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  • "We don't have light"

    ‘We Don’t Have Light’
    By Kevin D. Williamson

    March 14, 2019 6:30 AM

    A street during a blackout in Caracas, Venezuela, March 8, 2019. (Carlos Garcia Rawlins)
    The lights have been out for a while in Venezuela, but none of this should surprise us. We have literally seen this before.


    N ew York City collapsed in 1977. There were 1,557 murders in the city that year, more than twice the number there had been ten years earlier. That awful trend would continue to get worse until the city hit its homicidal apex in 1991, with 2,245 murders, but the shadow — the literal shadow — of 1977 continued to loom over the city.

    Anno Domini 1977 saw the nation as a whole suffering from stagflation, and New York City in particular was crippled by a financial crisis following years of misgovernment heavy on policies that lately have enjoyed a revival: tuition-free education at City University of New York, substantial growth in public-sector personnel spending, big deficits financed by potentially volatile securities, short-term emergency financing, etc. Against that background of chaos and desperation, the so-called Son of Sam serial killer commanded the headlines as a brutally hot July settled over the simmering city.

    And then the lights went out.

    The 1977 blackout saw New York City burn. Arsonists attacked 31 neighborhoods in the city, burning down a five-block commercial stretch in Crown Heights with 75 stores. Bushwick was still burning the next morning. Hundreds of stores were looted, and a Bronx Pontiac dealership was relieved of most of its new-car inventory. Hundreds of police officers were injured in the riots, and thousands of looters were arrested. Thousands had to be evacuated from stalled subway cars. And New Yorkers were trapped: The tunnels had to be closed down as the ventilation failed, and the airports were closed. Mayor Abe Beame described it as a “night of terror.”

    ConEd, the municipal monopoly utility, called the event an “act of God.” But it was no such thing. The situation of New York City was the result of the acts of men — and their hubris.

    New York City was not alone.

    On the other side of the Atlantic, London had found itself in much the same situation, along with the United Kingdom at large. It was the high-water mark of British socialism, with strikes crippling the country, rampant inflation crippling the economy, and the attempt to impose wage-and-price controls in response making things even worse. Homes lost their heat, hospitals were running on batteries or ceasing to operate at all, transportation came to a standstill.

    The 1970s saw much of the notional radicalism of the 1960s put into actual practice in the United States and the United Kingdom, producing a terrible alloy of étatist command-and-control economics, cultural libertinism, and delusional liberationist policies touching everything from law enforcement to mental health — it was the golden age of “deinstitutionalization,” the results of which can be seen and smelled and heard raving on the streets of any U.S. city today — all under the watchful eyes of powerful public-sector unions and related interest groups. In short, it was a time of permissiveness in all the things requiring rigor and regimentation in all the things requiring liberalism.

    The blackouts in the United States and the United Kingdom were emblems of the despair of that time and, more pertinent, of the failure of the political ideas that shaped those years. But there were others: Gasoline rationing and hours-long waits at fuel stations come to mind.

    In the United Kingdom and the United States, the rejection of that arrogant and dysfunctional étatism resulted in the elections of Margaret Thatcher and Ronald Reagan, respectively, and in support for their broadly deregulatory, market-oriented reform agendas.

    But it is in the nature of human beings to forget. When Hugo Chávez came to power in Venezuela, progressive activists in the United States and the Democratic politicians allied with them lionized him as a rebuke to American capitalism and its excesses, celebrating him as a people’s champion and the leader of an authentically popular movement. Philadelphia Democrat Chaka Fattah accepted the gift of a few gallons of heating oil from the Chávez-run state oil company and sang hymns to the great dictator, thanking him “and the Venezuelan people for their benevolence.” New York Democrat Jose Serrano later eulogized the Venezuelan strongman as a hero who “understood democracy and basic human desires for a dignified life. His legacy in his nation, and in the hemisphere, will be assured as the people he inspired continue to strive for a better life for the poor and downtrodden.” Joseph Kennedy suggested that those critical of Democrats who accepted the patronage of the Chávez regime were countenancing “a crime against humanity.” The usual suspects — Sean Penn, Oliver Stone, Michael Moore — came to sit at his feet. Under Chávez’s successor caudillo, Nicolás Maduro, things got worse, but Jesse Myerson of Rolling Stone assured his fellow Millennial socialists that Venezuela’s economic program was “basically terrific.” There was no food, medicine, toilet paper, etc., and people were reduced to eating pets and zoo animals, and opposition leaders were disappeared in midnight raids, but Myerson insisted that Venezuela’s “electoral system’s integrity puts the U.S.’s to abject shame.”

