Barking Mad – A rave, prompted by facing insane heating costs

Guest essay by Caleb Shaw

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Nigel Hawthorne playing King George the Third. Photo credit: Rex Features

It is a painful thing to confront someone whom one is accustomed to respecting, and to tell that person they are barking mad. Usually one avoids it, or dismisses the other’s strange behavior as “a difference of opinion,” and speaks platitudes about “the importance of diversity,” however when a person is going, “Arf! Arf!” right in your face, there is no way around it. This includes governments, when they become barking mad.

Thomas Jefferson knew this, when he quilled the Declaration of Independence, listing King George’s barking mad behaviors, however there has been a recent, revisionist effort to show that King George the Third wasn’t all that bad, and his blue urine wasn’t due to porphuria, and his spells of foaming at the mouth were but minor episodes, especially when he was young and was busily losing the American colonies. (I think this may in part be due to the fact that porphuria is hereditary, and certain people don’t want the rabble giving Prince Charles appraising looks.)

The argument states that, if you could get an audience at his glittering palace, King George was quite lucid, and even charming, and that the points he raised, about the government’s right to tax, are valid to this day. There is even some reproach towards America and Jefferson for failing to understand King George’s points.

However taxation was not the issue. Taxation without representation was the issue. When one looks back with twenty-twenty hindsight, the solution to the problem seems simple: Simply give the thirteen colony’s thirteen elected representatives in Parliament. It seems like such an obvious thing, to give Englishmen abroad the same rights as Englishmen at home, and seems so conducive to unity and the expansion of an unified kingdom, that to switch the subject to the-right-of-the-government-to-tax seems a sleight of hand bound to stub thumbs, to lead to schism, and to create discord out of harmony. It was, in fact, a barking mad thing for King George to do.

As soon as one treats ones own family as the enemy; one fosters a house divided, which must fall. Perhaps the greatest example of this madness occurred in 1914 when three of Queen Victoria’s grandchildren occupied thrones that governed roughly half the planet, as King of England, Kaiser of Germany, and the wife of the Czar of Russia. Unless these relatives considered their own family to be the enemy, there could have been no World War One, which was a calamity and slaughter so mind-boggling, and so shattering to people’s structures of belief, that it’s declaration was in many senses the beginning of a war that hasn’t ended.

The way to avoid all this madness is simply to understand there is one sort of behavior that leads to marriage, and another that leads to divorce. Assuming one can concede unity is better than division, and harmony is better than discord, (and there are some scoffers who refuse to concede this,) then heeding others (or their elected representatives) is wisdom, and any alternative deafness is ignorance. It is hugely important for those in positions of privilege and power to never lose touch with the so-called “common man.”

Unfortunately this is exactly what appears to have happened in Washington, where the leadership has seemingly forgotten, if they ever knew, how hard it is for less privileged people to scrape by. They have lost touch with humble lives that can be quite happy, provided a certain criteria involving basic necessities are met, and instead are making decisions that cause the poor to experience hardships which the leaders themselves are seemingly oblivious to. Enamored by their own eloquence, charmed by their own intellectual gyrations, they fail to see some of their concepts are barking mad.

“Cash for Clunkers” was an example of such madness. It was basically an ill-thought-out and erroneous solution to a fictitious problem based on a fraud, however it sounded elegant and efficient to the privileged at glittering parties inside the Beltway. In one fell swoop they imagined Cash for Clunkers would increase the gas mileage of American vehicles, reduce Carbon Emissions and therefore halt Global Warming, increase car sales and therefore stimulate the economy, replace low tech vehicles with high tech vehicles and therefore benefit more advanced technologies and technicians, and do all this for a paltry three billion dollars the nation didn’t have, but that could be printed. In short order Cash for Clunkers then destroyed 690,114 perfectly viable vehicles, which were traded in for 690,114 new vehicles.

It was barking mad to destroy all those perfectly good cars, and to get nothing in return for it but three billion dollars of debt. What person in their right mind does such a thing?

It didn’t even reduce Carbon Emissions, because building and shipping a new car requires three to eight tons of carbon, while driving the same old clunker required zero. It would take over five years to make up the difference with a new car, and eight years with a new truck, if the increased gas mileage was as good as promised, (which it wasn’t, due to computer glitches, faulty sensors turning on the check-engine-lights, and people driving with the check-engine-lights on, and also the natural aging of new cars.) Furthermore, the foreseen reduction of carbon would have had only an infinitesimal effect on world temperatures, even if Global Warming were proven true.

