Category Archives: Society

Rooting For The Little Guy

I’ve become addicted to listening the NPR program “This American Life” lately. I started with the weekly podcast about six months ago, but a couple of weeks ago I started listening to the archives that stretch back to 1995. With thirteen years of archives I’ve been listening all day, rather than waiting another week to hear the next program. It really helps my day go by. Being stuck in a 10 x 10 office all day programming web sites can get a little boring.

The opinion among my ideological brethren is that NPR is notoriously liberal. Even Howard Dean described the classic liberal as driving a Volvo station wagon while listening to NPR. While I’ve noticed the left-of-center slant in the This American Life programs, it hasn’t been something that I’ve found to be obnoxious. Not nearly as obnoxious as the racket coming out of Sean Hannity’s mouth on a daily basis. The stories presented are mostly stories about everyday people with not much of a political stance either way.

When I come across the stray liberal stance here or there I generally just take it within the context presented and brush it aside. However, occasionally one of the contributors says something that just sticks in my head.

Today I found myself pondering a story from “Dishwasher Pete” that deals with the 1996 National Restaurant Association convention. I think Pete is pretty funny, and seems like a really nice guy. I suppose his thing is that he’s there representing the lowly dishwasher among the boss types that are in attendance at this convention. While admirable in intent, logically it’s a little misguided. It’s the classic leftist shot at “the man.”

Pete’s visit to this convention is generally benign. Bob Dole is the keynote speaker, and Pete asks if he has any advice for the dishwashers of America. In classic Dole style his response is, “Just keep washing.”

Later Pete visits an automated dishwasher manufacturer’s booth. The dishwasher vendor explains that with his machine a restaurant owner can cut back on dishwasher staff, because it only takes one person to run this machine. Pete’s follow up question is the kind of thing that reveals the flaws of leftist thinking.

He’s asks something like, “How will this affect the dishwashers that lose their jobs because of this machine?” The vendor seems a little taken back and give a stupid response that seems to indicate that the machine will help to ensure job security for the remaining dishwasher.

He should have said something like, “Well, looks like the dishwasher will need to find another dish washing job, or learn another marketable skill.”

Since when is it the restaurant owner’s job to keep someone employed past their usefulness to the company? There’s this sense of entitlement that comes with liberalism that I find it hard to explain. Who is ensuring that the restaurant owner will keep his job? Answer: the restaurant owner. He keeps his job by offering something to the market that is worth buying. He keeps himself in a job. He does not have the responsibility to haul around the extra weight of an employee that doesn’t see the need to offer a compelling service to the marketplace. What leftists seem to miss is that in a free market system we are all little businesses. Every worker is a tiny little business. We all offer something to the marketplace to be exchanged for money, or we don’t make a living. Simple.

The reason that I have a job in an ad agency making decent money is because I taught myself graphic design while working as a counter guy at Kinko’s. I was making about $5.00 per hour working at there. That’s nearly equivalent to washing dishes. If I wanted to make more money I needed to expand my skills. I needed to offer more to the marketplace.. so I did.

A dishwasher can learn to cook. A cook can learn to manage. A manager can start his own business. Why is this so hard for ‘progressives’ to understand? This is the best way to root for “the little guy.” This is the best way to have a prosperous society. Help people to better themselves by helping them to learn how to offer more to the market.

John McCain was given a lot of grief when he visited Detroit on a campaign stop. He was asked what can be done about the autoworkers who are finding themselves out of a job. His response was that the workers needed to be retrained to find another place in the market. What?!? Retrained!?! That’s ridiculous!

Why should American automakers be forced to keep armies of obsolete workers on payroll? That’s is the reason that younger auto workers are losing their jobs in the first place. It’s the reason that American automakers find it difficult to compete with overseas competitors. The unions have negotiated such a welfare state for retired workers that the companies can’t afford to keep the current workers on payroll. The money has to come from somewhere. Unions are the worker’s worst enemy. There was a time and place for them a century ago, but that time has passed. The unions are a millstone around the neck of American manufacturing.

OK… enough preaching… sorry. Stepping down from my soap box.

I can remember a conversation that I had with a ‘progressively’ minded friend of the family one time. He was complaining about the minimum wage. He asked me if I was able to live on my own when I was making minimum wage. He said that no one can live on minimum wage today. In fact, I did live on my own… sort of. When I moved out of my parent’s house I shared a house with two of my friends, and we split living expenses like rent or groceries. It wasn’t the government’s job to get me more money. It was my job to get me more money. Statistically, most of the people earning minimum wage are young people who only need to support themselves. Of those earning minimum wage only a small percentage are the primary providers for a family.

Anyway… I’d better stop. I’m diving back in.

Conclusion: the best way to help the little guy is to help them to help themselves. Teach a man to fish.

Will Republicans lose congress? Do they deserve to?

With the November elections looming, and Republican prospects of keeping the majority looking worse than they have in long time, I find myself amazingly calm. The only explanation that I can come up with for the serenity is my indifference with the Republican Party right now. I’m not sure if I actually care if they lose. In fact, it might be good for the party.

Having been a conservative since grade school, calling out the GOP for failure isn’t something that I do easily, but something is terribly wrong. Republicans have held the White House, the Senate and the House for almost seven years. What is the result? Record levels of spending that have outdone Clinton by a long shot. We have a national debt that is out of control. We have a nearly non-existent southern border. It’s estimated that over one hundred thousand illegal immigrants per month cross our border and land in our social services system. On top of these internal failings, respect for the US around the world is at record low levels.

This may sound like a list from Democratic talking points, but I am afraid that having a Republican majority has not helped this country has much as I had hoped it would. It seems that having a blank check to do anything has caused the GOP to do nothing constructive.