    The lights have been out for a while in Venezuela. People are dying in Venezuelan hospitals because there isn’t enough electricity to run the dialysis machines and other necessary pieces of equipment. People are starving because food cannot be refrigerated or transported. Looting is common. The police crackdowns and political retaliation are brutal. As one Venezuelan put it, literally and perhaps more poetically than intended: “We don’t have light.”
    1

    None of this should surprise us. Not in New York. Not in London. We have literally seen this before. And where are American progressives? On Maduro’s side of the barricades, to a depressing extent. The failure of what Bernie Sanders likes to call “democratic socialism” in Venezuela cannot be forthrightly admitted lest they come to discredit Democrats’ domestic political ambitions. What has, say, the average columnist at The Nation learned from this brutality and privation? “The left wing of the Democratic Party needs to sharpen its crisis-response message,” writes Greg Grandin, “to figure out a way to use such moments to put forth a compelling counter-vision to the bipartisan foreign-policy establishment.” As long as the suffering of the Venezuelan people can be used for something! If it helps Ilhan Omar, then at least it will not have been entirely in vain.

    Some shadows are very long indeed, and some darkness almost impenetrable.
    Kevin D. Williamson — Kevin D. Williamson is the roving correspondent for National Review.

  • #2
    Re: "We don't have light"

    Murders at the height of the crack epidemic and the NY blackout and the oil crisis were all due to socialism?

    Just when I thought I'd heard it all...

    PS, the Citgo sign has been sitting in front of Fenway Park since long before Chavez and socialism in Venezuela, and Joe Kennedy's oil partnership with Citgo predates Chavez as well. Joe for Oil is a New England institution that old folk have depended on for heat in lean winter months for decades. We don't have natural gas heat in many municipalities up here, we freeze without fuel oil. Joe 4 Oil helped untold thousands stay warm. Since the 70s, call 877 Joe 4 Oil. People know it. It saves so many folk who run out of oil and have to wait for a fixed income to come in to buy more. It's disgusting to make it out to be some socialist plot just because a Kennedy is involved. The partnership was always with Citgo, before Venezuela bought it in 1986, and before Chavez took power in 1999. Citgo continued the program all the while. To make it out as though this we're some socialist plot hatched by Joe Kennedy and Chavez and Maduro is just so low. Discourse is beyond dead.

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    • #3
      Re: "We don't have light"

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: "We don't have light"

        Socialism fails in any national experience.

        China is not socialist. As EJ said, China has a mercantile capitalist economy and a one party political system.

        A market economy is necessary for sustained economic growth.

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        • #5
          Re: "We don't have light"

          Originally posted by vt View Post
          Socialism fails in any national experience.

          China is not socialist. As EJ said, China has a mercantile capitalist economy and a one party political system.

          A market economy is necessary for sustained economic growth.

          Problem is in the definition, vt. I think socialism is just another word for sin for those who pray at the altar of Mammon.

          To me, socialism is a very specific thing. Public ownership of the means of production and capital. Much like China's massive state owned enterprises controlled by their communist party. To you, that's capitalism, because China is growing in material wealth, and therefore must be pleasing Mammon and cannot be sinning.

