False Dawn: FDR and the Great Depression

False Dawn: The New Deal and the Promise of Recovery, 1933–1947 is an academic economists’ look at all of the academic economists’ explanations for the Great Depression and how, with muscular government intervention led by a now-revered FDR, it could have lasted so much longer than economic downturns that happened in the U.S.’s free market period (1630-1930). (I introduced this book a few months ago with Philip’s Book Club: False Dawn.)

One popular theory is that World War II brought the U.S. out of the Depression after about a decade of failed federal government interventions. The book points out that calculating GNP during World War II is somewhat arbitrary:

But there is a deeper sense in which the wartime recovery, however and whenever it started, was no recovery at all. “In the crucial respect of waste of economic resources,” Broadus Mitchell (1947, 396) observes, “the war was, particularly for the United States, a deepening of the depression.” Tens of millions who had been either unemployed or employed in peacetime activities now took part in activities that, however crucial, continued to reduce instead of enhancing their own and the world’s living standards. To label such a state of affairs “full employment” was, Mitchell says, but “a flattering unction”: the employment thus generated was “for purposes which, by very definition, could have no place in a normal economy.” In short, the war was but a temporary solution to the problem of economic depression, and the more temporary the better. The point may seem trite. But it’s a necessary response to those—and there are many—who declare that World War II ended the Depression and just leave it at that.

… the most serious shortcoming of wartime output measures, namely, their tendency to overstate, perhaps dramatically, both the nominal value of war matériel and the extent to which it should be considered part of national output at all. As Higgs (1992, 45–47) reports, Kuznets, whose wartime and postwar deflators are among those that have been called into question by Friedman and Schwartz and others, had his own grave misgivings about the Commerce Department’s valuation of wartime output. “A major war,” he observed, “magnifies” the usual challenges involved in estimating national income, because war matériel isn’t sold at anything resembling “market” prices and also because wars blur “the distinction between intermediate and final products” (45).

Such considerations persuaded Kuznets to come up with several alternative measures of wartime and postwar GNP, all of which imply a less impressive wartime boom, or no boom at all, and no postwar slump. For example, according to Higgs (1992, 46), “whereas the Commerce Department’s latest estimate of real GNP drops precipitously in 1946 and remains at that low level for the rest of the decade,” Kuznets’s “wartime” estimate “increases in 1946 by about 8 percent, then rises slightly higher during the next three years.” Another Kuznets GNP estimate—what he called “peacetime” GNP—revises the record still further by valuing goods produced for military use at their nonmilitary surplus values only. According to that estimate, between 1945 and 1947 real output rose by almost 18 percent!

The above quote illustrates the principal flaw of the book for a non-academic reader. The author spends most of his ink summarizing and referencing the work of other academics. He’ll lay out four or five theories and deal with each one in turn, forcing the reader to tease out the author’s personal point of view. The book is more accurately characterized as a survey of 100 years of academic thought regarding the Great Depression than as an explanation of the Great Depression and subsequent recovery.

Another popular theory is that the New Deal was an example of Macro Economics 101 Keynesian deficit spending during a downturn. Two chapters are devoted to “The Keynesian Myth”. The author points out that Roosevelt was committed to a balanced budget and that Keynes himself wrote critically of American economic policy. The New Deal was a project to increase the power of the federal government in regulating business, not a deficit spending plan. Some of this project was abandoned when the federal government needed private industry to be its partner for World War II weapons production, but the effect was to stifle business investment and reduce personal consumption.

“Conventional wisdom has it,” Gary Best (1991, 222) observes, “that the massive government spending of World War II finally brought a Keynesian recovery from the depression.” However, Best continues, the fact that the government was no longer at war with business, as it had been during the original New Deal, deserves more credit. “That,” Best says, “and not the emphasis on spending alone, is the lesson that needs to be learned.”

