Right and Wrong Matter

One of the greatest casualties of the so-called ‘progressive’ movement and its antecedent, relativism, has been the obfuscation of right and wrong. These used to be obvious. Now, not so much.

Take violent protests for example. Hollywood and the leftist talking heads have created the impression that some violent protests are ok, even justified. Antifa, Occupy Wall Street, the riots at Berkley (choose from the long list)… all are at best excused and at worst condoned because they promote Leftist ends.

Despite the misreporting/outright lie that Far Right violence greatly surpasses Left, violent protest is wrong irrespective of whether it’s engaged in by either side. Yet, you wouldn’t know that by listening to many Hollywood heroes. Madonna, for example, flat out suggested she ought to blow up the White House. Kathy Griffin will forever be remembered for holding up a fake severed Trump head. Snoop Dog wrote a song entitled “Make America Crip Again” with a scene of Trump getting shot.

And the mainstream media and democrat leadership are, to any observer with eyes and ears, no better.

Roll back the clock to the Boomer generation and this kind of rhetoric and behavior was simply…wrong. Not today. It’s all relative, but paraphrasing George Orwell, “Some things are more relative than others.” If it allies with Leftist dogma, it’s right. If it allies with Right (.sic) dogma, it’s wrong, and once again, he who has the biggest megaphone is able to drown out the other side.

As if often the case, someone has said it better than I ever could. In a book titled 1938: A World Vanishing (London: Buchanan & Enright, 1982), Brian Talbot Cleeve contrasted Britain as it was entering World War II and the way it had become in the early 80’s.

“There really was, as nostalgia remembers, an air of greater contentment. Of a sturdier confidence in the future. [People] had a greater stock of moral certainties. Right and wrong were not matters for debate,” he wrote.

He went on to reflect, “To exchange a false morality for no morality at all is not necessarily an exchange for the better. And if, as a survivor of pre-war years, I were to offer an opinion as to one difference between then and now that is for the worse, I would have to choose morality. . . . the morality of believing that there are real and objective standards of behavior, that there are such things as virtues, and such things as vices; that certain things are unarguably good, and others unarguably bad.”

It’s often been noted that democracy carries within itself the seeds of its own destruction. The argument, with which I concur, is that what has happened today is the promotion of democratic ideas beyond reason.

“In our modern eagerness to be tolerant, we have come to tolerate things which no society can tolerate and remain healthy. In our understandable anxiety not to set ourselves up as judges, we have come to believe that all judgements are wrong. In our revulsion against hypocrisy and false morality we have abandoned morality itself. And with modest hesitations but firm convictions I submit that this has not made us happier, but much unhappier. We are like men at sea without a compass.”

And what was evident to Cleeve in 1982 is even more evident today.

How can we survive as a civilization if even right and wrong are confused and unclear? I believe the answer is, “We can’t, unless some outside shock brings us all down to earth again, causing us to focus on the basics.”

Right and wrong matter.

God Matters

First, if you don’t believe in God or a Supreme Being, I’m not going to convince you there is one. But if you don’t, I urge you to go the country on a cloudless, moonless and no-light-pollution night and look up at the sky. Think of what you learned about probability and try to imagine what the probability is that we’re alone in the universe. To me it’s preposterous to suggest that there ISN’T a God!

God matters because He and His teachings are the basis for the standards by which we need to measure and conduct our lives – the basics of right and wrong, of good and evil, of truth and falsehood. The specifics of whether he is the Jewish God, or Catholic God, or Mormon God, or Muslim God is less relevant if one considers that virtually all religions and dogma subscribe to the fundamentals we know as the Ten Commandments. Without standards, there is only chaos, and without God, there are no standards.

God also matters because we need humility. Without humility, arrogance and the temptation to lord over others takes hold.  With all our advances, and with our advances coming at an increasing rate, it’s easy to see why we think we’re pretty special. It’s led to many people just assuming we don’t need God. And, since the array of circumstances we face vary widely, it’s tempting to think we’re better than someone who is less fortunate or who lives in less favorable circumstances than we. We need God to remind us that we’re really all just specs of dust and mustn’t get too big for our britches.

