Update from the
Heartland
No.681
29.12.14 – 4.1.15
Blog version: http://heartlandupdate.blogspot.com/
To all,
My friend and fellow author Kevin Earl
Ready offered the following New Year’s message on his Facebook page.
“Ringing in the New Year, I have to say that I am concerned that
we, in America, are disconnected with our brethren and sistren around the world.
Yes, I invented the word
"Sistren" because I found no appropriate word to serve its purpose. We, in America, view world events in a
vacuous perception, disconnected from the realities of our fellow human beings
around the world. I hope that the
new year allows us to perceive the inequities and inconsistencies that our
brethren and sistren around the world perceive when viewing human events. ISIS is evil. Ebola must be stopped.
Putin is acting like Hitler. Ukraine
is Sudetenland revisited. We are
just a smidgeon away from cataclysm from MERS or some other virus, yet we
cannot see the commonality of our need to co-exist with the fellow members of
our species. PLEASE, look beyond
the simple local view and start acting like the world around us matters.”
. . .words to
heed. Happy New Year.
For those readers who may be interested,
I submitted the manuscript for the third book in my To So Few series of
historical novels. Book III is
provisionally titled “Explosion.” I do not have a projected publication
date, as yet, but springtime seems reasonable. Also, for those who have asked, my publisher has decided to
produce the books in print versions as well as all electronic book
formats. The first book “In
the Beginning” is currently available by special order through any book
retailer, and the second book “The Prelude” should be available
shortly. I have begun work to prepare
the fourth book for submittal.
The follow-up news items:
-- President Obama authorized additional sanctions against
the DPRK in the wake of the malicious hacking of Sony Pictures Entertainment [679], aimed primarily at 10 North
Korean field agents of the Korea Mining Development Trading Corporation – the
principal arms export agency of the DPRK – in countries like Iran, Syria and
Sudan. The ratchet turns.
Comments
and contributions from Update no.680:
Comment to the Blog:
“‘Conspiracist’ is more name calling. Speaking for and of myself,
I alleged no conspiracy in either the legal or the dramatic sense, and I never
saw any such conspiracy. I still do not.
“We can only understand business decisions from outside by the
"follow the money" method. I stated that Sony had likely decided to
provoke Kim Jong Un. The politicians and the media tools had no part in that
decision. Again, this is not a conspiracy theory. I made an observation based
on a business education. Kim Jong Un has shown no signs of maturity, and his
wild rhetoric could be predicted by virtually anyone who watches newscasts. If
North Korea had merely blustered and threatened as expected, that decision paid
off. Any marketer knows the cash value of the patriotism such rhetoric
provokes, and we are seeing it. All the "defend freedom of speech"
stuff on newscasts is free marketing. Those same news outlets interviewed
people who saw the movie in question at the 300 theaters following the
high-drama news reports. Most customers expected a lesser product but felt that
it was a patriotic duty to see (buy) it because of the news reports. Many other
such patriots may be expected to pay to download the same movie in the safety
and comfort of their homes. So a poor picture escapes most of the reproduction
and venue costs and it still brings in money. Bottom line: Sony adeptly made
money on a turkey. I suspect that Sony created the initial controversy to
salvage a project that they foresaw would not pay off otherwise, even with big
names starring. On top of that, they gain a long-term lead in
direct-to-Internet releasing. That leadership ultimately will make them more
money than any given movie. As a communications major, I admire their chutzpah
and strategic thinking; as a person living by moral values, I detest their
corporate ethics.
“If the fullness of time shows us that the hackers were not the
government of North Korea, the hackers saw their plan backfire because it got
caught up in the other drama. I suppose some chance exists that Sony itself is
behind the hacking, although it seems unlikely. If the hacking was North
Korean, we have seen the very first sign of real tactical thinking by Kim Jong
Un. Sony might not have expected that, but it doesn't cost anyone anything
except the taxpayers who finance the investigation and whatever costs the
hackers bear. Sony makes money in
all cases. Everywhere the money leads, we find Sony.
“I give Mr. Sorkin a partial pass. He is an individual, not a
corporation. As such, he has feelings and responds to motivations other than
money. I agree that he feels the moral outrage he expresses, but I still see it
as hypocritical.
“I refrain from commenting on the current airline disaster because
no conclusions are yet available. I made that mistake a few weeks ago with the
movie issue.