On the extent to which there was any Keynesian borrowing:

New Deal deficits were less impressive than New Deal spending because the Roosevelt administration went to considerable lengths to boost tax revenues and did so even when it meant relying heavily on taxes that mostly burdened low-income Americans. For that reason, the administration chose not only to retain and then repeatedly extend most of the excise taxes imposed as part of Hoover’s 1932 budget—taxes Herbert Stein (1966, 210) considers “the purest act of pre-revolutionary fiscal policy”—but also to increase taxes on gasoline and tobacco, revive the liquor tax upon the repeal of Prohibition, and introduce its AAA tax on food processors. Because they fell on consumers, either directly or indirectly, excise taxes, which eventually funded 60 percent of the government’s “ordinary” revenues (Leff 1984, 147), tended to be deflationary even when fully offset by government spending. Such taxes therefore had little to recommend them from a countercyclical fiscal policy perspective (Brown 1956, 868; Leff 1984, 39). But because excise taxes were revenue workhorses, to an administration not much less determined to limit deficits than Hoover’s had been, they made perfect sense. At the height of the New Deal, Mark Leff (1984, 38) points out, the tax on food processors alone “accounted for one-eighth of total tax revenues,” which was more than the yield from either the personal income tax or the corporate income tax. For this reason, after the tax on food processors was struck down, Roosevelt “continued to suggest processing taxes to balance the budget and to fund farm subsidies” (Leff 1984, 44). What was true of excise taxes was truer still of the Social Security payroll tax that the government began collecting in January 1937. According to Leff (1984, 45), when Roosevelt first came up with his plan for funding Social Security, his advisers warned that because it would draw purchasing power from consumers for the purpose of establishing a $47 billion reserve fund without making any like disbursements from that fund for many years, the plan would be dangerously deflationary. Still, Roosevelt insisted on it, saying that it would assist in balancing the budget while projecting “an image of fiscal responsibility” (47). According to Sherwood Fine (1944, 114), the regressive Social Security tax diverted “more than a billion dollars of purchasing power . . . away from an industrial establishment sensitively attuned to consumer demand” in the midst of a severe economic downturn. “Running along, as we are, on a low level,” Alvin Hansen (1939b, 283) wrote afterward, when various amendments to the Social Security Act were under consideration, “we cannot afford . . . the luxury of a Social Security Program which turns out in effect to be essentially a compulsory savings program, and which thereby seriously curtails the volume of consumption expenditures.”

France was the only significant (imagine that there was a time when France was significant!) foreign nation inspired to follow our example:

France was one of the few countries and the only major one to take longer to recover from the Great Depression than the United States. France was also the only country that resorted to policies closely resembling—indeed inspired by—the New Deal, including NRA-style codes. And it was the only country that did not experience a substantial improvement in output after devaluing its currency. As Barry Eichengreen (1992a, 349) observes, France’s example shows, even more clearly than that of the United States, that “devaluation was necessary but not sufficient for economic recovery.” France’s first stab at New Deal–style industrial planning consisted of the so-called Flandrin experiment, an attempt by the conservative ministry of Pierre-Etienne Flandrin (November 1934–May 1935), directly inspired by the NRA, to cartelize French industries and reduce workers’ working hours. Flandrin’s experiment went no further, and his government fell after six months. But several weeks after decisively winning France’s May 3, 1936, parliamentary election, the Popular Front—an alliance of French radicals, socialists, and communists—implemented an NRA-inspired plan of its own. That plan was so aggressive that recent scholars have dubbed it “a sort of NIRA on steroids” (Cohen-Setton, Hausman, and Wieland 2017). As Barry Eichengreen (1992a, 375–76) explains, “Employers were compelled to sign the Accord de Matignon granting trade union recognition, collective bargaining privileges, and wage increases. . . . [T]he work week was shortened again, but this time without any corresponding reduction in pay. The government legislated an annual paid vacation and a 40-hour week. Wages were raised by 7 percent for high-paid workers and by up to 15 percent for the lower paid. . . . Other elements of the French ‘New Deal’ raised the school-leaving age and nationalized the armaments industry.” The Matignon Agreements’ mandatory wage rate increases went into effect at once, raising nominal labor costs by between 7 and 15 percent (Cohen-Setton, Hausman, and Wieland 2017, 279). The rest of the Popular Front’s plan, including its forty-hour week provision, was phased in industry by industry between then and the end of the year.