God matters because we need fellowship. Worshipping a Supreme Being with others who believe as we do gives us a sense of belonging that transcends ethnicity, politics, economic circumstances and all our other differences. We simply don’t do well by ourselves, as much as we’d sometimes like to think we do. Gathering together to acknowledge, pay homage to and invoke the blessings of God brings us together and helps us smooth those differences out.

God matters because we need to understand gratitude. Not to suggest for a second that I agree with anything Obama ever said, but borrowing on his phrase “You didn’t build that,” if you have success, comforts, joy, love, uplifting experiences and peace in your life, “you didn’t build that.” God had a hand in helping you. A dramatic sunset, a spectacular night sky…God (and most certainly not the government as Obama was suggesting) built those, not us. We need to be grateful.

Finally, God matters because there exist laws in the universe that we simply don’t understand yet. Notwithstanding the brilliant minds of scientists and philosophers, we still can’t say what happened BEFORE the Big Bang. And we still can’t comprehend an endless, infinite universe. Believing and trusting that there is a Being out there who knows more than we do and who has, who can, and who in the future can communicate His knowledge and expose new truth to us is not only comforting, but exciting. We should continuously try to get to know Him.

We need to look up at those stars from time to time and remember how small we really are…how insignificant compared to the vastness and power of an infinite universe and return to thinking about how we’re ALL related and need to help one another.

Today we know so much more than our grandparents new. And tomorrow, our grandchildren will know so much more than we do. Gaining knowledge with the help of a God who can reveal things to us and give us guidance as we progress…matters.

Truth Matters

In 2016 the Oxford English Dictionary’s “Word of the Year” was post-truth, suggesting that truth is dead, and objective facts no longer have any meaning. Really? Have we become so poisoned with relativism that standards no longer exist and the individual is the sole arbiter of right and wrong, fact and fiction, truth or lies and, by way of conclusion, “anything goes?”

“What is truth?” is one of the central questions of philosophy. Is Corey Booker correct to suggest that we must all live “our truth”? Plato, Aristotle, Socrates and Corey Booker can debate the answer. Here’s one truth, however, that should but probably won’t be universally accepted. It is that there is a difference between truth and belief.

What is or should be of great concern is how falsehood, what a business school course once called “creative misrepresentation” and fiction are used to persuade or judge everyday matters. And of paramount concern is how lies have been weaponized so as to cause belief to be to pushed and accepted as truth. By way of example, that the Benghazi disaster was the result of an anti-muslim video was proclaimed so loudly and assertively, it brainwashed many.

It’s also true that not everything is black or white. Grey is the predominant color in debate. But has the questioning of norms and rules gone so far overboard that it attacks the very idea of having any rules at all as Victor Davis Hanson suggested in his 2014 essay “The Poison of Postmodern Lying“? As he so starkly points out, “Without notions of objective truth, there can never be lies, just competing narratives and discourses. Stories that supposedly serve the noble majority are true; those that supposedly don’t become lies — the facts are irrelevant.”

So it seems nowadays that truth is in the hands of he or she who has the bigger megaphone, or who can more cleverly devise a phrase or seven second soundbite that tugs at a heartstring or “sounds right.”

The antidote?

Critical Thinking…something that is sorely lacking in our population today. Or, how about, at least, healthy skepticism?

Not all news is fake news, but a lot of it consists of selective truth, or facts taken out of context. Not all advertising is nonsense, though healthy skepticism should cause us to consider whether ground-up peach pits will cure cancer, or whether an actress’s proclamation that vaccinations cause autism should be accepted as truth.

If you hear a talking head say, “Let me be clear,” or “Make no mistake”, or “The truth of the matter is”, or, my favorite…”It goes without saying,” immediately turn on your skeptic’s filter.

Separating fact from fiction, truth from lies, involves work. It is the work of seeking out, validating and judging evidence. In an era of information overload, (I like the analogy of trying to take a drink from a firehose), sounding plausible or looking, in the case of websites or television, as if it’s plausible does not mean it’s true. We used to say, “Don’t believe everything your read.” Now we have to add “hear” and “see” to the list. Today you can’t even believe your own eyes thanks to the wonders of PhotoShop.