          Worse still, I think to you (plural), things like the op article make sense. Of course Joe Kennedy's private philanthropic partnership with corporate Citgo is socialism because over time Chavez captured Citgo, and Venezuela is losing material wealth, so it must be sinning.

          I think that's the logic anyways. Market is Good. Material wealth is proof that Market loves you. Therefore all material gains are due to Market. Material poverty is proof that one has sinned against Market, therefore proof of socialism.

          To me, the relationship between markets, state ownership, firms, private non profits, and all the rest are much more complicated and nuanced. The USSR, to me, can be much more Socialst than Putin's Russia, and still enjoy periods of greater growth in material prosperity. Or visa versa. But it's not always one way. It's an optimization problem, and you need well structured institutions and education and broad access to capital and property rights and uniform rule of law to really crank it up.

          Take Ukraine. It's far poorer and worse off today than it was 30 years ago. To you, socialism must be the reason. The possibility of oligarchy using a market system to loot the population simply doesn't exist. Or if it does, we can't say markets and billionaires did it, and must blame it on the state somehow. Because Market is good, always and everywhere. And if they were giving thanks to Market properly, riches would be showered upon them. Their very poverty is evidence that somehow they are more socialist now than when they were... actually socialist and wealthier.

          I simply cannot buy that reasoning. I don't worship the same God you do. There is no Prosperity Gospel in my world. And I don't think you'll ever convert me. But you will goad me into responding to some of these articles written by Mammon's disciples. Just know that I seriously view them as proselytization by missionaries of a foreign religion. And I'm not in the business of deprogramming heretical cults. I'll leave that for the Priests. All I can do is point out the fact that the cult of mammon exists and move on.

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          • #6
            Re: "We don't have light"

            It's a mixture

            https://learningenglish.voanews.com/...s/4599837.html

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            • #7
              Re: "We don't have light"

              I re-watched The Big Short the other day. It's incredible that we went from it being a felony for a loan officer not to notify authorities when someone tried to lie on a loan application to NINJA. The "market" could never have "corrected" this. Socialism or no socialism, if left up to markets, the rivers would still be on fire, L.A. would be uninhabitable, and we'd all be drinking Al Capone beer and wine. Our sick democracy explains Wells Fargo, Martin Shkreli, Caterpillar, VW, 48,000 dollars for a tetnus shot, and the regulatory capture of Boeing. 85 people have more wealth than the poorest 3 billion. Marx got a lot right. Markets certainly won't adjust that.

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              • #8
                Re: "We don't have light"

                If you think of markets like a tool instead of like a god, they become much more interesting. Like a hammer, they are the perfect tool for some jobs, but sort of rubbish at others. There's a reason that just about every major corporation organizes itself as a hierarchical firm rather than as a market. And viewed this way, markets can be both fallible and misapplied. That is, you can simply believe in market failures not caused by the state. They can happen. Often. Worse, you can apply markets where they're not such a great tool. Wouldn't want to try to fix my laptop with a hammer. I think history shows market based military or fire protection to be something akin to that. And to be honest, I don't think the profit market model is doing us any favors in education or healthcare either. One of the problems with "the service economy" is that it lumps all these things together with chefs and taxi rides into one category. But I suspect there's a reason these sectors were traditionally not for profit in British law and going back to Oxford in the 1300s. The goals are different. The primary mission is not wealth accumulation or shareholder value. And when you get confused about the primary mission and make it wealth accumulation and shareholder value in situations where it should not be, things go awry. But this cannot happen if Market is god. Market is always the answer. There is no better tool for any job. And if it's not working out, well, that's just socialism and you need even more markets with even fewer rules about what mischief they can get into.

                People who worship Market at this point usually either get red in the face and tell me I worship the state (I just read history, and there are no markets in failed state anarchy that are worth a damn) or they assume I'm a secret socialist because I'm speaking ill of Market. I'm not. I don't hate markets. They are very good and efficient things when applied properly, like a flea market--you know, actual markets, not multinational corporate for profit school chains run by textbook publishing companies. Not so good then. Of course, the other thing markets as tools does not preclude is a socialist market economy. They're not good and evil opposites. You can organize a market with public or collective ownership. So socialist market economy is not the oxymoron worshipers of Market imagine it to be.

