Archive for the ‘Socio-Economics’ Category

Usage Based Billing?

LucraMatrix

I will start off by stating that I am a libertarian and that it is an infringement on the rights of the people running these companies when the government steps in to regulate how the Internet service providers bill us. The statists among us will insist that the ISPs need regulating because they have a quasi-monopoly on delivering this access… ignoring the fact that it was created for them, and is sustained for them, by the CRTC in the first place.

It is the usual Charley Foxtrot of the bureaucrats and politicians using problems they created as justification to step in and intervene even more. Like the financial mess in the US where they regulated themselves into a real estate bubble and then come to the rescue by “solving” the problem with… yet more regulations? These are perpetual job creation program for bureaucrats and a never ending source of vote purchasing for politicians. It also allows corporations to buy their way into protected and very profitable situations. This is never in the best interests of the population at large and often not in the corporations bet interests in the long run. I think this is one of those cases.

That said, I have no moral or philosophical objection to usage based billing. It seems eminently reasonable to pay for what you use. I do have a pragmatic objection to it as they are proposing to implement it here.

You see, their state protected position allows them to artificially throttle the usage and cripple access to the Internet in the name of short term profits. They set the baseline usage ridiculously low and then charge several orders of magnitude more than it costs for the inevitable overrun. This is bad for the customer but also damages the business in anything but the next few quarters.

IP is poised to take over our communication infrastructure, entertainment delivery and work via interaction with data in the cloud. Everything we exchange that can be reduced to bits will be and because of that, we can set a baseline of usage that encompasses everything we do now that falls under that umbrella.

Our protected ISP industry has held us back to a developing world level of Internet access- we’re lucky if we can get a 10Mbps feed and then they pretend that it is high speed Internet access. Uhhh no, 100Mbps is high speed Internet access; 10Mbps hasn’t been high speed since the last century and 1 Mbps being advertised as “High-Speed Lite” is actually insulting. To make matters worse, this advertised 10Mbps is small-printed as “up to”. This means they have covered their ass as long as, every once in a while, they manage to get up to 10Mbps. I have yet to meter out more than 7.5Mbps on an “up to 20Mbps” package.

If they were honest, they would advertise the minimum they hit rather than the maximum. It should be “no less than” not “up to”. The only use for listing a maximum theoretic limit is to deceive the customer. The only use.

So the first thing they need to do is drag themselves out of the dark ages. Make no mistake, this isn’t easy or cheap. Small countries with large populations have a distinct advantage in building out the infrastructure. It costs far less to do much more when you have a population density of South Korea at 487 people per square kilometres rather than our 3.4 people per square kilometre.

But it certainly isn’t a hundred times more expensive, much of our population lives in metropolitan centres located within a hundred kilometres of the Canada/US border. While rural homes may have to accept 10Mbps access for a while, the ISPs have some explaining to do about urban homes where they want to charge $150 for a hobbled “up to” 100Mbps package.

And we will need true high speed access if we want to fully utilize the Internet and stop falling further and further behind.

The big data hog is entertainment, television being the main culprit. Whatever form the broadcasters and cable networks take in the future, we will always watch a lot of television. What we won’t do is all watch the same television. The average home has three televisions and three people living in in so the Internet feed needs to handle three HD streams at once.

Good compression algorithms mean that an adequate image can be streamed for about 10Mbps… so you can see where an “Up To 10Mbps!” is some seriously weak sauce. The average peak television usage would be 30Mbps and would allow the Internet Service Providers to offer an acceptable base package starting at “No Less Than 50Mbps” that would meet demand and leave a comfortable buffer for the next decade or so.

There are a significant number of households that would require more than this. Some would simply have more people living in the household while others would be more intensive in their use of the Internet with multiple HD feeds going in the background along with several streaming radio and a self hosting website that consumes a few tens of megabits per second on its own. There are also going to be more and more people working with software and data that lives in the cloud – many of who will need tens of Mbps for that alone.

To service these higher usage households, the ISP would be remiss if it did not add one or two tiers above it- let’s just go with 75Mbps and 100Mbps. The pricing of these services should reflect what we are currently paying for Internet access as well as our cable bill and a land phone line- with a healthy discount for consolidation. It would be crass of them to take undue advantage of the situation to try and hide an increase inside that consolidation… so I fully expect them to try to do that very thing.