Noting how after 1936 France’s industrial output was persistently 30 percent below its long-run trend, Paul Beaudry and Franck Portier (2002) consider various possible explanations, including technological stagnation, only to conclude that the best is the simplest: French output fell 30 percent because between them the Blum government’s labor market legislation and strikes caused total hours worked to fall 25 percent. A decline in the ratio of investment to output, itself traceable to France’s New Deal legislation, accounts for the remaining five percentage points by which output fell.

What did cause the early-1930s collapse, then? The author points to an agriculture boom during World War I that led inevitably to a bust after WWI that dragged down most of America’s banks.

Bank lending to farmers itself doubled between the start of the war and 1920. After the war, both crop prices and US farm exports fell as sharply as they’d risen during it, triggering a farm crisis that was to ruin many farmers over the course of the next decade, often bringing their banks down with them (Belongia and Gilbert 1985). In 1921 alone more than 500 banks failed, topping the previous record established during the Panic of 1893. The 1921 failures coincided with the general economic depression of that year. But while most other industries recovered quickly from the downturn, and did so with little help from either the Federal Reserve or the Treasury, agriculture and banking didn’t. Instead, bank failures mounted.

Although thousands of US banks managed to survive the 1920s, many were in no condition to withstand any further shocks. So when commodity and security prices sagged after the onset of the Depression, bank failures became even more frequent. Rural banks were still the main casualties, although now instead of being concentrated in the western grain-growing states, bank failures were especially frequent in the South and the Midwest, where collapsing cotton, tobacco, and livestock prices combined with reduced cotton and wheat yields—a result of what the Weather Bureau described as “the most severe drought in the climatological history of the United States”—proved to be the last straw (Hamilton 1985, 602).

How much can we rely on expert analysis and wisdom? The author points out that all of the best minds of economics were in agreement that there would be a depression following World War II due to soldiers returning and finding themselves unemployed and the

Full post, including comments

San Francisco Bay Area Trip Report IV (Mare Island)

I had an early Pho lunch with a Bay Area friend who is a passionate Democrat and, typically, a reliable source of Trump hatred. Instead of fuming about Trump’s unprovoked attack on peaceful Iranians that had begun two days earlier, however, he talked about his AI-assisted efforts to prevent 180 units of affordable housing from being built on some government-owned land two miles from his multi-$million house.

After our Vietnamese experience, it was time to meet a different friend at Mare Island, a Navy base from 1854-1996. More than 300 ships and submarines were built here, including a battleship (shipyard history). Despite being right on the water and less than an hour from the AI fleshpots of San Francisco, the place hasn’t been redeveloped. The City of Vallejo seems to own it now and has opened parts of it for recreation, but can’t even get organized to build restrooms (there are a few porta-potties) as a Florida government entity would immediately have done.

The drydocks haven’t completely shut down and some impressive cranes remain.

There are some beautiful homes built originally for Navy officers.

There’s a sculpture with the names of many of the ships built at Mare Island on top of a hill:

I had dinner on Berkeley’s 4th Street with a local. She refused to walk more than a block from the restaurant on the grounds that it wasn’t safe. She believes that (1) after 70 years of progressive governance with a nearly unlimited budget, Berkeley has an entrenched criminal underclass, and (2) there should be at least 70 more years of progressive governance.

This was my introduction to a new-ish form of California fraud. Restaurants give customers menus with various prices and then add a 5 or 6% fee (why not 50% or 60%?) for “living wage” or “EE [employee] benefits”:

Traffic from Berkeley to SFO at 6:21 am was already grim (1:13 for what is a 29-minute trip without traffic):

My Uber driver (from Ethiopia) decided to take an expansive view of “HOV 3+” to include him+me. We zipped by the rule-following chumps and were at the airport after 45 minutes. We passed through some of the housing that is delivered to the vulnerable by wealthy progressives who say that housing is a human right:

Californians with whom I talked were passionate about wanting to further investigate the dead-for-seven-years Jeffrey Epstein and male associates who purportedly victimized under-18 females by paying them to have sex. They want additional men to be prosecuted for crimes that they believe occurred some decades ago. What do they do with their latest airport terminal? Celebrate a man who had sex with men under the age of 18. (Grok, like Claudine Gay, says that context is everything: “This was a consensual adult-teen relationship in the context of the 1960s gay scene. … Scott Smith (born 1948, so ~18 years younger than [Harvey] Milk; they met when Smith was in his early 20s in 1969–1972).”)

