09 November 2023

It Isn't A Good Time To Be A Gazan (Gaza War Part V)

It was the fifth day in a row that the IDF opened an evacuation window, and numbers of people fleeing south have increased each day. The UN said 2,000 had fled south on Sunday, rising to 15,000 on Tuesday. The Israeli government said 50,000 Gazans travelled via the evacuation corridor Wednesday. That number could not be independently verified, but a CNN journalist at the scene said the numbers leaving were larger than on Tuesday.

Israel has been ramping up its offensive inside Gaza, following the October 7 attacks that left 1,400 people in Israel dead.

Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant claimed Tuesday that IDF troops were at the “heart of Gaza City” and targeting Hamas infrastructure and commanders there. . . . .

The IDF has been bombarding Gaza for weeks, saying it hit 14,000 terrorist targets in the densely packed territory. . . . 
“This war left nothing safe – not churches, not mosques or anything. Today, they dropped the leaflet ordering us to leave to the alleged safe area. Now we are beyond this area of Wadi Gaza, and we are still hearing bombardments. There is no safe place in Gaza.”

“We are seven families. All of our houses are gone. Nothing is left. We couldn’t take anything – no clothes, no water, nothing. The way here was very difficult. If something falls, you are not allowed to pick it up. You are not allowed to slow down. Dead bodies everywhere.”

Baraa, a 16-year-old girl, said that she had been walking for a long time.

“It felt like the Nakba [catastrophe] of 2023,” she said, using the Arabic term for the expulsion of Palestinians from their towns during the founding of Israel.

“We walked by people who were ripped to parts, dead bodies. We walked beside tanks. The Israelis called us, and they were asking people to take off their clothes and throw their belongings. Children were very tired because there was no water.”

CNN has asked the IDF about the allegation that evacuees were made to remove clothing and get rid of belongings.

“We came under heavy shelling and had no choice but to leave our area,” Hani Bakhit said. “We ended up using donkey carts because there were no cars, fuel, or drinking water available. Nothing is left for us. They forced us to leave by cutting off all available resources,” he said, referring to Israeli forces.

“People who have nothing to do with the resistance are being bombed and so they are fleeing to the south,” Khader Hamad said. “They are all children, newborns, women.”

From CNN

Another report states that based upon satellite images, it appears that about a third of the buildings in Gaza City have been partially or completely destroyed. Israel's top focus, at this point, is destroying the Hamas tunnel network under the city, it claims to have destroyed about 130 tunnels so far, and wiping out Hamas entirely.

This Gaza City epicenter of military action isn't huge. The evacuation zone is probably less than twelve miles from north to south, and maybe six miles from west to east, and only half or a third of that area is the built up part of Gaza City itself. The core of the conflict is an area no larger than a survey township (which is six by six miles) and maybe two-thirds of that area.

Many hundreds of thousands of Palestinians, probably a majority of the people of the Gaza Strip, have fled south of the evacuation line imposed by the Israeli Defense Forces into territory without any place for most of them to stay.

So far, at least seven times as many Palestinians (about 10,500) have been killed by Israeli forces (and friendly fire from Hamas and from lack of adequate medical care, food, water, etc.) as there were Israelis killed in the October 7, 2023 attack out of 2.3 million Gazans by CNN's estimate. A significant share of those who have died are innocent civilians and children, although a disproportionate share are, no doubt, genuine Hamas militants. Just under half of Gazans are children (the median age there is 19 years old), and about 40% of the dead are children. Many of the adults who have died in Gaza are innocent civilians as well.

Only about a thousand people in Gaza have been allowed to leave into Egypt side of its border with Gaza, mostly foreign nationals and dual nationals. Only minimal aid has been provided to Gaza from across the Egyptian border. 

Only a few Hamas hostages have been released or confirmed dead or freed, with an estimated 239 of them still held or unaccounted for. There are no serious publicly known negotiations underway for their release, in part, because the people holding them don't seem to have any real representatives in contact with Israel.

Iranian backed Hezbollah militias in Lebanon and Iranian backed Houthi forces in Yemen, have attempted to harry Israelis, mostly ineffectually, with the Houthis destroying one U.S. drone. No governments in the region but Egypt, however, have overtly done anything to help the Gazans.

The Egyptians have provided only the most minimal and grudging support to the Palestinians with whom they have little in common. 

For example, the Arabic dialect spoken in Gaza is only barely intelligible to someone in Egypt, perhaps like someone with a thick South Asian or Scottish accent trying to talk to someone who only knows how to speak in American English.

The future for Gazans doesn't look bright. Israel has declared war on Hamas which was their exclusive legitimate self-government, and their is no clear sense of whether a new form of self-government, foreign Arab administrators, or Israeli martial law, will come next. 

Gaza City is already in ruins and will be far worse when the Israeli campaign is over. One of Gaza City's main hospitals was bombed accidentally by Hamas. They can't emigrate. They continue to have very limited supplies of food, water, medicine, and fuel with no clear timing for relief in sight. Much of their real estate has been ruined and they have mostly fled without their possessions. They were already poor, on average, now, most people there are absolutely destitute. According to one story:

A total of 106 trucks carrying food, water and medical supplies arrived at the Rafah border crossing between Egypt and Gaza on Wednesday, the Palestine Red Crescent Society said, amid growing calls from international aid agencies for a ceasefire to allow more aid into the besieged enclave. The delivery from the Egyptian Red Crescent did not include desperately needed fuel, which Israel has banned from entering Gaza, claiming Hamas would commandeer supplies for military purposes. It brings the total number of aid trucks into Gaza since October 7 to 756, according to the Palestine Red Crescent — a trickle compared to the roughly 455 trucks the UN says entered daily before the war.

Their Hamas leaders absolutely provoked this response and brought this upon their people, and the absolute rabid stance towards Israel that Hamas has taken makes diplomacy with them useless. And, the Gazan people's support was instrumental in bringing Hamas into power there, although the means by which Hamas has remained in power have not been very democratic (although it isn't as if Hamas was particularly unpopular with grass roots Gazans prior to their October 7 strike).