Besides applying the principle of critical thinking we can resolve to tell the truth ourselves, teach our children and grandchildren the difference between truth and a lie (remember George Washington and the cherry tree?) and remind ourselves not to be swayed by the herd, by popular opinion, by peer pressure and by what tugs at the heart while bypassing our brains.

The truth matters.

Stuff That Matters

With a salute and due credit to Charles Krauthammer (1950-2018) whose book Things that Matter (New York: Crown Publishing, 2013 available from Amazon here) was the capstone of his exemplary life and the inspiration of this and future related posts, I’ve begun my own list.

New items come to mind daily so it is a work in progress. They’re in no particular order, although Truth, God and Right would be right up there at the top of any ordered list. From time to time I’m going to address these topics in more detail but to get started, here’s a first stab.

Truth matters.

God matters.

Right and Wrong Matter.

Our word matters.

How we think matters.

People matter.

What we teach our children matters.

What we do as a family matters.

Helping others matters.

Being friendly matters.

Courtesy matters.

Being considerate matters.

Our reputation matters.

Loyalty matters.

Being kind to animals matters.

Conservation matters.

Courage matters.

Catching someone doing something right matters.

Thrift matters.

Obeying/Respecting our parents matters.

Respecting our elders matters.

Respecting authority matters.

Saying what we mean and meaning what we say matters.

Words matter. What we say and how we say it matters.

Listening matters.

Perseverance and determination matter.

The choices we make matter.

Temperance matters.

Anticipation and thinking ahead matters.

Knowing ourselves matters.

Our health matters.

Controlling ourselves matters.

Deferred gratification matters.

Grooming matters.

Situational awareness matters.

Whom we choose as friends matters.

What we read matters.

What we watch on television matters.

What we tweet/post/email matters.

What we eat matters.

Our morning routine matters.

How we spend our non-working time matters.

Hard work matters.

Honoring our spouses matters.

Standing up for what we believe in matters.

How we treat those above us and how we treat those below us matters.

What we value and how we spend our money matters.

Where we live matters.

What we don’t say matters.

Please send us your additions to this list by email to admin@grumpsreport.com !

How to Recover from a Stall (or Why Sometimes Letting Go and Doing Nothing is Best)

(Don’t try this at home!) Flying a small plane like a Cessna 172 Skyhawk is a hell of a lot safer than a 737 Max. Why? For a lot of reasons, but one is that for every 1000 feet of altitude the plane will glide 3 miles without the engine running! But there’s a another, more topically current reason…

A Skyhawk properly trimmed for straight and level flight (that means all the controls in the right position) wants to stay straight and level.

Let’s say a flock of birds appears in front of you and you pull up suddenly and accidentally stall the plane. Basically, that means that it starts to fall out of the sky. The nose points straight down and you’re in a dive headed for a rather abrupt landing.

With you and the nose looking straight down at the ground rushing up, your immediate reflex is to pull back on the yoke (or stick) to bring that aircraft nose back up. Unfortunately, if the plane is in a stall, pulling with all your might will do precisely nothing.

In fact, pilots are trained to do the exact opposite of what everything is screaming they should do. We force ourselves to push forward on the stick, restoring correct air flow over the wings and the horizontal stabilizer, and then pull out of the dive.

For sake of argument, let’s say you just can’t bring yourself to push forward when every part of your anatomy is screaming pull back, pull up? You know what? If you LET GO of all the controls, chances are the plane will right itself on its own and all by itself seeking to return to straight and level flight.

What does this have to do with anything? Often, when the economy is in free fall, legislators keep trying to pull back on the stick, to DO SOMETHING, when, in fact, were they to just let go, the economy would most likely right itself!

At another level, I’m talking about about control vs. freedom. The LEFT wants to control everything. For them, in their warped world view, if they have control over the sources of production as well as production itself it can be equitably divvied up among everyone. History proves that this communist/marxist/socialist approach to society results in the worst possible outcome (think Venezuela, North Korea, the U.S.S.R.).