“I know not whether you have studied Congress' end-of-session
history. ‘A flurry of last-minute bills’ is the usual description. Of course,
people use the confusion inherent in a high volume of complex work to slip
through less-popular items from their personal agendas. I have no idea why
someone inserted an attempt to regulate the spy community, but it would take a
great deal more than a statute to get the spies' attention. Spies ignore laws.
The recent report on torture made that plain once again.
“The economy may indeed be reviving at last. I noted in passing a
TV report that wages have finally begun to rise a little.”
My response to the
Blog:
Re:
‘conspiracist.’ My oh my, we are a
bit sensitive today. I made no
accusation or even inference. I
was simply making an observation from several news sources.
Re:
Kim Jung Un. Interesting
observations. If he had just said
the words, this would be just another humorous demonstrations of his
immaturity. He crossed the line
when he directed Bureau 121 to inflict damage on Sony Pictures Entertainment.
Re:
patriotic duty. You may well be
correct, but I think not. While
neither hypothesis may ever be proven.
It is just as likely the DPRK did exactly as it appears. If the genius marketing project
hypothesis is correct, then the DPRK played its part masterfully. If your hypothesis is correct, Sony
executed a most impressive false-flag operation for financial gain. While that hypothesis is plausible, I
still believe the DPRK as culprit is the most likely, and thus, I save my
condemnation for the DPRK rather than Sony.
Re:
Sorkin. OK, we shall hold
different perspectives.
Re:
Congress. OK, as you say.
Re:
economy. A rising tide raises all
boats.
. . . Round two:
“Your response to my ‘conspiracist’ comment is worthy of Fox News.
(Yes, I know that's insult for insult, but I couldn't resist.) ‘We’ are not
sensitive today, but perhaps you are. My participation in this forum operates
by fact and logic, as any serious debate ought to do. I do not respect ad hominem attacks and I will continue
to point them out. The condescending tone of your replies when you are ‘sensitive’
is familiar but unbecoming.
“The FBI continues its investigation of the hacking attacks and
will report at some time. Whether that report will ever be made public I cannot
say. In the meantime, your assumption that Kim Jong Un was responsible for the
hacking is over-reaching.
“Please re-read my last comment. I stated that it's unlikely Sony
Pictures did the hacking, and I have not changed my mind. They would not need
to do that to boost revenues, and it would be too risky for most executives'
taste. I do, however, see a real possibility that a hacker or group of hackers
somewhere in the world would see Sony as a juicy target for blackmail. I have
seen a story from a news source (but not one I can document) that Sony received
a money demand before the political story broke. Such a blackmail attempt could
come from almost any skilled hacker. Regardless of that, Sony would know that
they could withstand the release of those emails without serious financial
loss, and the emails were in fact released. Sony lost nothing on them. They
will make money by releasing the movie. Follow the money.
“A rising tide does not float all boats in economics. We have been
disproving that one since Reagan's Presidency as the income gap has widened.
Replacing lost manufacturing jobs that paid $20 an hour in 1980 and carried
multiple benefits with retail or other jobs that pay minimum wage today and
offer no benefits does not support that saying. It's a false analogy. Were it
true, we would have far fewer full-time workers receiving government benefits.
It might help to remember that not all Americans participate in the stock
market.”
. . . my response to round two:
Re: ‘conspiracist.’ I shall
take the criticism in the spirit in which it was given. As Sir Winston so
eloquently observed, “Criticism is like pain in the human body, it brings
attention to an otherwise unhealthy state of things.” I have been accused
of being a ‘conspiracist’ for even suggesting the hypothesis we presented in
our book “TWA 800 – Accident or Incident?”, so I shall leave it there.
Re: hacking. I must confess I
failed to glean that perspective from your words. Regardless, I accept
your explanation. Whether the DPRK Bureau 121 actually carried out the
hacking of Sony Pictures or instigated their brethren in the PRC may never be
known; but, clearly, the motive belongs squarely with the DPRK. I have
not heard the extortion hypothesis or claim.
Re: patriotic motive. I
suppose I am not so patriotic, as I have no interest or even a curiosity about
that movie.
Re: floating all boats. There
are always exceptions. So, I suppose the debate of this topic depends
directly upon our perspective of the individual exceptions or the broader,
general perspective. Part of the dynamic involved here (and in
other topics) is the change and adaptation to changing conditions. To
expect a US$20/hour, simple, manual labor job to remain in perpetuity is not
realistic or substantiated by history. We change with the changing times,
or we fall by the wayside.
