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Aug 13, 2021Liked by Geary Johansen

The situation has become deeply partisan because Democrats have become fully bent on destruction of the American value proposition. They openly hate it and don’t care that we finally get their agenda. They have always hated the Constitution. They feel ultimate victory within reach, hence the effort to completely undermine election integrity. We may have one more chance to slow the decline.

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It's mostly that they want a simple first past the post democracy, so that they can try all their programs out. They don't understand that when 51% gives a party more power to change things, areas like education in particular suffer. My mother is a retired schoolteacher in the UK. The number of times I saw a newly elected government change things for changes sake, spending a shitload of money on bureaucracy, just so they could tell the voters that education was their main priority was pretty much par for the course.

And it's not just education. There are ample reasons why in most areas you want a government constrained from doing much, unless there is a clear majority of 70% or 80% of people who want the change.

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Aug 13, 2021Liked by Geary Johansen

To quote a former President: In this present situation, government is not the solution…, to much of anything.

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Aug 12, 2021Liked by Geary Johansen

You mean it's hard to have an American country if people don't think themselves all Americans first and foremost? Who knew?

How do you solve issues among a diverse people (think about religion)? Do you force them to reject all of it? For them to have faith in only one of them? Or do you accept liberty and equal protection works, that people will never agree on anything and so forcing one view on all is sure to create conflict?

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There has to be a unifying sense of civic pride in the nation. The belief that whatever historical flaws it possesses, the trend is upward. One of the things I used to love about Americans, was their boundless sense of optimism. I could explain exactly what happened, but it is easier to describe by way of illustration- now that China has mostly developed they too are shedding jobs offshore- making Africa China's China_ but unlike America they are only offshoring the low value labour, keeping the mid to high value manufacturing for themselves.

All it took was the displacement of America's professional managerial class with a proliferation of legal and accountancy types, who cared less for their country or their businesses than the ledger of detached numbers. Paper samurai with little conception of the way businesses in the real world operate, most of their former companies are now bankrupt, as is the American Dream.

It is recoverable. Americans possess a strength not found in the old world other than in a few of the North or Western states, but it will be a long hard slog back up the hill and will require the reification of the American mythos from first principles.

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Aug 12, 2021Liked by Geary Johansen

I hope your faith/belief comes true, but "long hard slog" isn't what many Americans would ever dream of now, and most Americans would never do anything that's hard or risky or self-motivated (unless it gives great pleasure!). America looks to China and Europe and see solutions to the problems of individual liberty and equality under the law with more "scientific" central planning.

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The China thing is a false impression. There are plenty of things to criticise China over, but the size of their government relative to their population or tax levels are not the problem. They tax about 24% of national wealth generated, much less than the 40% which America does, or the 50% which is common for most of the other advanced economies. Crucially, 80% of this amount is devolved out to the regions and is mainly used for the purposes of economic development.

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Aug 13, 2021Liked by Geary Johansen

WHO and the rest looked to China for how to solve a Covid crisis with lockdowns, border closings and other mandates, and a bit with forced vaccinations and "passports" for attending social life.

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other than the ledger(typo)

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Aug 13, 2021Liked by Geary Johansen

One thing we have seen play out is that official tolerance only works within defined parameters. In religion, it only works when the large majority are united in a judeo Christian tradition. In politics, the large majority must agree on the basic premise of a constitutional Republican form of constrained government. Once a minority takes advantage of the good will of the majority, game over. The end game is “one man, one vote,” one more time.

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Aug 12, 2021Liked by Geary Johansen

As a 4th Gen CA Native, one would have to be a blind fool or a partisan to not see the radical changes and shift that has happened in my home state during my 50 year life. Immigration from our porous border has made our State unrecognizable, which has not led to an average of 5,000 CA middle class residents flee the state each month! There are no solutions except draconian measures of complete lockdown of our southern border, but we all know this will not happen. So...before the wife and I take our eternal "dirt naps", we too must vacate our home state and live out our days with folks closer to our "tribe". Great essay Geary! Thanks for sharing.

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Thanks for your kind comment. I gather Colorado is highly incensed with the influx of citizens from other parts of the country. I would try Texas, but check the weather maps for the best parts of the States in terms of average temperatures and the ideal local scene.

