Is The Mueller Indictment A Joke?

Ever since the Mueller investigation of Russian "meddling" or "interference" or "collusion" or something like that began a year or so ago, you have probably been wondering, What the heck is the crime?  Granted, there are 5000 or so supposed federal crimes out there.  Nobody has any good idea what all of them are, and plenty of them are so vague that they might criminalize brushing your teeth on an angle.  But still -- "meddling" or "collusion"?  How could such things even be illegal?

So probably you are thinking, the answer must be in this indictment.  Don't get your hopes up.  As far as I can tell there is nothing real about this indictment at all.

Read More

Resounding Echoes Of Watergate In The Susan Rice Email

It has now been a few days since Senators Grassley and Graham released a letter they had sent to ex-National Security Advisor Susan Rice, demanding information from her about a meeting held in the White House on January 5, 2017, and attaching to their letter a redacted copy of a remarkable email describing the meeting that Rice sent to herself on the government email system on January 20, 2017 at 12:15 PM.The Grassley/Graham letter and attached Rice email can be found here.   

You will recognize January 20 at 12:15 PM as being about 20 minutes after Donald Trump was sworn in as President, and therefore the same number of minutes after Susan Rice's term as National Security Advisor had ended. She had no further government business to do, and therefore had no possible legitimate purpose related to government business to write herself this email on the government email system.

 

Read More

How To Change Minds On The Subject Of Climate Hysteria

Unfortunately, as I frequently point out to my colleagues, on important political issues, very few human minds can be changed by mere reason and logic, no matter how ironclad that reason and logic may be.  We may think we are creatures of reason, but that's only a veneer.  The famous quote is attributed to Jonathan Swift:  "Reasoning will never make a Man correct an ill Opinion, which by Reasoning he never acquired."  

On the other hand, there are things that can persuade even those who are very difficult to persuade.

Read More

How Self-Delusional Can We Be On The Cost Of Electricity From "Renewables"?

With the New York Times, when it comes to promotion of the climate sin and redemption narrative, the big question is always the same:  Are they completely ignorant of the subject matter, or do they understand the subject matter, in which case they are intentionally trying to deceive you and their other readers?  It ought to be obvious which of the two it is, but incredibly it is not.  Could there even be a third alternative?  The only one I can think of is that what we have here is an extreme case of self-delusion, brought about by a need to believe in the official religion so overpowering that it prevents any consideration of actual facts or evidence.  

Read More

Manhattan Contrarian In Investors Business Daily

An op-ed written by myself and co-author Jim Wallace appeared Wednesday afternoon in IBD, titled "With Tax Reform Done, Trump Should Set Record Straight On Climate Change."  Here is a link to the piece.

The piece summarizes the Wallace, et al., research on the subject of attribution (or lack thereof) of global temperature change to human influences.  I have previously covered the Wallace, et al., research reports when they have been issued, most notably in "The 'Science' Underlying Climate Alarmism Turns Up Missing" on September 19, 2016, and "The Greatest Scientific Fraud Of All Time -- Part XV" on July 8, 2017.  It has taken some time, but finally this work is seeing a somewhat wider audience.

Key quote from the IBD op-ed:

So, what is the actual science behind the EF [Endangerment Finding -- the Obama EPA's determination that CO2 constitutes a "danger" to human health and safety]?  We confidently assert that in any Red/Blue evaluation of the science, where the Blue team supports the EF, the Blue team will lose badly.

"Warmists" claim a 97% scientific consensus regarding the hypothesized catastrophic impact of increased atmospheric concentrations of CO2 and other GHGs. But this illusion of consensus has only come about through misrepresentation of global temperatures and research results plus rigid enforcement of orthodoxy and refusal to debate for some two decades.

In accordance with the scientific method, the EF has been shown to be invalid at least three separate times over the past two years. One of us (Wallace) is the lead author of three scientific research reports that, each in a unique fashion, invalidated all of the lines of evidence on which EPA claimed to rely for its EF.

Go to the IBD link to read the remainder of the piece.

More Late Stage Socialism At NYCHA

Here in New York City, we love to bash landlords.  First, we impose on many apartments a rent regulation regime that makes it almost impossible for landlords ever to raise the rent.  And then, woe be to any landlord who fails to provide heat or hot water on some cold day in the winter, or to fix a leak promptly.  This regime is guaranteed to engender a degree of animosity between landlords and tenants, and indeed it does so.  From time to time the authorities single out some particularly disliked landlord to make an example of, and have him sent to prison.