However none of a economist’s or climatologist’s pseudoscience meant much to the poor. The poor do not buy new cars; they drive the clunkers that better-off people trade in. What Cash For Clunkers meant for them was that 690,114 poor people were without a car. As the price for second-hand cars soared, many were plunked into the catch-22 position of young men who can’t get a car because they don’t have a job, and can’t get a job because they don’t have a car. But what does Washington know of such unhappy lives? They say, “Let them buy a new car” in the manner of Marie Antoinette saying, “Let them eat cake.”

In their ignorance Washington glibly stated that Cash for Clunkers would be a boon for scrap yards, blissfully unaware that much of the profit at such yards comes from taking apart engines for parts, and that, with engines destroyed, profits would sharply decline. But what does Washington know or care about greasy hands and bruised knuckles?

At least 300,000 and as many as 500,000 of the 690,114 new cars would have been sold anyway, because people need new cars even without incentives, so the government was paying-for and destroying between 300,000 and 500,000 used vehicles for absolutely no reason.

During the brief surge in car sales Cash-for-Clunkers brought about, sales of American cars actually decreased as Asian sales increased, for people were concerned about soaring gas prices at that time, and desired the better gas mileage of Asian cars. This means much of the slight increase in the national-average-gas-mileage (noted with great satisfaction by government Cash-for-Clunker statisticians) would have occurred without the program. It also means Cash for Clunkers didn’t increase the sales of of American cars, and in fact hurt the American car industry more than it helped it. The government would have done better to focus on reducing fuel prices, but actually aimed to increase those fuel prices, to lower the nation’s “Carbon Footprint.”

Some stated that if the poor couldn’t afford cars, their immobility would increase the use of public transportation. Again, it is not the wealthy that have to stand waiting in blazing sun or in winter blasts, or are uprooted because they do not live where such transit is available.

The unintended consequences go on and on. The mechanics skilled in repairing clunkers were hurt; the newer cars were far more expensive to maintain, due to computer glitches, and, when faced with the fact that plugging into a dealer’s computer to diagnose a problem could cost a hundred dollars, people simply chose to drive with the check-engine-lights on. (So you can throw the manufacturer’s estimated-gas-mileage out the window.) People do what they must to get by, and there even was an increase in uninspected and unregistered cars.

It is not that the poor want to be scofflaws or to enact some sort of political rebellion. They simply want to survive, but survival is something the barking mad in Washington has forgotten all about.

This brings me to the current madness of increasing the cost of heating a home, on purpose, to fight some theoretical warming of the planet in the future. This is another display of being barking mad, for the coming winter is no environmentalist’s theory; it is a grim reality that can kill.

What do the privileged elite in Washington know about cold homes in January, or of needing to chose between freezing and food? At their glittering, January parties the only ice they know is in their drinks, as they pontificate the politically correct arfing they call profundity. They know how to frown at the words, “strip mine,” while waving away the subject of unemployed miners, who they never face eye-to-eye. They know the correct disapproval to show for the rural poor’s smoking wood-stoves, and the right way to clasp hands and smile as wind turbines kill eagles. They rumple brows over a tenth of a degree rise in world temperatures they can’t feel, enacting legislation that chills the homes of the poor they never meet ten to twenty degrees.

The fact such legislated “energy poverty” is barking mad was already proven, by an increase in the death rate of the elderly in England by 30,000 in the winter of 2012-2013. The elderly of England could not afford both food and fuel, and didn’t get enough of either. Because the old can’t withstand cold, especially when hungry, and because a common cold can swiftly turn to pneumonia, turning down the heat meant death for 30,000.

What sort of savage society of primitive cannibals allows its elderly to be treated in such a vile manner? It was to avoid such barbaric treatment that FDR created Social Security in the first place. His grave must rumble with a rolling sound, now. To have intentionally brought such misery down upon the general population is the behavior of the certifiably insane. The English leaders were barking mad, and now Washington wants to copy them.

The oncoming hardship, bad enough in an ordinary winter, may be worsened by an especially brutal winter. In theory an El Nino might warm the planet, as a whole, by a tenth of a degree, but in fact an El Nino Modoki, (which is expected,) may warm other areas but brings exceptional cold to one particular part of the planet: The eastern and central United States. Some runs of some models foresee a winter as bad as 1976-1977, which was so vicious it prompted people back then to talk of “a coming ice age.” It is to be hoped these model runs are wrong (as they often are) but what if they are not? Assume the attitude of an Alarmist, and imagine that the models are right. We are then facing a crisis.