It never ceases to amaze me how little preparation people put into life changing decisions relating to homes. My first job out of Uni was in retail banking- believe it or not, people put more work into choosing a new car than they do in shopping for the right finance, which can often make tens of thousands of dollars worth of difference over the course of a mortgage. And it's true of virtually every aspect of the homebuying process- good research endows the better prepared with a distinct comparative advantage...

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Aug 12, 2021Liked by Geary Johansen

Yes, most take whatever the dealer financing is, and rather than negotiate on price, they decide based on down and monthly payments.

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Aug 13, 2021Liked by Geary Johansen

Another solid article. Wish I had some people to share with but they are all ADD so any article this length is a no go! It would be awesome to have some sort of merit system for immigration but you know that will never happen here. Trump was labeled a racist for even bringing it up and as long as the press is in bed with the left to rile up the masses--anyone who promotes it is toast. I really am not one to go to the extreme but the only way we will ever get this country back is through a civil war. That is not hyperbole. In two years we will take back the house and senate and in 2024 Trump will get reelected. Fraud will not win out the day next time. If anyone thinks the riots of 2020 were bad and they were--wait for a 2024. In the mean time, we have our inner cities decimated with crime. Murder in broad daylight isn't a shock to anyone. Thugs commit burglary with no consequence. Police are retiring in droves and will only get worse. Our institutions that are suppose to protect us, don't. The FBI, CIA and Justice Departments are corrupt to the core spending more time on a NASCAR hoax than election integrity. Politicians openly defy subpoenas with no consequence. Our schools at every level are killing education to where Oregon won't even require math and English and CRT is pushed. I could go on and on. I have always been hopeful but without a free and fair press we are screwed. I hope I am wrong, but I don't thank so. So we are diligently preparing for the worst hoping for the best.

I appreciate your perspective, I long for the day when people could agree to disagree without a label being thrown. I didn't agree with much of Christopher Hitchens back in the day but he was so worth the time to get his perspective. Now I have substack, something that reminds me of the better days. I take no pleasure in my grammar especially since my dad was a English grammar teacher for 30 years in high school and I did not take him!

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The policing situation is going to get a lot worse before it gets better. The Left is partially right about policies like violence interrupters and community resourcing, but what they fail to understand is that these approaches only tend to have an effect when paired with proactive policing, or the much loathed Broken Windows approach- that was what the Scotland public health approach proved conclusively. Plus, it really needs to be focused on youth crime, because it is far easier to reform the young.

It's going to take at least 15 years to recover to former homicide rates.

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As always a very thoughtful approach. Yes! Let's bring back "stop and frisk" coupled with community resourcing/outreach. This approach would be highly popular, so it would be fought at every turn by the race hustlers.

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Aug 13, 2021Liked by Geary Johansen

How do we survive worse? I wish Scotland's income threshold was lower for Americans wanting to retire there.

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Aug 12, 2021Liked by Geary Johansen

If one looks at a standard profile of immigrants one does tend to find they are prepared to work harder for less money. This of course is going to impact easily replaceable native workers. However, immigrants also take the jobs native workers are reluctant to. Thus they don't wholly replace native workers when they do take jobs. These unpopular jobs do need to be filled. Here in Japan they don't want immigrants but have several sectors which are short staffed (particularly in care homes for example). They are forced to take immigrants but the problem is care workers are none too keen to work in Japan given the very high barriers to entry and hostile bureaucracy. I merely mention all this to indicate the situation is not a one size fits all and an Australian points system isn't necessarily the panacea it seems.

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Of course there are exceptions- seasonal agriculture, care workers and many service jobs, etc. It wouldn't be a problem if there was a complete ban in certain sectors- construction, manufacturing, lorry driving- all the jobs which blue collar male workers depend upon for employment. That being said Australia has a thriving economy and they seem to somehow negotiate these issues.

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Aug 13, 2021Liked by Geary Johansen

You cannot pay people to stay home and expect them to step into the labor force. Many of these jobs are entry level and meant to teach a person how to work, prepare them for advancement. Learning to work requires an ethic, too often lacking. Rome showed the danger of uncontrolled borders and a fat citizenry.