Even before the strike, Gaza has always been in pretty bad shape. It has the demographics of sub-Saharan Africa, something it shares outside of Africa only with Yemen and Afghanistan. It has been under Israeli rule since the "the Nakba," the Arabic term for the expulsion of Palestinians from their towns during the founding of Israel in the late 1940s.

Other Middle Eastern, West Asian, and North African countries have supported them politically and diplomatically, but don't really want to have anything to do with them.

There is no well defined and widely expected end game, and most Gazans are inclined to expect the worst.

It isn't clear what ordinary Gazans think about all of this or who they blame. 

Certainly, they have no love lost for Israel. 

But, despite its dictatorial approach when in power, I suspect that many Gazans, at least privately, harbor pretty negative feelings towards the Hamas leaders who put them in this mess in the first place by serving as Iranian puppets. But maybe I'm wrong and Gazans have rallied around Hamas instead. It is hard to know.

08 November 2023

The Policy Status Quo Is Very Powerful

Democracies strongly preserve status quo policies even when they no longer make sense and are unpopular. The paper below theorizes that policies that were previously the subject to decisive, close political fights stay that way after they are decided because people stop caring about those issues enough to change them after they are resolved.
Policy choices sometimes appear stubbornly persistent, even when they become politically unpopular or economically damaging. This paper offers the first systematic empirical evidence of how persistent policy choices are, defined as whether an electorate’s or legislature’s decisions affect whether a policy is in place decades later. 
I create a new dataset that tracks the historical record of more than 800 state policies that were the subjects of close referendums in U.S. states since 1900. In a regression discontinuity design, I estimate that passing a referendum increases the chance a policy is operative 20, 40, or even 100 years later by over 40 percentage points. 
I collect additional data on U.S. Congressional legislation and international referendums and use existing data on state legislation to document similar policy persistence for a range of institutional environments, cultures, and topics. 
I develop a theoretical model to distinguish between possible causes of persistence and present evidence that persistence arises because policies’ salience declines in the aftermath of referendums. The results indicate that many policies are persistently in place—or not—for reasons unrelated to the electorate’s current preferences.

There is some irony in this result. One of the major reasons for opposition to democracy in the transition from monarchy, and for opposition to direct democracy, in particular, was the fear that this would led to frequent, radical policy changes as the public's mood shifted from election to election. It turns out that they had nothing to be afraid of on that score.

This empirical result also bodes well for the future of abortion rights in the United States now that Dobbs has overturned Roe v. Wade.

Red states like Kansas and Ohio have backed abortion rights in state referendums (Ohio passed a state constitutional right to abortion with almost 57% of the vote yesterday.) And, this academic study shows that those referendum decisions are likely to endure.

Image from the New York Times.


Image from the Washington Post.

Notably, and surprisingly, these massive regional abortion restrictions have not greatly impacted the number of abortions carried out nationally, as people have used abortion pills and travelled to other states to obtain abortions.

07 November 2023

Which Occupations Are Prone To Dynasties

In which occupations are current practitioners most likely to have had a parent who practiced the same occupation?

My observation is that dynastic career paths are closely associated with careers that are low paying in early years or for average performers, but are high pay in late years (or provide other unique rewards in late years) or for elite performers only. In these professions exposure to a late career parents or an elite performer parent makes those possibilities seem real enough for children to cling to that dream, while others tend to see the prospects of big rewards from such a career as too speculative to commit to pursuing.

Among particularly dynastic professions fitting this pattern are politics, military officer service, medicine, sports, and the performing arts. Professions where average performers are paid well and early career work does not pay much less than late career work, like IT and nursing, in contrast, are far less dynastic.

Ireland Is Not That Well Off

It is widely known that traditional definitions of gross domestic product exaggerate the economic productivity of Ireland (and other tax shelter countries).

Of course, you may have heard that Ireland’s GDP is massively overstated. And indeed it is . . . if you look at a . . . recent graph of Irish GDP, it soars to ridiculous heights — over $100,000 per person. The country is rich, but it’s not that rich.

A recent article in The Economist explains what’s going on. Ireland’s GDP is overstated for two main reasons. First, and most importantly, Ireland is a famous tax haven — its low corporate income tax rates give multinational companies an incentive to book as much of their profit as possible at their Irish subsidiaries. For European companies, this usually required actually relocating their activities to Ireland, but the U.S. has a strange corporate tax system that allows companies like Google and Apple to engage in various other schemes to book profits in Ireland without actually doing anything substantial in the country, inflating Ireland’s GDP. A second piece of weirdness was aircraft leasing, whose statistical treatment doesn’t make a lot of sense.

From here. 

Better Off African Women Have Fewer Kids

Even in poor countries in Africa where the average woman has many children per lifetime, more affluent "elite women" have fewer children.
Low fertility has been well documented among wealthier and more educated women in more economically developed sub-Saharan African (SSA) countries. Economic theory and historic literature predict that upper class individuals want smaller families regardless of the normative or contraceptive context. Here we ask: do “elite” women in SSA really have similarly low fertility outcomes, regardless of the national fertility and family planning contexts? Or is low fertility found only among elite women in wealthier countries with lower overall fertility? Using DHS data from 27 SSA countries since 2010, we find that TFR is substantially lower among elite than non-elite women throughout the region. Multilevel analysis shows national contextual characteristics are only weakly related to fertility for elite women, in contrast to non-elite women. These findings indicate that the profile of elite women across SSA results in similarly low fertility, regardless of national contexts.
Jamaica Corker, Moussa Zan,Clementine Rossier "Fertility of the Elite in Sub-Saharan Africa: Is Low Fertility Among the Better-off a Phenomenon Throughout the Region?" Population Association of American Conference (April 2019).

03 November 2023

Why Do Hunters Need Body Armor?

The bill . . . would disproportionately affect law-abiding citizens who use body armor for lawful purposes such as hunting, [and] outdoor activities[.]

From here

U.S. Constitution Still Flawed

One of the lesser known flaws of the U.S. Constitution is the 12th Amendment process for selecting a President if no candidate receives a majority of the electoral vote. In myriad ways set forth in a recent Lawfare article, it is clear that it would be a total disaster.