Our government seems exceptionally incapable of dealing with such a crisis, for it lives in a landscape of delusion. It does not care for the elderly; it cares about being re-elected. The oncoming winter could loom like the black shroud of the Grim Reaper, and still a politician’s primary concern would be suppressing voter turnout in unfavorable districts. The best that can be hoped for is a national awakening, and a voter backlash in November, and a completely changed congress next January, but by then it will be too late.

It is conceivable, even likely, that in the face of a winter like 1976-1977, fuel prices would skyrocket, and there would be shortages, brown-outs, and even shutdowns. For many there would be no money left over, after paying for heat. There would be no so-called “disposable income.” For the poor, it would not be a matter of staying warm; it would be a matter of staying alive. Immediate action would be required, but by the time the bumbling bureaucrats came wandering back from their Christmas recess, not even a potentially vibrant new Congress would be able to kick their inertia into action before March, at which point the damage would be already done.

In the face of such a future it is high time for the American people to enact a rebellion, but not like any rebellion the powerful expect. It should be a rebellion outside the expectations of economic experts, and completely beyond the comprehension of Washington insiders and the wealthy elite. It would be beyond their comprehension because it would do what they fail to do. It would care for the elderly, and care for neighbors.

Considering all too many Americans don’t even talk to their neighbors, such a rebellion might seem impossible, however Hitler did not think it was possible Londoners could withstand his Blitz, yet they slept in subways, and those of Hitler’s advisers who guaranteed London’s despair, due to people sleeping in subways, were flabbergasted by an increase in high spirits, as the English people rebelled against the barking mad oppressor raining bombs from their skies.

The rebellion I envision doesn’t involve raining bombs or sleeping in subways. It merely involves sleeping at a neighbor’s, or having several elderly neighbors sleep at your house. It involves the simplest economics, which is that if you turn off the heat and electricity and drain the water pipes, and move in with your neighbor, the two of you will together only need to pay half as much for heat, if you share the costs. In cases where three households can fit into a single house, you would only pay a third the cost. Nor would such an arrangement be permanent. To be most effective, it should last only sixty days, from just after Christmas to before the first of March. These sixty days involve the cruel heart of winter, when heating bills are most likely to ruin a budget. If you could put up with your neighbor only that long, think of the money you’d save!

Of course, getting along with neighbors is no easy task. If the younger adults question the old-timers, they might learn about neighbors called “hippies” who lived with neighbors in places called “communes,” and learn about lots of things you should avoid doing. However likely they wouldn’t learn what to do to make the situation work, for most communes were abysmal failures. Getting along with neighbors is no easy thing, even for only sixty days.

However the Londoners, sleeping in subways during the Blitz, were sustained and derived relish from the simple fact they were defying Hitler. Perhaps the same relish might make neighbors more able to tolerate neighbors in modern times, for surely such behavior on the part of the American people would shock the socks off the barking mad in Washington. It is beyond the limits of their feeble minds, for they prove they are incapable of comprehending neighbors caring for neighbors, when they fail to care for constituents.

Just imagine what the effect would be, if my idea caught on. When the oil delivery man came down a street with ten houses, he would not deliver oil to all ten, but to only five, or even only four.   Because he delivered less, rather than the oil price going up, it would go down, due to the laws of supply and demand.

Even better is to imagine the consternation in Washington. They depend, in part, on a tax collected with each gallon of oil and propane delivered. If only half as much oil and propane is delivered, they collect only half as much tax.   It is tantamount to them opening their pay envelope on payday, and seeing their paycheck is only half as large as they expected.

They will deem this a serious problem. Fortunately, they are such dunderheads they will never see it coming, and by the time they wake up the sixty days will be past, and everyone will be back in their own houses, innocently whistling.

I imagine that at this point the elite will be absolutely furious. How dare the American people behave as if they are independent and free! How dare they be so ungrateful as to pay fewer taxes!   Laws must be passed to prevent this rebellious behavior! If the new congress does not pass the laws, the EPA will do it! Laws against the cohabitation of neighbors must be written in stone! Climate scientists must be hired to prove cohabitation causes Global Warming! (This may seem like an irrational response, but you need to remember these people are barking mad to begin with.)