In a competitive market, the delivery of actual broadband services should making a healthy profit at $1 for 1Mbps. Practically every urban household in Canadian will be subscribing to Internet access and it would behove the ISP to try and deliver the best bang for buck to capture those millions of customers for decades of $50, $75 or $100 every damn month.

So now that we’ve spent several screens to establish how fast the data need to come into the house, we need to figure out how much data would be pulled down every month.

Going back to that three people per household and using the average of four hours of television watched per day- let’s round down from that and assume there is some overlap on what is watched and go with ten hours of distinct television per day. That is mostly for ease of use in the napkin math I am using here but I also think it is a reasonable metric to use.

Since we are using 10Megabits per second as the HD data rate, that works out to 1.25 Megabytes per second which is 75MB per minute for a total of 4.5 GB per hour. I know that using the better algorithms and lowering our quality demands can give us a compromised image for only 1.5GB or a little more. I really don’t want to watch an image full of compression artefacts and so I won’t use numbers that reflect the lowest common denominator when projecting forward.

So, using my quality standards and some napkin math and statistics gets us to 45GB per day on average for television alone. One of the three is streaming radio stations, another is playing a serious game online and the third is working from home complete with video conferencing and cloud computing… we can easily round that up to 50GB per day as a working basic usage rate.

So, in a household in a developed country- the Internet Service Providers should be looking at 1.5 Terabytes drawn down over a 50Mbps service as a working model for what they need to deliver monthly for not a great deal over $50. Right now, that 1.5TB would cost them between $30 and $40 to deliver and they would have to work on the economy of delivery as well as alternative revenue streams… but building a working business model based on the real world is their job. I am just pointing out the parameters to them.

Now, there are other households, with six or seven occupants who have a serious Netflix addiction and watch two or three movies in addition to the twenty hours of TV every day. So these people will be using closer to 5TB of data per month and so the ISPs will want to meter that and charge a reasonable rate. If it costs them two and a half cents to deliver a GB of data then we are looking at an additional cost to them of about $90. This household is a high usage should probably already be paying the $100 for the higher bandwidth and their usage would be partially covered by that higher rate… but the ISP would have to charge an additional $75 to $100 for the higher than average usage.

This household’s bill could easily hit $200 a month and I don’t have a problem with that- it is a reasonable usage based billing scenario.

The closest I could find to this hypothetical baseline service is the maximum service offer of SHAWS “Nitro” package. This advertises “Up to 100Mbps download speed” which realistically might be able to sustain a “No less than 50Mbps” data rate in the few places that it is offered. How does the rest of the package measure up? Well, they cap it at only 350 GB per month which is about 23% of a reasonable baseline and they want $150 which is about three times what it needs to be.

So in reality, they are not that far off what they should be delivering. Since it is actually closer to a true 50Mbps service than a true 100Mbps they need to charge a third of what they are charging and allow four times as much data transferred. These aren’t order of magnitude differences and should be reachable in a reasonable timeframe. We don’t have to live in a second rate information topology.

Internet Topology

Now that we can see what they can and should deliver, what are they actually proposing?

The big telecom companies that built and operate the pipes for the Internet in Canada want to impose a 25GB per month cap and then charge for every GB you go over that. The CRTC was created to consolidate the bureaucracy into one-stop shopping for the telecom industry so they rubber stamped it and gave the companies $1.90 per GB in English Canada and $2.35 per GB in French Canada.

So let’s get this straight, they want to cap it at less than 2% of a reasonable base usage and then bill the customer $2,850 per month in overages to get the other 98%?

How about those poor ghettoized Quebecois who could then be charged $3,525 per month? Or that hypothetical high usage household above that would be dinged $9,500 or $11,750 respectively?

Obviously it would not be possible for Canadians join the developed world if they have to pay what the telecom/CRTC are asking for – and we will fall further and further behind the rest of the world as they build out for the future and Canada entrenches themselves in the 1990s.

So my message to the ISPs of Canada is to look out past the next few quarters of their bottom line and work toward a business plan that will make them competitive in the developed world and deliver what the customer needs rather than crippling them with last century’s data plans. If they are too blatant about the money grab and do to much harm to the customers- that leaves them vulnerable to politicians sacrificing them on the alter of votes.

I am pretty sure that I am yelling into the void on this one.

