Mount Rainier National Park

Established in 1899 by President McKinley, Mount Rainier National Park was the nation’s fifth. It is today surrounded by signs informing visitors, who’ll pay almost nothing to enter ($80/year for an annual pass), that they might have to wait 3 hours in a car line-up (engines and AC running for maximum climate preservation!) to get to the “wilderness” experience inside the gate. In the bad old days of 1908, people paid $5 per car. The BLS CPI calculator goes back only to 1913, but ChatGPT says that this corresponds to $180 today. What did those with $180 of today’s dollars get when they arrived? Some fun activities that have had to be banned in today’s crowded national parks:

The visitors of 1908 didn’t have to deal with the negative effects of Climate Change:

Despite our abuse of Mother Earth, she apparently still loves Her children because we were blessed with unusually clear weather on Day 1 of our visit:

Evening above Myrtle Falls (near the Paradise Inn):

Speaking of Paradise, check out the 5G mobile service available in this mile-high island within the park:

The rest of the park is pretty shabby, consistent with the almost-free entrance price (see What if our National Parks charged Navajo prices?). The lobby of the Inn is beautiful, but the rooms are small and crummy by present-day standards:

Don’t miss Box Canyon and Silver Falls, east of Paradise:

Putting our rental minivan to shame, a Siberian Husky’s 13-ton motorhome (on tour from 2021-2033):

Don’t miss the short Twin Firs Trail through old growth forest on your way out to the west.

Practical tip: make sure to bring hiking sticks, especially if visiting in June when th snow won’t have melted.

Summary: a great place, but it was created for a country of 76 million humans for whom long-distance travel was expensive and onerous. Nobody seems to have thought about what it means to build a park for over 400 million Americans (we’ll get there pretty soon if legal immigration continues at 1.3 million humans per year and very fast indeed if we have another Biden-Harris-style surge of undocumented migration) who have access to low-cost comfortable cross-country transportation, plus another 70+ million foreign visitors to the U.S. (current level). Considering the gold-plated nature of much that is run by the government, it is unclear why the national parks stumble along shabbily. Entrance fees are low, a massive subsidy is required every year from taxpayers in general, and facilities are antiquated and in obvious need of maintenance. Meanwhile, access is rationed according to who is willing to sit in a 3-hour traffic line to get in, who can tolerate physical discomfort in crummy hotels, who doesn’t mind using outhouses when private enterprise in the same terrain has running water and a septic system, etc.

Related, from the New York Times:

This year, staffing remains sharply reduced, and some parks have scrapped their reservation systems, already leading to gridlock at popular sites.

They own some of the most valuable real estate in the world, in other words, and can’t get a sufficient return on that capital to pay a few rangers. A family of rich foreigners on a three-week national park trip will still pay almost nothing per person per day.

They can also buy a $250 nonresident annual pass — available online or at park gates. The same pass costs $80 for U.S. residents.

Almost ninety percent of the true cost of the foreign family’s visit will be paid by federal personal income taxpayers, many of whom won’t have enough time or money to visit the parks. (Only 10 percent of the NPS budget comes from visitor fees and another 3-4 percent from concession contracts.)

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If the 1950s were a “rat race” for men, what is the correct term for the 2020s?

White-collar men in the 1950s often characterized their world as a “rat race”. If college-educated, they competed with only a small subset of Americans for high-paid desk jobs. Men in the 50s did not compete with immigrants because substantial importation of humans into the U.S. stopped in 1924, not to be restarted until President Johnson signed the Hart-Celler Act in 1965 (see below). A house in a safe suburb with good schools and A/C could be purchased, at the end of the 1950s, for about one quarter the cost today (in real dollars; see $112/month to live in a brand-new house in Bowie, Maryland). Relative to income, a house cost about 1.7X annual salary vs. over 5X today (ChatGPT table below). Partly due to this low cost for housing in a safe suburban neighborhood with decent schools ($1+ million today?), a man’s income was generally sufficient to support a wife and 2-3 children as well as himself. Sex outside of marriage was discouraged both legally and socially and, therefore, the man would usually be married before age 25. No-fault divorce (“unilateral” in research parlance) did not exist and, therefore, if the man wasn’t behaving outrageously (beating the wife, drinking heavily, failing to work, having affairs), the wife couldn’t profit via a divorce lawsuit (a divorce might be arranged by mutual agreement, of course). In addition to marital security, the 1950s man often enjoyed a lot of job security from (1) the lack of competition in the labor market, and (2) the tendency of large companies to provide lifetime jobs, which today is limited to government work.

