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Daily Archives: February 18, 2021
Shipboard Technology Evaluation Program: Revised Application for Ballast Water Management Systems Homeland Security Today – HSToday
Posted: February 18, 2021 at 2:39 pm
The Coast Guards Office of Operating and Environmental Standards has published a revised 2021 Shipboard Technology Evaluation Program (STEP) Application Package. This application facilitates the process for both prototype Ballast Water Management Systems (BWMS) and BWMS undergoing U.S. Type Approval testing under the oversight of an Independent Laboratory (IL). The application and instructions for submitting are available on the Office of Operating and Environmental Standardswebpage.
The STEP application incorporates fully validated experimental design parameters developed through the U.S. Environmental Protection Agencys Environmental Technology Verification (ETV) process, as well as ETV harmonized shipboard testing requirements. Navigation and Vessel Inspection Circular 01-04 (NVIC 01-04) establishes the process and gives additional information for vessel owners to apply to STEP.
The revised format is intended to assist applicants to prepare and submit all necessary information in a clear and consistent manner, thus facilitating the review process. Potential applicants should familiarize themselves with the guidance before completing the application. There is NO CHARGE for applying to or being enrolled in STEP.
If you have questions, please contact the Chief of the Environmental Standards Division at[emailprotected]
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Aspen Technology to Present at the KeyBanc Emerging Technology Summit – Business Wire
Posted: at 2:39 pm
BEDFORD, Mass.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Aspen Technology, Inc. (NASDAQ:AZPN), a global leader in asset optimization software, today announced that Antonio Pietri, President and Chief Executive Officer, and Karl Johnsen, Chief Financial Officer, will present at the KeyBanc Emerging Technology Virtual Summit. The presentation is scheduled for Wednesday, February 24, 2021 at 10:55 a.m. ET.
The presentation will be webcast live and available for a limited time on the Investor Relations section of the companys website at http://ir.aspentech.com/.
About AspenTech
Aspen Technology (AspenTech) is a global leader in asset optimization software. Its solutions address complex, industrial environments where it is critical to optimize the asset design, operation and maintenance lifecycle. AspenTech uniquely combines decades of process modelling expertise with artificial intelligence. Its purpose-built software platform automates knowledge work and builds sustainable competitive advantage by delivering high returns over the entire asset lifecycle. As a result, companies in capital-intensive industries can maximize uptime and push the limits of performance, running their assets safer, greener, longer and faster. Visit AspenTech.com to find out more.
2021 Aspen Technology, Inc. AspenTech and the Aspen leaf logo are trademarks of Aspen Technology, Inc.
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Cascade and Battelle Collaborate to Apply Patented Environmental Remediation Technology for Recalcitrant Contaminants – Yahoo Finance
Posted: at 2:39 pm
Battelle, the worlds largest independent private R&D organization, announced today that it is in discussions to provide Cascade Environmental with a patented process (International Patent US10,907,143 B2) for the use of encapsulated enzymes to remediate recalcitrant pollutants.
Cascade Environmental, a leading provider of environmental and infrastructure drilling, site characterization and environmental remediation applications, is exploring use of Battelles technology at its sites.
Battelles optimized encapsulation process yields a unique formulation of proprietary mixture of fungal-derived, oxidoreducing, time-released enzymes for rapid degradation of recalcitrant contaminants. The structure and composition of encapsulated enzyme beads are highly effective for remediation of petroleum hydrocarbons (TPHs), polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs).
When compared to invasive technologies such as excavation, in situ or ex situ application of encapsulated enzymes to soil, groundwater and sediment has multiple benefits. The encapsulated enzyme formulation, currently demonstrating two-year shelf stability, has a broad spectrum of treatment and provides a controlled release of enzymes to the contaminated matrix eliminating multiple application events. This technology requires minimum effort at application, generates no waste and promotes complete degradation of pollutants via enrichment of naturally abundant microorganisms as the contaminant becomes more bioavailable after enzymatic treatment.
"Were pleased to begin working with Cascade in this promising technology collaboration that will have broad industry impact," said Dan Longbrake, Commercial Business Director for PFAS and Environmental Restoration. "We expect to be able to release more information as we finalize details."
Co-inventors of the process are Battelle researchers Kate Kucharzyk, Tony Duong and former Battelle researcher Ram Lalgudi.
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"Adding a slow-release enzymatic chemistry solution to the new Cascade Chemistries line of products deepens our capabilities to support our clients at their challenging TPH, PCB and PAH-impacted sites," said Scott Wisher, Senior Vice President at Cascade. "We envision these chemistries being appropriate for in situ injection along with conventional remediation including soil blending."
About Battelle
Every day, the people of Battelle apply science and technology to solving what matters most. At major technology centers and national laboratories around the world, Battelle conducts research and development, designs and manufactures products, and delivers critical services for government and commercial customers. Headquartered in Columbus, Ohio since its founding in 1929, Battelle serves the national security, health and life sciences, and energy and environmental industries. For more information, visit http://www.battelle.org.