Grok was able to produce a variant of the brochure without any spelling errors:

(ChatGPT: “Sorry, I can’t help create or edit an image that promotes or glorifies Jeffrey Epstein.” Asked to explain why Harvey Milk is good while Jeffrey Epstein is bad, ChatGPT explains that “there was no criminal prosecution [of Harvey Milk] and the relationship occurred in a period when age-of-consent laws and enforcement varied widely by state and by circumstance”.)

Don’t fly without your djembe (West African drum) and indigenous blanket:

Don’t stay home and Zoom it in or travel safely by private car when you could instead exchange aerosol viruses with 200 potentially infected/infectable humans, protected by nothing more than a simple mask:

JetBlue reminded passengers to celebrate Women’s History Month:

The Broward County/FLL officials highlighted their entry in the South Florida Poetry Contest: “Pack the Fun, No Carry-On Gun!”

Full post, including comments

Don’t kill your enemies if you want to win a war (NYT)

Curtis LeMay: “I’ll tell you what war is about, you’ve got to kill people, and when you’ve killed enough they stop fighting”

New York Times, regarding the untimely death of Ali Larijani, the guy who’d been running Iran: “Israel’s Killing of Ali Larijani Could Allow Military to Tighten Grip on Iran … had a reputation for acting as a bridge between hard-line figures in the armed forces and more moderate political factions”.

If that wasn’t clear enough for communicating how foolhardy the idea of killing the enemy is as a warfighting technique, the NYT ran a second article explaining that killing the enemy “can backfire” (i.e., will backfire).

(The Iranians retaliated per usual by launching missiles at civilians in Tel Aviv. One odd feature of this war is that the Iranians complain that it is against the laws of war when the U.S. kills some civilians by mistake while at the same time the Iranians mostly attack civilian targets, e.g., in Israel or the Gulf Arab states. Similarly, folks in the West don’t complain that Iran attacks civilians, but point out that if we were to shut down Iran’s weapons factories by disabling oil production and electric power generation that would be a war crime because civilians also benefit from oil sales and electric power.)

The New York Times doesn’t explain its rationale for why killing the enemy is a sure way to lose a war, but maybe it follows logically from Islam being the Religion of Peace. If Muslims are by definition peaceful then killing a Muslim such as Ali Larijani reduces the amount of peace in the world.

A good companion piece, from state-sponsored PBS: don’t be concerned about the four Islamic jihads waged domestically in the first two weeks of March (Ayman Mohamad Ghazali trying to kill 140 preschoolers in Michigan, Mohamed Bailor Jalloh killing Lieutenant Colonel Brandon Shah, an Army helicopter pilot, in Virginia, Emir Balat and Ibrahim Kayumi throwing bombs in Manhattan, and Ndiaga Diagne killing Texans). Islamophobia is the real problem here in the U.S.

Screenshot
Full post, including comments

San Francisco Bay Area Trip Report III

In order to avoid what Google Maps said would be a very un-rapid rapid transit ride, I Ubered into San Francisco on a Sunday morning to meet a friend for dim sum in Chinatown.

If you get something at one of the take-away places, there is a nice patio above the Rose Park Station at Stocktown and Washington St. where you can eat it. After Chinatown, we walked to the City Lights bookstore:

We didn’t prepare by reading A Black Queer History of the United States, unfortunately, but enjoyed a visit to the USS Pampanito (a couple of days later, a U.S. submarine sunk an Iranian frigate).