What’s the correct term for what similar men face today? They inhabit a world in which you can’t spit in the street without hitting a college graduate. Men must compete with women for jobs and, despite women being more likely to earn college degrees, be passed over for hiring or promotion when a company decides that “diversity” is its strength. If a female or favored minority human competitor doesn’t take the white-collar man’s job, Claude is ready to replace him. The companies that once offered native-born Americans jobs for life are now home to platoons of H-1B “non-immigrant” immigrants.

A house in a neighborhood with low crime, an orderly familiar culture, and good schools, is about 10X the median college graduate’s income (5X for houses overall, but the typical suburb is no longer a white picket fence idyll). A college education for the kids, so that they can get into the “rat race” that the parents ran, is now 5X more expensive state colleges and 9X more expensive at elite Queers for Palestine-type schools . (ChatGPT on the history of federal government programs to make college more affordable: “GI Bill for veterans in 1944, first general federal student loans in 1958, major modern federal aid framework in 1965, and Pell-style direct grants in 1972/1973”)

Where in the 1950s he likely partnered with a virgin aged 20 (ChatGPT says 10-25% of 1950s brides might have had sex with someone other than their fiancé/husband), today he’s with a 30-year-old veteran of the sexual revolution. If he is persuaded to marry her, she can sue him for divorce a day later for any reason or for no reason. For men who strayed in the 1950s and got sued for a “fault divorce”, the resulting financial drain was primarily alimony and it lasted only a few years because the plaintiff would remarry and that shut down the alimony revenue stream. The risk of losing his role as a father was controllable due to the requirement that a plaintiff find a “fault” ground, such as infidelity. If a man gets sued today because the wife found someone she likes better, the man can lose his “father” role, and access to the young people who used to be his children, due to factors entirely beyond his control. The man’s biggest financial exposure in a divorce lawsuit is typically “child support” (paid to an adult female to spend on whatever she wants, not to a “child”), which can last for 23 years (Massachusetts) or 21 years (New York) even if the plaintiff has married her lover and that lover earns far more than the defendant and even if the lover is the biological father of the child (nytimes: “I pay child support to a biologically intact family, a father and mother, married, who live with their own child.”). (In the cases where alimony is the primary profit from a divorce lawsuit, the defendant might be paying for 50 years because there is no longer any social pressure for the plaintiff to remarry. She can have sex with 100 men and write a magazine article about the “single MILF” lifestyle and this has no impact on her cash entitlement.)

This is not to say that American in the 1950s was better overall, of course. We had been starved of enrichment via immigrants since 1924 and, therefore, weren’t as strong under the “diversity is our strength” axiom. We didn’t have Internet or LLMs for personal use. A 1950s car, though beautiful in our museums today, came out of the factory as a junk heap compared to a 3-year-old Toyota today. We had three TV channels to watch on a 21″ CRT. But in terms of career security and personal life security, the 2020s are inferior to the 1950s. So, returning to the title question… if the 1950s were a “rat race” for white-collar men, how would we characterize the situation today?

Loosely related…

A post on X from an offensively titled username so I’ll just copy the text:

White Americans and Europeans are the ONLY people worldwide that are EXPECTED to compete with the ENTIRE world for jobs.

50+ years ago White men with STEM degrees got good jobs. Things like engineering or applied mathematics guaranteed a good career.

Now we are required to compete against not just our own people, but the brown and black hordes worldwide that are willing to work for pennies.

It was an ECONOMIC CRIME committed against our people.

(I post this not for the truth or falsehood of what the author writes, but for the expression of a feeling of insecurity and, therefore, pressure even worse than the rat race of 50 years ago.)