In fact, letting go of the stick, i.e. giving more freedom to individuals, the Traditionalist approach to organizing society, results in growth and prosperity for EVERYONE.  One of the great truisms is that ‘a rising tide lifts all boats’.

Reagan was dead on right…government is not the solution. Government is the PROBLEM! If we can just figure out a way to get government’s hands off the stick, the plane will right itself.

But then why would we need politicians?

The Real Problem with Healthcare

First, let’s get something straight. There’s a difference between health INSURANCE and health CARE. The politicians and talking heads continuously either conflate or misuse the terms. Providing healthcare insurance does not mean providing health care. Conversely, health care does not necessarily have to be linked to or paid for with insurance!

Oh and by the way, health insurance doesn’t (e)nsure health any more than life insurance covers life. Both are tortured marketing labels that have, over time, become universally but naively accepted.

Perhaps the most influential and lucid book ever written on the subject of healthcare policy was written in 1986 by Joseph A. Califano, Jr., who, among other things, served as U.S. Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare. The book is entitled America’s Health Care Revolution: Who Lives? Who Dies? Who Pays?  Califano, Joseph A. (1986) NY:Random House. Although out of print, it can still be obtained through Amazon. In plain language, Califano describes the various players, forces, complexities and problems of the system. He too makes a distinction between health insurance coverage and the delivery of health care.

Back in the 80’s the crisis was rapidly escalating cost and how that was reflected as a percentage of Gross National Product. Califano cited numerous drivers of the inflation, among them: an aging population, advancements in medical technology and drug therapy.

But the biggest driver of healthcare inflation and the root cause of all of the health care delivery and payments system’s problems is intrusion into the doctor-patient relationship.

Why? The answer is complex, but greatly simplifying the story and the history, it all began in 1929 when Baylor University Hospital initiated an insurance plan for 1,250 schoolteachers. Each teacher paid 50 cents (!) a month and received up to twenty-one days of hospital care each year. In 1932 Blue Cross came into being, largely supplanting individual hospital plans and by 1937 had 800,000 subscribers, which rapidly increased to over 6 million by 1940.

Commercial insurers, who primarily wrote property & casualty and life insurance policies, were initially skeptical, but with the success of Blue Cross, entered the arena aggressively, taking the not-for-profit characteristics of Blue Cross plans into the for-profit realm.

Fast forward to World War II, when strict price controls on salaries and wages were enforced but there were little, if any controls on “fringe benefits.” Corporate America, competing for qualified personnel, offered better varieties of often ‘free’ health care insurance benefits to prospective and existing employees in lieu of higher wages.  

In 1947 the Taft Hartley Labor Relations Act opened the door for unions to include fringe benefits like health care insurance plans in their collective bargaining negotiations. That really put fuel on the fire.

Since neither companies nor the government wishing to hire or retain employees could compete with each other on wages, they tried to outdo one another on fringe benefits. Promises of lifetime healthcare insurance coverage that paid 100% of the costs of health care for workers and, eventually, their families as well, became the norm, and health care insurance quickly moved from benefit to entitlement.  

Guess what? Now, decades later, those promises are coming due, with the cost of providing coverage to both workers and retirees not just dwarfing original cost estimates, but now threatening our national solvency!

With the spotlight when Califano wrote his book on costs, the solutions proffered by our benevolent federal government included greater regulation and control over the system, which in turn, predictably, gave rise to “managed care”, or what I refer to as “mismanaged care”. This not only added to health care cost inflation by layering in an administrative bureaucracy but more importantly, exacerbated the intrusion between providers and patients and rapidly advanced the already existing “Triangular Health Care System”.

In no other industry or system are the basic principles of economics more violated than in America’s health care system. What the advent of insurance, whether purchased by an individual, provided by an employer, or granted by the government (i.e. Medicare and Medicaid) does is largely eliminate the economic discussion between the provider of goods and services and the consumer of those goods and services.  