“Essential” marijuana is available down by the water, right next to the In-N-Out Burger that was closed by authorities for its refusal to demand vaccine papers (remember that California marijuana stores were open for the entire 18-month period during which schools were closed):

Transportation variants:

Then back to Berkeley for coffee the next morning:

To be continued…

Full post, including comments

Iran war progress analysis from Al-Jazeera

While a lot of Americans, including the New York Times, seem enthusiastic about the idea that the U.S. is losing the war against Iran, Al-Jazeera publishes a perspective from a professor in Doha… “The US-Israeli strategy against Iran is working. Here is why”:

“When you look at what has actually happened to Iran’s principal instruments of power – its ballistic missile arsenal, its nuclear infrastructure, its air defences, its navy and its proxy command architecture – the picture is not one of US failure. It is one of systematic, phased degradation of a threat that previous administrations allowed to grow for four decades. … An arsenal built over decades, dismantled in days … The campaign has moved through two distinct phases. The first suppressed Iran’s air defences, decapitated its command and control, and degraded its missile and drone launch infrastructure. … The second phase, now under way, targets Iran’s defence industrial base: missile production facilities, dual-use research centres and the underground complexes where remaining stockpiles are stored. … Iran now faces a strategic dilemma that tightens every day. If it fires its remaining missiles, it exposes launchers that are promptly destroyed. … Much of the criticism of the US-Israeli campaign focuses on its costs while treating the status quo ante as if it were cost-free. It was not. … Closing the strait was always Iran’s most visible retaliatory card, and always a wasting asset. About 90 percent of Iran’s own oil exports pass through Kharg Island and then the strait. … The question is not whether the strait reopens but when and whether Iran retains any naval capacity to contest it. … the endgame is visible in the operational phasing, even if the rhetoric obscures it. The objective is the permanent degradation of Iran’s ability to project power beyond its borders through missiles, nuclear latency and proxy networks. … the critics are making a different error: They are treating the costs of action as if the costs of inaction were zero. They were not. They were measured in the slow accretion of a threat that, left unchecked, would have produced exactly the crisis everyone claims to fear: a nuclear-armed Iran capable of closing the Strait of Hormuz at will, surrounded by proxy forces that could hold the entire region hostage indefinitely.”


I’m not sure if Muhanad Seloom is correct, but the fact that A-10 Warthogs are now operating in Iran suggests that he is. Speaking of the Hog, here’s a photo from the 2024 Stuart, Florida air show:

Prof. Seloom seems to assume that the Islamic Republic stays in power and that the U.S. stops its regular bombing runs, thus giving Iran the opportunity to rebuild its military:

No one is proposing to occupy Tehran. The question is what happens when the bombing stops, and here the critics raise a legitimate concern, which Murphy articulated concisely after a classified briefing: What prevents Iran from restarting production?

Maybe the answer is that there are some adversaries who are indifferent to being bombed and, therefore, you have to keep bombing them every few days indefinitely, e.g., use satellites and drones to see if they’ve managed to rebuild some military capability and, if so, take it out immediately. Wait for a new leader to show up in public and drop a missile on his head. Certainly you can’t let the enemy rebuild its air defenses.

Full post, including comments

San Francisco Bay Area Trip Report II

Moe’s Books (Berkeley) moved all of the Gaza books to the back of the store (see A trip to Berkeley, California (November 2024))

Some of the books that were prominently displayed:

Nearby Mrs. Dalloway’s Books features works on how to spend most of the day reminding kids that they’re going to die when the Earth goes Full Venus:

I talked to a professor of adolescent medicine shortly after seeing these books and he said that it made sense for all teenagers to be in therapy because of their reasonable fears regarding climate change.

Housing is a human right, which means either a $3 million house from this real estate agency or sleeping in the real estate agency’s alcove:

Dove soap is too precious to be left on the shelf at CVS:

Full post, including comments

How was the immigration of Ayman Mohamad Ghazali supposed to make Americans better off?

As we solemnly observe International Day to Combat Islamophobia, let’s consider the ways in which the U.S. has been enriched by some Islamic immigrants who’ve recently made the news…

Hezbollah was designed a Foreign Terrorist Organization by the U.S. in 1997. Ayman Mohamad Ghazali was a Shiite Muslim from the Lebanon, a country in which nearly all of the Shiite Muslims polled say that they support Hezbollah. If that weren’t enough, Ayman Mohamad Ghazali had at least two brothers who were active Hezbollah fighters (CBS; see below) and “Ghazali was flagged by a government watchlist for his contact with suspected Hezbollah members, but was not said to have been a member himself” (CNN, via Wikipedia). Lebanon is one of the world’s most violent countries and 150,000 Lebanese were killed by fellow Lebanese in neighbor-to-neighbor violence during a civil war that began to wind down in 1990 (“religious diversity” was the cause, according to Wikipedia).