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Codex works to verify a chart showing Iran having a relatively high level of religious tolerance compared to neighbors

Here’s a chart from an X post charting answers to the question “The only acceptable religion is my religion” (perfect for Pride Month!):

Iranians living in the Islamic Republic of Iran are, according to this chart, much more likely to tolerate non-Islamic belief than, for example, the noble Palestinians who reside in Jordan (whose territory is about 80% of British “Palestine” and in which over 97% of residents are Muslim (0% are Jewish, which makes puts it on track to be celebrated as an ideal society from a progressive point of view)).

Should we believe this chart? Is it a reasonable size survey, for one thing? I found the cited source and was able to get the raw numbers. 1200 people were surveyed in Bangladesh and only 25 disagreed, consistent with the published bar chart’s percentage.

Codex crunched away for about 15 minutes, asking for permission quite a few times (I haven’t ever used it for something like this so maybe the next one will go smoothly). Codex (ChatGPT/OpenAI) concludes that the X chart is a fair representation of the data (i.e., it accomplished a fact check). The Codex-produced chart in Excel is hard to read, though, with the country names buried inside bars of color (not to say “colored bars”):

Note that some countries the X author left out are near the top here, e.g., Maldives (“100% Muslim” according to Google) and Libya (nearly 100% Muslim, according to Google, with the exception of some expats (oil industry workers?)).

I asked “Can you redo the chart so that the country names are in a separate column? Or at least left-justified?” This took another 10 minutes with many failed attempts and several requests for approval. The result was at least off by one, with the Bangladesh label applied to the percentage legend:

Another 5 minutes and much straining by NVIDIA chips in a data center somewhere…

So the AI assistant does work, but I think that asking a Chatbot to produce a chart, without reference to a desktop computer and Excel, might have been faster/simpler.

Separately, why did we attack a country that is far more tolerant than our NATO ally Turkey (recipient of about $31 billion in aid, cumulatively) and far more tolerant than Jordan, a country to which we have provided $34 billion in aid?

(Loosely related, maybe our surrender to Iran isn’t quite as great a deal for them as portrayed in the media. If it were, wouldn’t the Iranians have already agreed to our surrender? Instead, there are merely negotiations.)

Here’s Codex’s Excel output:

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Father’s Day at the New York Times

The latest from the Scientists, “To My Daughter, My Gender Was Never Complicated”.

The daughter is named “Elliot”, which in no conceivable way could encourage her to think that maybe her sex was incorrectly assigned at birth:

(Also, how was a child produced if there aren’t any Y chromosomes anywhere among the people who call themselves “parents”?)

Science is passed down to the younger generation:

A question that any American father might be asked, “How long did you have breasts for, Dad?”

Happy Father’s Day once again. I hope that none of the dads reading this blog are experiencing any pain or irritation from their breasts/bra today.

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The LeMay car museums in Tacoma

It’s Father’s Day. For those handful of American men who have any control over their kids’ lives, a suggestion….

If you’re anywhere near Tacoma, Washington and haven’t been carjacked yet (Tacoma is “safer than 1% of U.S. cities), the LeMay car museums are well worth a stop. The primary one is near the Almond Roca factory in Tacoma proper and styles itself “America’s Car Museum”.

We were there for a special American Supercar exhibition, in which the Corvette and Ford GT were featured prominently.

Here’s an astonishing 1000 hp Oldsmobile:

GM loaned the museum the C8 Corvette test mule:

Those who loved physics class will appreciate this 1923 Lincoln, the first car to drive over the doomed Tacoma Narrows Bridge in 1940:

If you need a last-minute art idea for America’s 250th:

Thanks to Harold LeMay’s fortune built hauling garbage, the museum has magnificent examples from every era of the automobile, a 1906 Cadillac, for example:

A 1930 Duesenberg:

A wartime Chevrolet:

A 1954 Chevrolet wagon that would be awesome to own with retrofit A/C:

If Greta Thunberg hadn’t segued into pro-Hamas activism, this would be the perfect 100 mpg car for her, from aircraft engineer Jim Bede:

In order to skip out on Tacoma’s reputation for violent crime, we stayed in the new development of Point Ruston, a bit to the northwest. Fortunately for Florida real estate values, the breakdown of order in the West Coast cities is still in evidence. A CVS in the moderately-rich area locks up the precious laundry detergent:

Immigration has resulted in a random assortment of humans with conflicting cultural and religious values. Below, Muslims complying with Islamic dress codes are juxtaposed with (1) a pet dog (haram), and (2) a female rollerblader shamelessly displaying her bare midriff:

Our good fortune with the weather and Mount Rainier views continued:

The counter-serve taco place has a trans-enhanced Rainbow Flag to which customers can pay their respects prior to ordering, an example of Rainbow-first Retail (examples from Bozeman, Montana).

