Category Archives: Political Commentary

Look In The Mirror

That’s Jennifer Rubin’s advice to Obama if he wants to know how he’s losing the election. I disagree with this bit of (what is now) conventional wisdom, though:

The obvious blunder was in bypassing Hillary Clinton as VP. With Clinton, the frenzy of excitement would have been for the Democrats and Sarah Palin would be back in Alaska.

Admittedly, having Hillary! on the ticket would have made the Palin pick more difficult–it would have looked too much like “me too.” But Obama had good (as well as no doubt bad) reasons to not want to share the ticket with her. The Dems might have thought it was a “dream ticket,” but not everyone would agree. Both Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton have high negatives, and they’re not necessarily with the same group of voters. That ticket would lose votes to both the voters who won’t vote for Barack Obama and those would would never vote for Hillary!, and that conjoined set would very likely been more than half the electorate. Her choice would also have fired up the Republican base against her.

And that’s ignoring having to share the stage and power with her, and the Bill problem (not to mention having to hire a food taster and have someone else start his car for him every morning). No, I don’t think that failing to put her on the ticket was a mistake.

What was a mistake, though was dissing her and her supporters by making it clear that he had never even considered doing so. If he’d been smarter, he’d have at least gone through the motions of vetting her and making it looks as though she was on the list. As it was, it was just one more finger in their collective face.

Obama’s Biggest Problem

Pointed out by VDH:

…don’t count on a Palin implosion: if one examines Obama’s failed House race, and the weird pull-outs of both his primary and general election Illinois Senatorial opponents, then we sense that he has never really waged a knock-out campaign fight until this past year–and that may not be true of Palin’s past scrappy and contested rise to the top.

Barack Obama is a hot house plant. He only beat Hillary! because of his early success in caucuses, and because of the Clinton campaign’s early complacency and overconfidence. He lost the last half of the primary seasons.

He wasn’t supposed to win the nomination this year–it was just a practice run. But now he’s like a dog who chases cars, and has finally caught one. He doesn’t know what to do with it.

Of Course It Does

Restricting the top speed on automobiles “seems reasonably sensible” to Matthew Yglesias:

…of course the reason you’re not allowed to go super-fast is that it isn’t safe. A large proportion of car accidents are related to people driving too quickly. Thus, via Ezra Klein comes Kent Sepkowitz’s suggestion that we design cars so as to make it impossible for them to drive over, say, 75 miles per hour.

Clearly spoken as someone woefully ignorant of the cause of accidents, and who probably doesn’t drive much, at least outside a city, or in the west, or in mountains, or on curvy roads where rapid passing is occasionally necessary. Or someone to whom time (at least other peoples’ time) has no value. I suspect that he agrees with Al Gore that cars are intrinsically evil, and wishes that everyone would ride a train, like those enlightened Europeans. It’s similar to the idiocy (and yes, there’s no other word for it) of a double nickel speed limit (something to which even Charles Krauthammer, who doesn’t drive at all) has fallen prey.

Fortunately, most of his commenters take him to school.

Who Is Overpaid?

Not engineers.

Engineer’s salaries, taking into consideration education and responsibilities, the stress of accelerated delivery schedules and their direct impact on corporate profits and overall success of the company, seem absolutely inadequate.

Well, I’ve known a few who were. But no, not in general.

In many of these overpaid professions, there’s some kind of government-induced market failure going on (e.g., longshoremen), but in a lot of cases, it’s just the occasional irrationality of the market place.

Mike Griffin’s Frustration

I was going to have some comments about the administrator’s leaked email, but haven’t had the time. Fortunately, over in comments at Space politics, “anonymous.space” picks up my slack:

He didn’t mean for it to be shown to the outside world, but the revisionism, hypocrisy, and self-adulation in Griffin’s email is pretty shocking, even this late into the ESAS/Constellation debacle. It’s either that, or he’s been lying about his real positions for a long time. Griffin wrote:

“Exactly as I predicted, events have unfolded in a way that makes it clear how unwise it was for the US to adopt a policy of deliberate dependence on another power for access to the ISS.”

Griffin never predicted this. Instead, Griffin repeatedly stated that the VSE — including its 2010 date for Shuttle retirement — and the accompanying NASA Authorization Act of 2005 provide the nation with its best civil space policy in decades. In fact, Griffin said so as recently as January 2008 in an STA speech:

“I consider this to be the best civil space policy to be enunciated by a president, and the best Authorization Act to be approved by the Congress, since the 1960s.”

See here.

In fact, just before becoming NASA Administrator, Griffin even _led_ a study that argued as one of its central conclusions/recommendations that the Space Shuttle could and should be retired after ISS assembly reached the stage of “U.S. Core Complete”, certainly no later than 2010.

See here.

If Griffin was really so prescient as to predict the situation that NASA’s human space flight programs are in now, then he should have spoken up years ago instead of repeatedly signing onto studies and policies that are flawed according to the argument in his email. In fact, it would have been wrong for him to have lobbied for the job of NASA Administrator to begin with if he really thought that the President’s policy was so compromised.