About Cascade
Cascade is a field services contractor that partners with our clients to provide seamless environmental and geotechnical solutions from concept to completion. Our vision is to integrate technology, safety, sustainability, and human potential to tackle the challenging environmental and geotechnical issues facing our clients. For more information on Cascade, please visit http://www.cascade-env.com.
For more information on the new injection chemistries and integrated turnkey remediation services, contact Eliot Cooper, Vice President of Technology at ecooper@cascade-env.com.
View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20210218005758/en/
Contacts
Katy Delaney(614) 424-7208delaneyk@battelle.org
T.R. Massey(614) 424-5544masseytr@battelle.org
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Opinion | The Coming Technology Boom – The New York Times
Posted: at 2:39 pm
A few months ago, the economic analyst Noah Smith observed that scientific advance is like mining ore. You find a vein you think is promising. You take a risk and invest heavily. You explore it until it taps out.
The problem has been that over the last few decades only a few veins have really been paying off and changing lives. Discoveries in information technology have obviously been massive the internet and the smartphone. Thanks in part to public investment, clean energy innovation has been fast and plentiful. The price of solar modules has declined by 99.6 percent since 1976.
But life-altering breakthroughs, while still significant, are fewer than they once were. If you were born in 1900 and died in 1970, you lived from the age of the horse-drawn carriage to the era of a man on the moon. You saw the widespread use of electricity, air-conditioning, aviation, the automobile, penicillin, and so much else. But if you were born in 1960 and lived until today, the driving and flying experience would be safer, but otherwise the same, and your kitchen, aside from the microwave, is basically unchanged.
In 2011, the economist Tyler Cowen published a prescient book, The Great Stagnation, exploring why scientific advance was slowing down. Peter Thiel complained that we wanted flying cars, but we got Twitter.
But this technological lull may be ending. Suddenly a lot of smart people are writing about many veins that look promising. The first and most obvious is vaccines. The amazing fact about Covid-19 vaccines is that Moderna scientists had designed the first one by Jan. 13, 2020. They had the vaccine before many people even thought the disease was a threat.
Its not only a new vaccine but also a new kind of vaccine. The mRNA vaccines will help us teach our bodies to fight pathogens more effectively and could lead to breakthroughs in combating all sorts of diseases. For example, researchers have hope for mRNA cancer vaccines, which wouldnt prevent cancer, but could help your body fight some forms.
In energy, geothermal breakthroughs are generating tremendous excitement. As David Roberts notes in an excellent explainer in Vox, the molten core of the earth is about 10,000 degrees Fahrenheit, roughly the same temperature as the sun. If we could tap 0.1 percent of the energy under the earths surface we could supply humanitys total energy needs for two million years.
Engineers are figuring out how to mine the heat in the nonporous rock beneath the surface. As Roberts writes, If its more enthusiastic backers are correct, geothermal may hold the key to making 100 percent clean electricity available to everyone in the world.
This is not even to mention fusion. In one of those stories that felt epochal when you read it, my Times colleague Henry Fountain reported last September on how M.I.T. researchers had designed a compact nuclear reactor that should work. China currently has an experimental thermonuclear reactor that is reaching 270 million degrees Fahrenheit.
It feels like autonomous vehicles have been three years away for the last 10 years. But sooner or later they will arrive. Waymo has already started a driverless rides service in Phoenix like Uber and Lyft, but with nobody in the front seat.
Meanwhile, in the electric car sector, Toyota is developing a vehicle that can go 310 miles on one charge and can charge from zero to full in 10 minutes.
One could go on: artificial intelligence; space exploration seems to be heating up; a variety of anti-aging technologies are being pursued; on Wednesday The Times reported on an anti-obesity drug. Theres even lab-grown meat. This is meat grown from animal cells that would enable us to enjoy steaks and Chicken McNuggets without actually slaughtering cows and chickens.
Obviously, all these veins are not going to pay off, but what if we gradually created a world with clean cheap energy, driverless cars and more energetic productive years in our lives?
On the plus side, global productivity would surge. What economists call total factor productivity has been grinding along with 0 to 2 percent increases for years. But a series of breakthroughs could keep productivity surging. Our economy, and world, would feel very different.
On the negative side, the dislocations would be enormous, too. What happens to all those drivers? What happens to people who work on ranches if labs take a significant share of the market? The political difficulties will be complicated by the fact that the people who will profit from these high-tech industries tend to live in the highly educated blue parts of the country, while the old industry workers who would be displaced tend to live in the less educated red parts.
We would be riding the tiger of rapid change. The economy would grow faster but millions of people would have trouble finding a place in it. Universal basic income would become a red-hot topic.
Government investment has spurred a lot of this progress. Government would have to come up with aggressive ways to mitigate the shocks. But it is better to face the challenges of dynamism than the challenges of stasis. Life would be longer and healthier, energy would be cleaner and cheaper, there would be a greater sense of progress and wonder.
In a week of political gloom, I thought youd like some good news.
The Times is committed to publishing a diversity of letters to the editor. Wed like to hear what you think about this or any of our articles. Here are some tips. And heres our email: letters@nytimes.com.