Thoughts on Egypt’s January 25 Revolution

I’ve given the situation a few weeks to settle out a little… I also needed time, once the movie I was working on (Gravity’s Pull) wrapped, to observe and analyze.

800px-Tahrir_Square_during_Friday_of_Departure

The key thing I’ve noted is that the media tends to treat Egypt’s political machine and Egypt’s Military machine as if they were two separate things. Like almost every person of power and influence in Egyptian politics, Mubarak came from the military- an officer in the Egyptian Air Force in his case.

Hosni_Mubarak_ritratto

His temporary replacement was Vice President Omar Suleiman who was director of the Egyptian General Intelligence Directorate and before that he was an officer in the Military’s Intelligence branch.

504px-Omar_Suleiman_070731-D-7203T-010_0WX8I

Today, he let everyone know that they had passed all authority to the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces. In Egypt, the Sultan rules at the suffrage of the Mamluk.

Mamluke

I am sure that Mubarak wanted the military to crush the protestors but was politely turned down and convinced to accept an alternative proposal, that it was in Mubarak’s best interests to hand over the reins of power, probably with a guarantee that he, his family and his wealth will be kept from prosecution and repatriation. I am not so sure that they will follow through on that though, he has systematically stripped tens of billions of dollars from the Egyptian people through graft, kickbacks and flat out redirection of state resources; there will be much hue and cry to bring him and his family to justice. Not to mention that $50 plus billion will help repair some of the economic damage that these last few weeks have dealt the country.

Now, the real worry is for what elections will bring. Many in the west seem to think that a democratic election is all that is needed for a better political system when in reality, people can quite easily vote themselves into subjugation and crushing poverty. A free and democratic election is necessary for a political system that enhances freedom, but it is by no means sufficient.

The best case scenario is the military finds their own Atatürk who will found a secular government that ushers in social and market freedoms. If this person manages to win a clear majority of the votes in an election that is marred by no more charges of corruption than is usual in a fledgling democracy… Egypt will be markedly better off five years from now. I give this about a ten percent chance.

The more likely scenario is a candidate who promises to take Egypt down the vote purchasing path that is dragging most of the developed world economies to a standstill. Europe and North America have a century of economic growth from capitalism to feed off of while Egypt may try to go straight to the bankrupting debt and economy stifling interventionism that can buy the next election. They will promise to create jobs, build a welfare state and institute labour reform along with a free unicorn in every garage- while telling everyone that nationalizing major industry will pay for it all. This will leave them worse off by any measure except by the media yardstick of believing no ill of any political party that embraces social democratic rhetoric. This one I give something like a sixty percent chance.

The worst case scenario involves the ascendancy of a religious party backed by the Muslim Brotherhood that institutes Shariah law and drags Egypt back into the dark ages. They have been treading carefully, not trying to take too much credit for what has happened and saying that they will not field a candidate for the presidential race… but fielding a candidate and backing a puppet are much the same thing in deed if not word.

Muslim_Brotherhood_logo

Though I am an atheist, this is most definitely not an attack on Islam as a religion. Make no mistake, I think Islam is every bit as dangerous and silly an idea as any other religion… it is just that in the case of politics, the danger stems from power mongers creating tyranny behind the shield of Islam. There is no worse enemy of Islam than the power hungry individuals who wrap themselves in religion as they use it to their own personal ends. If you care about your religion, keep it as far from the halls of politics as you can; for if the temple is the house of god on earth- the capital is the house of the devil. Voting for a religion based political party will give Egypt a crushed economy and a jackboot on their neck. I give this outcome about a thirty percent chance – and if they vote this way in their first free election it will be their last free election for a long time.

There is still a slim chance that things will get better for Egypt and I really hope that there are those with the foresight and will to make it so.

The Government Has No Obligation To Help Us

Dammit, it isn’t charity if you are using someone else’s money!

It is not the place of the government to help out the poor and downtrodden.

It is not the place of the government to help foreign countries when their socio-economic system collapses around them due to natural disasters exacerbating their gross mismanagement.

The very idea of positive rights is twisted and damaging since the only way to deliver them is to take from others by force.

It is not charity and it certainly isn’t benign when it is built on the threat of grossly disproportionate violence. The state wants to take from Peter so that they can give to Paul… and if Peter resists, the state will send heavily armed men who will imprison or kill Peter if he does not bow down to the confiscation.