We’re informed that Floridians are stupid. The hyperintelligent progressives of Tacoma, however, need to be reminded to close the water tap after filling a cup at the ice cream shop:

The coffee shop nearby has a complete Righteous Boomer No Kings Rally Starter Kit:

The fridge magnets for sale during morning coffee include one that situates anti-Trump protest in the context of Martin Niemöller-level heroism (which makes sense since The Reverend Niemöller hated Jews almost as much as today’s progressives and actually voted for the Nazi Party three times!):

Although the residents of western Washington State are surrounded by neighbors who are in obvious need of assistance, e.g., due to being unhoused, their political energies go into parading around in front of each other to show how much they hate what Donald Trump is doing 3,000+ miles away in D.C. Here’s the reading material provided at the coffee shop:

The next morning we hit the LeMay Collections at Marymount, a less-glitzy venue in south Tacoma. This shouldn’t be skipped! We opted for a docent tour, which included a ride in a Ford Model T and a visit to a massive car warehouse that is normally off-limits.

Wouldn’t it be awesome if Stellantis brought back the AMC Pacer?

The Collections includes a large exhibit on the Elon Musk of the 1940s, Preston Tucker. Promoting the public sale of stock in an unprofitable company whose products were delayed did not make Tucker a trillionaire, however, but got him prosecuted and shut down by the U.S. government. Tucker beat the rap, but the company was killed. Tucker’s design had a lot of safety features that would gradually appear in mass-market cars over the subsequent 30 years. The museum explains that the original design even included seatbelts but that they were removed due to a fear that the public would infer that the car was more dangeorus than existing designs. One design goal was that the engine and transmission could be removed and a loaner engine/transmission swapped in. This would take less than one hour and would enable repairs to be done offline.

How much fun would it be to have this Edsel station wagon? Our docent reminded us that Edsel Ford shouldn’t be associated with business failure, despite the lack of success of the Edsel cars that were introduced after his death. It was Edsel who twisted his dad’s arm into adding the Model A to Ford’s product line as an alternative to the Model T, which Henry Ford considered to be ideal.

The Collections has far more cars than the downtown museum and they don’t always get a lot of room for display and walking around:

There are a lot of gems, however, and the place is well worth 2 hours. You’ll learn about at least a dozen car brands that you hadn’t previously known existed. Below, I learned about an entire class of car that I hadn’t heard of, the “cyclecar“. 14 hp out to be enough for anybody, as Bill Gates famously never said.

Just imagine how much surplus oil we’d have if people did most of their errands in a modern version. Even with 1913 technology, this machine supposedly achieved 40 mpg at 40 mph (more than enough speed to get around Seattle and, in fact, even 15 mph was overkill during a lot of our time on I-5).

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Sitka, Alaska Public Library

What do the taxpayers of Sitka, Alaska get at their local public libary? Here’s a report from a May 2026 visit.

(Alaska has no state income, estate, or sales tax, but residents of Sitka pay property tax and also a sales tax of 6 percent (summer) or 5 percent (winter).)

It’s a beautiful waterfront building with awesome-by-pathetic-US-standards free WiFI:

A bulletin board with community announcements greets visitors:

(The Juneteeth celebration will likely resemble an Ibram Xolani Kendi (born Ibram Henry Rogers) book club because we didn’t see a single African American local or visitor during our day in Sitka. Even the Labrador Retriever who protected us from brown bears on the Totem Trail was yellow rather than Black (the Lab’s owner appeared to be white).)

Featured books by the front door:

A featured book in the kids’ section:

(So far the locals don’t seem to have followed the leader into wearing hijab.)

Here’s a book that was flagged as new in the kids’ section. It says “Inspired by the childhood of Dolores Huerta”. Ms. Huerta was recently featured in the New York Times, e.g., with “‘We’re Just Seen as Sex Objects’: Dolores Huerta’s Years in the U.F.W.” (“The co-founder of the United Farm Workers talked about her relationship with Cesar Chavez, and the night he raped her.”) and “Cesar Chavez, a Civil Rights Icon, Is Accused of Abusing Girls for Years”.

