Brian Gongol Show on WHO Radio - June 16, 2018

Brian Gongol


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Please note: These show notes may be in various stages of completion -- ranging from brainstormed notes through to well-polished monologues. Please excuse anything that may seem rough around the edges, as it may only be a first draft of a thought and not be fully representative of what was said on the air.

Segment 1: (11 min)

BUT FIRST: The opening essay

In the last week, I've driven across three states: Iowa, Illinois, and Nebraska. In each state, I drove past road construction, stalled vehicles, and law enforcement -- all either blocking a normal lane of traffic or on the shoulder.

Iowa recently expanded its "Move over, slow down" rules for dealing with vehicles on the roadside. It's now the law that drivers must give extra leeway, pretty much no matter what. I'm guessing that all three states have roughly the same rules. I've always tried to follow the same practice of moving over and slowing down, not because it's the letter of the law, but because it's the right thing to do. I don't think I'm exceptional in that regard, either.

Sure, if everyone followed the law exactly -- always staying in their lanes and pulling over adequately -- then "move over, slow down" might not be strictly necessary. But sometimes the wind gusts. Sometimes a load falls off a truck in front of you. Sometimes a tire blows out. The unexpected can occur, and even if you're doing everything you can to stay in your lane, you can still be overwhelmed by circumstances.

Is it sensible to follow a rule like "Move over, slow down" to protect your driving record? Yes. But it's more important to follow the rule because the people you're protecting are other human beings.

And it doesn't matter whether those other human beings are fellow Iowans, or Illinoisans, or Nebraskans. I'm not out checking IDs when I'm trying to do the just and decent thing by giving them a little extra leeway.

That's the framework I think we ought to be applying to the situation on the southern border, as well as to the issue of refugees generally. It's really not imposing that much to ask us to give people a little extra leeway.

The situation we face -- with thousands of people trying to enter the country in a state of desperation -- calls for an approach that does a few things:

1. Recognize the essential humanity of the situation. Good people don't go barreling through a road-construction zone at 100 mph because it's wrong to endanger other human beings like that. Sure, they chose a high-risk occupation -- but a decent human being gives them plenty of room and slows down. People who come here often make high-risk choices, too. But many of them make those choices because staying at home is even more dangerous. Most Americans really aren't ready to digest the unspeakable violence some people face in their own homelands. The least we can do is to, in effect, move over and slow down.

2. Grapple honestly with whether there is a "right" thing to do. The letter of the law can be the refuge of the scoundrel who wants to avoid the moral complications of personal responsibility and the gray spaces created by empathy. We often say that the three components of a crime are means, motive, and opportunity. But those are also the three components (in mirror form) of a moment to show true moral leadership. And we, as a country, have unparalleled means to do most things, and clearly we are in the midst of an opportunity to act. But do we have the motive? Do we believe anymore in being a true shining city on a hill?

3. See a challenge as an opportunity. It's practically a cliche to note that most personal growth comes from moments of struggle. But what about on a national scale? Are we up to the challenge of doing more -- maybe not everything, but at least doing something -- to aid our fellow human beings seeking refuge from abominable circumstances at home? Could that challenge reveal itself as an opportunity? Just for instance, there may be states that might welcome a few more refugees as a small step towards countering their depopulation trends.

4. Frame the costs and benefits in the right way. Virtually no one is a true total deadweight on society. For as much as people try to frame immigration of all types as a drain on the public purse, it's almost never true. People generally create value wherever they go, and there's a very good case to be made that almost anyone's measurable output as a worker rises dramatically when they move from a poorer place to the United States. It's easy to find and exaggerate anecdotal evidence of immigrants and refugees who end up claiming benefits from the welfare state. But the fact is that most people, most of the time, want to be self-sufficient.