Griffin should resign immediately and apologize if his email reflects what he’s actually believed all these years. If not, and his email represents how Griffin has recently changed his views, then Griffin should admit that he was wrong to sign onto the policy, argue that the policy needs to be revised, and resign if it is not revised in a manner that he can support.

Griffin also wrote:

“In a rational world, we would have been allowed to pick a Shuttle retirement date to be consistent with Ares/Orion availability”

Griffin is confused about both chronology and causality in this statement. The Shuttle retirement date came first — as a recommendation about Shuttle operability and certification in the CAIB report and then as policy in the VSE. The replacement for Shuttle (originally CEV in the VSE and then Ares/Orion in ESAS) came second and was supposed to have a schedule that was responsive to that Shuttle retirement date.

In a rational world, a rational NASA Administrator would have picked a rational Shuttle replacement that could be developed rapidly and fielded soon after the 2010 deadline for Shuttle retirement using the available budgetary and technical resources. Instead, Griffin chose an Ares/Orion system that is so technically compromised that it can’t complete even its preliminary design review before the end of the Bush II Administration and is so costly that it can’t be flown operationally within the available budget until 2015 (and even that date has only a limited chance of being met).

Gemini took less than four years to develop and fly. In the same amount of time, Ares I/Orion will not complete its preliminary design review. That is not rational.

Apollo took seven years to develop and fly (to the Moon). In the same amount of time, Ares I/Orion will still be (at least) three years from flying (to the ISS). That is not rational.

Griffin also wrote:

“We would have been asked to deploy Ares/Orion as early as possible (rather than “not later than 2014″) and we would have been provided the necessary budget to make it so.”

Griffin is just making up history with this statement. NASA was never asked to “deploy Ares/Orion” at all. Rather, the VSE directed NASA to develop a Crew Exploration Vehicle (CEV, which eventually becameOrion), and provided a budget that supported CEV development. The VSE never directed NASA to develop a new launch vehicle that duplicated the nation’s military and commercial capabilities with yet another medium- to intermediate-lift launcher (Ares), and the budget never supported such a development. Ares I needlessly busted the VSE budget box from day one, requiring the termination of billions of dollars of ISS research and exploration technology development just to start its design activities.

And why does anyone have to ask Griffin to deploy a Shuttle replacement as early as possible when the VSE gives him the flexibility to develop a replacement anytime before 2014? Is the NASA Administrator really so unambitious and lacking in initiative that, instead of being given a deadline (which he’s blown by a year anyway), he also has to be told by the White House to execute a critical replacement program as rapidly as possible?

And then Griffin wrote:

“… for OSTP and OMB, retiring the Shuttle is a jihad rather than an engineering and program management decision.”

First, for the head of any federal agency to use the term “jihad” in written reference to the White House offices that set policy for and fund their agency – especially when the same White House has been leading a seven-year war against Islamic extremism – demonstrates such extremely poor judgement that it brings into question whether that agency head is still fit to serve.

Second, the 2010 date for Shuttle retirement was effectively set by the CAIB’s expert judgment about and extensive investigation into the vehicle’s operational and certification issues. OSTP and OMB (and NASA under the prior Administrator) simply reiterated the 2010 date in the VSE. If Griffin wants to challenge the 2010 Shuttle retirement date, then he needs to challenge the engineering and program management analysis and expertise of the 13-member CAIB and its 32 staff, not OSTP and OMB. OSTP and OMB read and followed the CAIB report on this issue. Apparently Griffin did not and has not.

The only things OSTP and OMB are guilty of is not fulfilling all of the White House’s funding commitments to the VSE and not stopping Ares I/Orion at the outset when those projects busted the budget, or later when they ran into insurmountable technical issues and schedule delays that made them programmatically and politically useless.

Griffin also wrote:

“Further, they [OSTP and OMB] actively do not want the ISS to be sustained, and have done everything possible to ensure that it would not be.”

For the same NASA Administrator who wiped out billions of dollars of ISS research and who referred to the ISS as a “mistake” in the press to criticize White House offices about their lack of support for the ISS is the height of hypocrisy. See (add http://www):

.usatoday.com/tech/science/space/2005-09-27-nasa-griffin-interview_x.htm):

Griffin needs to stop flailing in the political winds, make up his mind, and stick with a consistent position on the value (or lack thereof) of the ISS.

Finally, and this is a technical nit compared to the issues above, but towards the end, Griffin also wrote:

“The argument that we need to get Shuttle out of the way so that conversion of the VAB/MAF for Constellation can proceed is similarly specious.”

This totally misses the point. The VAB and MAF are just really huge shells that NASA can build anything in. It’s the launch and rocket test infrastructure (the pads, the mobile launcher platform, and test stands) that the Shuttle and Constellation system share, and which Constellation has to make modifications to, that will interminably slow Constellation development if Shuttle continues to make use of those facilities.

