Where Has Competence Gone

Years of heavier-than-usual rains, followed by dry and hot weather, left vast fuel for fires. Winter brings the dangerous and unpredictable Santa Ana winds. Thank goodness California Governor Gavin Newsome had the foresight to call an emergency legislative session to fund preparations to handle the threatening situation.

Realizing what could be coming to vulnerable areas, successful governors get out in front and ensure everything is ready and working. Even though Florida suffered from severe hurricanes, Governor Ron DeSantis and his crew minimized problems and returned things to normal quickly.

Florida set the standard of preparedness for California to follow, and with overwhelming Democratic majorities, getting the needed funds and authorizations to be ready to meet the dangers presented no problem for Governor Newsome.

Oh, wait a minute. , the emergency legislative session wasn’t to prepare for a severe fire season; it was to appropriate funds to thwart Trump from expelling illegal aliens from California. The danger Newsome foresaw wasn’t from out-of-control wildfires; it was the federal Government initially deporting the illegal alien criminal element.

The result of this lack of preparation is likely to be the worst wildfire disaster in history. Fire hydrants without water are incompressible, as is a key reservoir without any water. Does this sound like preparation?

This absence of competence isn’t due to Californians not being taxed enough to measure up. They pay a lot more than Floridians. So why does Florida do so much better in crisis? The Sunshine State may spend more wisely.

It isn’t global warming. Both states are equally affected—after all, it’s one planet. No state has invested more and taken more action in combating Global warming than California. Of course, all of it has had zero effect. The truth is that nothing California or even the United States can do will change the direction of global temperatures. It could be a simple difference in competence.

Yes, I’ve shown this chart before, but it bears watching:

While the Federal Reserve has been lowering rates, longer rates are approaching levels reached when inflation was 9%. What is it the market sees the Fed is ignoring? Could higher inflation be in our future? Could the brilliant minds at that institution be missing the signals again? Remember, a few years ago, they told us not to worry; the price rise was transitory.

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’24’s Leftover Mysteries

As we enter 2025, some ’24 mysteries remain unresolved. Donald Trump ran his successful campaign with a variety of seemingly contradictory positions. I was reminded of these when the Cafe Hayek blog pointed to economist Mark Perry’s illustration:

This contradiction made me think of other Trump contradictions. Peace and safety while withdrawing our troops from the Middle East. Without our support, the Kurds overseeing tens of thousands of ISSIS followers may face an attack by Turkish forces, rendering them unable to prevent a resurgence of the deadly group. Remember, Turkish leader Erdogan has territorial ambitions of his own. This possibility doesn’t sound peaceful to me.

We all know that politicians make all sorts of claims that step on each other, but now it’s time to introduce legislation, and conflicts remain unresolved. The idea is to write one or two big reconciliation bills containing the whole Trump program.

Inflation is a paramount issue that accounts for Trump’s victory, yet many of the president-elect’s promises are likely to raise prices. Besides tariffs that, like sales taxes, increase what you’re paying, lower taxes for favored groups, such as those working for tips or retirees, will likely result in higher interest rates or printing money. As I’ve pointed out, either will raise prices.

Unquestionably, the Biden Administration’s wild spending on the Green New Deal, infrastructure, and chips led to the highest inflation in forty years, but will Trump attempt to repeal all of this legislation? Taken together, these acts are an enormous industrial policy. Repeal all since state-directed economies have no record of success.

The question is whether Trump will tackle the problems wholeheartedly or simply piecemeal. The latter will be conflict on conflict. For instance, will Trump’s buddy, Elon Musk, stand still for eliminating his electric vehicle incentives and green tax credit sales? Will members of Congress allow the scrapping of big projects scheduled for their districts? Many businesses have sunk big money based on the Biden-era legislation. Can they continue without the promised subsidies and credits, or must they swallow significant losses on sunk costs? Even major oil companies put big bucks into green projects.

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