Yes, the state considers it entirely reasonable to crucify Peter to redeem Paul- I do not.

It is not the government’s job to help those in need.

It is mine.

And it is yours if you want it.

Locally, I help my father with the community gardens where we plant potatoes, turnips, cabbages, carrots, peas and a few other staples that he then delivers to families that are in need, The Pines Care Home (a retirement home and hospice) as well to the local Food Bank. The picture below is one of two plots that a local physician, Dr. George Magee, donated the use of. There were several other pieces of land donated and my dad put a lot of time into the planting, weeding, watering and harvesting. If any locals are reading, he could use a lot more help with it next season.

I wasn’t in town much during the season but I still managed to put in a several days of weeding, watering and harvesting.

BurnsLakeCommunityGarden1

My dad also helped organize the local Tragedy Fund that helps people when they are hit with an unexpected emergencies. Examples being homes lost to fires or when someone needs to go to Vancouver for medical care and they don’t have the means for any family members to travel with them- the Tragedy Fund helps out.

Both of those are local and they do not have any web presence… I really should put something together for them, even if it is just a way for folks to organize their time so that the fields don’t go too long between weeding and watering.

Our families go to regional charity has been the BC Children’s Hospital.

bc_childrensLogically, it makes sense that if you take care of people while they’re young, that will reverberate throughout their life and therefore have a compounding effect in comparison to helping an adult… but I am self aware enough to know that the primary motivator is the strong protective instinct toward the young that evolution has instilled in me. I’m fine with that.

As for the world; there are many charities that have fallen victim to Pournelle’s Iron Law of Bureaucracy and where all but a tiny fraction of the money ends up paying for “administration”.

There are a couple of organizations that I feel are at the top of the ROI heap.

Doctors Without Borders is one of the causes that I feel comfortable putting money into. They have a solid reputation of converting donations to results with the minimum loss to overhead. They do a hell of a lot of good and your money is well spent there.

10597895-doctors-without-borders-mdecins-sans-frontires-msf

 

The Red Cross has more… uhm… administration friction than Doctors Without Borders but by sheer dint of the amount of money that passes through them they are able to mobilize and get things done that few other charitable organizations can dream of doing.

Flag_of_the_Red_Cross That isn’t to say that there aren’t dozens of other worthy causes to invest your time and money in- these are just my picks. Embrace philanthropy and take it back from the state, it isn’t an onerous duty that you can foist off of the self serving power brokers and thugs. Nor is it the purview of the rich, if you can’t give money then try and give a little of your time.

And I want to make something clear. I do not do this because some sky bully tells me I have to if I want to get past the bouncer at his afterlife party. I do not do this because I feel an obligation or duty. I do not do this out of guilt for living a comfortable and safe life.

I do this because I see people in need and I think that the world will be a better place if I helped- not just for those I try to help but for myself and for those I care most about.

This is an element of rational self interest that Ayn Rand just couldn’t seem to grasp.

The Gap Between the Rich and the Poor is Irrelevant…

…and a stupid metric to base your world view on. You don’t run any faster by hobbling your team mates.

Complaining about the gap between the so called “haves” and “have-nots” is a gross distortion of reality, mean spirited and rooted in jealousy and greed. The prevailing attitude in this clique is that it isn’t about your lot in life, it is all about the fact that someone, somewhere, is doing better than you… and that should piss you off.

This is not a zero sum competition where Paul Allen having two mega yachts somehow means that the poor are the worse for it. It means that thousands of people worked for years to create the Octopus and the Tatoosh and another hundred or so people have full time employment on crewing and maintaining them. The quarter of a billion dollars that went into their construction and the million a week to keep them going is extravagant but that money is spreading out in a net to the rest of the world.

TheOctopus

Besides which, Paul Allen is one of the early signatories to Bill Gates’ The Giving Pledge where he and a few dozen others have agreed to give away half of their wealth to philanthropic causes.

Don’t let the mind boggling luxury that some small percentage of the worlds population lives in blind you to the fact that almost everywhere else on the planet, people live significantly better lives than their parents or grandparents.

Technology, democracy and capitalism has lifted the health and wealth of the entire planet and only the very worst places today are as bad as the very best places of two hundred years ago.