02 November 2023

The Trump Ballot Qualification Trial

The Insurrection Clause And Colorado Trial Explained

Today is the fourth day of five in the Trump ballot qualification trial in Denver, Colorado's state court of general jurisdiction. It is a bench trial mandated by Colorado's state election laws and brought by political action group CREW to determine if former President Trump is ineligible to run for public office as a result of the disqualification set forth in Section 3 of the 14th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, as a result of his efforts, including but not limited to the January 6, 2021 Capitol Riot, to overturn the 2020 Presidential election that he lost.

Factually, the CREW case leans heavily on and parrots the final report of the United States House Select Committee on the January 6 Attack for its evidentiary case.

The Colorado case is one of many cases challenging Trump's qualification to serve as President under the insurrection clause. 


But, the Colorado ballot access case is important because it is the first of these cases to be tried on the merits (although parallel ballot access litigation in Minnesota is also very advanced).
 
The relevant language from the U.S. Constitution, also known as the Insurrection Clause, states that:
No person shall be a Senator or Representative in Congress, or elector of President and Vice President, or hold any office, civil or military, under the United States, or under any state, who, having previously taken an oath, as a member of Congress, or as an officer of the United States, or as a member of any state legislature, or as an executive or judicial officer of any state, to support the Constitution of the United States, shall have engaged in insurrection or rebellion against the same, or given aid or comfort to the enemies thereof. But Congress may by a vote of two-thirds of each House, remove such disability.
One purely legal question is whether the clause applies to the office of President of the United States. The court has rightly rejected the dubious argument that the Presidency is not included in the statement that: "No person shall be a . . . elector of President and Vice President, or hold any office, civil or military, under the United States" in Section 3.

Another purely legal question is whether the President is "an officer of the United States" (since former President Trump took the oath of office to support the Constitution of the United States only after he was elected President). The judge has rightly rejected the dubious argument that the President is not an officer of the United States.

It is undisputed that Congress has not removed this disability if it does apply to former President Trump.

The Court has also rejected challenges to the standing of the Petitioners in the case, the ripeness of the challenge, given that Trump hasn't been elected yet, and has rejected the claim that Section 3 of the 14th Amendment may not be enforced in a civil lawsuit today because no authorizing federal legislation to allow that is in force. The judge has concluded that the private cause of action allowed by Colorado's election laws are sufficient.

Numerous historical precedents have held that this determination may be made in a civil lawsuit and does not require a criminal conviction, contrary to Trump's argument that a criminal conviction is required.

So, the core mixed question of fact and law before the Court in its five day evidentiary bench trial is whether Trump has engaged in insurrection or rebellion against the Constitution of the United States, or has given aid or comfort to the enemies the Constitution of the United States.

This requires the Court to both determine whether Trump took the actions that the Petitioners allege that he did, and to determine if the actions that the Court finds that Trump did take amount to "insurrection or rebellion against the Constitution of the United States", or to giving "aid or comfort to the enemies the Constitution of the United States."

The Petitioners note that historically, people have been disqualified from office under the insurrection clause for acts far less weighty than Trump's. 

Trump and the Colorado Republican Party have argued that Socialist Eugene Debs was allowed to run for President while in prison. In particular, "Debs was allowed to run for president despite serving time in prison for sedition for publicly discouraging military recruitment during World War I." Of course, in this 1920 election campaign, Debs was a third-party candidate with little or no chance of winning the race who received just 3.41% of the vote. Debs was sentenced, on September 18, 1918, to ten years in prison and was also disenfranchised for life. His conviction was affirmed by the U.S. Supreme Court in 1919, but his sentence was later commuted by President Harding on December 23, 1921, although Debs was not pardoned, after Congress repealed the statutes under which Debs was convicted earlier that year. It isn't clear to me, however, that his disenfranchisement, or the insurrection clause argument, was ever raised in that case to oppose his eligibility to run for President. 

In contrast, Donald Trump has previously served as President for four years, and is the clear front runner in the 2024 Republican Presidential Primary. Trump remains the far and away front runner in the GOP primary, despite the fact that he is currently facing four felony criminal cases (a criminal business fraud case in New York State, a classified documents case in a Miami, Florida federal court, a D.C. based case arising out of the January 6 riot, and a Georgia state court election interference case in which several co-defendants from his inner circle have already pleaded guilty), having already partially lost a $250 million civil fraud case in New York State on a motion for summary judgment the balance of which is still being tried in a New York State court, and having recently lost a defamation and rape case in which he was found to have sexually assaulted a woman and then lied about not having done it. He also faces other civil lawsuits (e.g. a lawsuit as a co-conspirator in a personal injury case of a law enforcement officer injured in the January 6 riot) and other ballot qualification lawsuits which are likely to be decided before the Presidential election is held in November of 2024, just about a year from now.

A Plausible Worst Case Outcome For Trump

From what I have seen so far, it seems more likely than not that District Court Judge Sarah B. Wallace will find that Trump is disqualified from serving as President under this constitutional provision commonly known as the insurrection clause. The Denver Post editorial board thinks that she should find that Trump is disqualified from running for President on this ground.

It also seems likely that the Colorado Supreme Court is likely to affirm Wallace's ruling, if that is the one she makes, on appeal. Then, the question is whether the U.S. Supreme Court would take up the case.

If the U.S. Supreme Court denies certiorari after the this case has excluded Trump from the ballot (which seems unlikely), or if it does take up the case and affirms a ruling of Judge Wallace that Trump is not qualified to serve as President under the insurrection clause (despite its 6-3 conservative supermajority), then Trump's Presidential race is over. So far, Trump's record in the U.S. Supreme Court has been mixed, despite his role in appointing more than one sitting U.S. Supreme Court justice.

This is because Trump is a party actively litigating this case, and the legal doctrine of collateral estoppel says that the resolution any legal issue finally determined in an actively litigated lawsuit against someone bind the person the ruling was made against in all future civil lawsuits. Collateral estoppel is one sided because it is party driven. It binds Trump when he was a litigant in a previous case, but it does not bind new Plaintiffs in other cases, who weren't litigants in previous cases.

So, if Trump loses the Colorado ballot access case (or another other ballot access case to which he is a party brought by different petitioners like a parallel case in Minnesota), after all appeals in the case are exhausted, he automatically loses every other ballot qualification case that is brought against him in every other U.S. state.

