Archive for January, 2010

Jan 19 2010

On the Eve of MA Special Election

Published by Forager under politics

I try to make it a rule not to comment on day-to-day political grind. Since the partisan cacophony is like background noise, if you pay too close attention to it, you lose the big picture.

But I think tomorrow’s MA special election to fill Teddy Kennedy’s seat can be a monumental event. If Coakley loses, to me at least, it says volume about where this country is or where it is heading.

If that event did transpire, one can almost hear a loud, collective groan coming underneath Kennedy family’s cemetery. It is as if everything the Family from Joe on down has fought for–whether out of the pursuit of power or a sense of social justice–is gone now. Surveying what is left of the Kennedy brand, one can’t help but feel like watching the last whirlpool above the Titanic.

But the historical importance is even more grave. If media reports are to be believed, the prospect of losing the Kennedy seat was so unlikely just a few weeks ago, the Democrats in the Congress did not have a Plan B for Obama’s Health Care Bill. Without a Health Care Reform to write home about, the Democrats will certainly lose big again like it was 1994 all over. Not that I am a partisan Democrat. But the fact remains that, nowadays, the Democratic Party is the only political venue where disparate social factions can participate and play politics. The GOP is increasingly looking like a Nazi organization.

It is pretty sad that the great hope that came with Obama just a year ago is in such peril today: forget about the Financial Industry Reform, forget about holding people like John Yoo accountable, forget about Immigration Reform, forget about Climate Change, forget about all other things that excited the Progressives who thought eight-years of Bush-Cheney is in itself enough a reason to justify the Change. Everything yielded to Health Care Reform–the one thing that trumped them all. But that one thing is now hanging by a thread, tied up to the fate of a clueless woman whose name may be forever ill-remembered.

Obama failed history. He failed because he lacks a healthy dose of cynicism of the mass he presides over. More specifically, he failed because he chose to persuade people on Health Care instead of making a clear case for the cause and just push the legislation through.

First of all, health care – After closely following the debate for almost half of year, I have learned enough to draw the following conclusions:
1. The focus of health care reform must be on cost.
2. The biggest challenge to containing the cost issue is the fact the industry is not market-elastic, i.e. the cost curve does not respond to normal supply-demand. There are many reasons, employer paying health care being an prominent one.
3. Without a collective will (out of universal pain) to reform the industry, interest groups play out-sized role to maintain status quo. I am not talking about the insurance industry, but the physicians and the likes of AMA. To me, it is obvious that health care delivery is the biggest reason behind cost increase. If we are to reform health care, we must change how physicians are paid.
4. To restore market-elasticity, the only way to get physicians to change their ways is through a combination of assistance and threat of competition. While assistance may be easier to come by, the threat of competition will not be credible unless there is a large enough alternative that also offers an viable example as an optimal model.
5. I don’t believe anyone other than the Federal Government has the wherewithal to build such an alternative.

Secondly, once the goal is set, it takes two campaigns to realize it: a forceful voice, repeating the merits over and over and over until people take the assumptions as the Truth. Next it takes some professional politicking, LBJ style, to realize it. Instead, Obama chose the route of persuasion. He might think that he has the moral and rational high ground. But to a cynic like me, the truth remains:
1. Not everyone is willing to reason with you, especially if you are the ultimate trophy of the Yankees
2. Even among those who are willing, not everyone is capable of understanding such a complex issue
3. When they are not, people tend to fall back to what they WANT to believe, or not doing anything at all

Lastly, Americans, a rowdy bunch as any other, are nevertheless the quickest to turnaround when they see results.

The way as things stand is the opposite of all three-

I agree with critics who say the current health care bill will increase deficit and is not fiscally sustainable. Nor is there enough reforms in the bill that will show a road map to enlighten us how that is achievable. If we don’t have way to lower the cost but still holds on the universal coverage, the U.S. is heading towards what Japan is like today: perennial budget deficits and political stalemate.

In terms of communications, it is even worse. People on the street are as confused today as they were when the debate began. Not many person can agree on a clear statement of the goal, nor was there any headline-grabber to epitomize the whole bill.

Politically, it is no less a miserable affair. After several months’ debate and horse trading, not only the reforms are watered down, most importantly, the promise of a reform is diluted. And in the end, those who opposed Obama still do. As Lindsay Graham suggested, “anything but health care”.

Some news reports suggest that the Democrats will try to push the Health Care Bill through if Coakley lost. To me, it is the orchestra-on-deck moment.  Obama somehow managed to lead the Democrats into a lose-lose situation: they are damned if they do push the bill through (lack of political legitimacy). And damned if they don’t.

As I said before, maybe Obama is not the right person to lead this country at this juncture. But I wouldn’t put the blame on him.

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Jan 14 2010

A Letter to an Old Acquaintance

Published by Forager under China, censorship

Guo Liang

I read the following on the New York Times -

Guo Liang, the director of the China Internet Project at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, said he thought Google’s accusations were little more than public whining. “Google may use politics as its excuse, which is easy for Westerners to accept, but in essence this is just a business failure,” he said. “If I were the government, I wouldn’t even bother to respond.”

If the reporter didn’t quote you out of context, I have to say I strongly disagree with your stance. You may question Google’s ulterior motive, that is your prerogative. But if you just look at the matter at its own merit, whatever the Party-State has been doing cannot be justified. You may dismiss us as outsiders not in tune with reality in China. But reasonable people disagree. In this case, you also need to ask whether your reality is THE reality or whether outsiders’ opinion are naturally irrelevant just because they are outsiders.

In the end, what goes around, comes around. The limit of information flow in the name of “stability and harmony” will backfire. To me, information freedom is not as much about some abstract ideal as about dollars and senses. A billion people with “little smart” (小聪明) is, in the end, a billion brains wasted. If you think the creative ways Chinese are making money now is the same as innovation, I am afraid you are terribly mistaken and sourly missing the point. If Chinese citizens are trained only to think as they are allowed to but no more, what you end of having is “involution”–a term historians used to describe the late Qing China.

Bing

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Jan 11 2010

Avatar

Published by Forager under movies, reviews

Finally watched Avatar–so many people told me so much about it, I figured that if I didn’t watch it now, I’d probably lose interest soon. It was good. I have to say the visual effect is less than what I expected but the story is more weighty. Overall, it is great. ZR and I had this discussion afterward. She thought the references in the movie about War on Terror (”we have to fight terror against terror”, etc.) was a little overbearing and unnecessary. I thought that was the part I liked it.

Not that the reference is any more clever or persuasive than the prosaic news columns we all have read. But I can tell Cameron is inspired by the absurdity sensible Liberals like him have to live through in the name of Democracy. Like other artists who created their masterpiece after years of mental agony, Cameron’s work is not a show for show’s sake. It is trying to say something. In that way, it is not unlike some of the great movies made after the Vietnam War, except the means through which Cameron & Co delivered the message is incredibly imaginary and beautiful. Still, at the end of the day, Avatar is a allegory, not just a fantasy.

I don’t know how many people truly get the message though. It was said that when the Pope first saw Michelangelo’s painting in Sistine Chapel, he immediately knelt and asked for forgiveness. I don’t see any tourists doing that nowadays. They just hold up their camera phones and say, “Wow, how beautiful!”

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