There are places in the world right now where people live in abject poverty and suffer under an average life span of less than forty years… which was called “normal” for nearly everyone up until the industrial revolution. We should do our best to help the world’s poor embrace the technology, democracy and capitalism that has lifted the rest of the world out of that sorry condition.

The greed and envy that drives so many people to focus on the gap is not productive and it most certainly doesn’t help the poor and unhealthy of the world. The fact that Bill Gates can avail himself of the very best health care that the planet has to offer, and that he can live at a level of comfort and luxury that few people can even imagine does not make the harsh life of an orphan in Haiti any harsher.

But that wealth might allow the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation to find a cure for malaria or cholera and make that orphan’s life a hell of a lot better.

Really, the needs and desires of the wealthy countries is the primary driving force for the increasing standard of living for the worlds poor- it is that very gap that is dragging the poorer countries up along with the wealthy countries. If the gap were bigger, the poor countries would be pulled along faster.

The socio-economic capital spent concentrating on that gap isn’t about helping the poor, it is about punishing the rich even if it is at the expense of the poor. I find that sentiment sad, bitter and empty.

The video embedded below shows that two hundred years ago the world lived with a much smaller gap between countries- we were all “have-nots” who lived in poverty- and then only for about forty years. We now have a much bigger spread between the rich and the poor… but the poor are almost all better off than even the very best from two hundred years ago.

It takes generations to move countries from the lower left to the upper right on this chart and it is admirable to help them as much as we can; but it is a nasty and irrational thing to attack any that have actually made it up and over.

We should celebrate our wealth and revel in our high standard of living while we do our best to help the developing world join us. Cheap energy is the only thing that will allow that and I am afraid most “green” energy is so expensive that it will stall billions of people in poverty for the next two generations.

Coal Powered Cars

Why don’t people look past the superficial marketing of an idea?

tesla-model-s-electric-car-photo-ss002

Above and below; two types of transportation separated by about a hundred years. What is the difference? One of these uses coal to create steam that spins turbines to generate electricity that is then sent over power lines to charge a battery- only then is it converted to mechanical energy. The other is more efficient since it skips the electrical generation altogether and uses the steam to directly generate the mechanical energy.

CoalSteam_Merriwa

You can’t see the smokestacks from your heated leather seats but for most of the world they are right there in the display from your rear facing camera.

But people don’t want to think about that.

Many people need the world to be in danger and they need there to exist steps they can take to rescue it. Saving the world is the most important thing that they can imagine and it gives the greatest value to their lives.

They may not articulate it to themselves that way though it is the explanation that best fits their actions.

But they have a very big problem.

I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again- the world is in magnificent shape and never in history has so high a portion of humanity lived as safely and comfortably and with as much freedom as they do today.

For the last hundred years our lot has been getting better at an astounding rate- not because of the self styled saviours of the world but because of the scientists, engineers and businessmen who have wrested knowledge from the universe and bent it to our needs and desires.

Democracy has fettered the politician’s innate desire to tyranny just as capitalism has loosened the masses’ economic bondage to the self same ruling class.

Admittedly it has not been a smooth and unremitting climb, but there is none such path in the real world. As long as we don’t cripple out economy too much in the next few decades, we will muddle through the hysteria and deal with climate change while simultaneously bringing a developed world standard of living to a few billion more people.

Even today, things are so much better than in the past that the saviours and martyrs need to create the crisis before they can save us from it. Since both the crisis and the solutions are illusory they can bear little scrutiny- hence the vitriol pointed at anyone who questions their axioms.

Yes, the world is warming up… and has been since the last ice age ended about 12,000 years ago. The trend we have been in for the last half millennium is an increase of about a degree every century and the anthropogenic effect on climate change would reasonably be described as a rounding error.

Since any actions we can take are only relevant to computer models designed to find actions for us to take… they can not be expected to survive contact with reality.

So people ignore the fact that wind turbines do not efficiently or reliably produce electricity- while they are very good at killing tens of thousands of birds.

They ignore the fact that the electricity used in electric cars is a medium of transferring energy and, for much of the US, electric cars can best be described as coal powered cars that produce a carbon footprint closer to that of an out of tune Hummer than the much touted zero.

Sorry Elon but your Tesla cars need a satellite solar power infrastructure to get their impact down where everyone in the environmental movement thinks they are… so get on that okay?