What Happens If Trump Can't Run For President?

If Trump is not on the ballot, the 2024 Republican Presidential Primary would be turned upside down, and the prospects of the Republican candidate emerging from the primary in a general election matchup against incumbent Democrat Joe Biden would have to be reevaluated from scratch.

Trump and Biden have been in a statistical dead heat in 2024 Presidential general election polling for months. But many Republicans might not vote at all if Trump wasn't on the ballot. On the other hand, a Republican candidate other than Trump wouldn't be nearly as tarnished by Trump's bad character and criminal prosecutions with moderate swing voters who dislike Biden but see him as the lesser of two evils.

Given the good substantive economic news and news on a variety of other barometers of national well being, and the evidence that shows that when incumbents run for re-election that the race is usually a referendum on the incumbent's performance, it isn't entirely clear while Biden is polling so very poorly. But that is the reality, and even many Democrats, myself included, don't really love him as the Democratic party's standard bearer, even though he is clearly better than any of the Republican challengers that he might face, and is clearly better than any of the stronger third-party candidates.

More darkly, there is good reason to fear the removing Trump from the ballot could drive far more efforts from the far right to use violent political tactics than they already have so far, after seeing their efforts to gain power through the electoral process thwarted.

The Open Seats In CO-4

Ken Buck (R), the incumbent Congressman in Colorado's 4th Congressional District (roughly speaking, the rural front range), is not running for re-election because he's sick of the lies (see also here) from his own political party about issues like who won the 2020 Presidential election.

This leaves an open seat in 2024, and many people are rushing to join the Republican primary race for the seat.

As much as I'd like to hope for a Democratic pickup of this open seat, it isn't happening. The 4th Congressional District is the safest GOP seat of all eight seats in Colorado.

Instead, the race will be a bellwether for the Colorado Republican party, to see how far right towards MAGA populism it has grown, and how much it remains a party of more traditional conservatives. 

30 October 2023

What Makes A Good Snow/Off Road Car Or Truck?

What makes a good snow/off road car or truck?

Of course, learning how to drive in snowy, slippery, and off road conditions (ideally, both in the light and in the dark) matters just as much as the vehicle itself. But the vehicle matters too. 

In order of importance, a good snow/off road car or truck should have these characteristics and/or features:

1. Tires properly inflated for the conditions with lots of tread. Tires let you stop, which is more important that four wheel drive or all wheel drive which lets you go. Chains can partially make up for otherwise insufficient tire tread.

2. Sufficient clearance. Mazda Miatas are horrible and can't even clear a couple of inches of snow on a raised driveway (in common with many sports cars designed for peak speed in dry paved roads). Five inches is usually tolerable. Subarus, at 8.7 inches with a couple of exceptions (e.g., the Impreza) are usually adequate for even off road conditions. Jeeps and Hummers are better. In theory, things like angles of attack and various other measurements of a vehicle's capabilities to handle variously shaped terrain also matter, but in practice, if you have enough ground clearance, everything else will probably work out as well. A decent suspension is also closely related to adequate clearance.

3. Four wheel drive or all wheel drive (four wheel drive is marginally better than all wheel drive, and more than four wheels, for example, on a fire truck or 6x6 or 8x8 wheeled vehicle, can be better). If you can't have either of these, front wheel drive is better than rear wheel drive.

4. An ability to intentionally drive in low gear (not a big factor as almost all vehicles can do this).

5. Traction control and anti-lock brakes. You have to know you have these features, however, as you drive differently with them when you are skidding.

6. Fog lights, if you are driving in blowing snow or fog.

7. More weight, within reason. More weight generally means more traction, but too much weight (e.g., more than ten tons) can make it impossible to cross bridges in rural areas. More weight also usually means less fuel efficiency, which is a problem if you need to travel for long distances between refueling opportunities.

8. Narrower width, within reason. A narrower vehicle can fit through tighter spaces, around tighter corners, and into smaller parking spaces. But if the vehicle is too narrow this can lead to a problematic high center of gravity.

9. Lower center of gravity and height, within reason. Vehicles with a higher center of gravity are more prone to rollover accidents. A vehicle that is taller is more prone to being blown around by high winds and can't pass through narrow underpasses.

10. Traction generating tools on hand in case you are stuck (this could be kitty litter, traction boards, shovels, or other traction generating devices).

11. A full sized spare tire and jack and tire changing tool(s).

12. Greater range with a suitable fuel tank to support it. When you are far from civilization you need to be able to travel further between refueling. Range is a combination of fuel efficiency and the size of your fuel supply.

13. A decent heater and air conditioning that work.

14. Rear window wipers and washers (to clear mud that flys up in your rear window as you drive and falling snow).

15. Straight up and down windows (this reduces the time spent clearing snow from the windows, but reduces fuel efficiency and aerodynamics).

16. A winch. This is the ultimate way to get yourself or a pal unstuck, but is only needed if somebody really screwed up in the first place a long way away from a tow truck.

17. Extra bright headlights, if you are driving in the dark off-road.

18. Metal cages for vulnerable parts. A front metal grill in front of the bumper and metal cages around headlights and any other vulnerable parts of the vehicle can reduce damage if something bumps them, which is more likely in snowy, slippery, and off road driving.

19. A stronger engine. The big concern here is the ability to generate lots of torque in low gears. But this is well down the list of factors that are likely to make a big difference, and this usually comes at the cost of less fuel efficiency which can also be an issue since it limits your range.

20. Heated seats.

There are other things worth mentioning that are good to have including which relate mostly to what you carry and how: 

* a good emergency kit and set of survival supplies (especially water, something to hold water, blankets, food that doesn't have to be cooked, a lighter, a knife, rope, flares, and a good first aid kit);

* good places to stow your camping, biking, skiing, fishing, snow shoeing, or other gear for your outdoor adventures (either inside, or in a truck bed, or in a roof rack or on a trailer for which you have a hitch - covered storage is usually better than uncovered storage, unless you routinely carry oversized and odd sized cargo);

* a place to charge phones and other electronics, or back up charging devices;

* satellite radio for places with no radio channels and no cell service;

* easy to clean upholstery covers and footwell covers.

* extra motor oil, coolant, windshield wash, car fuel, and a stand alone battery jumping machine; and

a satellite phone.