They may even say it is better for people to freeze alone than to cohabit in a warm, shared, happy household. At their glittering parties they will nod in agreement about how cohabitation stresses leach fields and septic systems, and must be banned. Others will state cohabitation spreads infectious diseases, and must be banned. Whatever they say will seem sublimely logical, to them. However whatever they say will increasingly look like bunkum, to an American people who neither died of infectious diseases nor destroyed their leach fields, during their sixty-day, Gandhi-like, nonviolent rebellion.

However, just to be on the safe side, those with legal inclinations should perhaps prepare some legal briefs beforehand, arguing that religious freedom is involved. It doesn’t matter if they are atheists, they can point out Christianity makes a big deal about loving neighbors, and that “loving your neighbor as yourself” is right up there with worshiping the Creator, among Christians.

Not that we Americans care all that much about our neighbors. What we care for is our own independence and individuality. However, through the wisdom of our forefathers, we also know that we had better care for the independence and individuality of our neighbors, and stand united, or we will fall divided, for if our neighbors lose their independence and individuality, so will we.

So important is this concept that those with legal inclinations should likely figure out a way to file a lawsuit even before the EPA bans cohabitation. The best defense is a good offence, after all. The rest of us, who are not so legally inclined, should likely have some talks with the neighbors we never wanted to bother, and have never before gotten to know, during these Halcyon days of summer.

Scoffers will say my proposal will never work. (Likely their neighbor has halitosis and seldom changes his or her socks.) However when dealing with the barking mad you need to bark back. (Though you might like to allow your neighbor to live as he chooses, you need to tell him that for sixty days he should brush his teeth and change his socks.) However I think my idea just might work, due to something I noticed in my study of the London Blitz.

While the history of the English People, from the death of Queen Victoria to the eventual death of Queen Elisabeth II, largely looks like a free fall from huge responsibility to irresponsibility, from power to powerlessness, from grandeur to meaningless obscurity, they did have one moment when they, and no one else, stood utterly alone and took on an evil we cannot imagine. It truly was their “finest hour.”

Next time you are filled with self-pity about high heating bills, or about being stuck in a traffic jam, or about having a neighbor with halitosis, pause and imagine London during the Blitz. Every day bombs rained from the skies. Every day people you knew died. However rather than self-pity a defiance grew. Their motto was, “We can take it,” but what possessed those people to make up such a motto? The best description I ever heard, of what possessed London, simply called it “A White Heat.”

It was a moment in history when it was not America who stood up for Freedom, the English did. That class-ridden, moribund, down-falling society stood for Liberty when America didn’t. And why? Because of “A White Heat.”

As a poet, I love that description, “A White Heat,” but as a scientist I am appalled, for no thermometer can measure it. Even as a pseudo scientist and psychologist I am made nervous, for psychology seldom talks of a goodly power that can take on Hitler and shame him to suicide.

Christians would likely assert “A White Heat” is a gift from God given to those who take on evil, but because I don’t want to alienate goodly atheists, I’ll just state that if you stand by Truth, Truth stands by you. It is the strangest thing, for I am a pragmatist who prefers a large woodpile to standing by a cold stove expecting “White Heat”, but I’ve seen this over and over in my life: If you tell a lie, it haunts you and tracks you down, but if you tell the truth, though you may get sneered at and jeered at and even fired, in the long run you get “A White Heat.”  Scoffers can doubt, and point out 30,000 elderly in England felt no “White Heat” this side of Glory, but it is also true people do not take kindly to politicians telling them to freeze, and it it does not take much for a smoldering public to blaze into Light.

I confess I am counting on this unscientific “White Heat” to help out, when I make my proposal that neighbors love neighbors to the degree where they can abide together for sixty days. I know what can go wrong, for I am an old man who remembers the debacles of hippie communes. I furthermore know anyone who had to live with me for sixty days would be sorely tested. However the redeeming thing is that the sixty days would annoy the heck out of the elite in Washington. The sublime satisfaction of annoying such extremely annoying people would make even putting up with me worth it. In fact, it might turn the living situation into a sort of party, quite enjoyable due to the presence of “White Heat.”

In conclusion, that is my proposal. We need to condescend to love our neighbors for sixty days. If others have other ways we might respond to leaders who are barking mad, I am eager to hear their proposals. However I hope we can agree on this: The leadership is barking mad, and it is time to bark back.

