up.” Responding to Brett Kavanaugh’s hearing for his nomination to the Supreme Court... Sen. scumbag-Mazie Hirono (D-Hawaii) put American men on notice: Their day was over. The mainstream press and social media were more specific in echoing who needed to shut up: old white men in government. According to social justice, the proper role for this privileged group is to mutely support victimized ones. Presumably, they could also step aside. Congress has a culture war on its hands and the battles will blaze for the foreseeable future. Congress is a microcosm of the schism that is tearing America apart--ideologically, morally and emotionally. Understanding the dynamics of the conflict requires a grasp of the “victimhood culture” that scumbag-Hirono’s statement epitomized in its message and its tone. The message of this #MeToo approach is “get out of the way of oppressed groups”; the tone is rage. A key to understanding the victimhood ideology is how it defines “justice.” Victimhood is an integral part of identity politics and the social justice movement of past decades. People are separated into categories according to their secondary characteristics, such as gender or race. Their primary characteristic is being human. A person’s political status is then viewed through the lens of his or her group identity, with heavy emphasis placed upon whether the group is considered to be oppressed or oppressive. Men oppress women, for instance. The purpose of social justice is to balance the status of all groups, which requires an imbalance of treatment because some groups are seemingly privileged at the expense of others...  https://thehill.com/opinion/civil-rights/415422-victimhood-culture-and-traditional-justice-are-on-a-collision-course
.
AGHnzvDgAIc_dkrUO59jF21LrUmiQ79dA3RIshU-YlAdfSFPOhc54BmJs1OTRtvnrEX-cCbeiMVXdurlydL03p7YzXsWg_6cAavWTIOYU1PogQU4ftAjtXM=s0-d-e1-ft#%3Ca%20rel%3Dnofollow%20href=
. 
The Road to Crony Capitalism An Introduction 
1LBrvYgTz5UDB66QgDzuCRZrU63gSoN_VFHju5VUmjG4kENUL8uTCEuNjQbKQpzbcwMWzRPSmjDnRNnsl6N4uOxMTc9fGDabsp8ydH3cQw7NrGJ3e6auJ3nJ=s0-d-e1-ft#%3Ca%20rel%3Dnofollow%20href=?width=400
by ROBERT M. WHAPLES  

{independent.org} ~ This issue of The Independent Review is intended to open up a debate about the nature of capitalism. My co-editor, Michael Munger, and his co-author, Mario Villarreal-Diaz, begin the discussion with a deeply disconcerting question: “Suppose it’s true that capitalism has a tendency—it’s not inevitable or irreversible, but a tendency nonetheless—to devolve into crony capitalism. Is laissez-faire simply the first step on a kind of road to serfdom, where giant corporate syndicates achieve a parallel kind of economic planning every bit as pernicious as that feared by Hayek?” They conclude by determining there’s a great deal to worry about: “It is at least possible that cronyism is intrinsic to and not separable from capitalism” (emphasis in the original). And they provide much evidence that it’s not simply a possibility but a reality—firms especially entrenched ones that are losing their innovative edge and politicians have strong incentives to travel down this road. 

To initiate the debate, Munger delivered the paper in a plenary session at the April 2018 meeting of the Association of Private Enterprise Education. We continue the debate with six papers that respond to Munger and Villarreal-Diaz’s cronyism argument. In addition, we invite readers to respond to “The Road to Crony Capitalism”—to consider how significant and inevitable the problem of crony capitalism is and to examine whether there are any real solutions to it—with the promise of publishing the best responses online alongside this issue of The Independent Review (send your formal comments to rwhaples@independent.org). 

In the first of the six responses, Geoffrey M. Hodgson, playing with another classic economics title, considers in “Capitalism, Cronyism, and Democracy” whether statistical evidence and history can help elucidate the question. Examining Munger and Villarreal-Diaz’s link between democracy and cronyism, that “allowing real democracy may doom real capitalism,” he finds a weak negative correlation between an international index of democracy and international indices of cronyism and corruption. However, his central argument is that “in the beginning there was cronyism.” Cronyism “has had much greater longevity than markets: it extends back to our simian ancestors. Trade . . . has been in existence for tens of thousands of years, but cronyism goes back millions of years. As a consequence, cronyism and corruption are not recent impositions on a market economy.” How can corruption and cronyism be reduced? 