It is also worth noting that if you have more than one vehicle, only one of them needs to be good in snow and off road conditions in most cases. Your other vehicles don't need to be equally capable unless you truly live in the deep wilderness. 

If you face extreme conditions only infrequently, the best option may be to rent or borrow a vehicle suited for extreme conditions in the rare circumstances when those capabilities are necessary.

Ground War In Gaza (Gaza War Part IV)

The Gaza Strip is ultimately not a very big place. It is about twice as wide and twice as long as Manhattan and is similarly densely populated. It is smaller geographically than most U.S. counties; it is smaller than three U.S. survey townships and the military conflict is concentrated in a northern 1/3 to 1/2 of the Gaza strip. "Deep incursions" into Gaza can mean a dozen miles or less. 

There has been talk of a ground war campaign lasting for months, although it isn't clear why it would take so long. 

Israel has up to 600,000 troops at its disposal (half, activated reservists), and a full range of modern military systems. The Israelis can call in air strikes with guided munitions at will on short notice.

Hamas had something more like 6,000 armed men before it launched its raid on Israel, some of whom are no doubt already dead or seriously wounded. Hamas has essentially no armored vehicles and no naval forces of any kind. Its soldiers use unarmored civilian motor vehicles and motorcycles, with dwindling fuel supplies. They are armed mostly with small arms, as well as a modest number of drones as its air force, and infantry or civilian truck carried missiles, and IEDs, as its most potent weapons. Hamas can draw blood from Israeli Defense Force troops as they move in and kill the hostages it holds, but ultimately,  Hamas is totally outmatched militarily.

Hamas is boxed in by the Gaza border fence and an Israeli navy patrolled sea. They have no place to run. It does have an extensive tunnel and underground bunker system within Gaza City, although the Israelis know where at least some of the tunnels and bunkers are located. 

Hamas has no access to new military supplies. It probably didn't have all that expansive reserves of ammunition and rockets before this latest conflict began. 

Much of the city, especially in places Hamas was believed to use, has been reduced to rubble. The electrical grid of Gaza City is without power, and new shipments of food, fuel, water, and medicine to the Gaza Strip are minimal. Hamas accidentally bombed and largely destroyed one of the main hospitals in Gaza.

A handful of Hamas hostages have been released, a small number of died, a few are known to be alive and have been shown on video clips, and most of perhaps a hundred or a hundred and fifty hostages, are unaccounted for. Recovering hostages is probably the IDFs first priority.

Hezbollah militias in Lebanon, supported by Iran, on Israel's Northern border, have tried to fire rockets at Israel and raid it, but mostly ineffectually. Iran has made great noise about Israel's actions in diplomatic circles, but Hamas in Gaza has no one taking military action to support it. 

The main focus of diplomatic efforts has been on providing humanitarian aid to Gazan civilians via its border with Egypt, only a trickle of which has occurred. Gazan refugees are apparently not welcome in Egypt.

One of the biggest problems for Israel and civilian Gazans, is that with a death warrant effectively issued by Israel for anyone remotely senior in the Hamas led government or organization, there is really no one in a position for Israel to enter into diplomacy with in Gaza. For example, no one is in a position to deliver an unconditional surrender to Israel that had any meaningful effect, even if this is what Gazans overwhelmingly wanted to do.

This may be why the ground campaign is anticipated to last so long. It won't be over until every last fighter in Gaza is defeated, because there is no easy way for Hamas fighters to surrender.

The Washington Post describes what ground combat activities have commenced there:

Moving quickly, in darkness and daylight, Israeli tanks and soldiers entered the outskirts of Gaza City on Monday, reaching the main highway that connects north and south in the 25-mile-long enclave. The Israeli forces were so close to the city that ground troops called in airstrikes on Hamas targets. . . . 
Earlier in the day, other dramatic video footage taken by Palestinian journalists and geolocated by The Washington Post showed a white sedan traveling on the highway toward the Netzarim junction, where there was at least one Israeli tank. As the car executed a slow U-turn, the tank appeared to fire on and hit the vehicle. (Netzarim was an Israeli agricultural settlement whose last residents were evicted by Israeli soldiers in 2005 during their pullout from the Gaza Strip.)
Israeli military spokesman Rear Adm. Daniel Hagari declined to comment on the incident on the highway on Monday, but told a news conference that Israel has “expanded the activity of our forces and additional forces entered the strip, including infantry, armored corps, combat engineering and artillery corps.”

“There is also direct contact between our forces on the ground and terrorists as the fighting continues inside the Gaza Strip,” Hagari said.

Without offering much detail, the Israeli military and the Shin Bet internal security agency issued a joint statement saying they had rescued an Israeli soldier who was taken hostage on Oct. 7 during the raids by Hamas into Israel. The soldier was identified as Private Ori Megidish. Authorities said she was in good health and photos appeared on Israeli media sites of her reunited with her family.

In other signs of a deeper incursion into Gaza, the Israel Defense Forces told journalists that Israeli troops spotted “an antitank missile launching post in the area of the al-Azhar University, and guided a fighter jet to strike them.” The university campus is located just south of Gaza City. Social media reports from Gaza said Israeli troops were in the area. 
Earlier, IDF soldiers hoisted an Israeli flag atop a beachside hotel north of Gaza City. 
Until now, short video clips released by the IDF mostly show tanks and troops operating on the periphery of Gaza, mainly in farmlands and the edges of urban areas. 
There are only two main roads connecting north and south in Gaza. One of them runs along the exposed coast and the other is Salah al-Din road, the main artery. 

The COVID Vaccines Saved Many Lives

Leveraging the staggered rollout of vaccines, we find that the vaccination campaign across 141 countries averted 2.4 million excess deaths. . . . We also find that an equitable counterfactual distribution of vaccines, with vaccination in each country proportional to its population, would have saved roughly 670,000 more lives.

According to the World Health Organization there have been 6,974,473 COVID deaths to date, worldwide. So, vaccines prevented about 25% of COVID deaths that would have occurred without them.