He was admitted to the U.S. by the Obama administration and later given citizenship by the Obama administration. Let’s suppose that Ayman Mohamad Ghazali had never loaded up a truck with explosives and tried to kill 140 preschoolers. How was his immigration to the U.S. supposed to make Americans better off? The rationale doesn’t seem to have been economic. Ayman Mohamad Ghazali’s education and job skills enabled to him to earn only $20,000 per year in 2024.

New York Times:

A Restaurant Worker Was a Quiet Presence. Then He Attacked a Synagogue.

Court records [from his wife’s divorce lawsuit] show Mr. Ghazali was earning about $20,000 a year from his job at Hamido.

CBS:

A freelance journalist working for CBS News in Lebanon learned from sources there the two brothers were both members of a Hezbollah rocket unit in southern Lebanon.

We could ask the same question about Mohamed Bailor Jalloh, who waged jihad in the same month as Ayman Mohamad Ghazali. Mohamed Bailor Jalloh killed a Black Army helicopter pilot, thus directly demonstrating the falsehood of accusations that elites are replacing American Blacks with immigrants. Mohamed Bailor Jalloh was from Sierra Leone, a country that rivals Lebanon for violence. The Sierra Leone civil war claimed up to 70,000 lives and resulted in 2.5 million people being displaced (roughly half the population at the time). Let’s supposed that he hadn’t waged jihad. How was he going to make Americans better off? Why didn’t we denaturalize and deport him after he was convicted and imprisoned for being an ISIS supporter? We thought that he was going to change his mind?

I already asked How was the immigration of Ndiaga Diagne supposed to make Americans better off?, who donned a “Property of Allah” shirt and killed Americans in Austin, Texas a couple of weeks before Ayman Mohamad Ghazali’s jihad.

Finally, we can ask about the parents of Emir Balat and Ibrahim Kayumi, two U.S.-born Islamic State jihadists. What skills did the parents bring from Afghanistan and Turkey that we thought the U.S. was going to be improved via their presence?

Related:

Full post, including comments

San Francisco Bay Area Trip Report I

Flying over Yosemite from Las Vegas…

… we landed in Concord, California, rode on “Transforce” tires, were admonished to “Coexist” with people of different religions, and arrived at a Thai restaurant with an all-gender restroom:

The next day it was time to visit Berkeley, California. A house in my hostess’s neighborhood celebrates RBG, who refused to hire Black law clerks, and Black Lives Matter:

Although everyone I talked to in Berkeley agrees that taxation in California should be higher, there is no “Repeal Proposition 13” sign on the fence of this house worth $2.4 million and taxed at $1.3 million (referenced to its 2006 purchase price). Nor are any of the Californians who said they wanted higher taxes and that they hate generational wealth (unearned!) working to implement a 16 percent state death tax in California to match estate tax rates in Maskachusetts, New York, and other progressive states.

Two yards over, “Free Palestine” (this was a day before Donald Trump attacked the peaceful Iranians so the signs in support of the Islamic Republic hadn’t gone up yet):

Outdoor masking is common and so is wearing an “I’m gay” t-shirt, but it was relatively rare to find an intersection:

Californians love to brag about being rich and also say that housing is a human right, yet are happy to walk by neighbors who live in tents:

Californians also love to brag about their commitment to environmentalism, yet driving old cars that spew pollution is common. (Note that the owner of the 40-year-old Mazda 323, ChatGPT-estimated value of $1,000, was concerned about theft.)

Gasoline is $5/gallon:

Those who’ve converted to electric install tripping hazards on the public sidewalks:

To be continued…

Full post, including comments

Las Vegas report

Last month I stayed with friends near the north end of the Strip, near the new Fontainebleau Las Vegas (a $3.7 billion Florida export with a tortured history). The view from their terrace (note the Sphere towards the right):

They showed me the Las Vegas Arts District, usually bypassed by tourists who go from the Strip to Fremont Street. If you’re walking from the Strip you’ll pass by a dangerous area where you could lose half of your current assets and 50-80 percent of your income going forward:

The City of Las Vegas welcomes visitors from Maskachusetts with a billboard for healing essential marijuana:

Frida Kahlo dispenses advice, e.g., “the best way to succeed in a field is to have sex with a married man who is already successful in that field.”