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Aug 13, 2021Liked by Geary Johansen

It's difficult to control borders when every state including your own is expationist to the nth degree as in the case of Rome. Just to confim I understand your post correctly - are you saying that native expectations are too high and that some do not possess a work ethic?

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I’m not certain if you mean “expansionist” but if so I don’t know exactly how you mean that. In our case, we do like lots of goodies at low prices and as long as Pedro is will to do our lawn work at less than the neighbor boy will do it, the neighbor boy is out of work. Pretty soon the neighbor boy figures that work is a losing proposition and he’d rather play video games and live off dad. As to native expectations, I suspect you refer to the tendency of too many Americans to expect a position rather than a job. My point is that this behavior has been trained over time by over generous welfare entitlements as well as the downplay of the dignity of work, including labor. There will always be a laboring class in any civilization. The question is who will the laborers be and what will be their status. Broadly speaking, American laborers were accepted as part of the community but, more importantly, had the opportunity to attempt to move out of the laboring class and establish themselves as tradesmen, craftsmen or businessmen. Mobility was a real potential. By denigrating work, we have sentenced millions of Americans to eternal dependency and ensure the need for an ever increasing flow of low skill migrants to “do the work that Americans won’t do.” This is not sustainable.

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Expansionism referenced your comment about Rome. Rather than a 'uncontrolled borders and a fat citizenry' one had an environment where expationist groups competed with each other for bigger and bigger slices of the pie. For a long time Rome was the most successful (in fact, eventually too successful) but was superceeded and dismembered by other expationist groups. It was not an example of a state brought down by immigration.

The points you make about immigrants are good ones. However, if we look at responsibility whose is it? The local who doesn't want to compete with the immigrant because the money is too low, the immigrant who accepts a lower wage because they want to get on or the employer who is happy to pay less for the same or a better level of service. What would be your solution to this situation - a guaranteed minimum wage, top up benefits?

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You are correct that the citizens grew fat and lazy as a result of their phenomenal success and wealth. Among other ills created by this luxury, they declined to defend their borders. Rome had created an empire based on immigration and assimilation. They welcomed people from conquered nations into Rome, they could even purchase citizenship. The key to Rome’s success was ensuring that the newcomers were not allowed to settle together, they had to spread out, adopt the language and customs of Romans. This created one of the most diverse societies in the ancient world but also ensured a common language and culture. When Rome ceased to defend its borders and grew too weak to enforce this assimilation invading Germanic tribes swarmed over the borders and settled in the Po River valley. Eventually they became strong enough to overthrow Rome. Although Rome successfully drove them out, Rome’s decline was sealed. It never regained its former power and reach. Culture matters and no country can long survive with competing cultures.

Government’s role is to secure the borders, not set wage rates. A sustainable immigration policy would allow those workers entry who can contribute without detriment to our own citizens. Absent cheap, and often illegal, labor the wage rates would be used to secure the labor required and when wage rates exceeded the market ability to pay innovation would solve the problem as it always did.

Responsibility is a useful concept and should be studied, but not before the border is secured and the invasion staunched.

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Aug 15, 2021Liked by Geary Johansen

To clear up a misunderstanding, I wasn't saying that Roman citizenry were complacent and lazy. Here I was quoting your initial post. Rome failed to defend it's borders because it couldn't. It relied on its wealth extracted from its empire and its standing army. The latter is what made the difference in the expantionist phase of the empire. It worked well but eventually hit the inevitable barrier all empires hit. The empire was too big for the size of army it needed. Simply put they couldn't pay for it all. The legions were spread too thin and with other expantionist groups able to concentrate force the empire was doomed. The Roman method of fighting had dominated the region but was outmanoeuvred by more innovative tactics. However, Rome chose to go down the path of a standing army to gain dominance. Communications should also be factored in to the situation. The Roman empire was big and it took time for news to filter back to the centre. Recalling or transferring legions was a slow process and any response was likewise delayed. Eventually Rome was forced to split into an Eastern and Western empire to deal with its challenges. The peripheries (like Britain) were cut loose - they just cost too much. However, this was all because of the expantionist environment not immigration. The model was to take and for a long time Rome was the best at this. One does not see a similar situation in the US. People may want a share of the pie but they don't want the whole pie as they did in past times. This of course throws up its own unique challenges but doesn't equate to the imperial experience.

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