27 October 2023

China Is Unlikely To Start A War

With Russia knocked down a peg by its disastrous performance in the Ukraine War, Afghanistan fallen to the Taliban, none of the usual candidates in the Middle East coming forward publicly to try to pounce on Israel in the face of its intense response to an Iranian supported Hamas massacre and Hezbollah rocket attacks from Lebanon, and North Korea lobbing nuclear ready missiles in tests but taking no conventional warfare steps and its leader shaking hands with South Korea's leader, all attention has turned to China.

As a country with 1.4 billion people, a gross national product that is 76% of the size of the U.S. GNP, and decades of intense economic growth, China's has had the resources to fund a large and advanced military, without even seriously militarizing its society with large numbers of soldiers relative to its population or seriously straining the ability of its government to pay for it. 

China's merely regional aspirations also allow it to concentrate its military resources. China hasn't tried to mimic the United States and Russia by deploying a large blue sea navy far from its coast, or by trying to serve as a "global policeman". China has some blue sea navy capabilities with modern aircraft carriers, surface combatants, and longer range than coastal submarine, it has long range missiles (some of which carry nuclear missiles), and it even has some reasonably long range military aircraft. But China has shown little interest in flexing its military muscles further from home than the Philippines, Southeast Asia, the Western Pacific Ocean, and the East China Sea. 

China certainly has no plans to invade any country in the Americas, or to repeat the mistake that Japan made in World War II when Japan attacked Hawaii in 1941.

There is no indication that China has any intention of starting hostilities to the North, with Russia or Mongolia or on its borders with the former Soviet Republics in Central Asia. 

Despite some border skirmishes over worthless, almost uninhabited mountain territory on its border with India, this conflict seems to be more about pride and honor than anything substantive. China shows no indication that it wants to seize meaningfully inhabited parts of Pakistan, India, Nepal, Bhutan, or Myanmar. China seems to have bitten off as much as it can chew when it conquered Tibet and now thinks better of any other campaigns to repeat that experience.

China could easily have conquered the communist regimes in North Korea, Cambodia, Laos, or Vietnam outright, but appears to be content to merely leave them as tributary states in its sphere of influence that emulate it and kowtow to it. 

In part, China appears to have concluded from the troublesome resistance its has received from ethnic minorities in semiautonomous regions like Inner Mongolia, and from ethnic minorities like the Uyghurs, the Tibetans, and the Manchurians, that it prefers to be a nation-state dominated by a Han Chinese core to being a sprawling multi-ethnic, multi-lingual, multi-cultural empire.

China doesn't really want to have to absorb Japan or North Korea or South Korea or Vietnam or Laos or Cambodia or the Philippines or Indonesia or Thailand, let alone Australia or New Zealand or Papua New Guinea. 

China isn't even grumbling about trying to unify Chinese diaspora populations in Western influenced places with large Chinese minorities, like Singapore or Malaysia. It swallowed up Macao easily enough, when its 99 year lease expired, but has found that even trying to absorb Hong Kong without destroying what makes it valuable has been highly challenging, even when the British handed it over without a fight when its 99 year lease expired.

China has a large and technologically advanced Army ground forces with no place to go. It has state of the art tanks and anti-tank forces, but no plausible conflicts, other than an invasion of Taiwan or a campaign to put down North Korea's regime if it gets out of hand, to use it. 

It is conceivable that China might need to fight a counterinsurgency conflict in its own territory, or to aid one of its tributary states in doing so. But there is no way that any plausible insurgent force in these places could acquire "near peer" conventional military force weapons to its own forces in any meaningful amount in the foreseeable future.

The United States also has large, technologically advanced ground forces in its Army and Marines, but unlike China, it has used those ground troops as expeditionary military forces to fight foreign wars on a regular basis since at least World War I. China hasn't been involved directly in a foreign war on an expeditionary basis since World War II, even though it supported proxy Communist regimes in Korea and Southeast Asia.

Since the 1980s, China's military ambitions have focused largely on regaining control of Taiwan (which itself arrogantly claims sovereignty over mainland China, an ambition that has been futile for seven decades) and expanding its dominance in the portions of the seas near it, some closer to the Philippines and Japan than to its own coast, that the rest of the world considers to be international waters.

Taiwan is attractive because it is very close to mainland China, and it is predominantly ethnic Chinese, which makes it feel to the People's Republic of China like a territory that it could assimilate in a manner similar to its current effort to reintegrate Hong Kong into the People's Republic of China. 

The prospect of a military conquest of Taiwan is also attractive to China's military leadership, much as it is the military leadership of the United States, because it justifies immense expenditures for naval forces, air forces, and ground forces who can participate in an amphibious assault on the island of Formosa.

If China's barriers to this conquest were primarily military, it would have happened long ago. The People's Republic of China has something like 70 times more people than Taiwan does, vastly more economic resources, and can focus on this single front without fearing distractions from some other conflict at the same time. Taiwan's economy is more technologically advanced and developed than China's but that gap has fallen steadily, and when it comes to military technology, they are close to parity with China potentially having the edge at this point. Even if China had to incur three or even ten times the casualties as Taiwan did in an offensive war against it, ultimately, China has a greater capacity to bear those losses than Taiwan does. 

This said, however, one of the reasons that the last significant amphibious assault in the history of the world was seventy years ago in the Korean War is that military technologies have shifted in a way this makes this strategy which has always been extremely challenging and costly, even more difficult to carry out effectively. It is just too easy with modern anti-ship missiles, submarines, sea mines, and more to sink amphibious assault surface combatants with hundreds or even thousands of ground troops on them before they even reach the shore. And as military technologies mature and advance, the balance continues to shift, again and again, against warships and toward military forces that want to stop warships. Ukraine has managed to seriously bloody Russia's Black Sea fleet, despite not having any real navy to speak of at all.

Taiwan does have the United States, with the worlds largest and most advanced military force and nuclear weapons as it patron. But a reasonable Chinese military strategist could wager, and would probably be correct, that the United States, while it would provide as much support in conventional warfare to protect Taiwan as it could, would not be willing to start a global nuclear war with China to protect Taiwan's sovereignty, something that Taiwan itself blows hot and cold on in its own domestic politics. Likewise, while China would very much like to have Taiwan as a jewel in its crown, it seems unlikely that China would risk starting a nuclear war with the United States to get it. Nuclear missiles are blunt instruments that serve few legitimate military purposes in the hands of rational military leaders in positions of high command. And, unlike the leaders of North Korea, China's leaders have consistently shown themselves to be calculating and rational, rather than insane and reckless, for the last half century or so since the Cultural Revolution ended.

