Bear with me for a minute while I provide an analogy of what happened using a commodity that we are all familiar with: What if your company gave you 'first dollar' Food and Drink insurance? In other words, your food and beverages are part of your compensation. When you're hungry, you whip out your insurance card and for free or a de minimis charge at the point of delivery, you can order whatever you want. How would your behavior change? Three ways:
Every time someone reads this blog an angel gets its wings. - Zuzu, the Elder
Sunday, January 31, 2010
Medicare, Bastiat and the Balm of Geezerad
Bear with me for a minute while I provide an analogy of what happened using a commodity that we are all familiar with: What if your company gave you 'first dollar' Food and Drink insurance? In other words, your food and beverages are part of your compensation. When you're hungry, you whip out your insurance card and for free or a de minimis charge at the point of delivery, you can order whatever you want. How would your behavior change? Three ways:
Saturday, January 30, 2010
Investors now consider US a greater default risk than Coca Cola
Hawaii votes down same sex marriage
Thursday, January 28, 2010
On perversion
Stunned Wall Street doesn't want war with Obama
Obama perpetuates myth that GWB was a free marketer
Wednesday, January 27, 2010
Oh Good Grief
The Collapse of the Income Tax
Tuesday, January 26, 2010
Magnificent
How do you know what you know 5
Abe Foxman and the critical unseriousness of the Jewish Left
Why do our schools do so poorly?
The Choice of the World [John Hood]
Periodically I like to peruse the book of education data published annually by theOrganization for Economic Cooperation and Development. While the education establishment often cites international competition as a reason for American taxpayers to fork over more and more money, rarely do our educrats express any real curiosity about why students in other developed countries so often outperform American students, particularly at the high-school level.
It certainly isn't a product of greater public investment. America spends more tax dollars per pupil on education than almost every other country on the planet. Cultural differences, higher academic standards, and less psycho-babble in the training of teachers are some of the factors explaining the difference. Another fact to keep in mind is that many of the OECD countries whose high-school students outperform American kids provide parents more choice among tax-subsidized schools.
According to the most recent data, for example, a majority of high-schoolers in the Netherlands, Belgium, and Chile attend private schools, usually with a tax subsidy of one kind or another. About half of British and Korean students, one-third of French and Japanese students, and one-quarter of New Zealand and Australian students enroll in private high schools, as well. Fewer than 10 percent of U.S. students do so — though polls show that many would opt for private high schools if given the choice.
Let's do it.
Monday, January 25, 2010
Tithe Eaters?
I recently compared the membership directory of my Church to the one from 1980. It turns out that today there are 33% more staff for a solidly evangelical church that has roughly the same membership and attendance as back then. To be fair, the Church has two more services and a flourishing Wednesday night program, none of which existed in 1980. But I couldn’t help but be struck by the difference between my church’s historical staffing performance and that of other industries that I am familiar with. Had we been a typical manufacturer, we would be doing the same tasks with one third the staff of 1980[1]. Had we been Wal Mart, we would have used only one fifth of the staff to get the same work done[2], the average bank, half[3].
Now Church is not Wal Mart and a manufacturer’s goal is not God’s. But it is a commonly observed characteristic of Churches that while people work hard and often long, the intensity and focus typical of well run investor owned organizations is lacking. There is a carelessness with time if not money that one doesn’t normally experience in well run private businesses. Why should this be? After all, the Church’s mission is infinitely more important than any businesses’. And any resources the Church can save from its daily operations can be invested in Kingdom efforts that have a far greater return than T Bills. So why do private businesses do more with less each and every year and Churches and Christian schools don’t?
Institutional Integrity
I believe that while Churches are focused on individual integrity they tend to struggle with institutional integrity. In my definition, institutional Integrity is the commitment that an organization makes to the achievement of a specific goal. Whatever you believe about its ‘morality’ Wal Mart exhibits a high level of institutional integrity. Sam Walton founded his business because he wanted to bring low priced brand name merchandise to small towns, just like the big cities. Since then, “Every Day Low Prices” for common people has been Wal Mart’s (and Sam’s Club’s) singular focus. And they’ve delivered – largely due to Wal Mart’s unceasing focus on cost reduction, the price of the things that Americans use every day has fallen dramatically. Everything Wal Mart does is focused on lowering costs to the consumer. For example, a friend of mine was an executive with a (soon to be bankrupt) specialty retailer. He tells of going to a conference at a tropical resort: as was customary, he took a room at a luxury hotel. His two counterparts from Wal Mart – by then the richest retailer in the history of the world, doubled up at a discount motel.
By contrast, while all Churches have goals, they generally don’t look upon the resources that they command with the hard-nosed perspective of an investor. We aren’t asking: “Where can we deploy these resources for highest impact for the kingdom? Where can we use technology or technique to become much more productive? Instead we tend to spread our efforts like peanut butter over many activities to please influential parishioners and givers. We don’t seek continuous improvement that allows us to do more with less. We react rather than pursue the goal.
We management consultants often note that the most successful companies - the ones with the most institutional integrity and commitment towards their goal - are seldom the most pleasant places to work. These companies have a sense of ‘driven-ness’ a commitment to excel against a specific goal that comes from inside the institution and the people themselves. It’s often exhausting to work for such a company because doing the best for the goal often takes a lot out of employees.