The library loans out gear and games:

The teen section reminds kids in Alaska that climate change will ruin their lives unless they follow the lead of Indian-born environmental journalist Meera Subramanian and become climate activists. (Thought experiment: Suppose that both Phoenix, Arizona and Sitka, Alaska became 10 degrees warmer. Would that make real estate in Sitka more valuable or less valuable?)

The book could perhaps use an update. Climate Change Alarmists now demand cheap oil and complain about gas prices being, in nominal dollars, nearly as high as they were in 2022, but the book praises those who obstructed the Dakota Access Pipeline. The book celebrates Tonopah-style concentrated solar power, apparently disagreeing with Popular Mechanics that “The $1 Billion Solar Plant Is an Obsolete, Expensive Flop” (2020). See also “Solar plant on I-15 near its end, shutting off in 2026, officials say” (2025) regarding the Ivanpah dream.

Teens are also reminded that “the perfect family” does not include any white people:

Circling back to the adult section, some books that the librarians chose to feature:

The book on “How Latino Immigrants Saved the American City” is interesting. The New York Times tells us that Black New Yorkers haven’t been replaced by Asians and the Latinx. It is just that New York City now has fewer Black residents and more Asian/Latinx immigrant residents (e.g., see “Why Black Families Are Leaving New York, and What It Means for the City” (2023)). The book explains that the non-replacement of Blacks by Latinx has “saved” cities.

If you’re in Sitka, don’t forget that Rainbow Storytime (pre-K through 5th grade), from the above poster of Pride events, is happening today at 10:30 am Alaska time. Storytime raises a question. The library is funded by taxpayers and, therefore, we have to assume that the majority of taxpayers support whatever the library does. Outside of San Francisco or Massachusetts, though, how many of us have heard a parent say “I am taking my child to the Rainbow Storytime at the library now”?

Speaking of Massachusetts, it seems that the Boston Public Library is hosting 19 drag queen story hours this month. Here are a couple of examples tagged for children of various ages:

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Target on Juneteenth

Did anyone go to Target yesterday to purhcase Pridewear for a beloved 2SLGBTQQI+ canine?

It seems that Target is the ultimate example of Juneteenth. Elite white corporate executives at the headquarters in Minnesota, a state in which slavery was never legal, get a paid day off. Black retail workers in former slave states must toil to help customers if they want to be paid for working on June 19th. Google:

(The Target leadership team page depicts not a single person who appears to be African American. Screen shots below.)

If any reader happened to be at Target and happened to get a photo of a Black worker toiling while the above elites enjoyed their day off, I would love to receive it!

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Maskachusetts starts work on an exit tax

It’s Juneteenth and Black Americans are celebrating the end of slavery.

(Except, of course, for the millions of Black Americans who are immigrants and who have no relationship to the roughly 400,000 African slaves who were imported to British North America/the U.S. And also not Black Americans in service jobs who have to work today while whites who work for the government, nonprofits (also government!), and Big Tech are relaxing with pay.)

A friend is also celebrating freedom this week because he finally unloaded his old house in Maskachusetts. He moved to Florida a year ago, but the market for high-end houses in MA is slow and he had some work to do on the place. It might have been inadvertently smart to sell the house in a tax year after he was completely gone. The new Massachusetts Millionaire’s Tax applies only to MA-source income. So he will owe tax only on the capital gain in 2026 and that should be under $1 million after the $500,000 exclusion for a married couple. Note that the “gain” is entirely fictitious and disappears once you adjust his purchase price for 19 years of official CPI. It would actually be a significant loss in real terms if adjusted for CPI as previously calculated, i.e., before the “owners’ equivalent rent” scam (see also “Summers: Inflation Reached 18% In 2022 Using The Government’s Previous Formula” (Forbes)). If he’d sold in the year that he moved, the rest of his income would have pushed the total well over $1 million and he’d be paying tax (on a loss in real dollars!) at the 9% rate rather than 5%.