Instead, the main barrier to a Chinese invasion of Taiwan is that fact that both countries "live in glass houses." Modern China's economy and prosperity is rooted in its export oriented manufacturing base, which is increasingly moving up the chain of technological sophistication. Taiwan, likewise, has an export based commercial economy that, most famously, it the global center of advanced computer processor manufacturing. China and Taiwan even have significant and strong trade ties with each other.

Unlike Russia, which has survived global economic sanctions and boycotts with only minor cuts and bruises so far, because the only exports that are very important to the health of Russia's domestic economy are natural gas and oil, both China and Taiwan have economies which are heavily reliant on international trade, much of it with rich Western countries. 

In an all out war, the sophisticated high tech factories that make that export based economy possible would be completely wiped out for decades in Taiwan, although the heavy capital investments of mainland China would be harder to really devastate. But it also isn't just physical capital investments that matter. You can't manufacture world class computer processors with unwilling serfs. The prime exports of both economies require the voluntary, and indeed, enthusiastic participation of legions of sophisticated engineers, factory managers, technicians, financial and managerial professionals, and more generally a health, decentralized, reasonably economically free commercial sector and social class. All it would take for China to kill the goose that lays Taiwan's golden eggs would be quiet work to rule, "quiet quitting" type behavior from its managerial, professional, administrative, and technical classes. No flashing explosives or armed resistance would be necessary.

Equally important, if any significant part of the developed world decided to boycott Chinese exports because of a Chinese invasion and conquest of Taiwan, as part of a general mobilization against it akin to the general mobilization against Russia that took place in the immediate wake of its invasion of Ukraine, the impact this would have on China would be far more severe than the impact these sanctions had on Russia.

China wouldn't lose all of its trading partners. It could still keep selling its ware to the communist regimes of Southeast Asia and to Russia, for example. But its trade to those countries is already close to maxed out, because it is a leading global exporter. There is no place it could sell its wares that could replace its immense exports to developed Western capitalist countries around the world, if it lost access to those markets, which it likely would, at least in the medium term.

The economic blowback that China would experience in reaction to an invasion of Taiwan from the developed Western capitalist countries of the world would be at least as bad as the Great Depression was in the United States, if not worse. Hundreds of millions of ordinary Chinese people would lose their jobs and would be trust into abject poverty. Factories up and down China's densely populated eastern coastal regions would be shuttered. People who managed to hold onto jobs might see their incomes cut in half. The massive progress China has made in the past couple of decades in eradicating extreme poverty globally would be undone.

In an economy already heavily driven by extravagant public works projects, there would be little room to boost an economy facing collapse from a sudden interruption of its export trade with more spending on public works and infrastructure. A loss of access to supplies of imported raw materials would further cripple Chinese manufacturers ability to export goods even communist or formerly communist countries that continued to support China, and to manufacture goods for domestic consumption. Imported comforts would dwindle to the consternation of Chinese business elites that now snap up second homes in Vancouver and foreign educations and travel for their children and have acquired expensive and exotic tastes. 

Also, despite its vast population, now more or less tied with India, in China, lives are no longer cheap. The average Chinese woman has less than one child in a lifetime. Many young men in China are not just only children, but are also the only grandchild of four grandparents. A historical preference for boys as China experienced its demographic transition in the face of its one child policy have left China with a surplus of military service aged men, although it has barely tapped it since it has so many young men relative to the needs of its military. 

China is far removed from places with the demographics of places like the Gaza Strip, where almost 50% of the population is under the age of eighteen, couples tend to marry in their early twenties, and women generally have many children in their lifetimes. Too many mouths to feed and too few jobs to support them isn't a problem that China has at the moment. Every young adult man and woman is precious in the eyes of modern China, so each life lost in a war to take Taiwan would have an amplified social impact. China is not psychologically prepared to lose the millions of lives and hundreds of sunken ships that it would have to expend to take Taiwan.

Given the current situation of China and Taiwan, the only way it would make sense for China to conquer Taiwan would be if it could accomplish this in an almost bloodless fait accompli in a matter of days, which the Taiwanese people collective gave up and accepted as inevitable at the outset, much like the sudden, nearly bloodless Russian conquest of Crimea in 2014 that was basically over before the world had time to react to it, or come to Ukraine's aid.

But while the Taiwanese people do predominantly speak a Chinese topolect, and do have strong cultural ties to mainland China, the similarities between Crimea and Taiwan end there. Modern Taiwan's is the product of a society of Western leaning exiles from the Maoist Communist revolution in mainland China. The Chinese speaking people of Taiwan are the majority and have been in opposition to the communist regime of mainland China from the start, unlike the Russian speaking people of Crimea who were a minority in Ukraine and felt cultural and political kinship with their post-Soviet co-ethnics in Russia proper. 

There is no reason to think that Taiwan would accept their new Chinese overlords quietly or peacefully with resignation and obedience to the new regime. This would be a war of people with nowhere else to go in Taiwan defending their home, who have been preparing for this fight for much longer than the Ukrainians prepared for a Russian invasion, and with all of the ferocity of the Ukrainians defending their territory. And, like Ukraine, the Taiwanese would have ample military and economic support from Western-leaning allies including the United States, Japan, South Korea, and Australia with technologically modern military forces. So, the only scenario that would make the price that China would have to pay to take Taiwan simply isn't a plausible possibility.

Thus, the only ground war that China has shown any interest in fighting would be far too costly to China, even if it wins, to make the fight worth it to China. And, because China's leadership is rational and pragmatic enough to realize this fact, it is extremely unlikely that China will invade Taiwan.

Really the only military actions that it seems plausible for China to undertake in the near future is a continuation of its low grade, gradual efforts to use its naval and air power, and ground troops on artificial islands, to extend its dominance in the international waters of the East China sea and the Western Pacific as far as the international waters near the Philippines. The prizes here are fishing territory, oceanic mineral resources, greater control of the East Asian shipping industry, and national pride at a modest military cost. And, these are prizes which the allies of Taiwan, South Korea, and Japan are unwilling to exert the level of overwhelming trade, diplomatic, and military power necessary to completely thwart China from achieving these aims.