What’s pernicious about this system is that health care providers are incentivized to do everything and anything for their patients, whether medically necessary or not, and without concern for the cost. Since physicians can prescribe and create demand for their services (“I want to see you again in two weeks”), any attempts to reduce costs through price control mechanisms are easily offset by what we’ve seen, i.e. more services rendered in less time, and unavoidably, with reduced quality. Who hasn’t noticed that instead of 15 minute time slots allocated to routine doctor visits, the norm is now 10?

What’s also pernicious is that consumers are for the most part insulated from the basic economics of the transaction/interaction between them and their physician, hospital, pharmacist, optician, etc. until a bill comes in the mail for the “balance due, not covered by insurance.” Most people naively believe that “more care” is “better care”. Thus, the insulation further increases demand.

Whereas in most economic transactions there’s a bargain reached between buyer and seller, in the Health Care Triangle there are two bargaining activities: one between the patient/consumer and their insurance company (or their employer) and one between the insurance company and the health care provider. Again, the provider and the patient rarely, if ever, discuss cost.

In short, what insurance does is both intrude and distort the normal business equation. It turns over, increasingly, the responsibility for individuals’ health to Nanny, until now, the Left has abandoned all pretense of requiring people to care for themselves, and the freedom to elect how to select and acquire health care. Instead, they opt, as they usually do, for solutions like “Medicare for All” which is not about delivering cost and quality health care at all, but about CONTROL. (Come on over for a sit down and single malt to have a different discussion about that problem!)

So what can be done about this?

Due to ingrained and pervasive attributes, agendas and conflicting motivations among the participants, this Gordian Knot with a Rube Goldberg contraption on top will be very difficult to unravel. There is no simple, sweeping solution. However, the long climb back up this slippery slope starts with the application of free market principles, including both restoration of the economic discussion between consumers and providers of health care and disclosure and transparency among market participants.

Meanwhile, channeling Hippocrates, we need to stop doing harm. We must insist that legislators do the precise opposite of what they’re programmed to do…interfere. Rather, we need to legislate less, continue to relax or retract the straight-jackets being applied to the system and, carefully but decisively take away “nanny’s security blanket”, i.e. government hand-holding through regulation and tax extortion. Finally, we need to insist on personal/individual responsibility for HEALTH so that the need for CARE will be reduced. Only then can the inbred bureaucracies be successfully dismantled.

Health care is not just an art, or science, but also a business. The more regulated it has become, the more inefficient, unfair, arbitrary, expensive and messed up it has become, and the more intractable the problems. The less regulated it can be made, the more individual responsibility will be restored, the less demand there will be for care, the better its quality will be, and the more equitable its provision will be.

Celebrating Mom

In the kitchen this morning I’m surrounded by flowers and greeting cards. Not for ME, mind you, but for my wife, who is “sleeping in”…one of the very few days of the year when she can.

I’m thinking of my own mom this morning who died many years ago after a wonderful life, but whose memory lives on in many ways. As I reflect on the relationship we had as she (and my dad too of course) raised me; as I see her genes in my own children and now grandchildren, both physically and in terms of temperament and personality; as I see her in parenting behavior that I to this day find myself duplicating…I can’t help but be eternally grateful.

If you looked up the word “saint” in the dictionary, you’ll see my mom’s picture next to the definition. You’re thinking, “everyone thinks their mom is/was a saint.” Not true, at least not anymore, I’m afraid.

Because part of the mother-child relationship is situational. And with divorce, out-of-wedlock and single parenting rates continuing to skyrocket, and traditional families continuing to break down, for many, what I had growing up has vanished, and never will be. It’s terribly terribly sad.

Standing at the greeting card rack the other day I saw the changing role of moms reflected in the brightly colored, category-labeled array before me. “To Mom from the Step Kids”, “To Mom from Sister/Brother”, “To Mom from the Dog(s), Cat(s), Goldfish”, “To Mom from Wife”, etc. (I double took on that last one, but it was a big section…hard to miss). I didn’t see a section labeled “To My Moms”, but I’m sure it was there as well.