Is my friend free, free at last from Maskachusetts state taxes? Not quite. Selling real estate is considered “Massachusetts source income” and, therefore, MA state income tax is owed. So many rich people are bailing out on paying for whatever Gov. Maura Healey and Boston Mayor Michelle Wu have dreamed up that the state is fearful it won’t get its pound of flesh from those who’d fled. There is a new law that requires the withholding of likely capital gains tax at the time of the sale. It applies only if the seller is a nonresident, i.e., has moved to tax-free New Hampshire or tax-free Florida.

Starting November 1, 2025, a withholding agent is required to file a Form NRW for every real estate transaction when the gross sales price is $1,000,000 or more. If the seller (aka, Transferor) is a nonresident or a business with no continuing Massachusetts presence, the withholding agent may also be required to withhold tax.

The withholding rules on sales or exchanges of real estate generally require a withholding agent to withhold an amount reasonably equivalent to the personal income tax or corporate excise, as applicable, that will be due on the net gain from a non-resident’s sale or exchange of Massachusetts real property. Non-resident sellers (or other transferors of property) include individuals and business corporations with no continuing Massachusetts business presence.

(The new regulation drives up costs to both buyers and sellers, incidentally. The lawyers on both sides now have to be paid to review the forms relating to this new law (grew from 2 pages in 2025 to 3 pages in 2026). A lawyer on one side has to be paid about $300 to file the form with the DOR.)

I wonder if this could be the foot in the door for a more general state exit tax, e.g., something like the federal exit tax on people who renounce U.S. citizenship. Someone fleeing NY, MA, or CA would have to pay tax on all unrealized capital gains at the time of the move to a different state.

Here’s a Harvard Journal on Legislation article, “NO MIGRATION WITHOUT TAXATION: STATE EXIT TAXES”:

The author starts from the proposition that it was living in, e.g., Massachusetts, that enabled a person to make money. Only because the taxpayer lived in Boston was he/she/ze/they able to buy stock in ASML (Dutch) and Novo Nordisk (Danish) and, therefore, he/she/ze/they should have to pay capital gains tax on these stocks before fleeing to Florida.

If a taxing jurisdiction provides benefits to a taxpayer that allow the taxpayer to generate income, that jurisdiction should have the ability to impose tax on the resulting income … The problem arises with taxpayer mobility. If a taxing jurisdiction has a strict realization requirement, all the income that accrued within that jurisdiction could migrate to another jurisdiction along with the taxpayer before the realization event occurs. The taxing jurisdiction that provided the benefits that facilitated the income would lose the ability to tax it. The resulting tax revenue would inure to a different taxing jurisdiction that did not deserve it, or more commonly, would be eliminated through simple tax planning strategies.

The benefit theory’s fundamental premise is that individuals generate their income and wealth because the government provides economic, physical, and legal infrastructure; protection of property; and other facets of an “orderly, civilized society.”

(Obama’s “You didn’t build that”; why isn’t the fair tax rate 100% then?)

A state exit tax may not be entirely tax neutral, but it moves the overall tax regime toward neutrality. A state’s existing personal income tax regime without an exit tax creates a strong incentive to migrate out of the state before realizing income or gain, as discussed in Section IV.B. Imposing a tax on the gain that accrued while the taxpayer resided in the state removes that tax incentive to migrating out of the state, thus making the migration decision more tax neutral. With an exit tax that deems an exit to constitute a realization event, the detriment to migration is essentially just one of timing. The taxpayer can stay in the state and pay tax when there is a true realization event or leave the state and pay tax now. As discussed above, however, this assertion relies on an unavoidable realization event if the taxpayer remains in the state.

(This would certainly discourage people from moving. If they stay in a high-tax state they can avoid paying tax on unrealized capital gains for decades or perhaps forever (steps up at death). If they migrate, on the other hand, they must immediately pay tax on unrealized gains.)