013-F9_night_IMG_8591_640

It is image and intentions that matter most to the elites at the top of the environmental movement and the real world is an inconvenience that they ignore in favour of one level thinking and computer models designed to support their ideology. Their stories are exciting, engaging and a call to action that anyone can rally to with little real effort.

To truly effect the future requires decades of education and decades more of focused effort on complicated and difficult tasks… most people find it much easier and a lot more fun to party while holding placards and shouting slogans that rhyme with “Hey Ho-“.

Mel Doesn’t Have a Hangover

mel-gibson-mugshot

I’m not surprised that they cut Mel from Hangover 2. Sure he is a substance abusing, loudmouthed bigot… but that isn’t why he is a pariah. Oliver Stone and Sean Penn aren’t any better but I got a feeling that most of the people who vehemently denounce Mel Gibson would trip over themselves to work with either of them.

oliver-fidel

sean-hugo

 

Or Roman Polanski for that matter.

gal_roman-polanski_smantha-geimer

 

Mel Gibson is a Christian conservative (at least compared to most in Hollywood) and that is why he is ostracized… I say that as an atheist libertarian who disagrees with just about everything he holds most dear.

Yet, I would work with Mel Gibson before I would work with Oliver Stone or Sean Penn- it looks like Mel is only an asshole when he drinks too much while Oliver and Sean seem to carry that around with them always.

Actually, I would go further than that. If we could keep him sober, I would be happy to work with Mel Gibson on a serious film adaptation of Homer’s Odyssey. I think that Mel Gibson would be about as good an Odysseus as  you could ask for.

Mel_Gibson_Odysseus

Feeling Inadequate for Being Soft?

I am sorry about your ego but the soft scientists aren’t really in the same category as the hard scientist… they are more akin to an architect where the tools of math and physics are but means to arbitrary ends. They may build something useful and even vital but that doesn’t make the highly trained and very competent architect a “hard” scientist. Social scientist work in a world where ideology takes primacy and objective reality is subservient to subjective utility. It is used with certainty and righteousness by communist and anarchist alike.

Soft sciences like economics and psychology ARE becoming harder but mostly despite themselves as they hold tight to the usual practice of taking an ideological position and then using or discarding the tools of science based on their utility in supporting that position. I do realize that this is also a tendency in the hard sciences as well- but it is a bias they try to suppress or at least hide while in the soft sciences it is the water that the fishes swim in.

As long as the socialist/fascist or the libertarian can look at the same data and come to diametrically opposite conclusions it is hard to treat it like a science, let alone a hard science.

What Recovery?

Why do so many people in politics and the media keep trying to say that there is an economic recovery taking place- or that one is just around the corner?

Maybe part of it is an emotional investment in the left leaning Keynesian economic policy of so many of the worlds governments? People had an unrealistic expectation that Barack Obama was going to save the US from the inept machinations of the big bad Republican Party. So even though there is no recovery taking place, their political allegiance means they have to toe the party line and accept that the trillions in debt added to their children and grandchildren is doing what their saviour had promised it would.

I am sorry to break it to you, but there is little functional difference between George Bush and Barack Obama. It doesn’t matter what they say or promise, all that matters is what they do… and what they both do is harm.

I think that the biggest contributor to the inability to see that there is no recovery taking place is that too many people don’t understand what caused the economic collapse and what it will take to correct it.

The recession is not the problem, it is the cure.

The economic collapse came about because of government overspending and meddling to artificially expand the market. This was done partially through ignorance but mostly through self interest in the race to curry favour with the particular voting block that the politicians courted. It was a race for politicians to see who would promise to spend more of other peoples money to buy votes.

So they put forward that the cure for this overspending and meddling in the market was to spend even more while taking over businesses and writing thousands of new rules and regulations to add to the tens of thousands that already exist.

If, back in 2008, I had been able to grab our political leaders by the lapels and yell advice into their face, it would have been – “Don’t just do something, stand there!”.

If they had done nothing, the recession would damn near be over by now. Companies would have gone out of business and people would have lost jobs- then other companies would have bought any valuable assets of the defunct businesses and rehired many of those displaced workers. Not all of the companies would have been bought up and not all of the displaced workers would be rehired by now- but we would be on our way.