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beng
July 15, 2014 7:58 am

This past January the eastern US grid was stretched to its limit. It was saved by bringing on EPA-mandated semi-retired coal-fired units that were only running in Jan/Feb & July/Aug. Those units are scheduled right now to be completely retired the end of this year, 2014. So, do the math of what could happen this coming Jan if similar cold returns.

Richard Ilfeld
July 15, 2014 10:02 am

Events have overtaken us. Households where a Jr. or Sr. have moved in with the breadwinner are growing like wildfire. Senior multiperson households are as well. Many of the costs of maintaining a household are moderated by group living. The psychological strain come from the economic forcing of an otherwise unanticipated relationship change. The elites currently power like many aspects of this, and will find anecdotal evidence to support their view, ignoring the problems. You are not a person. You are a disposable production unit, except for the few days before each election.
As long as no one comes to their fine home in the DC suburbs, and informs them that the department of housing has determined that it can support 9 citizens……

July 15, 2014 11:05 am

Philip says:
Before I embark on the epic voyage of reading this, I will comment on the part I have read so far, the part about King George III.
The author, in common with most Americans blame George III for the problems of the colonists leading up to the American Revolution. In fact, then, as now, the monarch had (mostly) only symbolic power. The laws of the land (and the Empire) bore his signature, but he was not the author of them, nor were they his ideas.

I very recently completed reading Common Sense, written by an Englishman who had migrated to America (Thomas Paine). He seemed to place a great deal of the blame on the King.

Zeke
July 15, 2014 11:13 am

beng says:
July 15, 2014 at 7:58 am “This past January the eastern US grid was stretched to its limit. It was saved by bringing on EPA-mandated semi-retired coal-fired units that were only running in Jan Feb & July/Aug. Those units are scheduled right now to be completely retired the end of this year, 2014. So, do the math of what could happen this coming Jan if similar cold returns.”
That is true, those coal plants are going to be shut down by the unelected, unaccountable EPA, and as Sen Inhofe pointed out, this very winter there were record low below zero temps during the “polar vortex wobble,” – and also late planting dates in that area. And these areas in the north are where people will need to look out for others’ interests, as Caleb Shaw has pointed out. Perhaps it is time to be proactive and contact some chains, Lowe’s and Walmart, and see if they have any plans to carry small propane space heaters or things of that nature for the people in the north whose coal is being shut down, and the churches and others may also need help stocking up for some winter supplies for any one in need of help. This is one summer and fall to “plan ahe
ad” (as my grandpa said).
Otherwise, we can already see it now: the public waits for the media to make a fashion whirlwind of the issue of power outages in the cold north. A politician flies in to get his picture taken and declare “an emergency.” And just like clockwork, they will have a government solution to…a government solution. They begin to sell their worthless, unwanted meters.
Sen Inhofe has introduced a bill that would guarantee states could keep their coal online based on the needs of their own citizens.

July 15, 2014 3:43 pm

Caleb says:
“Mostly I wanted people aware of what we could be facing this winter. Forewarned is forearmed. The worst case scenario would be to have the power go off right in the middle of an arctic outbreak.”
I warned of strong Arctic outbreaks last winter particularly from around Jan 7th onwards in my solar based forecasts. For this winter season, there should be some early cold from late October and parts of November. The next notable cold shots should start just after Xmas and last around three weeks, and then from just after mid March for around three weeks. Both of those may well sustain a little longer in the N.E. US. I hope that helps.

July 15, 2014 6:38 pm

Caleb writes:
“In a major cold outbreak, the grid may fail and large areas may be in the dark during extreme cold. This 1989 blackout from a failure of the Canadian grid (satellite picture) may be a preview of our situation for which politicians will likely blame power companies instead of their own bad policy/regulations.”
That one was clearly a solar storm, which there is some risk of around 31 January 2015. Note the pairs of bodies:
The 1859 Carrington Event: http://snag.gy/WXBw0.jpg
7 March 2012, 5.4 X-flare and large CME: http://snag.gy/ZOoqS.jpg
31 January 2015: http://snag.gy/8hspW.jpg