5. Fit whatever we do into a larger vision. The world is tightly connected, as networks of all kinds bind every part of the globe to all of the others more than they did just a generation ago. The world's food supplies, health concerns, economic activity, and flows of ideas are all interrelated, and no amount of pandering and preening about doing things for ourselves is going to change that. So we need to ask: If there are troubles around the world, can we really avoid the consequences? The honest answer is that we usually can't -- so, as a matter of self-interest on the national level, we ought to look for ways we can help to ease pressures and make things better. We won't always succeed, but we ought to be on the lookout for ways we can stop problems from exploding.

We face a public-policy choice right now about the treatment of foreign children. That bears serious scrutiny. We need to remember the regret we as a country should feel over our similar policy choices circa 1938. The violence in places like El Salvador may not be state-run, but it is on a huge scale, and the kids who flee from it are true refugees. They deserve humane treatment as such. During WWI, Herbert Hoover led a US program to deliver food aid to people in occupied Belgium so they could avoid a famine. We helped because it was the right thing to do, regardless of the legal circumstances surrounding the German occupation. Americans don't have to wait for perfect law and order before choosing to do what is right, just, and compassionate. If the extraordinarily daunting nature of the journey is not itself enough of a deterrent to keep people from trying, then what good comes of us applying cruelty on top of it? In a quest to be a "great" country, we shouldn't torch the values and practices that make us good.

Segment 2: (8 min)

Segment 3: (14 min)

Segment 4: (5 min)

Segment 5: (11 min)

Segment 6: (8 min)

Segment 7: (14 min)

Segment 8: (5 min)

Unsorted and leftovers:

This week

News A paper was signed in Singapore -- but what?

Americans will, sooner or later, be privy to what was signed. But you can be sure the North Korean people will be fed a line of propaganda about "forcing the imperialists to acknowledge the indomitable might of the Juche Ideal" or somesuch. That's a win for Kim Jong Un -- at US expense.

By the numbers

Make money

I will argue that the publication of the Atlanta Fed's GDPNow forecast is a real public dis-service. The numbers provide an "official" statistic for willing partisans to cite in lieu of the real BEA figures. Fix the model or shut it down.

Even if we have short bursts of really quick growth, that doesn't prepare the framework for persistent 4% GDP growth.

But if people get misinformation from a model, that's decidedly unhelpful.

Have fun

Clean up after yourself

Mind your business

Quote of the Week

"Give us, we pray, the power to discern clearly right from wrong, and allow all our words and actions to be governed thereby, and by the laws of this land." - Dwight D. Eisenhower

The week in technology

Your role in cyberwar

Computers and the Internet Don't accept USBs from strangers

USB giveaways at the summit: Mating American weakness for free stuff to a super-convenient vector for putting really bad things on computers.

Iowa news

Contrary to popular opinion

Hyperbole is going to kill us all

21st Century conservatism

Curiosity, competence, and humility

I'm not sure the Republic can survive the LOLs. Clinton's snark lacks any semblance of self-awareness. Trump thinks dictatorial powers are a real hoot. Thank God Lincoln wasn't desperate for applause lines.

She's always dismissed the seriousness of her infosec carelessness -- remember how she wisecracked about using bleach on her servers? Just a token gesture of humility shouldn't be too much to ask.

His fawning over Kim Jong Un and his appalling treatment of our G7 allies are patently un-American -- if not fully treasonous.

Have a little empathy

Inbox zero

Stop the deliberate ignorance

Tin Foil Hat Award

Yay Capitalism Prize

Capitalist solution of the week

Totally Unnecessary Debate of the Day

Health Would you take a longer life (with high quality) if it required working longer?

There's no telling what's in store, but odds are good that the year 2100 will be amazing. Do people hate work? Over-discount extra quality years of life? Not really care that much about living? Attitudes on this will have a big impact on important policies -- like how we fund retirement programs and health care.

Kickers

News Women discover -- at age 72 -- that they were switched at birth

One of their mothers is still alive

News 40 floors of fire escape

A missed opportunity, perhaps, to demonstrate the Coriolis effect

One year ago

Five years ago

Ten years ago

Programming notes

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