My mom was a stay-at-home, manage the household and her children mom. She selflessly catered to my dad’s and her children’s needs and whims. Chef, chauffeur, therapist, disciplinarian, coach, consoler, nurse (and EMT), social director, cub scout den mother, music teacher, manners guardian, PTA President, art director, arbitrator, elegant party planner and hostess, maid, laundress, animal trainer, guardian, intercessor (both with God AND my father!), referee, and on and on – she did it all.

She led a busy life. Never did she complain about not having enough of this or that. She was patient, and kind, and almost always cheerful. I don’t recall her ever complaining about being sick, or having to drive me to school when I missed the bus. The “wrapped in her arms” image comes to mind when I think of my mom.

I’m grateful I’m a hybrid of my mom and my dad. My dad was a product-of-the-depression, self-educated and self-made, self-reliant, kick-butt-and-take-names, black-and-white, right-and-wrong, no-nonsense patriarch who was and always will be a giant to me. So sometimes that gentlewoman comes out in a softer side of me even as I grow ever more into an “old, angry white guy”.  

Much has been written about the changing nature of moms and families. And I could spend the rest of this post railing against the impact, mostly detrimental, those changes are having on our society. I’ll do so in different post.

But today I just want to celebrate my own mom and express the hope that despite all that’s different in today’s world, children and grandchildren will be able to experience the warmth, support..in short, the LOVE, that my mom gave me.

I miss you mom. Rest in peace.

Something GOOD to Watch

Are there ANY decent series on broadcast or cable, ones that are worth watching because they support traditional values? Yes, and here they are along with a shout out to our favorites.

We discovered a comprehensive study and list of “conservative tv shows” on the site Conservapedia.com. You’ll find the list here.

We hasten to note that some of these shows are decidedly religious, and some have the taint of scandal associated with them (e.g. “The Cosby Show” since Bill Cosby was found guilty of sexual assault). Here’s an abbreviated version of the chart incorporated in the article consisting of shows we can recommend.

“Title”
Original Run; Network; TV Rating
Description

“24”
2001-2010 Fox TV 14  
Jack Bauer (Kiefer Sutherland) protects America at all costs against all terrorists, whether Islamic, European, Communist Chinese, African, or even from within the U.S. government. The 2017 sequel series, 24: Legacy, stars Corey Hawkins as ex-Army Ranger Eric Carter, who battles Islamic terrorists planning attacks on American soil.

“Band of Brothers”  
2001       HBO       TV-MA 
This World War II military drama deals with the exploits of E Company, 506th Infantry Regiment of the United States Army. Similar to Saving Private Ryan, the mini-series promotes the military and American values in a positive light as well as the Nazis in a negative light.

“Blue Bloods”       
2010-     CBS TV-PG  
Conservative police officer show, that also promotes family. Stars conservative actor Tom Selleck as officer Frank Reagan (a possible name reference to Ronald Reagan). It also features Christian principles, with religion playing a fairly major role in several episodes, and each episode also ending with the Reagan family saying prayers before a meal (with such an overt depiction of Christian principles being rare on present-day TV). In addition, the series is clearly pro-Law Enforcement, with episodes dealing with conflicts between City Hall and the police force. It also includes examples of characters trying to demonize the police force, including some journalists, who are portrayed in a negative light.

“Chuck”
2007-2012            NBC       PG         
Chuck Bartowsky, a computer repair technician, accidentally downloads numerous top-secret government files into his brain and is recruited by the CIA, seeing as he can help them crack their toughest cases with his ability to rapidly shuffle through and find images in his head relevant to particular elements of a mission. The show emphasizes family values, honor, and a respect for America’s people in uniform, with one character, the brutish but patriotic NSA agent John Casey, as an outspoken conservative and Ronald Reagan supporter. Furthermore, the series averts feminism as positive male and female role models are present: both Chuck’s sister Ellie and her eventual husband Devon/”Captain Awesome” are equally competent physicians; and CIA agent Sarah Walker, who grows from being Chuck’s cover girlfriend to being his real girlfriend and eventually his wife, wants to leave the dangerous world of espionage towards the end of the series with Chuck to start a nuclear family.

