Rick Lazio is a progressive Republican in the Rockefeller tradition. There is little conservative about him. Hence it is a puzzle why Mike Long and the Conservative Party, chose to support him. I raised this question at the Tea Party meeting where I gave a pro-Paladino talk last night, and one of the CP people in the audience said that the rank-and-file and leadership in Ulster County, NY opposed Lazio. But this was also true of the Ulster County GOP, for the Catskills and Hudson Valley still have a living libertarian tradition. As I said to the Conservative Party guy at our meeting, I always knew that Rockefeller Republicans were prominent in the GOP, but I never knew that Rockefeller Conservatives were prominent in the CP.
Does the Conservative Party serve any purpose? Might conservatives find better representation in a Paladino-led GOP?
Tuesday, September 14, 2010
Paladino Routs Lazio
New York One reports that with 69% of the precincts reporting Carl Paladino has defeated Rick Lazio in the GOP by 64% to 36%. Now, Paladino says, he aims to defeat the "status Cuomo".
This is the message that I hoped the voters would send to the dysfunctional GOP. But it is not enough. To truly redirect New York's corrupt, New York Times dominated "progressive" decline, Paladino will need to similarly cream Cuomo.
Pretty much the only people supporting Lazio were pseudo libertarians and corrupt party hacks.
This is the message that I hoped the voters would send to the dysfunctional GOP. But it is not enough. To truly redirect New York's corrupt, New York Times dominated "progressive" decline, Paladino will need to similarly cream Cuomo.
Pretty much the only people supporting Lazio were pseudo libertarians and corrupt party hacks.
Sunday, September 12, 2010
Republican Decision 2010
The interesting primary this September 14 is the GOP's race between Rick Lazio and Carl Paladino even though Democratic candidate-designate Andrew Cuomo leads both. A September 11 Siena poll finds that Lazio leads Paladino by one percent, 43 to 42. Paladino leads with 53 percent among Upstate New Yorkers while Lazio leads with a similar margin downstate. Paladino leads among Tea Partiers 47 to 42 percent. This slim margin suggests that the appellation Tea Party is amorphous. The Tea Party is neither small government- nor Rockefeller- Republican. For while Paladino advocates a twenty percent cut in New York's budget, Lazio's record does not put him in the small government camp.
Carl Paladino
Paladino is a Buffalo-based real estate developer who attended St. Bonaventure University and Syracuse Law. He is a tough, inspiring speaker who befriends but challenges his audience.
Paladino built a real estate empire from scratch. His current net worth is about $150 million. While overseeing 15 office buildings is not an executive responsibility with as much latitude as the governor's, Paladino has had more at risk personally than any governor. As a result, he has developed management skills that would be more likely to benefit the public than those of a lifelong politician.
Paladino is accused of forwarding racist and sexist e-mails to friends. The New York Times has endorsed Rick Lazio over Paladino saying that the e-mails alone are grounds for rejecting Paladino. However, writing of Jesse Jackson's having called New York City "Hymietown", Times reporter Jodi Kantor implied on May 22, 2008 that Jews should not hold the epithet against Jackson because he has apologized. Although Paladino has similarly apologized for forwarding e-mails the Times applies a different standard to him.
Like Lazio, Paladino opposes construction of the Ground Zero mosque. He has run advertisements saying that as governor he would use eminent domain to foreclose the mosque. I questioned him on this point because many conservatives oppose eminent domain. At an Ulster County Republican appearance in late August Paladino insisted that he is opposed to private use eminent domain and that he would like to see less use of eminent domain more generally.
Paladino is running on a specific platform of 20 percent budget cuts. Although Lazio also states that he would like to reduce government, his promises are not so specific. The chief targets for Paladino's cuts are welfare and Medicaid, whose per capita costs in New York are double those in California. There are in fact many areas where Medicaid and other aspects of New York's budget could be cut without loss in public welfare.
Rick Lazio
Lazio grew up in West Islip on Long Island. He attended Vassar College and American University Law School. He worked as a Suffolk County prosecutor. He was elected to the Suffolk County legislature in 1989 and to Congress in 1992. He resigned his congressional post to oppose Hillary Clinton for Senate in 2000. His website states that he expanded public housing for seniors and the disabled. He also boasts of having increased the number of welfare-related Section 8 housing vouchers. In other words, Lazio's track record includes winning votes by expanding welfare benefits. He also has endorsements from the Sierra Club.
According to his Website Lazio favors three chief positions. The first, "getting our financial house in order," involves a property tax cap of 2.5% and instituting regional control of Medicaid. Also, Lazio aims to reduce public sector pension benefits for new employees and to reform Medicaid. Second, Lazio aims at job creation. He favors lower taxes, but unlike Paladino does not offer a specific target for tax or budget relief. Nor does he offer targets for Medicaid cuts. Lazio's third position is improvement of ethics in government.
