Wired’s Matt Ridley: Don’t Panic, We Can Dig Ourselves Out of this Hole.

Wired, it should be obvious if you’ve ever opened the magazine or been to the website, is a magazine for technologists. That is, for people who turn to technology to solve humanity’s problems. Or, as is the case with Wall Street Journal columnist and Wired‘s September cover story author Matt Ridley, people who believe in the omnipotence, and apparently, the omniscience, of technology.

Ridley calls himself a “rational optimist,” (it’s the title of his most recent book) which is actually an accurate description of the basic editorial position of Wired and the Wall Street Journal. As a rule, these publications are bullish on science and technology (which they would shorthand as “progress”), and dismissive or hostile toward warnings that every bacchanal brings a hangover. This idea springs directly from the sort of rational optimism Ridley speaks of. If we just stop freaking out, Ridley claims, the ur-technologist, or simply technology itself, will solve our problems. Freaking out seems to mean demanding that the government do something, though he never makes it clear what negative impacts he thinks this fretting or fear actually has. The idea of being a “rational optimist” isn’t really remarkable at all. After all, this worldview under-girds the entire apparatus of global capitalist society.

What is remarkable is that rather than use current examples of problems where political intervention in the market, spurred by all this apocalyptic thinking, is hindering solution-making (here’s one possibility), Ridley decides to use historical examples. The examples he picks all curiously undermine his point. That’s because they all demonstrate just how effective alarmist predictions can be at creating important policy changes.

Continue reading “Wired’s Matt Ridley: Don’t Panic, We Can Dig Ourselves Out of this Hole.”

Ryan’s Selection Puts Farm Bill Front and Center, for a Minute.

President Obama visited Iowa yesterday, and took the opportunity to remind everyone, especially agricultural swing state voters, that Congress, or as Obama would prefer it, the “Ryan Congress” (who’s this John Boehner guy you speak of?) can’t decide whether they want to undermine farmers through legislation, or through inaction. This was both disingenuous (what, campaign talk that isn’t 100% true? Outrage!) and important. Because the Farm Bill is the most important omnibus piece of social engineering that Congress has debated since the Affordable Care Act, and everybody there is getting it all wrong. Of course, we quite promptly shifted our attention on to the very important things, like Joe Biden saying “y’all” and the Romney campaign crying slander. Continue reading “Ryan’s Selection Puts Farm Bill Front and Center, for a Minute.”

Save Coal Miners: Just Say No to Coal Power.

President Obama says we need more than prayers to protect coal miners, we need action. He’s right. Unfortunately, he’s also wrong.

Specifically, he’s wrong about clean coal. This amazingly durable boondoggle has been a buzzword for “free money” to interest groups and “jobs” to unions and workers in the coal states. States where presidential elections have been won or lost the past two decades; Pennsylvania, Ohio, Virginia, West Virginia and Montana (the latter two were closer than you might think in the last election). The one thing clean coal definitely isn’t, however, is good for coal miners.

A lot has changed since 1908, but coal mining remains one of America's most dangerous jobs.
West Virginia Coal Miners in 1908.

Coal mining is one of the most dangerous, dirty, unhealthy jobs on the planet. Thousands of people die around the world every year in coal mining accidents. Admittedly, most of those deaths are in China, which has 19th century worker protection. Continue reading “Save Coal Miners: Just Say No to Coal Power.”

$86 Million More Against the Climate

Once again, future generations’ ability to endure on the planet has been compromised by our current chronic inability to live within our means. The Montana State Land Board voted last week to accept $86 million from Arch Coal Inc. for rights to dig nearly a billion tons of coal from beneath state land in southern Montana. Each of the 3 yes voters, including Democratic governor Brian Schweitzer, cited the state’s budget woes as the main reason to take the money.

Both Arch Coal and Schweitzer say it will be at least 7 years before mining begins in the area. (Pshah, that’s such a long time from now, what have we got to worry about!?!) Continue reading “$86 Million More Against the Climate”