Biden World

Welcome to Biden world.

Inflation is modest (3.4%). Economic growth is high (4.9% annualized, seasonally adjusted). Unemployment is low (3.8%).


Teen birth rates in the U.S. are at an all time historic low.

Violent crime was near a 25 year low before the pandemic in 2019, and is returning to the trend line after a pandemic surge:


The murder rate in big cities that bounced up in the pandemic (2020-2021) has fallen again (down 5% in 2022 and down another 12% so far this year compared to the same time period in 2022) to return to almost pre-pandemic levels.


The war on marijuana is almost over and Biden is working to remove its Schedule I controlled substance status (which would end punitive federal taxation of the industry and allow marijuana businesses to use banks):


Russia's conventional military might has crumbled and NATO is stronger. The U.S. is out of Afghanistan. Israel's continued existence is not seriously threatened. China has not invaded Taiwan.

COVID deaths are way down.


More than a thousand people have been held criminally accountable for the January 6, 2021 attempted self-coup and even the people at the top are being held accountable.

Bad cops are being held accountable at much higher rates in recent years.



Sales of electric vehicles (EVs) in the United States rose by two-thirds in 2022, comprising 5.8 percent of all new vehicles sold. This represents a significant increase from the 3.2 percent market share in 2021.

This is expected to increase substantially again in 2023. 

Mike Johnson's Economic Policies

Republicans favor policies that make people poor, sick, and stupid.

Republican Congressman Mike Johnson is the newly elected Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives. What policies does he favor? Paul Krugman, writing an op-ed pieces at the New York Times, tells us:

Until his sudden elevation to speaker, Johnson was a relatively little-known figure. . . . now that Johnson has become the face of his party, people really should look at the budget proposal the committee released for 2020 under his chairmanship. . . . 

Start with Social Security, where the budget calls for raising the retirement age — already set to rise to 67 — to 69 or 70, with possible further increases as life expectancy rises. . . . Then there’s Medicare, for which the budget proposes increasing the eligibility age “so it is aligned with the normal retirement age for Social Security and then indexing this age to life expectancy.” Translation: Raise the Medicare age from 65 to 70, then keep raising it. . . . 
Most nonelderly Americans receive health insurance through their employers. But this system depends greatly on policies that the study committee proposed eliminating. You see, benefits don’t count as taxable income — but in order to maintain this tax advantage, companies (roughly speaking) must cover all their employees, as opposed to offering benefits only to highly compensated individualsThe committee budget would eliminate this incentive for broad coverage by limiting the tax deduction for employer benefits and offering the same deduction for insurance purchased by individuals. As a result, some employers would probably just give their top earners cash, which they could use to buy expensive individual plans, while dropping coverage for the rest of their workers. . . . 
the budget would impose savage cuts — $3 trillion over a decade — on Medicaid, children’s health coverage and subsidies that help lower-income Americans afford insurance under the Affordable Care Act.

How many Americans would lose health insurance under these proposals? 
Back in 2017 the Congressional Budget Office estimated that Donald Trump’s attempt to repeal Obamacare would cause 23 million Americans to lose coverage. The Republican Study Committee’s proposals are far more draconian and far-reaching, so the losses would presumably be much bigger.

26 October 2023

Quote Of The Day

If you are unable to slam your hand in a car door to cause great pain, may I suggest you call Verizon Tech Support?
- Dan Danbom, Facebook, October 26, 2023.

25 October 2023

Race, Religion, and Household Debt

Low consumer debt levels are a natural consequence of an inability to pay consumer debt, not a consequence of religiously or culturally driven thrift.
Religion has been shown to have both a direct and indirect role in shaping personal values, especially pertaining to money and wealth accumulation. Existing research establishes a strong relationship between religious affiliation and wealth attainment. However, previous scholarship has largely ignored the link between religious affiliation and debt, an important yet overlooked indicator of total net worth. 
To address this gap, we utilize data from the 2017 wave of the Panel Study of Income Dynamics (PSID) and examine how religious affiliation is associated with two forms of household debt: credit card and mortgage debt. Findings from a series of logistic regression models indicate that Black Protestants have the lowest rates of both credit card and mortgage debt and Hispanic/Latinx Catholics have comparably low rates of credit card debt relative to Conservative Protestants. KHB decomposition analyses reveal that race/ethnicity explain some of the relationship between a Black Protestant or Hispanic/Latinx Catholic religious affiliation and household debt
While our study is the first to document the link between religious affiliation and debt profiles of Americans, we would encourage future research to explore how other elements of religiosity—long acknowledged by sociologists to affect wealth and social status—influence different types of debt accumulation in nuanced and meaningful ways.
Tristen Clifton, Mackenzie Brewer, Laura Upenieks, "Religious affiliation and debt among U.S. households" 115 Social Science Research 102911 (September 2023). The sample studied was as follows:
Approximately 30% of respondents report having no religious affiliation. Over a quarter of the sample is Catholic, with White Catholics comprising about 12% of the sample and Hispanic/Latinx Catholics making up 13%. Conservative Protestants make up about 10% of the sample, Black Protestants another 6%, and mainline Protestants also 6%. The remaining 23% of the sample is made up of other Christian denominations or . . .

An alternative explanation is that bad credit ratings and low incomes, rather than a religious and culturally driven aversion to debt, drives the low levels of household debt in these ethnic/religious communities. This tends to be supported by the review of the literature which notes that: 

Previous work revels large inequalities in wealth accumulation among religious groups (Keister 2003, 2008), with conservative Protestants estimated to have the lowest levels of wealth accumulation over the life course and Jewish and Catholic Americans to have the highest levels of wealth (Keister 2012).
It would have been less interesting to write a paper that said that people with less income, less wealth, and less good credit tend to have less credit card and mortgage debt. But most of the effect of religion on consumer debt levels is mediated through the effect of race (the conclusion of the paper above notes that: "We found that race explains much of these relationships[.]"), and almost all of the effect on consumer credit due to both race and religion is mediated by income, wealth, and credit ratings.