I’m not saying that the staff at my Church don’t work hard because they do. But the lack of focus on productivity, the notion that we must get more done with less each year so that we’ll grow and have more to share with others is as foreign to Church as it is integral to business. And it results in wasted effort. Effort that could be diverted to higher impact ministries. Wasted money that could better spent elsewhere. We seem to be comfortable with being comfortable. Because we don’t challenge ourselves to do more with less, we end up doing less with more. Slowly, inexorably, our Churches become Tithe Eaters, consuming the resources that God has given us to expand the Kingdom for our own comfort, our own ease.
The Parable of the talents sets the standard: The rich man gave money to three men. The two that he praised as “good and faithful servants” doubled the money they had been entrusted. The wicked servant merely preserved the principal, failing to earn even a moneylender’s interest. I fear that many of our Christian institutions are doing even worse than the wicked servant: returning even less than we are given.
It’s time to ask not only are we doing God’s will but are we doing it more productively each year.
It’s time to stop being Tithe Eaters.
[1] Bureau of Labor Statistics http://www.bls.gov/news.release/pdf/prod4.pdf
[2] The Power of Productivity, McKinsey Global Institute
[3] Bureau of Labor Statistics: http://www.bls.gov/news.release/prin2.t02.htm
Frank Rich: Fearing for the "One"
I particularly like him citing JFK to BHO. JFK: a politician to the right of GWB. A tax cutter. A man with a decisive pro-American foreign policy. A man who believed in color blindness. Hey! Waitaminit, this Richy Rich guy is starting to make sense.
Hey Mikey! We like it!
When FR starts (accidentally, yes) citing JFK as a role model for BHO, you know that there is Hope for Change.
Teleprompters at Elementary Schools
Got Kids?
Amazed at how expensive and ineffective their teachers are? Here’s some free help – from a guy who actually knows what he’s talking about.
Sunday, January 24, 2010
Stop the State!
Thank My Lucky Scars
The Islamicization of the World
“The Netherlands, of course, is not comparable with Iran, but it's about perception. If you cannot say that Islam is a backward religion and that Mohammed is a criminal, then you are living in an Islamic country, my friend, because there also you cannot say such things. Here I'm free to say that Christ was a faggot* and Mary was a whore, but apparently I should stay off of Mohammed.”
China has 32 Million more young men than young women
Saturday, January 23, 2010
How do you know what you know 5
Any government that can't control its public employee unions is doomed
Our President: Detached and floating away
A Man of the Hoi Polloi
Friday, January 22, 2010
Must be an empty shed
Is it just me or is Jon Stewart getting funnier?
Who would have predicted....
Insider Trading and the Battle of the Sexes
Stay away! Stay away!
Creating criminals and then becoming criminals to catch them
Thursday, January 21, 2010
SCOTUS Strikes Down Key Provisions of Campaign Finance Law
How do you know what you know 4
See here.
Holy Tourism
Hubris? Or direction?
Wednesday, January 20, 2010
No longer economically that free
Humility
Mortimer Zuckerman - "He's Done Everything Wrong"
Brown the Republican Front Runner for President?
Why Scott Brown Won - The Real Story
Without the manipulation, there would have been no election and Obama would still have his 60 seat majority. Poetic justice, no?
John Steele Gordon has more here.
Hitler Finds Out Scott Brown Won
Tuesday, January 19, 2010
As good a time as any for a Churchill quote
A Fool and his filibuster-proof majority are soon parted
Pray for the Haitians
Christians AWOL?
Monday, January 18, 2010
All I want is to be home
How do you know what you know? - 3
Just as Al Gore has notoriously declined debate, elected Democratic officials seem determined to reinforce the fiction of “climate consensus” by refusing to acknowledge dissident voices.
Republican Fred Upton — a Michigan congressman on the House energy committee — eagerly accepted our invitation (Michigan Republican Mike Rogers would have also come; Sen. James Inhofe was interested, had his schedule permitted his attendance. ). But his Democratic committee opposite, Michigan Rep. Bart Stupak, passed. As did Rep. Sandy Levin. And Sen. Debbie Stabenow. And Rep. Gary Peters. And Gov. Jennifer Granholm. And so on.
We tried to fill the seat with environmental activists and they also declined. One prominent green responded to our phone call with ad hominem attacks on climatologist Patrick Michaels as a ”liar” and CEI’s Myron Ebell as a fraud. Shut up, he argued. Eventually, Skip Pruss — Granholm’s chief energy officer — jumped at the chance to debate. My hat is off to Skip.
Cliff Claven (of Cheers) on the Woodstock Generation
This isn't the Democratic party of our fathers and grandfathers. This is the party of Woodstock hippies. I was at Woodstock — I built the stage. And when everything fell apart, and people were fighting for peanut-butter sandwiches, it was the National Guard who came in and saved the same people who were protesting them. So when Hillary
Clinton a few years ago wanted to build a Woodstock memorial, I said it should be a statue of a National Guardsman feeding a crying hippie.
The Roots of Obama Worship.
How Regulation Really Works
Mark Ernst, in December 2007, was chief executive officer of H&R Block, the nation's largest tax-preparation company. Thirteen months later, once President Obama took office, Ernst was named a deputy commissioner at the Internal Revenue Service, where he would spend his first year drafting new regulations for tax preparers--regulations that H&R Block welcomes and market analysts say will benefit the company.
With Ernst in mind, recall Barack Obama's campaign pledge: "No political appointees in an Obama administration will be permitted to work on regulations or contracts directly and substantially related to their prior employer for two years."