What things could have been accomplished that weren’t?

1. Border Control. The vast resources that are currently being used in Iraq could have been used to seal our own borders. Imagine the manpower and resources of this war being utilized where it’s really needed. Don’t want to fight the terrorists on US soil? Seal the freakin’ border! That’s pretty elementary. I’m not sure what kind of relationship Bush has with Vicente Fox, but this President’s reaction to the border crisis is laughable. Mass illegal immigration is the clear and present danger this nation right now.

2. Real Education Reform. The US education system is still as pathetic today as it has ever been. No Child Left Behind has simply become another thing that public school teachers can rig in order to advance children who aren’t learning. You really want to improve education in the US? Pass a voucher system that encourages free market competition. It has been proven in small-scale experiments that voucher systems improve public and private schools at the same time. It is crazy that so many other countries, many of which use voucher systems, are outpacing us. Until fundamental change is made to our education system we will continue to graduate illiterate children.

3. Social Security Reform. Congressional Republicans gave up too easily on fixing the largest sucking wound to the federal budget. As it stands, Social Security will be bankrupt just about the time that I’ll be of age to collect on what I’ve been putting into the system my entire working life. Before bankruptcy hits, the Social Security system will be a major cause of an economic downturn the likes of which we haven’t seen since The Great Depression.

4. Income Tax Reform. True, the one bright point for the GOP has been the tax cuts. They have helped to curb the economic effects of 9/11 and the dot-bomb burst. However, the tax code remains dramatically flawed. To see what could be, check out www.fairtax.org.

This concludes my list of disappointments in the Republican Party lately. You’ll notice that this list consists of mainly domestic issues. If the GOP loses congress, I believe that we may see a rebirth of core values in the party. Republicans against the ropes seem to remember what’s important. Cozy and fat Republicans become a waste of time.

All this being said God save us all from what Nancy Pelosi has planned for our country. This is going to get worse before it gets better.

Studio 60 and American Christians

Studio 60 on the Sunset StripI hate to admit this, because it reveals the inner couch potato in me, but I am genuinely excited about fall TV. Not sure when this embedded in my mind as a harkening of the seasonal change, but like freshly sharpened pencils and turning leaves, I now associate autumn with fresh television programming. To make it even better, I can’t recall when the crop of new shows seemed to be so promising.

On the top of my list this year is Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip on NBC. I watched the season premiere with much anticipation, and I wasn’t disappointed. It has the great writing of The West Wing (thank you Mr. Sorkin), combined with behind-the-scenes showbiz intrigue (something I’ve always been a sucker for).

All that being said, I’ve found myself in an interesting place while watching this show. Just on the edge of being offended, but not quite there. You see, I am a Christian and this program has chosen an interesting way of approaching the issue of Hollywood in relation to Christianity.

Studio 60 has been unfolding a subplot that deals with cultural pushback from Christian groups over the fictional show’s content. Subplot may be a bad description of this aspect of the program; seeing that one of the foundational ideas behind Studio 60 is that the former producer of the show was fired for melting down on live TV when the network asked him the pull a skit called Crazy Christians. Apparently, the fictional network didn’t want to incur the wrath of the Christian-Right by airing such a skit.

This theme has continued each week in some form or another, and at first blush I found myself getting defensive. The Christians portrayed in the general public are boorish, small-minded people who see humor in nothing. They are hair-pinned-back-to-the-point-of-pain; pursed-lipped caricatures that publish magazines called Rapture and employ dirty tricks to get their way in Hollywood.

I don’t personally know people like this. This is where the defensiveness was born. I have no personal knowledge of people who use their Christianity as a weapon in this way. According to Studio 60 I should. I just don’t.

My friends are more likely to read Relevant Magazine, if they read a Christian magazine at all. My friends and I enjoy going to pubs and spending long hours laughing over a few pints of beer. My friends are normal people. They aren’t glassy-eyed zealots always on the prowl for the devil in hidden places. I’m not even a West Coast Christian. I live in Tulsa, Oklahoma often referred to as the Buckle of the Bible Belt, and home of Oral Roberts University (You remember 900 foot Jesus? Ouch.).

Just when I thought that I was ready to be offended and chalk this up to another case of a Hollywood show intent on bashing believers in Christ, I had a thought. I don’t know this type of Christian personally, but I know that they exist. I’ve seen them on those hideous religious channels on TV, and I knew some folks with a bad case of religious bigotry when I was a kid attending a rural Baptist church.

However, I’ll bet that Hollywood knows these people well. They must hear from that segment of the church a lot. Hollywood has more of an opportunity to interact with this type of Christian because Hollywood is on their cultural hit list. I’m not. I have my Jesus Card. Those people aren’t interested in me, but they are interested in confronting Hollywood.

I had to remember that this program is a story told from the point of view of Hollywood. I also had to remember that most of the interaction Hollywood has with these Christians is set within the confines of this cultural combat.

This is sad to me. I wish that people didn’t always have to see the equivalent of my annoying brother-in-law when they think of believers. But this is who they see, because this annoying segment of the American Church is also the loudest, and most well funded.

When I read my Bible I see that Jesus spent most of his time talking with the underbelly of that society. Tax collectors, prostitutes and beggars were his audience a lot of the time. You can’t tell me that he didn’t have a great sense of humor to command the attention of those people. If you want a peek into this humor, just read Matthew 7:9-11 with an eye to the comedy of what he’s saying.

I am not saying that Hollywood is blameless. There’s a ton of trash that comes out of that town from merely even a quality standpoint. But I will continue watching Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip. It’s a great show. Instead of being offended at the portrayal of American Christians on the show, I will lament the fact that American Christians have portrayed themselves in this way to the world.