What if the developed world really cared about the poor in the Third World?

I just saw these two stories:

‘£1.6bn must be spent on climate change’

10M children worldwide die from lack of health care

One of the biggest reasons people care about human-caused global warming is because of the impacts on the poor in the Third World. But what would give you more bang for your buck, Pound, or Euro–money spent on dubious green technologies (we see how well the biofuel scheme is going) or spending money directly on medical care, clean water, and malaria prevention in the Third World?

To me the choice is clear–money is better spent on programs that provide real relief than on speculative projects which have dubious track records.

Another Sign California Is Over-regulated

California is a funny place. People try to save the Earth and they fun afoul of government agencies. From the LA Times:

Dave Eck, a Half Moon Bay mechanic, had attracted a media spotlight with his fleet of vehicles fueled by used fryer grease from a local chowder house. So when Sacramento called, he figured officials wanted advice on promoting alternative fuels.

Not at all. The government rang to notify Eck that he was a tax cheat. He was scolded for failing to get a “diesel fuel supplier’s license,” reporting quarterly how many gallons of grease he burns, and paying a tax on each gallon.

“All of a sudden they nailed me for a road tax,” said Eck, who drives a Hummer converted to run on vegetable oil. “I said, ‘Not a problem. I’ll do my part. But what do I get? At least let me into the carpool lane.’ ”

No such luck. The state offered Eck only a potentially large fine — and not just for failing to pay taxes. He can also get in trouble for carting kitchen grease away from eateries without a license from the state Meat and Poultry Inspection Branch.

Or for not having at least $1 million in liability insurance, in case he spills some of the stuff. Or for not getting permission from the state Air Resources Board to burn fat in the first place.

PJ O’Rourke’s Commencement Advice

This is the best commencement advice I have ever read.

One of my favorite piece of advice is this:

The Bible is very clear about one thing: Using politics to create fairness is a sin. Observe the Tenth Commandment. The first nine commandments concern theological principles and social law: Thou shalt not make graven images, steal, kill, et cetera. Fair enough. But then there’s the tenth: “Thou shalt not covet thy neighbor’s house. Thou shalt not covet thy neighbor’s wife, nor his manservant, nor his maidservant, nor his ox, nor his ass, nor anything that is thy neighbor’s.”

Here are God’s basic rules about how we should live, a brief list of sacred obligations and solemn moral precepts. And, right at the end of it we read, “Don’t envy your buddy because he has an ox or a donkey.” Why did that make the top 10? Why would God, with just 10 things to tell Moses, include jealousy about livestock?

Well, think about how important this commandment is to a community, to a nation, to a democracy. If you want a mule, if you want a pot roast, if you want a cleaning lady, don’t whine about what the people across the street have. Get rich and get your own.

Why is it good for government hiring to offset job losses in the private sector?

Recently Progressive States Network sent out an email in which they highlighted had three success stories which they called “3 Steps Forward.” The first positive story was “Ohio House OK 28% Cap on Payday Loans.” No problem there. Progressives are sure to support reigning in the payday loan industry.

The second story was “More States Offer Choice in Long-Term Care.” Again, no problem. Choice with Medicaid spending sounds like a good thing.

And lastly, “US: Expanding Government Hiring Offsets Job Losses in Private Sector.” For the life of me, I can’t see why this is a good thing. It’s nice that some people have new government jobs, but government jobs don’t help the economy. They don’t produce goods and service that people voluntarily pay for. Additional government jobs means there must be additional tax revenues to pay for them? That’s not happening, so where is the additional money going to come from to pay for these jobs?

Obama is not an idiot.

Mickey Kaus on Obama and Massachusetts Governor Deval Patrick:

Jon Keller revisits Obama wrang-wrang Deval Patrick–the pioneering African-American governor of Massachusetts who now has a 56% disapproval rating. What’s the difference between Obama and Patrick? They were both relatively inexperienced. They were both advised by David Axelrod. They both ran on race-transcending “hope.” A veteran GOP political analyst recently described to me what he considered the key analytic distinction:

Deval Patrick is an idiot. Obama is not an idiot.

The Solution to the Food Crisis–More Large Argobusiness

Paul Collier, the author of The Bottom Billion, has a interesting comment over at the FT about the food crisis. He has an interesting take:

The best solution to a problem is often not closely related to its cause (a proposition that that might be recognized in the climate change debate). China’s long march to prosperity is something to celebrate. The remedy to high food prices is to increase food supply, something that is entirely feasible. The most realistic way to raise global supply is to replicate the Brazilian model of large, technologically sophisticated agro-companies supplying for the world market. To give one remarkable example, the time between harvesting one crop and planting the next, in effect the downtime for land, has been reduced an astounding thirty minutes. There are still many areas of the world that have good land which could be used far more productively if it was properly managed by large companies. For example, almost 90% of Mozambique’s land, an enormous area, is idle.

Unfortunately, large-scale commercial agriculture is unromantic. We laud the production style of the peasant: environmentally sustainable and human in scale. In respect of manufacturing and services we grew out of this fantasy years ago, but in agriculture it continues to contaminate our policies. In Europe and Japan huge public resources have been devoted to propping up small farms. The best that can be said for these policies is that we can afford them. In Africa, which cannot afford them, development agencies have oriented their entire efforts on agricultural development to peasant style production. As a result, Africa has less large-scale commercial agriculture than it had fifty years ago. Unfortunately, peasant farming is generally not well-suited to innovation and investment: the result has been that African agriculture has fallen further and further behind the advancing productivity frontier of the globalized commercial model. Indeed, during the present phase of high prices the FAO is worried that African peasants are likely to reduce their production because they cannot finance the increased cost of fertilizer inputs. While there are partial solutions to this problem through subsidies and credit schemes, large scale commercial agriculture simply does not face this problem: if output prices rise by more than input prices, production will be expanded because credit lines are well-established.

Our longstanding agricultural romanticism has been compounded by our new-found environmental romanticism. In the United States fears of climate change have been manipulated by shrewd interests to produce grotesquely inefficient subsidies for bio-fuel. Around a third of American grain production has rapidly been diverted into energy production. This switch demonstrates both the superb responsiveness of the market to price signals, and the shameful power of subsidy-hunting lobby groups. Given the depth of anti-Americanism in Europe it is, of course, fashionable to criticize the American folly with bio-fuels. But Europe has its equivalent follies.

Obama Won’t Beat McCain

I don’t think Obama or Hillary will beat John McCain. I’m not a fan of many of McCain’s positions, but I think he’ll be the next President. Here’s one reason why, according to the latest CBS News/NY Times poll “McCain now holds a three-point lead over Obama among women; last month, women gave Obama a 13-point margin.”

It’s a long time until November and everything can change, but things are trending poorly for Obama as the attacks continue.

It’s Hard to Believe Climate Scientist James Hansen of NASA

James Hansen is one of the leading purveyors of climate doom. He claims that he has been stiffled by the Bush Administration and yet he has done 1,400 press interviews. That’s bad enough, but it is very curious that the temperature series that Hansen is in charge of shows more and faster warming and other ground-based temperatures series. The Reg has an article about how in Hansen’s temperature series temperatures were adjusted in the data series that the older temperatures were lower and more recent temperatures were higher. It is all very fishy.