If they had needed to do something, they could have cut spending and cut taxes. A dollar left in the hands of business men and women who are trying to turn it into more dollars does far more good to the economy than a confiscated dollar in the hands of a politician who sees it primarily as a tool to get more power and votes.

Instead, most every state on the planet has gone deeper in debt than ever before in history to keep pushing the economic ramifications off to the next year… then the next quarter… the next month… next week… then they will pray to get through the day without having to face the consequences of their actions. They are bankrupting the future in a vain attempt to stave off the cure!

I don’t really know how it is going to play out but the PIGS are closing in on their collapse and the North American and European “Stimulus” is set to be tapped out come next spring.

My expectation is that we will see the real economic turmoil beginning in the spring or summer of 2011 and that it will hit far harder than it would have if they had stepped aside and let the correction take place back in 2008. It should also last a lot longer because most governments have accumulated an unsustainable level of debt pushing the solution off for as long as they could. They are like little children who see the doctor with the needle as the problem, not the cure.

The Canadian government never put in the same effort to artificially inflate the market that our neighbours to the south did and the Harper administration didn’t react as irrationally to the crisis as the Obama administration did. There were a lot of people in the other parties and the media who attacked Harper for this and continue to do so to this day.

I think that Stephan Harper only followed the “spend our way out of debt” tactic as far as he did out of political expediency. If he had gone out of lockstep with the ever so popular spendthrifts it would have been political suicide. Setting aside their faults, and like all politicians they are myriad, the “right” understand economics far better than the “left”. That doesn’t mean they won’t throw reality under the bus if it means they get to keep or achieve office, it means that they will do it less often than those who can’t tell reality from fantasy.

And Keynesian economics is a fantasy. It is a fantasy that feeds on the politician’s vanity, ego and need for self aggrandizement. Boiled down to its essence, Keynesian economics states that the market can’t function without the directing hand of the politician. How could this not appeal to the politician? It puts a veil of respectability over the fascism/socialism that beats in the heart of even the most idealistic of politicians.

Maybe that should read “especially in the heart of the most idealistic of politicians”?

Business cycles are part of how the market functions; they are a feature, not a bug.

Capitalism is based on economic evolution. Systems and businesses that are better suited to the market environment succeed and those less suited go extinct. Keynesian economics is structured on ensuring that dinosaurs don’t go extinct…at the expense of those pesky little furballs running around their feet.

You Say We Can’t Leave Earth Until it is Fixed?

It is rather discouraging to look at the overriding negative and bitter attitudes of many people who are vehemently against the very idea of humanity becoming a spacefaring species. They say that we are abandoning Earth at its most dire need and that we need to “fix” it before we “waste” resources on anything so nasty and self cantered.

But our planet isn’t broken.

They can only see the world as the worst it could be, not as it actually is. They do their patron saint, Thomas Malthus, proud. A century and a half of epic failure to be right on anything and they still keep saying that the world is ending.

Thomas_Malthus

They are the same people that a hundred and fifty years ago believed that the cities could never get any bigger because there was no foreseeable way to dispose of all the horse excrement that was a completely unavoidable byproduct of the only possible way to transport people inside a metropolitan area. They also knew for a fact that long distance transportation was not sustainable since we were obviously going to run out of wood for railway ties. It was also completely self evident that if the world population were to ever hit two billion, this could never last more than a decade or two before an epidemic of smallpox wiped out almost everyone.

These people live in a horrible, nasty, ugly world… which thankfully has no real connection to the world we actually live in.

There is some minor warming that our climatologists think may be attributable in some small part to human activity… so they immediately jump to the conclusion that the world is going to be destroyed and it is all our fault? Of course there is climate change! What did you expect, climate stasis? The world will warm or the world will cool, now guess which one is worse… I’ll give you a hint, it isn’t the one they are demanding we bankrupt ourselves over. The earth has been much warmer in the past than the AGW alarmist’s “worst” case scenario… they used to call these warmer periods the global optimum because they were the periods of greatest abundance for life on the planet. That was before they started contorting reality to fit computer models and a need for crisis.

The world population growth rate is slowing and will probably stabilize within a couple generations at a level that is sustainable for even the current technology- let alone for what forty years of technological innovation will bring. If the free market is allowed to give cheap energy and abundant food to the developing world, this will probably cause the population to dip back below where it is now. Where social and economic freedom reign, people have smaller families.