After our light dinner at Ada’s, a gracious “goodbye” with the Fontainebleau in the background:

The Hunter Biden tour that I’d started at Sheri’s Ranch in Pahrump continued with a visit to the Crack Shack:

From there we continued driving to the Pinball Hall of Fame, which has an awesome sign:

The collection could use some maintenance help, unfortunately, and the ladies who were working there during our visit were not cheerful ambassadors for the passion. That said, there are some unique games to try out. I’ll do a separate post about this place.

We stopped by Atomic Motors to look at classic cars being maintained and offered for sale.

(I’d love to have the 1964 Chevrolet Chevelle Wagon if A/C could be retrofitted! Also, note the rare 1974 Jensen-Healey JH-5, above, at $29,000 with 81,000 miles (how did they get the British-made thing to run that far?). It is tough to imagine today, but the British were once significant innovators and manufacturers of cars!)

Dinner was at Endo, a Tokyo-quality you-gotta-text-and-be-invited omakase restaurant with six seats, three chefs, and two servers.

What did it cost? I’m afraid to ask, but fortunately my host paid. I don’t think that it was cheap, however, because the sake pairing, which I declined because I’m not sophisticated like James Bond and can’t appreciate sake, included a bottle that retails for $550:

The one disappointing aspect of the meal was that nobody expressed concerns about the U.S. economy. I was fully prepared to respond, “I share your anxiety. In fact, I don’t know where my next slice of A5 Japanese Wagyu is going to come from.”

We visited Red Rock Canyon, which is now so crowded that reservations are required but at the same time not crowded enough for the Federales to build a real bathroom in the middle (and maybe a restaurant?):

A school group of perhaps 60 kids was visiting at the same time. Out of the 60, I noticed 1 white girl (“it’s not a replacement”).

We hit Din Tai Fung inside ARIA for late lunch and then enjoyed the Chinese New Year decorations:

Then I walked through Caesar’s Palace, riding the circular escalators (a Mitsubishi innovation):

I saw Wizard of Oz at The Sphere. It’s been extended visually to fill the massive screen and cut down in time to 1:15. Massive fans simulate the tornado. I wasn’t a huge fan of the movie, but the Sphere experience is worth $150 (Sections 205 and 207, close to section 206, are probably the best value. The 100-level seats can be partially covered. Legroom is tight.). The Uber pickups and taxis aren’t handled all that smoothly so it might make sense to walk to the monorail or back to the Strip rather than getting caught up in the crowd.

I finished the trip with a walk through Fontainebleau, but was underwhelmed by the public spaces. There seems to be more to look at in Bellagio or Wynn.

Where should a person of means live in Las Vegas? They’re building some new apartment complexes near the Arts District that will likely be fun for the young and childless. According to my friend, Summerlin is where people with families or who don’t tolerate urban grit will want to be.

Full post, including comments

We are being absolutely crushed by Iran (NYT)

Let’s have a look at the New York Times right now. Every story on the front page seems to be about a failure of U.S. military. Russia is winning. We stole some oil tankers and that’s actually costing us money instead of making us money. Missiles are falling in northern Israel. Maybe we’re firing some missiles at Iran from Bahrain, but they certainly aren’t hitting anything. We’re suffering an “oil shock” like in the bad days of the 1970s.

Let’s compare to a random day in the middle of our involvement in World War II. The British-spec’d P-51 hadn’t come into action yet so we were losing B-17 bombers and crews at a ridiculous rate. Nonetheless, the focus of the stories was on the enemy’s losses, not our own.

This is the first time that I can remember when more than half of Americans seem to be invested in the idea that the U.S. is doomed to lose a war.

(I personally believe that our best option for winning is to use bombs to (1) disable Iran’s oil production and export infrastructure, and (2) disable Iran’s electricity generation. Without money from selling oil, the Islamic Republic won’t be able to do too much that we don’t like. Without electric power, Iran won’t be able to produce a lot of sophisticated weapons. (Yes, they can use generators for some stuff, but that’s not the same as plugging a massive factory into the power grid.))

Full post, including comments