“Everybody Loves Raymond”
1996-2005            CBS        TV-PG  
Based on the stand-up comedy of Ray Romano, this classic sitcom stars Romano as sportswriter Raymond Barone, following his comical everyday life with his wacky but faithful family. It celebrates family values as the characters overcome obstacles in a comic fashion.

“Full House”
1987-1995            ABC        TV-G     
Family sitcom where after losing his wife to a drunk driver, a younger father has his brother-in-law and best friend move in with him, to help raise his three young daughters. Despite this and living in the most liberal U.S. city-San Francisco-, the importance of having a male and female parent is still encouraged. Starting in Season Two, Becky Donaldson (Jesse’s girlfriend and later wife) becomes a mother figure for the girls. The original series was followed by a more liberal-leaning sequel, Fuller House, which debuted on Netflix in 2016 and promotes more liberal values and politics.

“Heartland”           
2007-present     CBC(Canada)                     
Based on the series of books by Linda Chapman and Beth Chambers (both under the pen name of Lauren Brooke), this Canadian drama centers around two sisters named Amy (Amber Marshall) and Lou (Michelle Morgan) Fleming, who run their family’s horse ranch, Heartland, with their grandfather Jack Bartlett (Shaun Johnston) and ranch hand Ty Borden (Graham Wardle) after their mother dies rescuing a horse abused by its owner. Every episode stresses the importance of devotion to family and succeeding with hard work and never giving up, as well as forgiveness, as when Amy and Lou welcome their estranged father Tim (Chris Potter) back into their lives, and how Ty, a parolee when the show begins, eventually earns Jack’s trust as a ranch hand. The show also demonstrates how the Flemings show respect for animals while training them to respect humans. This is one of the very few conservative-leaning shows to air on the otherwise heavily liberal state broadcaster the CBC.

“Justified”
2010-     FX Network        TV-MA 
Deputy US Marshal Raylan Givens, a 19th-century-style tough cowboy lawman, enforces his own brand of justice when dealing with criminals of all kinds in the hill country of eastern Kentucky. His boss, the Chief Deputy US Marshal Art Mullen, is played by Nick Searcy, a noted conservative actor.

“Last Man Standing”
2011-2017 (ABC) 2018-present (Fox)         ABC & Fox           TV-PG  
This refreshing sitcom stars Tim Allen as Mike Baxter, a marketing director for a sporting goods store chain called Outdoor Man, who strives to keep his manhood (fishing, hunting, sports and camping), and promotes conservative values (including supporting the military), in opposition to his antagonistic liberal daughter Kristin (the oldest of three daughters Mike has with his wife Vanessa) and her equally-liberal husband Ryan, who often clashes with both Mike and Vanessa over political, cultural and philosophical issues. Unlike the similar and more vehement clashes between Archie Bunker and Mike Stivic in All in the Family where the latter comes out on top due to Archie’s ignorance and lack of ability to make cohesive arguments, the often clueless and hypocritical Ryan loses arguments with the more well-versed and level-headed Mike. Meanwhile, Mike gets along very well with his youngest daughter Eve due to their similar political views and interests, as he does with Boyd, Kristin and Ryan’s son and Mike’s grandson (as expected, Kristin and Ryan are not impressed that Boyd has more in common with his grandfather than with them). Unfortunately, the liberal parent network ABC canceled the series due to its pro-Donald Trump humor, despite it having high ratings.This resulted in Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker taking to Twitter to denounce ABC for the decision, as well as a boycott against ABC and a petition demanding that ABC bring back Last Man Standing, the latter getting over 10,000 signatures within the night the petition was first made. When Country Music Television (CMT) picked up the series for syndication, rumors that it would continue the series started spreading. In May 2018, it was announced the series was being revived by Fox and would return on that network for the 2018-19 season. On its premiere, it managed to gain more viewers than the first episode of the reboot of Murphy Brown.