. . . Round three:
“Regarding economics: dismissing the drop in wages as ‘exceptions’
is false. I assume that you have resources to study economics simply because
you mention the subject in every posting. Look at the numbers for ‘real wages’
(after inflation) from about 1980 to the present. Falling wages are no
exception. That has been the fate of workers in every sector with the possible
exception of high tech. On top of that, your statement that higher pay is ‘not
realistic’ does not square with the fact of higher wages across most of Europe.
I will note the highest minimum wages tend to be in more prosperous places,
such as Scandinavia and Germany.”
. . . my response to round three:
For
the record and to my knowledge, I have never claimed to be an expert of
anything (even though there may be a few areas where such a claim might be
appropriate). I am a citizen,
concerned about his community, this society, the human race, and God’s little
green Earth; as such, I try to absorb as much information as I am able with
which to form an opinion. Even
with topics that I do offer opinions, I rarely claim to be correct, even when
the facts may support such a claim.
That said . . .
It
is my humble opinion that market forces and capitalism drive wages. Where labor supply exceeds demand for
that particular skill, wages must fall.
I imagine wages for skilled buggy whip craftsmen or wagon wheel
producers were fairly good in the day, but as there is no demand for such
products, wages were inevitably driven to zero, as they should have been.
My
argument breaks down in the arena of low-skill labor, where demand remains but
artificial forces distort the wage scale.
An automobile assembly worker who was getting paid more than an
educated, accomplished engineer is hardly a balanced wage scale. Minimum wage laws are and will distort
the wage scale.
We
have discussed for quite some time now the question of what is reasonable for
wages, standard of living, within a societal economic structure. I am certain we will continue to debate
this topic. Regardless, let there
be no doubt, I do not offer my opinion(s) as an expert. I am only an observant citizen, who
happens to be willing to present my opinions in a quasi-public forum to foster
constructive debate on issues of our time.
. . . Round four:
“I will note that one may not authentically claim lack of
knowledge in the Information Age, at least not on the Internet.
“Your faith in markets and capitalism is touching but dramatically
misplaced. Those free market assumptions derive from the work of Adam Smith,
who lived at roughly the time of the American Revolution. (Often Smith's ideas
are filtered through the rantings of Ayn Rand, but we'll let that rest for
now.) Smith completely opposed limited liability, which makes corporations
possible. Smith expressed mistrust of capitalists in his best-known work, Wealth
of Nations, and his ideas cover only the small businesses and local
consumers of his time. Applying those ideas to multi-national corporations and
combining them with the assumption that corporations have motivations other
than making money have produced no coherent results but remains very popular
with the few people who benefit from those distortions. Those people are few
but are powerful because of their wealth. You may plead ignorance or lack of
expertise all you like, but every bit of this information is readily available
from respectable online sources.”
. . . my response to round four:
Wow! To be frank, I did not quite know how
to take your reply. You may accuse
me of a lack of knowledge. That is
your choice. I made no such claim
or statement. I strive to be as
informed as I am able. My humility
should not be interpreted as ignorance.
Also,
to continue my frankness, I am a bit taken-aback by your comments. We have discussed Adam Smith,
capitalism, Ayn Rand, et al, more than a few times. I can only say, I urge you to recall those conversations. I have NEVER advocated for a true free
market, as such environments are often overwhelmed or succumb to nefarious
elements of human nature who use that freedom for the most shameful and greedy
purposes . . . just as the Wild West bent to the fastest gun. I have always advocated for appropriate
and reasonable regulation to draw order from chaos. There must be law & order. I appreciate your statement, and we are far more in
agreement than your comments would suggest . . . just not to the extent.
My very best wishes to all. Take care of yourselves and each other.
Cheers,
Cap :-)
2 comments:
I agree with Mr. Ready's concern with Americans' disconnection from the rest of the world. People here seem severely isolated to me. I would suggest other issues such as poverty, diseases that can be treated but are not, and the effects of climate change that are either current or easily predictable.
I hope your book does well. I understand that many readers still insist on printed books, although I and some other have mostly gone to e-books. Either way, enjoy your sales.
Calvin,
Re: Ready comment. I could add my observations of observing the conduct of Americans in numerous other countries. Let it suffice to say, too many embarrassed me as an American citizen – arrogant beyond description.
Thank you very much for your kind words regarding my books.
Cheers,
Cap
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