It’s Wednesday morning at ISPCS, and the deputy administrator of NASA is the keynote speaker.
Category Archives: Economics
Bob Bigelow’s Talk
I’m at the ISPCS in New Mexico, and He’s about to speak. Keep an eye on this post for updates, if it scrolls down. Continue reading Bob Bigelow’s Talk
Shuttlyndra And The Smoking Rocket
I have some thoughts on the recent revelations about NASA’s propellant depot trades over at Pajamas Media.
Hiding The Propellant Depots
Doug Mohney has picked up the story. I’ll probably have something up at Pajamas Media tomorrow. If anyone cared about space, or how much money Congress forces NASA to waste, this would be a big story.
Hyperinflation
Can it happen here? A history lesson.
Transparency At The IPCC
A FOIA-free back channel to discuss climate change, with White House collusion? Say it ain’t so.
Propellant Depots
…and NASA’s integrity. It’s frustrating that there is nothing in the news about this.
David Gregory
I’ve always thought he was an eclectic ignoramus, but this really takes the cake.
[Update late morning]
More idiocy. Gregory says that #OWS will “dovetail nicely with Obama’s campaign message.” What message is that? End Capitalism?
Is Tesla The Next Solyndra?
I’m a great admirer of what Elon Musk has done with SpaceX. With Tesla, not so much. The company should never have gotten a dime of federal loan guarantees, or support with tax credits. No one and no company should.
CLASS Dismissed
Thoughts on the latest collapse of the bunco scheme known as ObamaCare:
To say that this is an embarrassment for the gang in the White House and the Democratic congressional leadership, who we already knew could not shoot straight, would be a gross understatement. The failure of CLASS, predicted by conservatives, sprang from the Democrats’ insistence to pass some “historic” health-care bill, any such bill, and deal with the consequences later. Well, later is now.
Obama lied, the economy died.
[Update a few minutes later]
Did 2008 come true?
The skeptics of 2008 proved prescient; those who demonized them should be embarrassed. And we should remember that candidates, of both parties, will govern mostly as they campaign. Slips are not indiscretions, but often will prove in hindsight windows of the soul.
I was wrong about his electability, but I was right about what a disaster he would be as president. I saw him for what he was, but underestimated how susceptible so many are to con men.
[Update a while later]
Adult leadership comes from the House, not the White House.
It’s been that way since the beginning of the year. And at least now, as opposed to 2008-2010, we have some adult leadership in DC.
[Update a couple minutes later]
One ObamaCare disaster averted, but a lot more to go:
This confirmation that Obamacare cannot in fact defy the laws of mathematics and accounting should serve as a warning regarding the implementation of the broader law, most of which would begin in 2014 if it is not repealed by then. The other major provisions of the statute are also grossly ill-designed. If it is permitted to take effect in full, the law will cause premiums to rise rapidly in the individual market and create major dislocation in the employer market, driving people into vastly overregulated exchanges that would push premiums higher still, and then initiate a program of subsidies whose only real answer to the mounting costs of coverage will be to pay them with public dollars and so inflate them further. It aims to spend a trillion dollars on subsidies to large insurance companies and the expansion of an unreformed Medicaid system, to micromanage the insurance industry in ways likely to make it even less efficient, to cut Medicare benefits without using the money to shore up the program or reduce the deficit, and to raise taxes on employment, investment, and medical research. CBO does not expect it to make a real dent in the inflation of health-care costs or to avert the fiscal implosion of Medicare. Instead, it will double down on price controls and centralized administration and make a real reform of our system much more difficult. These outcomes are nearly as predictable as the fiscal collapse of the CLASS Act (and have been predicted by the same people who saw that the CLASS Act would never work, including the CMS actuary). But in the case of the CLASS Act, the Secretary of HHS was required to certify in advance that her actuaries believed it could be sustained, and at the end of the day there was no way around the fact that it couldn’t. The rest of the law has no such requirements, so the “we tried our best” excuse will come only after disaster strikes.
But other than that, it’s great.