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Lumen Technologies is the only company to win Frost & Sullivan’s prestigious 2021 Global New Product Innovation Award for its Holistic Web…
Posted: at 2:39 pm
DENVER, Feb. 18, 2021 /PRNewswire/ -- As the 4th Industrial Revolution continues to rapidly transform the way businesses operate, Lumen Technologies(NYSE: LUMN)today announced that its efforts to reshape the enterprise security landscape has been recognized with a prestigious, global award.
Experience the interactive Multichannel News Release here: https://www.multivu.com/players/English/8524359-lumen-technologies-frost-and-sullivan-2021-global-new-product-innovation-award/
As the only recipient of the Frost & Sullivan 2021 Global New Product Innovation Award in the holistic web protection market, Lumen received the acclaim for its combination of enterprise security solutions including:
"We know businesses are looking for a trusted partner on the Edge," said Christopher Smith, Lumen Technologies vice president of platform applications. "Companies are facing new challenges that require them to get, use, and leverage their data at almost unimaginable speeds. The emerging technologies and data intensive needs for the 4IR demand that speed. Our networking, cloud and security solutions are the power these latency-sensitive, next-gen business applications need. We are honored that Frost & Sullivan recognized the innovation we bring to this front."
In recognizing Lumen for New Product Innovation, Frost & Sullivan notedthe company's focus on continually improving the customer experience. "By integrating Lumen DDoS mitigation solutions with WAF solutions, Lumen offers a complete capability designed to protect network and application layers," said Steven Lopez, Frost & Sullivan best practices research analyst. "Ultimately, streamlining the security strategy set in place to simplify, integrate, and automate the solution's capabilities, Lumen achieves the outcome for optimal efficiency and cost-effective customer experiences."
For more detailed information about Lumen's holistic web protection solutions or the Frost & Sullivan Award, please refer to the following resources:
Additional Resources:
About the Frost & Sullivan Award:
Frost & Sullivan is an international consulting company dedicated to helping clients accelerate growth and achieve best-in-class positions in innovation and leadership. The Best Practices Award recognizes companies in a variety of regional and global markets for demonstrating outstanding achievement and superior performance in areas such as leadership, technological innovation, customer service, and strategic product development. Frost & Sullivan industry analysts compare market participants and measure performance through in-depth interviews, analysis, and extensive secondary research to identify best practices.
About Lumen
Lumen is guided by our belief that humanity is at its best when technology advances the way we live and work. With 450,000 route fiber miles and serving customers in more than 60 countries, we deliver the fastest, most secure platform for applications and data to help businesses, government and communities deliver amazing experiences.
Learn more about Lumen's network, edge cloud, security, and communication and collaboration solutions, and about our purpose to further human progress through technology at news.lumen.com, LinkedIn: /lumentechnologies, Twitter: @lumentechco, Facebook: /lumentechnologies, Instagram: @lumentechnologies and YouTube: /lumentechnologies.
1 Forrester, The Total Economic Impact Study of Lumen DDoS Mitigation Service, April 2020.
Services not available everywhere. Business customers only. Lumen may change, cancel or substitute products and services, or vary them by service area at its sole discretion without notice. 2020 Lumen Technologies. All Rights Reserved.
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MedPilot merging with Vytalize in a big win for Cleveland’s technology community – News 5 Cleveland
Posted: at 2:39 pm
CLEVELAND MedPilot, a Cleveland-based technology company that has streamlined medical billing, is merging with New York-based medical technology company Vytalize.
The merger was approved by both companies' Boards of Directors on Jan. 29 and is still subject to shareholder approval. The companies arent discussing the terms of the deal but all 35 of MedPilots Cleveland workers will join Vytalizes workforce, which now will be nearly 100 people strong.
It was a significant win for our employees, our customers, our stakeholders and definitely the City of Cleveland, said MedPilot Co-Founder Matt Buder Shapiro.
The Companies
Vytalize was founded in 2014 and is headquartered in Hoboken, New Jersey. It works with primary care doctors to help manage and maximize reimbursement from Medicare while preventing unnecessary care.
Kevin Barry
MedPilot was founded in 2015 in New York City, established its first customers in 2017 and specializes in medical billing. The company later relocated to Cleveland, where two of its three founders originally lived. By using technology like emails, texts, and phone calls, MedPilot can better communicate billing information to medical patients when they are most likely to respond.
Vytalize Co-Founder and CEO Faris Ghawi says the two companies started working together when Vytalize was interested in being a MedPilot client.
After a couple of months of working together, we realized there was a bigger opportunity here, said Ghawi. One plus one equals more than two, so to speak.
Kevin Barry
Buder Shapiro says MedPilot will continue working with its current clients while adapting to new projects within Vytalize. Ghawi says the same technology that makes MedPilot successful in collecting medical bills while maintaining high customer satisfaction could also be used in other parts of healthcare.
Everything [MedPilot] built, you can tell it was built to do something much more than just patient billing and it was built for 10s of millions of patients, said Ghawi.