The article seems to have been written in 2021, i.e., before the Mamdani Caliphate was established. However, the author has some specific guidance for how Ayatollah Mamdani could get cash from those who flee only as far as the Hamptons or Westchester County:

Although this Article’s focus is state exit taxes, there are localities that could similarly benefit from an exit tax regime. Interstate migration is quite easy, while intrastate migration is even easier, which leaves many localities such as New York City, San Francisco, and Seattle particularly vulnerable. The options are fewer for localities, even those with the power to impose an income tax, and many localities’ best option is piggybacking on a state exit tax. Localities could attempt to impose their own freestanding exit taxes, or creative exit tax alternatives that impose property tax or some other tax and grant credits in future years for the additional tax paid only if the taxpayer still resides in the state. These standalone options, however, are difficult to administer and susceptible to challenge.

The glorious conclusion:

States cannot prevent people from moving, but states can prevent the tax base from moving with them.

Where is the law professor who wants to save Maskachusetts, California, and New York while starving Florida of its daily fresh supply of rich people? Is he/she/ze/they in Cambridge, along with the journal’s publisher? In Brooklyn, perhaps? Maybe in San Francisco at Kamala Harris’s old law school? Remarkably, at the time he wrote the article, Professor Andrew Appleby was a professor at Stetson University College of Law, which is in Gulfport, Florida (Tampa metro area). He’s now moved to University of Tennessee, i.e., to another tax-free state that prospers when rich-but-mismanaged states in the Northeast raise tax rates. So.. the taxpayers of Tennessee are paying this guy to promote the idea that New York should impose a crippling tax on anyone who is thinking of moving to Tennessee and start paying property and sales taxes in TN.

Separately, consider that the modern economy has a winner-take-all aspect for companies (Apple and NVIDIA,), individuals (Jeff Bezos and any woman who manages to get him into Family Court), and geographical areas (Silicon Valley, San Francisco’s Cerebral Valley (the LLM companies), and NYC for finance). If the geographical areas that have won 90% of the income are able to prevent people from moving away via exit taxation then the places that currently get a few scraps won’t get anything at all. Although politicians and residents of the “winner places” love to talk about their passion for reducing inequality, I have a feeling that they’ll try to scoop up that last 10% with an exit tax, just as the Tennessee-taxpayer-supported professor suggests.

Loosely related, anyone who can afford $1,000/day for hotels, food, etc. could have visited our national parks today for free in 2025 (sign in our Olympic National Park hotel; of course, the promised daily housekeeping never occurred!):

Not so in 2026 because the Hater in Chief substituted Flag Day and Independence Day weekend for MLK, Jr. Day and Juneteenth.

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COVID-19 killed most of America’s old people and now Social Security is insolvent

Social Security’s impending insolvency is in the news lately. The system that provided Ida May Fuller with benefits that were 1000X what she paid in tax was apparently not sustainable (even Charles Ponzi couldn’t keep a scheme like that going forever!).

We were previously informed that 1 million healthy over-65 Americans had been killed by COVID-19. These people had at least 5-10 years to live, during which time they’d be receiving monthly Social Security payments. I wondered about this back in 2021 with Wave of death among the elderly bankrupts Social Security and quoted CNBC:

The Social Security trust fund most Americans rely on for their retirement will run out of money in 12 years, one year sooner than expected, according to an annual government report.

Social Security payments would be cut, or young people further enslaved to taxation, in 2033, in other words (2021+12). Apparently, some of those killed by COVID-19 have risen from the grave and are collecting benefits once again because the “trust fund runs out” date has moved up from 2033 to 2032 (source):

It is confusing because the above official source implies that full benefits are paid until 2034. The media, on the other hand, is reporting Social Security payments would be cut, or young people further enslaved to taxation, in 2032.

What do progressives think about this? A Maskachusetts friend who previously loved whatever Democrat thought leaders, such as AOC, Ilhan Omar, and Bernie Sanders were dishing out, objected on Facebook to losing his monthly checks:

I have been reading about the concept of “means testing” for social security recipients. This means taking it away from successful people. Well, I am okay with the government taking away my social security if the government will simply return to me all the money I paid in over the last 50 years.

