Daily Archives: August 9, 2005


Nailing the Drug War

Steven Taylor gets it right:

However, it is impossible, I would argue, to look at the money we spend and the results we get and then state that our drug war policy makes any sense whatsoever.

Read the Rest. Then call your elected representatives and tell them you want the drug war, a war on the people of America (amongst others) stopped. Now.


RIP Jerry Garcia 8.1.42-8.9.95

It all rolls into one
and nothing comes for free
There’s nothing you can hold
for very long
And when you hear that song
come crying like the wind
it seems like all this life
was just a dream
Stella Blue
Stella Blue, Lyrics by Robert Hunter

Also see Scott and John.
It’s great to see the NYT note this day but for a much clearer view of Garcia, the band and their music Phil Lesh’s recent book Searching for the Sound is well worth the time to read.
Update – Today’s Music: The Jerry Garcia Band, Kean College, February 28, 1980

Update 2:
David Gans has more links and The Days Between which includes some words from Robert Hunter.


Ending the Wal-Mart Subsidy

Toward the end of a discussion of Wal-Mart’s profits and its worker’s wages Donald Johnson, posting at Body and Soul, makes an important point:

Reductio ad absurdums aside, maybe it is possible that there’s a multiplier effect of some kind here, but it apparently involves government social programs stepping in to take care of Wal-Mart’s inadequately-paid workers. So again, should the government go into the business of picking out efficient businesses and subsidizing them, or should it give health benefits to everyone?

Well, it should do neither.
First, if folks are choosing to stay employed at a low wage operation like Wal-Mart because, inter alia, the sum of their wages plus health maintenance provided by Medicaid disincents them to find more remunerative work then end the subsidy. You and I should not be supporting Wal-Mart’s low wages via tax supported health maintenance programs.
Second, Wal-Mart is not the only business receiving this wage subsidy they just happen to be the large easy target. Others are both small and large. In addition, there are plenty of other business subsidies many of which are much more direct such as sugar price supports, import restrictions, tarriffs, etc.
Third, government should not be taking the fruits of your or my labor and using it to subsidize either directly or indirectly any business using any criteria.
So let’s stop it now: no more sugar subsidies, no more tarriffs, no more Medicaid, real free trade, and so on.
Surely all those highly paid K-street folks who now make their living persuading our elected represrentatives their minions that their business should be subsidized with money that would be better used buying food, shoes and health care for our families can find useful work elsewhere at a wage appropriate to their productivity.