Ghawi says thats especially true right now after COVID has made many people of all ages much more comfortable using digital technology for healthcare-related tasks.
The Cleveland Impact
In the start-up world, the goal is often for a company to either scale up and make a profit solving a problem or sell the company to someone else for a lot of money. The second choice is called an exit.
In the past, start-up founders have praised Cleveland as a great place to bring their companies. The move allows them to take advantage of local universities that graduate young talent, a relatively low cost of living compared to cities on the coasts, and close proximity to large parts of the Midwest.
Kevin Barry
Brent Sanders moved to the west side of Cleveland after co-founding his software company, Formulated Automation, in Chicago. He says Cleveland is a great landing spot for established companies, but the region still lacks other founders who have started, run, and sold successful companies. Columbus, he says, is ahead of Cleveland in that specific area.
You have these generations where youve had exits, youve had liquidity events, and then now you have all these agent investors and you have this hotbed, said Sanders.
MedPilots merger shows other Cleveland founders that a headquarters on the coast isnt necessary for a successful exit. It attracted funding from Cleveland-based sources as part of the $3.5 million it raised over the last few years from investors.
Kevin Barry
This is doable and I think that the more that we can change that narrative, the more people will try to start companies, said Buder Shapiro.
The deal between Vytalize and MedPilot closed just days after Governor Mike DeWine announced the creation of the Cleveland Innovation District, which promises to bring $565 million of investment and 20,000 new jobs over the next decade.
The Cleveland Innovation District didnt have any impact on MedPilots merger but Buder Shapiro says the more ideas the community tries, the better chance it has to find something thats successful as it tries to become a technology hub.
Companies like Vytalize getting involved in Cleveland coming in with technology and not just healthcare, thats the future of Cleveland, said Buder Shapiro. You need to believe that there is a chance to have a successful exit and so we want to make sure that we change that narrative.
Stephen Travarca P-216.444.0768
Buder Shapiro and his co-founders have already been enthusiastic cheerleaders for Cleveland to anyone who will listen.
I cant have a conversation with the leadership at MedPilot without Cleveland being like every other word, said Ghawi.
The merger sets a good example but also creates a team of founders who can reinvest their earnings in other small businesses. Buder Shapiro has already done that in the past and he says he plans on continuing that work.
As an entrepreneur, its natural to invest, said Buder Shapiro. We see the most deals because theyre not deals to us. Theyre companies and fellow co-founders and entrepreneurs.
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Technology, growth, and inequality: Changing dynamics in the digital era – Brookings Institution
Posted: at 2:39 pm
Ours is a time of exciting technological change. The era of smart machines holds the promise of a more prosperous future for all. But it demands smarter policies to realize that promise. To capture potential gains in productivity and economic growth and to address rising inequality, policies will need to be more responsive to change as technology reshapes markets. And change will only intensify as artificial intelligence and other new advances drive digital transformation furtherand at an accelerated pace in the aftermath of the COVID-19 pandemic.
As technology shifts market dynamics, policies must ensure that markets remain inclusive and support broad access to the new opportunities for firms and workers. New thinking and policy adaptations are needed in areas such as competition policy, the innovation ecosystem, digital infrastructure development, upskilling and reskilling of workers, and social protection regimes. Fostering wider diffusion of new technologies among firms and building complementary capabilities in the workforce can deliver both stronger and more inclusive economic growth.
Major economic reform, inevitably, is politically complex. Todays deeper political divisions add to the challenges. But political support appears to be building in some key areas of reform, such as addressing the market dominance of tech giants and putting in place an adequate regulatory framework governing data. Crises can shift the political setting for reform. The fault lines exposed by the COVID-19 pandemic can catalyze action to address mounting economic disparities. All too often, reform is paralyzed by trite debates about conflicts between boosting economic growth and reducing inequality. Encouragingly, however, policy is increasingly being informed by research findings that show this to be a false dichotomy. In realizing the promise of brilliant new technologies, the growth and inclusion agendas are one and the same.
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Rush Limbaugh galvanised and embodied the modern American right – The Economist
Posted: at 2:38 pm
The talk-radio host died on February 17th, aged 70
IN 1987, AMERICAS Federal Communications Commission, which regulates the airwaves, repealed the Fairness Doctrine, a policy that required broadcasters to present balanced views of controversial subjects. One year later, a former executive at ABC radio gave an opinionated but little-known talk-radio host from Sacramento a nationally syndicated show. This contravened accepted practice; most nationally known radio hosts were bland and inoffensive interviewers, the better not to alienate a range of listeners.
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Rush Limbaugh was the opposite. His shows rarely had guests or more than a few brief pre-screened callersthe better to let him expound, for hours on end, on the ills of modern American society, most of which were the fault of liberals and the left. His political view was Manichean: easy to understand and engagingly delivered. He made no effort to credit opposing views; heand by extension his listenerswere defenders of all that was good about America, while the liberalism of Democrats, as he put it, is a scourge. It destroys the human spirit. It destroys prosperity. He built this simple format into one of the most popular radio programmes in America, attracting millions of listeners and inspiring scores of imitators.