Ed Martin
July 15, 2014 8:16 pm

Hi Caleb, don’t know if you’ve ever seen this. It may not be the best history but pretty accurate. All the major parties have taken green liberalism way too far, to the point of endangering we the people. Of course, the Democrats go way too far on all neo liberal things but neither party ever undoes anything the other party did. Rarely if ever. In some instances actually piling it on worse.
http://climateandcapitalism.com/2012/03/27/the-origins-of-green-liberalism/
This is why I took to voting third party. Trying to change a party from within seems futile. I am ashamed that I was attracted to take a side with some far left views recently and ignorantly expressed them.
The Revolutionary War was fought simply to break the monopoly of the British East India Company. It wasn’t about the Colonists being mad because they had to pay taxes, they weren’t tea baggers. It was because the British East India Company had recently been exempted from any & all taxes and had all the taxes it had ever paid refunded. Talk about your Corporate Welfare. 
The Colonists were also fearful of the increasingly harsh treatment that this “Walmart of the day” was encouraging the British government to engage, all in the name of corporate profits of course. American ships were labeled as smugglers and the manufacture of goods that the Corporation chose to trade in was prohibited in the colonies and when caught were smashed. Since most of Parliament and the King were shareholders, they had no interest in hearing the grievances of middle class Americans. Sound familiar?
Today many of both parties of our government are now shareholders in one extreme or the other. Passing the baton back and forth in teamwork.

July 15, 2014 9:14 pm

RE: philjourdan says:
July 15, 2014 at 9:54 am
Thanks for explaining so clearly. I don’t mind being taken to task, when it forces me to think and hones my ideas.
In theory I agree with your ideas about the free market. The problem is that some businessmen are so successful that they get an overdose of money, and take steps to control the market, in which case it is no longer free.
You can put the word “Big” in front of any business, and people become nervous. Tyranny takes many forms. Originally unions and environmentalism were little people standing up to such big tyrants, but then they themselves too became “Big.” Now I think of them as Big Unions and Big Environmentalism, and they make me as nervous as Big Business and Big Government. Even our free press has largely allowed itself to be corrupted by greed, and exchanged its freedom for slavery.
I wish it were possible to legislate spirituality, but it isn’t. Spirituality is a mystery that springs from within, however its source often has something to do with suffering. When corruption reaches a certain level, it is the mother of such misery people simply get sick of it.
When the advertising agency a politician hires uses words like “hope” and “change,” it is slyly tapping into people’s hope for a spiritual revival. However, because truth-in-advertising is a good idea that has been corrupted, a leader may be nothing like what was advertised. Then, because modern Americans have been raised fully aware that advertisers are bald-faced liars, they catch on. Rather than seeing suffering decrease, they see it increase. “You cannot fool all of the people all of the time.”
Churchill said something along the lines of, “Democracy is the worst form of government, except all the others that have been tried,” however when the “Big” have enraged the little people, they tend to start thinking democracy is a bad idea. They have been measured and found wanting, but are too addicted to power to give it up. It is at such times democracy is in grave danger.
I think America is facing a time of such danger. The greatest weapon freedom has during such times is the simple Truth, which is like a small candle that can drive back Big darkness. In a society where advertisers have made lying commonplace, Truth can seem blinding and amazingly new, and spark a revival.

Reply to  Caleb
July 16, 2014 8:25 am

@Caleb – I wish to rephrase a comment I made – Add “In Practice” to “Government meddling in the markets always ends bad. ”
I do not disagree with you about “big”, but then you seem to be agreeing with me about government meddling. For the “Big” business seeks the protection and sanction of the government to remain big (GE and GM are 2 of the most egregious recent examples). Big business is not bad in and of itself. But when they conspire with government to limit entry into their markets to maintain their (or grow it) market share, that is bad. And they cannot do that without the complicity of government meddling.
Now to connect back to my rephrasing, in theory, government is supposed to keep the playing field level. for example, they are to make sure that “big” business does not sell below cost in order to bankrupt competitors. They are to keep the markets “free”. But in practice that rarely if ever happens.
Still, as Churchill said, it is the worst except all the others tried. It is not perfect. and it must be constantly monitored as man is not perfect. But let the market decide will always win out over letting government decide. Government is deciding. it is deciding to freeze to death the poor. it is deciding to bankrupt the middle class. None of the policies being enacted and practiced by governments in Europe or the US are hurting the Rich (when they do, they move! See Depardieu). So telling them to “maintain” a price is asking for trouble. And will always end with the poor worse off and the middle class becoming non-existent.
Government policy and intervention did not create the middle class. Bad “big” business did. But government is destroying it.

gail Combs
July 16, 2014 8:53 am

Laws must be passed to prevent this rebellious behavior! If the new congress does not pass the laws, the EPA will do it! Laws against the cohabitation of neighbors must be written in stone! Climate scientists must be hired to prove cohabitation causes Global Warming! (This may seem like an irrational response, but you need to remember these people are barking mad to begin with.)
They may even say it is better for people to freeze alone than to cohabit in a warm, shared, happy household.