Hodgson reports historical evidence that the establishment of a career civil service, a relatively free press, and especially military competition have favored a reduction in the governmental selling of favors. Burton W. Folsom Jr. sees considerable merit in Munger and Villarreal-Diaz’s thesis but argues from U.S. history that the slide toward crony capitalism isn’t so inevitable. He argues in “The Fall and Rise of Laissez-Faire in the United States, 1789–1900” that cronyism is as old as the republic but that there was a distinct backlash against it in the period between the Civil War and 1900. This backlash was spurred by the excesses of cronyism exemplified by the corruption behind handouts in both directions connected with the construction of the Union Pacific and Central Pacific transcontinental railroad. However, this relatively crony-free era didn’t survive the rise of the Progressives at the beginning of the twentieth century. Perhaps there are rest stops on the road to crony capitalism? 

Michelle Albert Vachris sees parallels between Munger and Villarreal-Diaz’s arguments and those of Edmund Phelps, who has identified a decline of “dynamism” in American society and business. She reports indications of this decline in statistics on falling business startup and entrepreneurship rates and rising levels of industrial concentration in the United States. However, there has been considerable churn in the firms at the top of the Fortune 500 list in recent decades. In her essay “Dynamism as a Bump on the Road to Crony Capitalism?” she amends Munger and Villarreal-Diaz’s thesis of capitalism’s inherent tendency toward cronyism by proposing that “well directed innovation” can stall the process. Such innovation would probably require a shift in cultural values and especially a greater appreciation of classical liberal ideals in our educational system and society as a whole. Perhaps “dynamism” is not merely a speed bump on the road but a U-turn? 

In “Crony Capitalism versus Pure Capitalism,” Walter E. Block fundamentally both agrees and disagrees with Munger and Villarreal-Diaz. He endorses their argument for creeping cronyism in the case of capitalism as we know it in the United States and warns that their “contribution consists of very accurately analyzing the forces that tend to move us in that baleful direction.” However, he notes that “their starting point is not at all the pure free-enterprise system,” which needn’t have this tendency. Rather, he says, they discuss whether a system already suffering from cronyism will stay the same, worsen, or improve. Block sees a ray of light in think tanks such as the Independent Institute that defend and advance free markets and submits that the problem would be cured if the capitalists asking for government favors such as tariffs were to be jailed—likewise the politicians who propose such laws that restrict entry into markets, industries, and professions. Hmm, could the police pull over these scofflaws for speeding down the road to crony capitalism? 

In “We Cannot Let Cronyism Overrun Our Economic Garden,” Nick Sorrentino argues that the “road” metaphor should be supplanted. “Cronyism is not a destination. It is, in fact, the landscape”—a garden full of weeds that we need to prune. Tending this garden is a thankless, never-ending task, but it must be accomplished if our economic garden is to flourish. However, he holds out considerable hope because “anticrony sentiment is embedded deep in the DNA of the everyday person,” so it may be possible to limit this weed by shining a spotlight upon it, making it generally unacceptable, politically incorrect, or at least unfashionable—something Sorrentino’s organization AC2News attempts to accomplish. 

In “Cronyism: Necessary for the Minimal, Protective State,” Christopher J. Coyne and Abigail R. Hall point out that “to the extent that capitalism requires the existence of a state, even a minimal state, it also requires some degree of cronyism” (emphasis added). Although some envision the ideal government as a simple referee, “real government can never be limited to a role of referee that stands entirely outside of the game it is tasked with overseeing. First, even the minimal protective state requires resources in order to operate. This requirement means that the government must intervene into private economic life to extract resources. . . . Second, the minimal protective state must also have discretion to deal with circumstances that are unforeseen at the time it is granted its initial powers” (emphasis in the original). Accordingly, “even if government were limited to solely providing core protective functions, cronyism would still be rampant” (emphasis in the original). In fact, one “would have a difficult time identifying a sector in the United States that better illuminates the operations of cronyism and its serious defects” than the military sector. Coyne and Hall’s essay thus explores the many ways in which the U.S. military is the quintessence of crony capitalism—the fast lane on the road to crony capitalism.
E-mail me when people leave their comments –

You need to be a member of Command Center to add comments!

Join Command Center

Comments

  • Bonnie

    We had the committees but no corporations from DOJ, FBI and some rinos, and also voters who seem to thing dems should be in charged. Boy, they are soon coming to know what they did.

  • w/the Dems in control now of major committees we won't know much if anything we had the chance to rid ourselves of them.   how did we not?   Rino Ryan and mcconnell are much to blame

This reply was deleted.