Like Donald Trump, whose presidency he championed, he styled himself a tribune of the common man, willing to say things that no one dared but everyone thought. Indeed, much as William F. Buckleys libertarian-inflected traditionalism prefigured the conservatism of Barry Goldwater and Ronald Reagan, Mr Limbaughs cocksure derisiveness, and the glee he took in angering the left, provided the stylistic underpinnings of the contemporary, Trumpist Republican Party.
And like Mr Trump, he inspired a quasi-cultic following, with fans who called themselves Dittoheads, for the propensity to agree with everything he said, even thoughor, perhaps, especially becausethe things he said could be repellent. Feminism, he maintained, was established so that unattractive women could have easier access to the mainstream of society. He called gay men perverts, mocked people dying of AIDS and treated the rare phone-in guest who disagreed with him to a caller abortionhanging up after playing the sound of a vacuum motor. He told an African-American caller to take that bone out of your nose and call me back, remarked that all composite pictures of wanted criminals resemble Jesse Jackson, and said that the National Basketball Association should be renamed the Thug Basketball Association.
His first book, released in 1992, championed standard conservative views: small government, anti-environmentalism and a belief that racial relations will not be enhanced or prejudice eliminated by governmental edict. But few tuned in to hear what he was for. People wanted to hear him hate who they hated. He had particular scorn for Hillary Clinton, who he said kept her trophies in a testicle lockbox, and Barack Obama, who he mused may not have been an American citizen (he played a song on his programme called Barack the Magic Negro). He survived some embarrassing scrapes with the law, including getting stopped with Viagra prescribed for someone else in his luggage, and an oxycodone addiction. Being married four times did not seem to dent his traditionalist bona fides any more than did Mr Trumps being thrice married.
Mr Limbaugh continued broadcasting until February 2nd, though by then he was something of an elder statesman. The day after he announced that he had advanced lung cancer, Mr Trump awarded him the Presidential Medal of Freedom, Americas highest civilian honour, previously awarded to, among others, Jonas Salk, Felix Frankfurter and Martin Luther King junior. Yet that just testifies to how deeply Limbaughism had been absorbed into the conservative mainstreamits influences discernible in Trumpist Republicans demand for complete fealty, and their casting of political opponents, not as fellow Americans with whom they disagree but as evil. Those attributes make for entertaining radio. But they make governing impossible.
This article appeared in the United States section of the print edition under the headline "Tower of babble"
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News – The Bankruptcy of Conservative Political Paternalism – The Heartland Institute
Posted: at 2:38 pm
Political paternalism the belief that those in government possess more knowledge, wisdom, and ability to plan, guide, and direct various aspects of peoples lives better than those people themselves comes in many forms. The American progressive movement is euphoric with being, once again, close to power with the new Biden Administration in the hope of intensifying and extending their version of political paternalism on the country.
But there are conservative brands of political paternalism, as well. Now in the aftermath of Donald Trumps defeat in the presidential election, visions of a new conservative paternalism are being offered to save the conservative movement from both the collectivism of the progressives and from the free market libertarians who are accused of ignoring that there is more to life than liberty and material wealth. An example of such a call for a new conservative political paternalism may be found in an article by Oren Cass,A New Conservatism: Freeing the Right from Free Market Orthodoxy(Foreign Affairs, March/April 2021).
Mr. Cass served as a domestic policy director for Mitt Romneys presidential bid in 2012, and in 2020 founded American Compass, a think-tank focused on post-Trump conservative politics, after having worked for a time as a research fellow with the Manhattan Institute. He never uses the term political paternalism in this article; it nonetheless remains a fact that what he advocates is a conservative agenda for activist government that can bring about a coalition of social and economic interest groups in ways different from that of the progressives in the Democratic Party to assure Republican successes in future elections.
It is not that Mr. Cass is against free market ideas and policies, per se; indeed he thinks they were useful and even necessary back in the 1980s, when social conservatives, foreign policy interventionists, and free market libertarians needed to help win the Cold War being fought with the Soviet Union, and defeat a variety of misguided domestic policies. But that was then, and this is now.
Times have changed, as they always do. Mr. Cass says that in the post-Cold War world conservative economic thinking atrophied, and libertarian ideas ossified into market fundamentalism in the controlling hands of an unnamed clique of market fundamentalists who have become wrongly identified with conservatism. Then came along Donald Trump who lacked any discernible ideology or capacity for governing. Trumpism simply has been a cult of personality, which now that he is off the presidential stage of history, leaves the future direction of a conservatism reborn up for grabs.
So, what are the sins of those who advocate this market fundamentalism, Mr. Casss opposition to which is not much different from its rejection by the broad coalition of those on the political left? It seems that libertarians, which is just another name for market fundamentalists in his political lexicon, are obsessed with liberty to the exclusion of other values. We are told:
Markets reduce people to their material interests, and reduce relationships to transactions. They prioritize efficiency to the exclusion of resilience, sentiment, and tradition. Shorn of constraints, they often reward the most socially corrosive behaviors and can quickly undermine the foundations of a stable community for instance, pushing families to commit both parents to full-time market labor or to strip-mining talent from across the nation and consolidating it in a narrow set of cosmopolitan hubs.