I am sorry Caleb but most states already have laws banning those unrelated to each other from co-habiting. Also the town of Fitchburg MA during a ‘Polar Vortex’ winter (1983?), made the church who had out-fitted a member’s unused warehouse into an emergency shelter for street people, turn those people back out onto the street where they literally froze to death. (Made the headline in the local news)
As you said our government is BARKING MAD!
Seems Fitchburg is still having problems:
http://www.topix.com/forum/city/fitchburg-ma/T4M2LHLAMUTDCEH0R

Randy
July 16, 2014 11:57 am

I really enjoyed this article, thanks.

July 16, 2014 3:26 pm

@philjourdan 7/14 at 1:44 pm
a repeal of the 17th amendment would do that. Senators were supposed to be beholding to the states as they were APPOINTED by state legislatures. Until the 17th.
Here is what I would replace the 17th amendment with:
Each state has two senators, an L and P. (Note 1)
the P senators have a 4 year term, elected by popular vote in the state on the even year, congressional, non-presidential election. 2014, 2018, 2022, etc. (Note 2)
The L senators are elected by the State Legislature and serve indefinite terms and can be recalled by the State Legislatures at any time for any cause. They represent the State Legislatures and serve at the pleasure of the State Legislatures.
Note 1: I’d be willing to change that 2 per state to only 1 senator (L) if there was only one or two Congressional Representatives in the state. I think VT, NH, RI have far too much senatorial representation. WY, MT, AK might deserve 1 as well, but so much land area is controlled by the US government, two senators might be fairer.

July 16, 2014 6:27 pm

RE: gail Combs says:
July 16, 2014 at 8:53 am
That is an outrageous story, especially if the homeless died. We can care for refugees but not our own? When I get time I definitely will investigate the story further.
My mother grew up in Fitchburg, and it has had an odd relationship with the town in New Hampshire where I now live:
In the early 1800’s, when water-power was king, people used to travel up here by horse-drawn-wagon from Fitchburg, because we were a center of industry with a “turnpike” through the center of town. However when steam-power became king, the wealthy of my town did a dumb thing, which was to forbid the railway to come to town. They said it would “attract undesirable people” (back then it was the Irish), and they slit their own throats, in terms of business, though I suppose they did become an early version of a “gated community,” for a while. The population of my town crashed as, without a railway, the “turnpike” and its horse-drawn-wagons could not compete, and all but one mill closed, as did many other businesses. People traveled the other way, to Fitchburg, to shop, and for a while there was even a bus service to Fitchburg, however when Massachusetts taxes grew very high people stopped shopping there. In fact the travel is the other way once again, though mostly for booze and fireworks. ( Fitchburg has a very low per-capita-consumption of booze and fireworks, while my town looks like a town of drunks who shoot off fireworks to a huge excess, in terms of per-capita-consumption. ) (It is amazing what you can do with statistics.) As an interesting aside I’ll mention that the single local mill that amazingly survived the stresses of 175 years of upheaval did so by producing specialized fabrics, some of which now sits on the surface of Mars. It is the same mill that made the town rich in the first place, back in the year 1801!
To return to the present, I think it is one thing to close down a church’s outreach, and throw the homeless back out onto the street, and quite another to enforce laws that basically forbid all house-guests except relatives, when you are trying to do it to the middle class during brown-outs in a cold wave. A bureaucrat would need to have a lot of balls, and they are not known for that. After all, the middle class owns hand guns, and I fear they would shove barrels into bureaucrat’s snouts and say stuff Clint Eastwood might say. Bureaucrats might then ask the police to do the job for them, but the police are middle class, and might bend the rules, which they have been known to do from time to time, to the great shock of those who don’t live on the street.
Such laws were likely put in place to prevent hippy communes, and houses full of migrant workers. When the laws put in place by the middle class to protect their own neighborhoods are used against them, I would recommend avoiding Clint Eastwood behavior, and recommend saying that the sheltered person is a relative. (After all, we are all related to either Adam or Eve, or some ape in East Africa, depending on your beliefs.) Draw the line in the sand and make them take it to court. By the time the case comes to court the sixty days will have passed. The judge will likely have such a case-load he’ll be lenient, if the “problem” no longer exists.
Such laws are usually enforced when many neighbors complain about one bunch of hippies or migrants who are trashing one particular place. If a whole neighborhood is doing it, and the places are not trashed, who is going to complain? (You probably know some Ned Nasty or Nellie Numskull in your neighborhood, who would be freezing alone and complaining about people who were warmer, but in a worst-case-scenario, who is going to listen to old Nellie and Ned?)
If you have lived on the street you know that the finer points of the law, which lawyers love to dicker about, are replaced by a sort of law-of-the-jungle, once survival is at stake and a sort of fog-of-war sets in. Although the middle class has attempted to avoid such jungle reality, they are not stupid, and will be quick learners if you shut their power off in January.
I wouldn’t worry too much, Gail, about people being afraid to break some zoning code in a worst-case-scenario. During the London Blitz some complete idiots said it was against the law to sleep in the subway, but I have never read that a single soul served time or even paid a fine for doing so, as the bombs rained down.