One of his financially savvy friends pointed out that “Every single adult worker” would be better off if they could have kept their Social Security taxes and invested it in the S&P 500. My response:

Social Security calculates and publishes internal rates of return periodically. These are in real dollars (adjusted for inflation). Very low earners who are married can get an 8% real return, comparable to the past 50 years of the S&P 500. Median earners get less than 2% (single man), 2.5% (single woman), or 4% (one-earner married couple). Someone at the income limit gets only about 0.6% real return (single man), 1% (single woman), 0.85% (two-earner couple), or 2.3% (one-earner married couple). So you could consider Social Security to be part of the U.S.’s transferist welfare state. It transfers money from high earners to low earners. It also transfers money from men to women and from those who weren’t successful in the marriage market to those who were successful. … So maybe [our mutual friend] will feel better about Social Security if he stops thinking about it as something designed to benefit him and instead as something designed to help him transfer money to low-income Americans and women

(note that the SSA doesn’t calculate or publish an IRR for nonbinary Americans)

What do readers think is going to happen? Benefits get preserved for anyone already claiming them, but drastically cut for anyone who hasn’t gone on Social Security yet? Benefits get cut for everyone? Social Security tax extended to infinite levels of earned income instead of being capped? Society Security tax extended to “unearned income” such as dividends and interest? (if the money isn’t “earned” then fairness dictates that the government should take 100 percent of it) Elon’s unearned $1 trillion gets confiscated and that plugs the hole? Robots get taxed as if they were human workers and 12.4% of the cost of buying and operating a robot must be given to Social Security?

A lot of my friends are between 62 and 67 (“full retirement age” for their cohort). Would they be better off getting on Social Security before they hit 67 or 70 (max benefit age) so as to be part of the “we don’t want to take anything away from these Boomers who are already relying on it” class?

(We can also look at Medicare, the federal government’s most expensive program (even larger than our off-the-charts enormous military!). Most proposals to cheat everyone who previously paid into it say that most or all of the stealing will be done from those under 55, e.g., by making them wait until 67 rather than 65 to receive any benefits.)

Related:

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How can the U.S. benefit from the proposed Iran peace deal?

We’re informed that a peace deal with Iran is coming any day now. Some of the terms seem worse than what Carthage had to give when they surrendered to Rome. For example, “Trump’s $300 billion problem on the Iran agreement”:

In an interview with CBS News Monday morning, Vice President JD Vance seemed to tacitly confirm the premise that Iran could be given “access” to a reconstruction fund worth as much as $300 billion.

Ever since that interview, the administration has strained to clarify things. It has emphasized that this money wouldn’t come from US taxpayers. Instead, it would be money from other Gulf countries that would only be available if Iran complies with a peace deal.

Vance said late Monday on Fox News that “we would invite other countries — not us, but other countries — to invest in” Iran. He echoed that Tuesday, telling Megyn Kelly that the US wouldn’t let the United Arab Emirates, for example, “invest in Iran, unless the Iranians change their behavior.”

When the Obama administration and other countries cut a nuclear deal with Iran in 2015, it included giving Iran access to billions of dollars. In that case, it wasn’t money from other countries, but instead Iran’s own assets that had been frozen in foreign banks under sanctions. Estimates generally placed the dollar figure around $50 billion.

The Islamic Republic of Iran still officially hates the U.S., right? They’ve been chanting “Death to America” for 47 years. To the extent that they have money and sovereignty, therefore, won’t they use that money to build weapons factories? To the extent that they have electric power, won’t they use that power to run the factories 24/7?

One purported benefit is oil can flow through the Strait of Hormuz without interference from the Iranian Navy that, we’re informed, no longer exists. But if the U.S. is an oil exporter, how do we benefit from the ability of competitors in the Persian Gulf to export through the Strait?

Maybe Donald Trump is doing this for immediate political gain? The price of gasoline will go down a little and, therefore, Democrats who were previously climate alarmists and wanted higher gasoline prices to discourage consumption will stop their recent complaints about the higher gasoline prices that they previously advocated? This explanation seems implausible because surrendering to an enemy, even if you call it “winning”, doesn’t usually make a politician more popular. Wouldn’t Trump enjoy more popular support, at least among Republicans, with round-the-clock bombing of Iran’s oil industry (thus denying the ayatollahs the money they need to build weapons factories) and electricity plants (thus denying the regime the grid-scale electric power that it needs to run its weapons factories)?

Separately, if the goal is to keep the non-existent Iranian Navy out of the Strait, couldn’t we use robot submersibles to make the waters unfriendly to those whom we don’t like? Here’s an example from Anduril that can endure for 10 days:

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