Alas, Mr. Cass declares, Libertarians have no time for such nuance. Being unable to distinguish between what markets can and cannot do and unwilling to acknowledge the harm that they can cause, they, instead, blindly pursue the unquestioned priorities of personal freedom and consumption.
What markets, free and uncontrolled by political constraints, tend to do, he warns, is undermine traditions and morals,Co weaken communities, and leave no sense of the common tasks for national betterment. In a list of concerns not much different from those of the progressives, Mr. Cass insists that libertarian market fundamentalists give no consideration to the deleterious effects of income inequality, concentration of community-impacting decision-making in large corporate hands, and place seemingly no importance on the cultivating and fostering of the right values in society as a whole and the educational system in particular.
So, what does he propose as his activist political agenda for a new conservatism? Well, it really comes down to pretty much the same conservative paternalism of times in the past. The national interest comes before the individuals own interest, as reflected in his calling for more of the same Mercantilist directing of economic affairs to assure that America does not lose out to a rising China. Industries, clearly, need to be protected, sectors of the economy must be supported, as well as directed as to where businesses are to be located, especially since Mr. Cass wants to decentralize where people live and work in a more balanced pattern away from large metropolitan areas.
In other words, this would be his own form of central planning of foreign trade and domestic industry, along with some type of national zoning designed to create the population distributions between town and country that he considers to be better than at present. No doubt, Mr. Cass would loudly object that he is not a socialist wanting to plan the economy. But, in fact, this would simply be a form of government direction of economic affairs that in the France of the 1950s was called indicative planning. The government does not directly control and command the countrys economic affairs; instead, it uses fiscal and regulatory tools to nudge private enterprises into those directions and activities the government social engineers want, while seeming to leave it all up to private sector businessmen within a tamed market economy. Nevertheless, a planning mindset and mechanism by any other name still remains political paternalism and social engineering.
How does Mr. Cass propose to deal with economic inequality and the imbalances between workers and employers? First, it might be pointed out that his despair that market fundamentalism has forced both parents in a household to earn a living in the labor market has a lot to do with the tax burdens on the average American family that create the necessity for there to be more than one breadwinner. Or perhaps he has not noticed the various amounts of income the government siphons off out of peoples paychecks, particularly, in places like California and New York and many other states, before there is any money left to bring home to cover household expenses. The fiscal follies of the federal and state governments in funding the interventionist-welfare state cannot be placed at the door of the free market. This has more to do with government-knows-best fundamentalism.
Furthermore, he seems to have an implied image of the little woman (which in our transgender world can be a him or a her depending upon how they feel that day when they wake up) should be staying at home cooking away at the hearth. Well, as Mr. Cass says himself, times change, and many women, besides any needed family income, would prefer to work outside of the home pursuing a career and having multiple sides to a meaning to their life. Many of them might not appreciate a conservative nudger trying to manipulate how they live and for what values in mind through household-focused indicative planning.
He clearly feels that the degree to which government directly redistributes income undermines a variety of the traditional virtues that he values. But he is uncomfortable with the tried and true market fundamentalist methods of low taxes and deregulated competitive capitalism to foster the physical and human capital investment that over time raises the productivity and wages of those employed to bring about rising incomes across groups and individuals in society as well as reducing government-induced inequalities in income.
Instead, Mr. Cass wants a conservative government to support labor unions. He sees the path to a better America for the average worker through collective bargaining and required labor union participation on the corporate boards of private enterprises. Well, that certainly is more like an older conservative traditionalism; medieval guild memberships and closed shops to assure that the union bosses or excuse me, worker representatives on corporate boards can strong arm excuse me once more, recommend higher wages to their co-managers on how those businesses are operated. (See my article,Free Labor Markets vs. Bidens Push for Compulsory Unionism.)
Perhaps, Mr. Cass should be less quick to castigate the free market economists insights that he pooh-poohs as outdated claims to eternal and universal truth, and turn to the fact that minimum wage laws oftentimes leave out permanently unemployed segments of the unskilled and public school poorly educated young and minority members of society. Time and place do not change the fact that no employer will voluntarily hire and pay someone more than they think to be the value of an individuals work in their enterprise, regardless of what government commands to be the legal minimum wage rate at which employment may be given. (See my articles,Freedom and the Minimum WageandPrice Controls Attack the Freedom of Speech.)
He should also be less impatient with how government regulations and interventions prevent or inhibit the ability to open and expand small businesses that, otherwise, enable greater self-employment and hiring of more people in local communities that suffer from higher degrees of low income and lack of job opportunities. Or how such interventions and regulations limit business competition and protect established and larger firms that Mr. Cass feels too frequently dominate markets. (See my article,Dont Confuse Free Markets with the Interventionist State.)
