Showing posts with label DeCoursey. Show all posts
Showing posts with label DeCoursey. Show all posts

Thursday, December 25, 2008

"Arbitrarily deciding that one group of people (private industry) is good and another (government) is bad really just doesn’t make much sense"

Sean DeCoursey on 124 Monkeys:

"Waste, fraud and abuse are endemic to everything( TRUE )

Posted by: Sean DeCoursey in Politics

Michael Sherer of Time put this post up on the Swampland blog yesterday, and it contained the following quote: “Republicans also have the ability to recast themselves as reformers( IN AN ALTERNATE UNIVERSE MAYBE. THEY COMPLETELY BUY INTO THIS HYBRID SYSTEM ), as the loyal opposition to the waste, fraud and abuse that is endemic to government,”. This really jumped out at me because it’s such a distillation of the conservative, small government ideology.

The small/anti-government types really do believe that government by its nature is incompetent and prone to abuse, waste, and attracts only the morally unsound and incompetent who want a job they can’t be fired from. The other side of this belief, that private industry is some kind of magical paragon of virtue and industriousness has to be adopted to support the first view.

Well, in case anyone hasn’t been paying attention to the economy for the last few months, waste, fraud, and abuse are just as endemic, if not moreso, in private industry( TRUE ). Actually, if you look at it, you know who corrupts the government into waste, fraud, and abuse when it does happen? Private industry.

Any organization made up of people who want to advance/make money/achieve influence/whatever is subject to corruption, waste, fraud, and abuse. There’s nothing new about this. It’s been going on for pretty much forever. Arbitrarily deciding that one group of people (private industry) is good and another (government) is bad really just doesn’t make much sense. At all. In fact, it’s fairly asinine( OK ).

I know that many conservative thinkers/writers/whatever would argue that they do have empirical, non-arbitrary evidence that government is prone to waste, fraud, and abuse. Fine, I cede the point. It is. But again, so is private industry. The current state of the economy (and the reasons for it) are pretty much all the evidence of that anyone could ever require.( ON THIS POINT I AGREE )

Personally, I think government should do handle infrastructure, defense, insurance, education, and give everyone a level playing field( OK ). Everything else, a regulated free for all - basically the level playing field( OK ). Do I expect all of this to be accomplished without waste, fraud, and abuse? Yes. Do I think it will happen without waste, fraud, and abuse occuring? No. But that doesn’t mean we should just be like “Screw it. I’m outtie.” ( TRUE )

And that’s really what the conservative/small government position on this boils down to. It’ll be partially not perfect, so forget it, we’re not going to do it at all. It’s like a doctor saying he won’t operate on a someone who only has an 80% chance to live. Or a patient who’s lost an arm but can be stabilized and saved. It’s an abandonment of responsibility combined with an admission of cowardice and failure( IT'S MORE BS PR ).

I think I may have ended up rambling a bit and repeating myself some on this post, but the absurdity of the concept demanded it. I think."

I generally agree. Private Enterprise is simply more useful for some things. I probably would like less government than he does. But vice is endemic to all human endeavors.

Tuesday, December 16, 2008

"since conventional and unconvetional warfare are fought against different types of enemies, you can’t use the same equipment for both"

Sean DeCoursey on 124 Monkeys with an interesting post on Modern Warfare:

"The Center for American Progress recently released a report on the future of the defense budget. One cool thing they included was an interactive defense budget simulator. Here’s a link

to it. Fun to play with. Sort of. One thing that really stood out at me when looking at it was the little wobble bubble on the side that was labeled 1/2 “Conventional” and 1/2 “Unconventional”.

That little bubble really crystalized something for me that I’ve been seeing a lot of lately in defense think tank circles. The notion that you can have a force that fights conventional wars, or one that fights unconventional wars, but not both. That’s frankly bullshit.

You know why insurgents and guerrilla’s use unconventional warfare strategies against conventional armies? Because they work against conventional armies better than conventional strategies do. Anyone who tells you that unconventional tacts and strategies are useless in a full scale war between countries is a goddamn liar or incredibly stupid.

When infantry soldiers fight, we patrol in spread out groups, with spaces between us for bullets and shrapnel to pass through. When we take fire, we get down on the ground and hide behind stone walls or trees or cars or whatever is available. This is conventional warfare. But we’re not the first people to practice it.

Francis Marion aka “the Swamp Fox” utilized a lot of these tactics during the Revolutionary War. His men fought from cover, traveled off roads on swamp paths, and engaged in mobile hit and run warfare, rather than the “stand in formation and shoot in volleys” strategy that comprised the conventional warfare of the day. It took nearly two centuries before people realized that this “unconventional” strategy of NOT standing in lines to get shot was a good idea. Once this was accepted and it became completely apparent that this was a more effective strategy, it became the “conventional” way to fight wars."

He's give a few more examples, which make sense to me, and they seem to throw some doubt on the wisdom of our Military Spending as well. Here's the conclusion:

"It’s almost like someone said that since conventional and unconvetional warfare are fought against different types of enemies, you can’t use the same equipment for both. Which is just a total crock. Unconventional tactics and strategies are designed to work against conventional forces. If proven effective, regular forces should adopt these techniques and strategies because they work. When I was in Iraq we once raided a town with some MPs. During the course of clearing the village’s buildings, the MPs told us they couldn’t conduct clearing operations inside building because they had M16s instead of M4s. This is exactly the type of nonsense thinking that says conventional and unconvetional warfare requires different weapons and systems and that you can’t fight both or be good at both at the same time. And it’s significantly more dangerous to America’s future than anything done or designed by our enemies."