Did you every hear the expression “a mile wide and an inch deep?” This describes President Trump's policies to a T. There’s always some truth to what he says:
- The odious Iranian government hates the U.S. and wishes us harm
- Nicholas Maduro is an evil, drug-dealing son-of-a-bitch
- Cubans are better off without the Castro's in charge
- Illegal immigrants have broken the law
- As have Minneapolis and other "sanctuary cities"
- Rich people generate wealth for everyone
- The federal government is bloated
- We are getting ripped off by foreign countries
- Et cetera
These are all great one-line sound bites for the beautiful people on Fox News, but they only skim the surface. When you look deeper, there are pesky details that make Trump's easy fixes seem delerious, dumb, and dangerous. For example...
- The odious Iranian government hates the U.S. and wishes us harm
- There are 92,000,000 (92 million) people in Iran.
- If they really wanted the IRGC gone, they would be gone.
- Most Iranians believe that the 1979 Revolution freed them from the oppression of the Shah’s monarchy and the foreign influence of the Anglo-Persian Oil Company.
- Other than kicking Hussein out of Kuwait, what do we have to show for the $6 trillion spent and 10,000 American lives lost in the Middle Eastern wars since World War Two?
- BTW, $6 trillion is about what we spend in six years on all welfare and other anti-poverty programs.
- Nicholas Maduro is an evil, drug-dealing, son-of-a-bitch
- There are 30,000,000 (30 million) people in Venezuela.
- If they had really wanted Nicholas Maduro gone, he would be gone.
- Since when did we kill people on the high seas because we "think" they are doing something wrong? Wouldn't we call this piracy if someone else did it?
- Isn't America still practicing Gunboat Diplomacy in its attacks on Panama, Grenada, Iraq, Lybia, Venezuela, and Iran?
- The Venezuelans didn’t ask for, nor did they need Trump’s help to put a sane government in place.
- Cubans are better off without the pro-Castro, Marxist regime
- Same for the 10,000,000 (10 million) Cubans...
- Most of whom believe that Castro did a lot for the desperately poor of Cuba…ask them!
- And BTW, no one in Cuba wants to return to the Batista dictatorship.
- Illegal immigrants have broken the law
- Of course “illegal” immigrants have broken the law, but they are not here for Red Sox games and hot dogs.
- They come here to work...
- And you know what, we need them.
- Our economy is dependent on immigrants as every worker in American cannot earn a minimum wage of $30 an hour (as proposed) without the economy going broke...
- Or turning into Europe where very few people have their own home, own more than one car (if they own one at all), or have much chance of breaking out of their "class."
- Immigration law should have been reformed decades ago to embrace immigration as a win-win opportunity...
- Blame congress for this not happening.
- Minneapolis and other "sanctuary cities" are defying federal law
- Yes, sanctuary cities like Minneapolis are defying federal law...
- But cities like Minneapolis, New York, and Chicago would be way too expensive for anyone but billionaires if there were no low-wage workers.
- And the myth that immigrants are taking jobs from Americans is just that...fake -- there are not enough Americans willing to work for $5 or $10 an hour to displace even a small fraction of our immigrant workers.
- And while we're at it let's face the myth that the American work ethic is still "work hard and succeed"...
- It's not. Today, many of us (literally many many millions of us) feel entitled to things we have not earned.
- Rich people generate wealth for everyone and deserve a tax break occasionally
- Absolutely, rich people do disproportionately promote economic growth, which generates wealth,
- And they do deserve a tax break occasionally,
- But making it sound like the “Big Beautiful Bill” helps ordinary people is nonsense;
- Worse, it undermines the government’s credibility.
- Ordinary people are not stupid; tell them the truth, that sometimes you need to give "earners" a reward.
- The federal government is bloated and needs to be trimmed
- Sure, but could anyone but Trump find a more ridiculous way to do this than to let a mad genius like Elon Musk loose on the bureaucracy... literally with a chain saw?
- As we are discovering, while the federal government does things inefficiently, it does things that we need.
- And, it's a lot easier to fire people who know how to do things than it is to get their expertise back.
- Why couldn't we have had a sane cut-back process?
- We are getting ripped off in our trade with foreign countries, who have also taken our indutries
- What...! Than how come we're so rich?
- Is a tariff a good solution to this "problem?" (A tariff is a "tax" paid by an importer [us!] to import goods.)
- It only works when the foreign-cost-of-the-good + the tariff > the domestic-cost-of-the-good. (Why would a conmsumer want to pay more? ...patriotism?) With Amercan production costs so high, it is rarely the case that this difference in cost is small...it's usually enormous.
- Any college student who has taken an economic survey course can tell you the most fundamental rule of a viable economy is...buy from the least-cost producer, not the highest-cost one (usually us)!
- America is rich and the people who work here will not accept wages that allow us to build a $1,000 refrigerator, a $20,000 car, a low-cost compouter chip, or an iPhone.
- Instead, our economic salvation lies in creativity and innovation, which we excel at because we allow people the freedom to try things, fail, and try again.
- And please, Donald Trump, stop showing us charts of the trade imbalance we have with India, Bangladesh, Uganda, and other economic "giants." We have a trade imbalance with most of the world because we are rich and these countries are too poor to buy our stuff.
- Et cetera
Trump's inch-deep approach isn't new. In fact, it explains how an entire population of sophisticated people can appear to suddenly go insane -- reference Germany in the 1930s, China in the 1960s, and Russia in the 1990s. Tell people enough contraversial stuff to get them charged up, leave out the pesky details, convince them that they can bully or shoot their way out of their problems, and these folks are well on their way to Crazytown.
And this journey is subtle – it’s hard to see that your values, your common sense, and your acceptance of "crazy" has changed. It's also gradual – when you are on the journey to Crazytown, it’s hard to remember when things were better.
What some evidence of this...ask yourself if you remember how it was about a year ago ...when we didn’t have federal troops in American cities? ...when we were not debating whether it was okay for federal agents to shoot protesters? ...when we were not toppling dictators for people who didn’t ask us to topple their leaders? ...when we were not in an oil-war in the Middle East? ...when the federal government was not run by lunatics trying hard to appear normal?
Yeah, those were the days. Next stop: Crazytown.
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Sadly, William died in 2017.

Spouting off proved to be great therapy for frustration, political and otherwise. Here, I can write about anything, and feel as if I've had my say. This also solved the problem of sparse viewship -- the site now had a personal use. Don't get me wrong, I'm happy to have visitors, and even happier if they find something of value here. I just don't fret about it anymore. As Ann Landers said, "At age 20, we worry about what others think of us. At age 40, we don't care what they think of us. At age 60, we discover they haven't been thinking of us at all." I would add that at age 80, we're just happy that we can still have worries, cares, and discoveries. By the way, the pictures are me at 20 and 80.