Mr. Casss mindset is no different in the arena of education. He does not see a path to better schooling and the knowledge and skills that students require through either the conservative emphasis on competitive school choice or the libertarian proposal for simply privatizing schooling altogether and taking the education business completely out of government hands. No, he shows himself to be an educational central planner here just as much as his progressive opponents.
He simply wants government schools to do the teaching and training with a focus that he considers the right ones for the country as a whole, rather than how the social justice warriors see it. High schools would emphasize practical skills and partner with local businesses for on-the-job training before they enter the workplace. As for college and university degrees, they would be focused on preparing graduates for a real world where they could cover the costs of the higher education they had earned. One wonders what has happened to the older conservative appreciation for a liberal arts education, and how it fits into this mix. But what a traditional education means is, obviously, all in the eyes of the conservative central planner holding the reins of political power. After all, as Mr. Cass says, times change. (See my article,Educational Socialism versus the Free Market.)
He says that much of his frustration with and rejection of libertarians and free markets has to do with his presumption that their proponents show neither understanding nor sensitivity to the conservative values of custom, tradition, ordered society, community, and family. Again, like those in the progressive political camp, Mr. Cass criticizes Milton Friedmans argument that the purpose of private corporations is to maximize profits and ignore stakeholders in the surrounding community and society. Instead, they should show a social corporate responsibility, regardless of the financial bottom line.
He totally misses, just like the recent host of progressive critics of Friedmans argument, that his point was not that such societal concerns were irrelevant or unimportant. Rather, expecting corporations to take on this role, independent of and possibly in contraction to the wishes of the firms shareholders, threatens not merely the financial health of the enterprise but politicizes business activities in a way that can easily undermine the smooth functioning of the social order and the market economy that is part of it. The funding and the facilitating of solutions to these social problems were best left to the individual and voluntary associative choices of income earners and dividend recipients, who then decide the practical and ethical best ways of spending their own money. (See my articles,Milton Friedman and the New Attack on the Freedom to ChooseandStakeholder Fascism Means More Loss of Liberty.)
Mr. Cass draws upon the ideas of the 18thcentury British conservative philosopher, Edmund Burke (1729-1797), who placed great value on the historical importance and continuity of institutions and traditions that provide security and stability to people within and across generations. But his reading of Burke leads him to think that if such institutions and traditions are important, it is the duty of governments to preserve them, cultivate them, and reform society in cautiously better directions.
Other Burkean conservatives, while seeing a larger role for government in society than classical liberals and libertarians usually do, have emphasized that these intermediary institutions of civil society family, organized religions, community associations and charities, among others need to be kept particularly separate from the government and its controls precisely due to the fact that they serve also as the important buffers and protectors standing between the lone individual and the potentially unlimited power of the State that can absorb and crush the single person.
For instance, the conservative sociologist, Robert Nisbet (1913-1996), highlighted these aspects to his Burkean understanding of society and its institutions, and made it a central element in his exposition of the ideas and principles of his book,Conservatism: Dream and Reality(1986). Nisbet insisted that Laissez-faire and decentralization are sovereign to Burke. In his earlier work,Twilight of Authority(1975), Nisbet explained the importance of the autonomy of such voluntary associative and market-based institutions, and the pressure they were under from the usurping and centralizing powers of government:
Of all the consequences of the steady politicization of our social order, of the unending centralization of political powerthe greatest in many ways is the weakening and disappearance of traditions in which [non-political] authority and liberty alike are anchored
Of all the needs in this age the greatest is, I think, a recovery of the social, with its implication of social membership, that in fact exists in human behavior, and the liberation of the idea of the social from the politicalCrucial are the voluntary groups and associations. It is the element of the spontaneous, of untrammeled, unforced volition, that is undoubtedly vital to creative relationships among individuals
Voluntary associations have an importance well beyond what they do directly for the individual members. Most of the functions which are today lodged either in the state or in great formal organizations came into existence in the first place in the context of larger voluntary associations. This is true of mutual aid in all its forms education, socialization, social security, recreation, and the likeIt is in the context of such [voluntary] association, in short, that most steps in social progress have taken place.
The importance of this is significant enough for me to tax the readers patience with referencing a complementary emphasis on the same point by the noted University of Chicago sociologist, Edward Shils (1910-1995) in The Virtue of Civil Society (Government and Opposition, January 1991). Vital to a free, prosperous, and humane social order, Shils insisted, was a large swath of society that is independent of and separate from political control and domination. Or as he put it:
The idea of civil society is the idea of a part of society which has a life of its own, which is distinctly different from the state, and which is largely in autonomy from itA market economy is the appropriate pattern of economic life of a civil society. There is, however, much more to civil society than the market. The hallmark of a civil society is the autonomy of private associations and institutions, as well as private business firms
The civil societymust possess the institutions that protect it from encroachment of the state and keep it a civil societyThese are the institutions by which the state is kept within substantive and procedural confinement. The confinement, which might be thought to be negative, is sustained on belief of a positive ideal, the ideal of individual and collective freedom.
