Search This Blog

Saturday, December 17, 2011

Keep an eye on Huntsman

Most Americans now believe the American Dream is slipping away. And while we know that the nation is not headed in a direction that gives hope to our children, most of us have failed to recognize that our own sloth and greed lie at the core of the problem. Once a proud nation of savers and investors, America has become a complaining nation of spenders and debtors.
Thus, we should not be surprised that our political leaders have become a reflection of our own self-indulgent excesses.
If President Obama wins a second term, and he remains the favorite, he’ll have nobody to thank more for it than the Republicans.
The GOP contest thus far is a grotesque caricature of Baskin Robbins “flavor of the month.” The parade of GOP hopefuls who have melted over the past months is nothing short of laughable.
Palin, Bachmann, Perry, Cain, and now Gingrich all have a couple of things in common. None of them is qualified to be President of the United States, and, if nominated, none of them is electable. But their ephemeral popularity is significant in that it illuminates the GOP’s visceral distrust of their presumptive nominee, Mitt Romney.
And while it is a shame that far more qualified Republicans like Governors Christie, Daniels, and Bush have stayed on the sidelines, there remains one person in the GOP field who is qualified and, if nominated, could win — Jon Huntsman.
Jon Huntsman is smart, serious, wealthy, youthful, and politically skilled. He has ably served four presidents, including Reagan and both Bushes, and was nominated and served as Ambassador to China by President Obama. Huntsman was twice elected Governor of Utah in 2004 and 2008. He is a right-center Republican who is articulate, but unlike his flavor-of-the-month opponents, he’s not a “Foam at the Mouth” Wingnut.
Yet thus far his candidacy has gone nowhere. He’s been lucky to capture more than 3 percent in the polling of the GOP aspirants. Most of the media and the political class in Washington have written him off.
I don’t buy it. His newly released financial reform plan is a breath of fresh air when contrasted to the pandering from his GOP rivals and President Obama. Huntsman would end “Too Big To Fail’’ on Wall Street, mandate transparency in derivative trading, end Wall Street’s reliance on excessive short-term leverage, repeal the incomprehensible Dodd-Frank legislation, and shut down Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.
If Huntsman breaks through in the New Hampshire primary, watch out.

Please visit:
capau.org

Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Really big, small and fast

Thanks to Sergio Leone and Clint Eastwood, we all understand the meaning of “The Good, The Bad and The Ugly.” But none of us understands something far more important: The Big, The Small and the Fast. And I’m talking really big, really small and really, really fast.
By really big, I mean the universe, as we know it. Much of that understanding dates to Einstein’s special and general theories of relativity and to our subsequent acceptance of the big bang theory as the origin of the universe some 14 billion years ago. The universe is unimaginably big and rapidly expanding. But Einstein’s theory of relativity contains a universally accepted fact. The speed of light, 186,000 miles per second, is as fast as anything can go. It’s the cosmic speed limit.
By really small, I mean the exotic world of subatomic particles, such as protons and quarks. Understanding these subatomic particles is governed by a set of scientific principles contained in what is known as quantum field theory.
The essential properties of these particles are under intense study at the Large Hadron Collider located underground near the Franco-Swiss border and operated by CERN, the consortium of nations and scientists that are engaged in the study of subatomic particles. At CERN physicists are conducting experiments by accelerating these particles in opposite directions to almost the speed of light in an underground tunnel. When the particles collide, the resulting debris provides them with the opportunity to better understand the physical world of the very small.
But there are unresolved problems between Einstein’s theories and quantum field theory. When they are combined, the results make no sense. And now that problem has become immeasurably more incomprehensible, which brings us to the really, really fast.
Scientists at CERN recently conducted experiments by firing neutrinos, particles that can penetrate anything, about 500 miles through the Earth. Their intent was to study how such particles might change as they traveled from one place to another. But the tests appear to have shown that the neutrinos completed the journey by traveling faster than the speed of light — 60 billionths of a second faster than the speed of light. In other words, they got to their destination before they left.
If other scientists confirm this finding, it will upset the entire scientific applecart. It would mean, for example, that cause does not precede effect. It would mean that Einstein’s principles of relativity and quantum mechanics are flawed — fatally flawed. It will send physicists and cosmologists back to square one because it will tell them and us that we don’t understand the world in which we live — at all.

System Failure

  SYSTEM FAILURE What follows is a column I wrote and that was published on April 12, 2015 by the Charlotte Observer. As you will see, my ef...