This last position is puzzling given evidence that the Village Voice has uncovered about Lazio's dealings at JPMorgan, for whom Lazio has worked as a lobbyist. During his eight-year congressional tenure Lazio collected more in contributions from financial service firms than any other Congressman. He was chair of the House housing subcommittee and through Louis Ranieri, his campaign manager, linked to the real estate bubble of the Bush administration. On March, 18 2008, six months prior to the financial crisis of 2008, the New York Times reported that JPMorgan’s stock had increased ten percent, roughly equal to a $12 billion handout it had received in part from the Federal Reserve Bank. JP Morgan also received $25 billion in TARP funds during the crisis, which it repaid in 2009. The Albany Times Union reported that Lazio's 2008 JPMorgan Chase salary was $325,000, with a bonus of $1.3 million.
According to the Village Voice, both Congressman Lazio and Democrat Andrew Cuomo as head of HUD worked on rules that legalized bonuses paid to real estate brokers who steered customers to more expensive real estate and higher-end mortgages. This marked the inception of the sub-prime crisis. The Voice also reports that in 2007 Lazio used his influence with Charles Millard, head of the Pension Benefit Guarantee Corporation, to secure a $900 million PBGC investment in JPMorgan's real estate management division. The PBGC insures private pension plans. The untimely 2008 investment led to significant losses. Moreover, in dealing with Millard, Lazio violated laws concerning communication during the bid process. The PBGC's Inspector General has investigated the case and has referred it to a prosecutor.
Analysis
Liberals dislike Paladino's style, which I would describe as Jacksonian. Andrew Jackson was a people's candidate who infuriated upper class Whigs, the 1820s' and 1830s' equivalent of today's Rockefeller Republicans and Soros Democrats. Jackson, like today's libertarians, advocated elimination of the biggest government program of then and now: the central bank. Like Lazio, Jackson's opponent, Henry Clay, supported big government and was friendly to banking interests. Jackson was an unabashed racist who was responsible for the Trail of Tears and whose Supreme Court appointee, Chief Justice Roger B. Taney, wrote the Dred Scott decision. But unlike the Jackson of 1828 and like the Jackson of 1984, Paladino has apologized for forwarding the e-mails.
Paladino's opponent, Rick Lazio, has been involved in marginally illegal activity in his role as JPMorgan lobbyist, and was very much associated with the bailout. Yet, he aims to get the state's fiscal house in order and clean up the state ethically. Paladino appeals to non-racist Jacksonians in the Tea Party who are righteously indignant about the Bush and Obama administrations' massive transfer of wealth to Wall Street. What is most puzzling about Lazio is his appeal to self-described Tea Party activists.
Mitchell Langbert is associate professor, Brooklyn College and is a member of the Ulster County Republican Committee. This essay was presented to the Kingston-Rhinebeck Tea Party on September 12, 2010.
Friday, September 10, 2010
Leo Strauss, American Ethical Decline and Aristotle's Highest Hope
I was just reading Leo Strauss's magnificent Natural Right and History. Strauss is a first rate thinker, on a par with the great libertarians, yet I disagree with a large chunk of his perspective. I must say that the early chapter on Max Weber is of tremendous importance to the work I have been doing on business schools' teaching of justice as the core management competency and the Aristotelian and Nietzschean traditions in mangement theory. Strauss's arguments in favor of natural right and law are profound and explicate a core insight at which I arrived in my undergraduate years. That is, that the justification of ethics is inherent in the socio-biology of humanity. Natural right and natural law are socio-biological constructs. Conventionalism, the notion that ethics is arbitrary, can be disproved empirically. Strauss makes invaluable arguments along those lines. As well, Strauss outlines the very concept I have been thinking about and am working toward: the crucial importance of decentralization to the development of the virtuous and liberal state. I am glad I am reading Strauss now after I have outlined the project in my mind. Although the idea is my own independent of Strauss, Strauss must be given major credit for conceptualizing the project in 1953.
I do not agree with Strauss in a number of ways. Most important among these is his emphasis on human differentials with respect to the prospects of attaining virtue. Strauss's emphasis on this aspect of Plato and Aristotle leads to elitism which I do not share. This elitism is very much in the Progressive and Marxist traditions. I do not agree that there are people who have a special claim to virtue. Anyone who thinks so can try to fix their own plumbing or their own cars. Just because someone can go to Harvard does not make them more valuable than a plumber. When my pipes go, I care about a plumber, not a philosopher or a politician. Sorry, Ayn Rand. What I want is a virtuous plumber. And a virtuous plumber will not go home, drink a 12-pack of beer, and wash his hands of what has happened to the nation. Rather, America has declined because of the elitism inherent in Progressivism.