Obviously the answer to this exploitative capitalist housing system is a public ownership socialist model system.  And sure enough, New York City has gone for such a socialist model system in a big way with its publicly-owned low-income housing provider known as the New York City Housing Authority, or NYCHA.  NYCHA's exploits have previously been covered many times here at MC.  NYCHA is the landlord for about 180,000 apartments, mostly in what are called the "projects," that house in excess of 400,000 people, or about 5-6% of the City's population.

Surely then, the NYCHA projects have brought perfect justice and fairness to the housing of the low-income residents of New York?  Well, perhaps we had better check in on that.  The Wall Street Journal helpfully provides a detailed article on the subject in today's Greater New York section, headline "Residents Vent Over Housing Woes."  (may be behind pay wall)  Uh-oh, that headline already sounds ominous.  Here's the introduction:

More than 143,000, or 80%, of New York City’s 175,000 public housing apartments have been without heat or hot water at times this winter, city officials said Tuesday.  Tempers flared over widespread heat and hot water outages in New York City public housing at an unusually contentious City Council hearing. Some residents were in tears. . . .   Residents have been left without heat sporadically throughout the winter, on average for two days at a time, according to city officials. The outages, which the city has blamed on aging boilers, have affected more than 320,000 people.

Wait a minute -- I thought this is exactly the kind of ill treatment of tenants that public ownership was supposed to fix.  And it seems that the City Council thought that too, so they decided to hold a hearing on the subject yesterday, and to call the head of NYCHA, one Shola Olatoye, on the carpet.

“She has haplessly presided over a humanitarian crisis,” Councilman Ritchie Torres said.

So what is your answer, Shola?

Ms. Olatoye said she was struggling to maintain even basic services after decades of declines in federal funding. The city’s public housing agency has lost $3 billion in federal aid since 2001.

Really?  Funny, but I thought to check on that, and I was able to find "NYCHA Projected Revenue by Source" for 2003, and then "NYCHA 2016 Operating Plan Revenues."  And, believe it or not, the two are actually presented in the same format, thus facilitating direct comparison.  (Most bureaucracies would never allow such a thing to happen, and would gradually change the format of presentation over time so that you could never hold them accountable.  Probably, that only means that NYCHA is uniquely incompetent.)  Anyway, the answer is, in 2003 NYCHA got $664.2 million from the feds as "Federal Public Housing Operating Subsidy," and $680.6 million as "Federal Section 8 Housing Choice Voucher."  For 2016 those numbers became $910.0 million for "Federal Operating Subsidies" and $982.8 million for "Section 8 Subsidy."  

OK, the handouts may not have gone up as much as you would have liked, but how in the world do you get to characterize what are obviously large increases in funding as "los[ing] $3 billion in federal aid"?  A clue can be found in the big "NextGeneration NYCHA" Report that the de Blasio administration put out back in 2015.  At page 7 of that Report, we find a claim that NYCHA had suffered a "$1 Billion Loss in Operating Funding since 2001."  But when they describe that "loss," we find that the "loss" is not an actual decrease in funding, but rather a "loss" measured by comparison to some formula of increasing hypothetical amounts that they somehow think they ought to have gotten:

Annual Proration and Federal Operating Funding Cumulative Loss by Year
Of the total operating funding NYCHA is eligible for on an annual basis from HUD, NYCHA receives only a portion, due to lower Congressional appropriations. This is known as a prorated amount.
 

Got that?  Now, how Ms. Olatoye managed to jack up the $1 billion to $3 billion for her testimony at this hearing, I cannot explain.  But hey, when you have obviously gotten large increases in funding, and you nevertheless want to claim a "cut" based on some ginned-up calculation that you don't disclose and nobody would understand anyway, what's the difference whether it's $1 billion or $3 billion?  Why not make it $5 billion?

Another subject covered in the testimony at the hearing was the amount of necessary but unfunded capital repairs that need to be made on the NYCHA buildings.  In that "NextGeneration NYCHA" Report a couple of years ago, it was $17 billion.  Yesterday:

City officials also said for the first time Tuesday that the housing agency’s infrastructure needs total about $25 billion, up from $17 billion several years ago.

Mayor de Blasio was giving his own news conference across the street at about the same time, and somebody asked him for his comment on the NYCHA issues.  Here it is:

“People in public housing deserve the very best living standard we can give them with the money we have,” Mr. de Blasio said. “But do I think we in the public sector can achieve everything that a private sector can achieve, with much greater resources in the private sector? No, I don’t have that illusion.”

 Was that an admission that socialism doesn't work?