The developed world is less polluted than it was fifty years ago and unless the enemies of progress stop the spread of social and economic freedom, those engines of creation will allow the rest of the world to follow suit. When your family’s stomachs are full and there is a roof over their heads, you can afford to worry about the pollution that your job creates. It is almost a certainty that our children and grandchildren will live in a cleaner world than we have.

Of course there is there work to be done. One of the more pressing problems is potable water; but like most of our problems, abundant and cheap energy can fix that. What cannot fix it is expensive “green” energy or artificially expensive carbon based energy.

NASA_solar_power_satellite_concept_1976I have to start creating some updated graphics that can be put into the Creative Commons so the we don’t have to rely on antique images from NASA.

I know that it will make these people very angry and resentful but I’m sorry to give them the bad news…

Planet Earth will be just fine.

All of which is irrelevant to the importance of opening space. Becoming a spacefaring species is the most important thing that it is possible for us to do. Crawling out of the primordial ooze and evolving the intellect that can actually give value properties to things like the environment of planet Earth is all well and good but if we stifle ourselves in this one tiny bastion of life, all life as we know it is a dead end.

There are men and women all over the planet that are working to give us a grand and magnificent future… for both those who stay in the cradle and those who venture out. It is sad but inevitable that people mired in unfounded despair will bitch and moan the entire time.

Why Go to Space?

“Earth is the cradle of humanity, but one cannot live in a cradle forever.” – Konstantin Eduardovich Tsiolkovsky 1911

sm_tsiolkovsky-stamp

The next fifty years will decide the future- and our actions, as well as our inactions, will reverberate through all time.

20100604_launch

Think about that for a moment. The universe is over thirteen billion years old and what we do in the next fifty years may well have a greater impact than anything that has ever happened up until now or ever will happen again.

Armadillo_0008

We are at a pivotal moment, not just for humanity but for life itself. At the very least, the only event that can match becoming a spacefaring life form is the very first life to evolve out of the primordial mud. If the unlikely is true and Earth is the singular cradle for life in the universe… then the only event that can match our move to space is the Big Bang itself.

masten-466px-7p

The Big Bang, life evolving and our diaspora to the stars- everything else before and after will be footnotes.

BigelowAerospaceGenesisIEarthOrbitView

Limiting our view to what going to space can do for Earth is as nonsensical as asking what Earth’s entire biosphere could ever do for that one little tidal pool where the first life form came into being almost four billion years ago.

31332345_73b669b345_o

Going to space won’t be important because it can give Earth abundant, cheap and clean energy… but it will.

SpaceSolarPower

It won’t be important because it can deliver strategic rare earth elements that are scarce down here, alleviating many of the driving forces for resource wars… even though it can do that to.

Accessing the 98% of our solar systems assets for use on on Earth won’t be important because it can step over the unreasoning terrors of the Malthusian Catastrophists  and allow the developed world to retain its standard of living while lifting billions of people out of poverty and war to join them… although it will be a wonderful side effect.

Deflecting a Torino 10 asteroid impact may save every human on Earth… but that is just holding off the inevitable if we don’t become a spacefaring species.

torrino_scale

asteroid_impact

Even though it will be wonderful, it won’t be important that it can fulfil the dreams of millions of people and inspire millions more to dream bigger and achieve more than they ever imagined possible.

luna-x-prize-google-moon

It also won’t be important because it can create trillion dollar companies that will pull the economy back up from the economic morass that government debt has us sinking into… even though the world’s first trillionaire won’t be made on our “world”.

BlueOrigin

Going to space will be important for the hundreds of billions of our descendants that will grow to fill our solar system and eventually the stars. As important as going to space will be in the short term for a few billion people on Earth- if we become a spacefaring species, Earth will be called home for only a tiny fraction of humanity.

0105-4x5color.ai

We have the opportunity to influence how that begins. Does it begin in a spirit of adventure and peace? Does it begin with distrust, fear and war? Is it stifled with totalitarian control or will freedom grab the first hold? We have the chance now to directly effect how it starts- not “we” as in the government or humanity as a whole, I mean you the person who is reading this and I who am writing it.

Or will you turn our back on the Universe and try to make yourself comfortable in the cradle – hoping that someone else will do it and that it will turn out alright?