Coincidentally Jim Crum sent me Andrew Malcolm's LA Times article that suggests that America is indeed in serious moral decline due to the Progressive and socialist policies that the Democratic and Republican Parties advocate. The article finds that 41 Obama appointees have not paid their taxes. As well, federal employees in general owe a billion dollars in unpaid taxes, and 638 workers on capitol hill owe $9.3 million in unpaid taxes. As Treasury Secretary, who is in charge of collecting taxes, Obama appointee Timothy Geithner owes $43,000 in unpaid taxes. As well, within the department of homeland security "4,856 people owe $37,012,174."
Aristotle argued that the role of the city state is to educate moral citizens. Clearly American society has failed in this elementary task. The problem is not just with dysfunctional schools which systematically fail to teach the three 'rs along with basic morals; nor with the decaying family, harmed by the Wall Street economy that has destroyed job opportunities in general but especially for men and has fractured the family by forcing women to return to work at an early age. It is also due to the miasma of bad ethics that imbues the casino economy; the get-rich-quick psychology of Federal Reserve Bank-financed Wall Street speculation and the carry trade; the mentality that one gets rich by sucking at the tit of the state rather than working hard. All of this is nothing new. For decades the Progressive state structure has systematically rewarded fast-talking corporate types with smooth interpersonal but limited productive skills and penalized those who take legitimate risks. The Federal Reserve Bank churns out easy credit made available to speculators in stocks and real estate but the government taxes work (through the income tax) and thereby inhibits small scale capital accumulation, creating a bank-dominated economy that is inherently corrupt. All of this tends to manipulation of paper and cheating, at which Republicans like Rick Lazio as well as Democrats like Timothy Geithner excel.
A nation which allows cheats like Lazio and Geithner to attain high office has failed Aristotle's highest hope for the city state. The nation is failing morally and the fault is Progressivism. Moral failure will lead to collapse. The Founding Fathers knew Aristotle and they were aware of this point. So were the Mugwumps of the Gilded Age. Because of its fascist economy, the nation has foresaken its moral foundations.
I do not agree with Strauss in a number of ways. Most important among these is his emphasis on human differentials with respect to the prospects of attaining virtue. Strauss's emphasis on this aspect of Plato and Aristotle leads to elitism which I do not share. This elitism is very much in the Progressive and Marxist traditions. I do not agree that there are people who have a special claim to virtue. Anyone who thinks so can try to fix their own plumbing or their own cars. Just because someone can go to Harvard does not make them more valuable than a plumber. When my pipes go, I care about a plumber, not a philosopher or a politician. Sorry, Ayn Rand. What I want is a virtuous plumber. And a virtuous plumber will not go home, drink a 12-pack of beer, and wash his hands of what has happened to the nation. Rather, America has declined because of the elitism inherent in Progressivism.
Coincidentally Jim Crum sent me Andrew Malcolm's LA Times article that suggests that America is indeed in serious moral decline due to the Progressive and socialist policies that the Democratic and Republican Parties advocate. The article finds that 41 Obama appointees have not paid their taxes. As well, federal employees in general owe a billion dollars in unpaid taxes, and 638 workers on capitol hill owe $9.3 million in unpaid taxes. As Treasury Secretary, who is in charge of collecting taxes, Obama appointee Timothy Geithner owes $43,000 in unpaid taxes. As well, within the department of homeland security "4,856 people owe $37,012,174."
Aristotle argued that the role of the city state is to educate moral citizens. Clearly American society has failed in this elementary task. The problem is not just with dysfunctional schools which systematically fail to teach the three 'rs along with basic morals; nor with the decaying family, harmed by the Wall Street economy that has destroyed job opportunities in general but especially for men and has fractured the family by forcing women to return to work at an early age. It is also due to the miasma of bad ethics that imbues the casino economy; the get-rich-quick psychology of Federal Reserve Bank-financed Wall Street speculation and the carry trade; the mentality that one gets rich by sucking at the tit of the state rather than working hard. All of this is nothing new. For decades the Progressive state structure has systematically rewarded fast-talking corporate types with smooth interpersonal but limited productive skills and penalized those who take legitimate risks. The Federal Reserve Bank churns out easy credit made available to speculators in stocks and real estate but the government taxes work (through the income tax) and thereby inhibits small scale capital accumulation, creating a bank-dominated economy that is inherently corrupt. All of this tends to manipulation of paper and cheating, at which Republicans like Rick Lazio as well as Democrats like Timothy Geithner excel.
A nation which allows cheats like Lazio and Geithner to attain high office has failed Aristotle's highest hope for the city state. The nation is failing morally and the fault is Progressivism. Moral failure will lead to collapse. The Founding Fathers knew Aristotle and they were aware of this point. So were the Mugwumps of the Gilded Age. Because of its fascist economy, the nation has foresaken its moral foundations.
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