My kingdom for a rational NASA Administrator who reads and follows policy direction, develops programs within their allotted budgets, encourages and listens to independent technical advice, and has the capacity to admit when the current plan is fubar and adjust course in a timely manner.

Maybe in the next administration, regardless of who wins. But don’t bet on it. The only area in which I disagree with these comments concerns the Shuttle retirement date. As I noted in a later comment over there:

“…why did they pick 2010? What is magic about that date (particularly when no one really knows what ‘certification’ means)?

I had always assumed that the CAIB thought that the Shuttle should be retired ASAP, and that if it wasn’t, it would have to be ‘recertified’ for longer life (ignoring the issue that the term was undefined). But ASAP meant no sooner than ISS completion, which (I think even then) was scheduled for 2010 (at least after the Columbia loss and standown). Hence the date (it doesn’t hurt that it’s a round number).

The Shuttle doesn’t suddenly become less safe to fly in 2011, or even 2012. If there is a degradation, it is a gradual one, not a binary condition, and there is no obvious ‘knee in the curve.’ The date was driven by non-Shuttle considerations, IMO. If someone on the CAIB (e.g., Dr. Day) knows otherwise, I’d be interested to know that.”

And if Mike Griffin is now frustrated, and wants to know who to blame, he’ll see him the next time he shaves.

Nomenclature

Ann Althouse writes that Bill O’Reilly “spouts right-wing economic theories.”

What does that mean?

I’ve heard Bill O’Reilly rant against free trade, complain about “fat cats,” whine about “obscene” profits from oil companies, price gougers, etc., but in that, he seems to be more attuned to Democrats than “right wingers.” Say what you want about O’Reilly, but he’s no “right winger” (at least if, by that, one means a classical liberal who believes in free markets). He’s a populist, who is just “looking out for the folks” (at least to hear him tell it–never mind the actual effects of his anti-market nostrums). Just another example of the meaninglessness (and uselessness) of the labels (e.g., “neocon,” “conservative,” “fascist”) that get pointlessly thrown around the arena.

Don’t Give Up Your Day Job

The day job, that is, which seems to primarily consist of running for the next office. Senator Obama tries to bring the funny.

“I mean, mother, governor, moose shooter?! I mean I think that’s cool, that’s cool stuff,” Obama said about Palin’s biography.

When discussing McCain’s energy plan, Obama poked fun at his line on drilling. “What were the Republicans hollerin’, ‘drill baby drill’? What kind of slogan is that?! They were getting all excited about drilling!”

Maybe you had to be there.

And how politically stupid is it to make fun of hunters in Michigan (which in fact does have moose in the western UP)?

More Community Organizer Thoughts

Byron York has an actual history of what Obama did. Jim Geraghty has some related thoughts:

…note that Obama and his supporters speak a great deal about Obama’s choice to be a community organizer, and not so much on what he actually did. We’re continually expected to applaud the decision to try instead of asking about the results. We never hear, “because of his work, Factory X reopened,” or “because of Obama’s creation of job retraining program Y, the community’s unemployment rate reduced from A to B.”

Yes, with so-called “liberals,” it’s always about the good intentions, and we’re not supposed to pay any attention to actual results.

Lileks has some thoughts as well:

We’re having a block party tonight – yes, another block party; damned community can’t stop organizing itself (if I may repeat something I said over at Tim Blair’s place – successful communities, or those on track to becoming successful, organize themselves; if you need someone to come in and do your organizing for you, he might as well call himself Mollusk Wrangler or Sloth Herder. I say this as a former community organizer myself, but that’s another story) so we’ll all stand outside and chat and eat pot luck.

If your community needs an “organizer” it’s probably not much of a community. It’s just a lot of people living in close proximity.

And just a hint for some in comments: given Obama’s image problem with his messiah complex, it’s probably not politically helpful to compare him to Jesus…

Building Character

Jessica Gavora, native Alaskan (and aka better half of Jonah Goldberg) has some thoughts on basketball and Sarah Palin:

We didn’t play basketball to pad our college applications or fulfill some bureaucrat’s notion of “gender equity.” We played because the winters were long and cold and dark. There was nothing else to do. Maybe as a result, basketball was deadly serious business. Away games were played at the end of eight-hour bus rides or
harrowing plane landings in frozen, remote villages. Our opponents were tough, and the fans were unforgiving. And even though the law that feminists like to credit with all female athletic success, Title IX, was then unenforced in high school sports, we girls wouldn’t have dreamed of taking second place to the boys–nor did we.

Palin earned her now-famous nickname on the hardcourt–“Sarah Barracuda.” Her enemies have tried to belittle her by pointing to her stint as a beauty queen, but it is clear that Palin’s background in sports, more than any other experience, is what has made her the existential threat to liberal feminism (and possibly the Democratic ticket) that she is today.

I wonder how she’d do one on one with Senator Obama? Did he ever win a state championship for his team? Perhaps it’s another comparison that his campaign should avoid.