                Of course, you see what's going on? Like a fundamentalist church mom, they instantly assume that anyone not worshiping at their Church (Market) must worship the devil (state). They instantly assume that anyone who disagrees are bad people (socialist), who hate god (Market). They cannot fathom the position of "markets are tools," because God cannot be a tool. In their minds, man exists to serve Market. Market does not serve man. Market cannot fail. Market can only be failed. All material success is due to Market. All material poverty is due to lack of Market. It's a classic good/evil dichotomy as old a Zarathustra himself. You can spot it over and over again in cultures around the world throughout history. The biggest, tallest, most opulent buildings always honor the ascendant god. They are luxury condo investments and investment banks now. Shrines to Market. The tallest residential building in the world at Park Ave is mostly empty. A store of market value to rival the Empire State Building. An offering built to Market that man dare not use. I don't view us as outside of history, but as part of it. I know this seems like hyperbole to a lot of people, but I think it explains a lot more of modern life than just about any other way of looking at it.
                Last edited by dcarrigg; March 16, 2019, 08:35 AM.

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                • #9
                  Re: "We don't have light"

                  There is lots of inequality in socialist and communist nations.

                  Venezuela has a few billionaires that control most of the wealth, including Chavez's and Maruro's families. Below that is a rung of loyal supporters like key military officers that are well to do. The rest of the nation is starving and poor.

                  Cuba is the same as is any despotic nation across the globe. Putin and his billionaire oligarchs control most of Russia's wealth.

                  China is an interesting case. Total and increasingly repressive political control and allowing more wealth creation in the private sector because that's where
                  80% of job creation is occuring. I've studied China and Russia closely for years and know experts in the field. China is controlled by a few wealthy in the leadership and then the loyal rung of communist party members who live a typical middle class experience.

                  China's entrepreneurs are allowed to become billionaires because the leadership understands the need to create economic growth or lose power. There are also family connections, as that's where contacts come in for the favored.

                  There is inequality everywhere in larger nations, and most others except a few homogenous countries like the Scandinavia region.

                  As for the failure to take action after the meltdown, that is the failure of government. Even before the the beginning of the transgressions started in the early part of the decade, regulators failed to enforce laws already on the books.

                  Clinton, Greenspan, and Rubin failed to listen to Brooksley Born on the risk of derivatives. McCain and Bush tried to rein in Fannie and Freddie bad lending criteria, but were turned away by Congress. Both parties failed us. Federal and state regulators failed us. The SEC was warned early about Madoof and did nothing.

                  NO one went to jail after the 2008 crash in spite of a federal government totally controlled by Democrats. The Republicans weren't any better. Note their efforts to kill the fiduciary rule.

                  As I've stated before countless times both parties are at fault and need to be replaced. But we don't need to replace them with other political forms of government that have failed continuously and added political repression and even killings of dissenters.

                  Marx??? His policies never worked, and his adherents have killed tens of millions of poor people.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Re: "We don't have light"

                    Originally posted by vt View Post
                    There is lots of inequality in socialist and communist nations.

                    Venezuela has a few billionaires that control most of the wealth, including Chavez's and Maruro's families. Below that is a rung of loyal supporters like key military officers that are well to do. The rest of the nation is starving and poor.

                    Cuba is the same as is any despotic nation across the globe. Putin and his billionaire oligarchs control most of Russia's wealth.

                    China is an interesting case. Total and increasingly repressive political control and allowing more wealth creation in the private sector because that's where
                    80% of job creation is occuring. I've studied China and Russia closely for years and know experts in the field. China is controlled by a few wealthy in the leadership and then the loyal rung of communist party members who live a typical middle class experience.