“Top Gear” 2002-     BBC TV-PG  
This fun and educational British series discusses cars and automotive technologies while celebrating individual freedom, capitalism, and private-sector innovation. It tends to be politically incorrect as well, poking fun at the belief in “global warming”.

“Yes, Minister!/Yes, Prime Minister!”            BBC                       
This classic British sitcom explores the political machinations of being a cabinet member in the British government, and then eventually as Prime Minister. A recurring theme is that of the struggle of politicians to make desired changes against the resistance of the bureaucracy.

Sleep at Night Investing

My economics professor strode into the amphitheater the first day and in bold letters wrote “TINSTAAFL” on the board. He then turned to face the class and, waving the chalk in his hand as if he were holding a brand new dollar bill boldly stated, “Ain’t that sexy!”, and then marched out the door.

“TINSTAAFL” we all wondered. And then we got it…”There Is No Such Thing As A Free Lunch.”

Similarly, I have been known to say, “TINSTAARFI”. “There Is No Such Thing As A Risk Free Investment.”

As I write this the stock market has plunged 350 points, after a see saw ride yesterday. Is the economy roaring? Yes. Is unemployment at a historical low? Yes. Are wages going up? Yes. Is the current administration slowly but surely getting the government off our backs? Yes. Are people better off today than they were 3 years ago? Yes.

Then why is the stock market going down?

The flip answer is, “Because there are more sellers than buyers.” The actual answer is not much more profound than that, but has at least three parts:

1) Because the “arbs” as they’re called (short for arbitrageurs or short-term, professional traders) are watching each other and have all joined a herd that are headed for the exit;

2) Because the computer algorithms that work in hundredths’ of a second have calculated that the market is going down; and,

3) Most importantly, because the headlines today are full of fear and dread: the China trade talks are stalled; our favorite Venezuelan insurgent’s attempt to oust the country’s dictator failed last week; Israel and Hamas are trading rockets; the Iranians are threatening to blockade (hah!) the Strait of Hormuz; and of course, the Arctic ice is melting.

In short, there are more sellers than buyers.

Depending on your investing goals, where you are in your life cycle, and a slew of other factors, a plummet in the stock market is either a shoulder shrug or a catastrophe. If you’re thirty something and you buy on the dips, this is a good thing. If you were about to cash out of a bunch of stock because you needed it for your daughter’s wedding or to make the final payment on that boat you’re having built, it’s a bad thing.

There are enough investment “experts” (see my article on this subject here) to provide reading material and television fodder that I don’t want to upset the apple cart. But I don’t know you, I’m not your advisor, and I can only suggest that if you are in danger of needing anything from Maalox to a defibrillator due to stock market gyrations, I have the following suggestion:

Put all your money in boring, low-yielding bank certificates of deposit and treasury bills, notes and bonds.

Why?

Because if you create the right mix of these instruments, you will earn an entirely predictable return on your money and be completely immune from market gyrations such as today’s. (P.S. the market is now down over 500 points).

“WOAH!”, the talking heads and experts will scream! You will lose money if you do this because while you may avoid market risk, you will still face inflation risk. In other words, your purchasing power will erode.

My answer to this fallacy is: the fees and commissions you pay for the advice you’re getting from the “experts” is likely more than enough to offset that risk, especially when inflation is low to moderate as it has been for some years and is likely to be for some years to come. Follow my suggestion and you’ll be able to avoid middle men entirely, saving you money and wear and tear on your body and psyche from sleepless nights.

By the way. I realize this is a touchy subject…one that could prompt hours and hours of hand-wringing and vituperations from my former Wall Street colleagues, but I offer up this suggestion because I managed just such a portfolio for my own father in his retirement, never paying a commission, never paying a percentage of “assets under management”, and month after month, quarter after quarter and year after year he pulled out of his “nest egg” more than enough to live on comfortably. In years when interest rates were relatively higher, he didn’t spend the extra, but we reinvested it and his nest egg grew. When rates were down, he still took out what he needed, and he slept well and was a happy camper until the day he died.

The market as I write this is now down 600 points. How will you sleep tonight?