Michael 2
Reply to  Caleb
July 16, 2014 8:15 pm

I enjoy reading many of the comments here. As I was reading your story I opened Googly Earth and looked in New Hampshire, but close to Fitchburg, for a small town with an ancient mill still in operation — Ipswich! Very pretty place and I can travel there almost instantly via Street View. I’ve been to Vt, Ma and Ct, but not New Hampshire. So then I study a bit of local history so I can “feel” a little bit about the history and people.

Reply to  Michael 2
July 17, 2014 4:56 am

RE: Michael 2 says:
July 16, 2014 at 8:15 pm
Excellent detective work, though it is not Ipswich, but New Ipswich.
If you check out the “Barret Mansion” you can see the Federal Style mansion the original mill owner built. (I worked there as a tour guide for two summers, and when I got bored of telling the same old story I would make up ridiculous history to entertain the people on the tours.)
What you cannot see is the sleeping quarter of the mill workers. They foolishly removed the roughly thirty side-by-side boxes, crammed together under the eves of the attic of a rooming house by the mill, about ten years ago. The workers ate in a common dining room downstairs, and paid the boss for room and board. It was a pre-Union existence we can’t even imagine.

July 16, 2014 7:11 pm

RE: philjourdan says:
July 16, 2014 at 8:25 am
You are asking me to answer profound questions, or at least to think about things, however I need to confess to you I cannot do you justice. Where you have obviously spent time and effort, and I should obviously repay you with time and effort, I cannot repay you. Look. See. My pockets are turned out and empty.
You see, when I focus my mind on writing I neglect other responsibilities. The lawns are not mowed. The garden isn’t weeded. Two pigs are delivered and I haven’t finished the pig pen. I feed the goats, rabbit and chicken, but forget to feed myself, or even shave myself. If it wasn’t for my writing appearing on WUWT, and nice comments like yours, my wife would likely kick my butt.
Now I have to attend to the responsibilities I neglected. However I am thinking of you, as I uproot crabgrass in the garden, build a pig pen, putter about on a rider mower, and deal with a neglected wife.
At some point, when I have caught up with neglected work, I hope to do some research about questions you have raised. I think I need to study the late 1800’s and early 1900’s, when monopolies such as Rockefeller’s Standard Oil and Carnegie’s Coal threatened to become powers that overpowered the common man. However that is the dead past. I also need to study the present. After I have done so, I hope to re-meet you on some thread, and get back to you.
All I can say at this point is that politicians in Washington seem to live in some alternative universe. I face an earthy reality where, if I neglect my responsibilities, there is hell to pay. (If I don’t water my chickens in the heat, they die.) They live in some other la-la land.
They are barking mad. And I think we agree on that.

Reply to  Caleb
July 17, 2014 6:47 am

@Caleb – Fair enough. And I agree they are barking mad.
And to get away from things, there is nothing better than working with your hands and creating something that will last and be enjoyed. So please enjoy yourself. I intend to get my own hands dirty soon enough.

Michael 2
July 16, 2014 8:19 pm

Caleb says: “All I can say at this point is that politicians in Washington seem to live in some alternative universe.”
That they do, but many universes exist, each of which seems incapable of imagining any other way. I worked there for several years in the Navy and “inside the beltway” is very different from “outside” even by just a few miles. By the time you get to Warrenton, it’s small-town rural and I used to go there for home-made jam sold at roadside stands.
Inside the beltway it is “Malthusian” dog-eat-cat. Essentially every bit of food is trucked in and there’s just not enough jobs, and probably never will be, for all the people so you have a huge self-sustaining welfare machine.

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