                    China's entrepreneurs are allowed to become billionaires because the leadership understands the need to create economic growth or lose power. There are also family connections, as that's where contacts come in for the favored.

                    There is inequality everywhere in larger nations, and most others except a few homogenous countries like the Scandinavia region.

                    As for the failure to take action after the meltdown, that is the failure of government. Even before the the beginning of the transgressions started in the early part of the decade, regulators failed to enforce laws already on the books.

                    Clinton, Greenspan, and Rubin failed to listen to Brooksley Born on the risk of derivatives. McCain and Bush tried to rein in Fannie and Freddie bad lending criteria, but were turned away by Congress. Both parties failed us. Federal and state regulators failed us. The SEC was warned early about Madoof and did nothing.

                    NO one went to jail after the 2008 crash in spite of a federal government totally controlled by Democrats. The Republicans weren't any better. Note their efforts to kill the fiduciary rule.

                    As I've stated before countless times both parties are at fault and need to be replaced. But we don't need to replace them with other political forms of government that have failed continuously and added political repression and even killings of dissenters.

                    Marx??? His policies never worked, and his adherents have killed tens of millions of poor people.
                    I'm a republican. Small R. I think you can be capitalist like Putin's Russia or socialist like Stalin's USSR and it's miserable either way. The economic system is secondary to rule of law, Civic virtue, broad and equal democratic participation and citizenship, fair representation, well functioning institutions, and broad access to education and health to build a competent and productive citizenry.

                    It doesn't mention free markets anywhere in the Constitution, and I for one think that's a good thing. It does mention post offices and post roads, and the regulation of commerce. I think those are good things as well.

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                    • #11
                      Re: "We don't have light"

                      https://bit.ly/2TWWSc4

                      This is as good an explanation as any for why pointing and yelling socialism at everything you don't like is a bad strategy, even if your goal is to make the system even more regressive and conservative, vt. Just don't say I didn't warn you.

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                      • #12
                        Re: "We don't have light"

                        I don't give a damn what an economic system is called, just want something that works best for the working people, from whence I came.

                        For years we've had the left yelling about how bad a free market system is and that socialism was the only answer, despite its failures. Free markets don't work perfectly also.

                        I don't care about the left or right so stop trying to label me. I oppose tyranny in all forms and thought control in any form. No Fascism, Socialism, communism or crony Capitalism.

                        I think capitalism has been replaced by the knowledge economy, and knowledge requires freedom of thought and the scientific method.

                        I think anyone who violates trust like the banksters who caused the 2008 crash should have been indicted and put on trial. Jail if guilty. But both
                        parties failed then.

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                        • #13
                          Re: "We don't have light"

                          "despite its failures..."
                          You mean like 100 million ish dead

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                          • #14
                            Re: "We don't have light"

                            Yes Mike, they tend to ignore that fact.

                            When it doesn't work they blaming the workers and people start getting killed.

                            On 60 Minutes tonight. Targeting Americans. This is what Communist nations do to maim and kill foreign government officials.

                            https://www.cbsnews.com/news/brain-t...nt-60-minutes/
                            Last edited by vt; March 17, 2019, 06:11 PM.

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Re: "We don't have light"

                              Originally posted by vt View Post
                              Yes Mike, they tend to ignore that fact.

                              When it doesn't work they blaming the workers and people start getting killed.

                              On 60 Minutes tonight. Targeting Americans. This is what Communist nations do to maim and kill foreign government officials.

                              https://www.cbsnews.com/news/brain-t...nt-60-minutes/
                              No VT what you've posted is what privately owned billionairre corporations do to convince gullible Americans to carry on spending billions on their "defence" and surveillance state in the name of freedom. Your media control would be laughable if the public didn't lap it up.
                              The majority of US thinking is no less controlled by privately owned propaganda than China is by state owned propaganda.
                              https://theintercept.com/2019/01/07/...kely-crickets/

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