Yet, this type of a conservatism reborn seems to hold no place in Oren Casss vision of a new conservatism. His is really just progressivism and its confidence and belief in the possibility and power of political paternalism to remake and move society in better directions, only in the context of what Cass conceives as the good, and the right and conservatively desirable. A softer governmental nudge here, a firmer political push there to get society into the collective pattern and shape wanted; just as the social justice warriors wish to do. It is the same political train, with the only difference being the ideological and paternalistic destination to which the government-determined ride takes us all.
Classical liberalism and libertarianism and the principles and practice of a free market system are all compatible with and complementary to much of the idea of conservatism and civil society that both Robert Nisbet and Edward Shils focused upon. But the difference is that for classical liberals and libertarians, there are no institutions of civil society, there are no protections for the autonomy of the individual and his voluntary associations from threatening infringements by the State unless the philosophical foundations of the social order start with the idea and ideal of those unalienable rights of each and every person to their respective life, liberty, and honestly acquired property, without which there can be no meaningful pursuit of happiness.
Traditions, customs, and noncoercive authorities to which people give recognition and respect and deference only can sustainably emerge and intergenerationally survive when they arise out of the free actions and chosen forms of personal and societal interactive conduct of the human actors themselves. It is what Adam Smith called the system of natural liberty with its evolved institutions of free exchange that generates the workings of the markets invisible hand of mutual gains from trade in all their varied forms inside and outside of the marketplace. (See my article,Adam Smith on Moral Sentiments, Division of Labor, and the Invisible Hand.)
If liberty is given foremost importance by classical liberals and libertarians, it is not due to an ossified dogmatism, as Oren Cass tries to suggest. It is because liberty is and should be considered a good in itself, something that recognizes and tells an individual that their life is their own to live and enjoy and use as they peacefully and honestly find to be best so as to give that life meaning and happiness to them.
What greater sense of respect and recognized dignity in the individual human being, what greater due regard for the uniqueness of each and every person alive than to tell them and assure them that they may not be made the coerced tool in the hands of others, whether they be private agents or government officials. It is classical liberalism that raised this as a universal and moral ideal, and it is the institutions and acceptance of free markets that separated earning a living from the control of political power that made it possible to practice the individual freedom that Mr. Cass sneers at and too easily shunts aside. The libertarians emphasis on consumer choice is not from a crass worship of materialism, but from an appreciation and understanding that such freedom to choose in a market economy enables the individual to express all the higher values that the availability and use of market-provided means make possible in a way that no other economic system has ever allowed. (See my article,The Rise of Capitalism and the Dignity of Labor.)
It is also the only basis and means for humanity to live in peace and cooperative harmony through the competition of the marketplace, which successfully reconciles many, indeed most, of the conflicts and discontinuities in the actions of multitudes of people in a world of limited means that can be used to advance the numerous competing ends that people follow.
At the same time, it cultivates the social attitudes and activities that increase the opportunities of life and improves not only the material but the cultural and intellectual conditions of all. What we need is for the political paternalists and ideological busybodies of every stripe to just leave all of us alone. We can take care of ourselves, thank you very much, even if as imperfect people in an imperfect world we make missteps along the way. We need neither progressives nor conservatives of Oren Casss ilk to manage the world. What we need is for the likes of all of them to mind their own business. (See my articles,Mr. President: Please Mind Your Own Business andHazonys Tradition-Based Society is a Form of Social EngineeringandConservative Nationalism is Not About LibertyandThe Plague of Meddling Political Busybodiesand my book,For a New Liberalism.)
But this is neither a classical liberalism nor a form of conservatism that appeals to Oren Cass when what he really is after is figuring how to outwit the progressives in the game of political plunderhood by devising coalitions in society that will put his side in elected office next time around through a conservative version of handouts of favors, privileges and subsidies. His new conservatism, therefore, is really only the same old political paternalism, just in different rhetorical clothing.
[Originally posted on American Institute for Economic Research (AIER)]
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News - The Bankruptcy of Conservative Political Paternalism - The Heartland Institute
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People Of Georgia’s 14th Congressional Make Decision Who Will Occupy That Seat – Jamestown Post Journal
Posted: at 2:37 pm
To The Readers Forum:
First, let me say that l am neither a Democrat nor a Republican.
I am a registered Libertarian and l have no love for either of the major parties. Your editorial of Feb. 10 criticizing Rep. Tom Reed for his failure to try to remove another elected member of the House of Representatives seems to me to be extremely misguided. Your stated premise is that Rep. Reed should base his actions on his perceived personal interests.
What about his oath of office to protect and defend the constitution of the United States? Who decides who represents the 14th congressional district of Georgia? I contend that that choice belongs to the people of that district who elected her by a substantial majority. They deserve their representation.
Whatever her opinions, she has a right to them and a right, within legal bounds, to express them. lf the voters in her district decide that they wish to remove her they can do so in the election next year. ln the mean time she should be able to express her fringe right wing views in the same way that many Democrat representatives express comparable fringe left wing views.
Robert Peterson,
Kennedy
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People Of Georgia's 14th Congressional Make Decision Who Will Occupy That Seat - Jamestown Post Journal
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