Sunday, March 22, 2026

The Historical Precedents for America's Temperament

"The past is never dead. It's not even past." - William Faulkner

Thinking about what it took our forefathers to come to the colonies in the New World is daunting. They encountered unimaginable wildness, Indians, and more. It's sensible to conclude that a peculiar insane optimism is one thing that could account for the post-Columbus migrations from Europe to America.

Spanish explorers like Columbus, Cortez and Pizarro made war on the native societies, even discarding their achievements in medicine and mathematics as they did. But what led to most of this largest-historical-genocide that killed 90% of the New World's population was the Old World diseases brought by the explorers themselves, particularly yellow fever and malaria, although measles and smallpox played a role too. 

So the European immigrants encountered a much-weakened native population, and vast stretches of land they abandoned as they died out. And even then, the Europeans fought them.

To work the land where malaria and yellow fever were rampant, the Europeans imported African slaves who had at least some immunity to these diseases. Slavery thrived between the Mason-Dixon line and the northern border of Argentina, where the vector mosquitos for those diseases were. Slavery was necessary, not optional, to grow all that cotton before mosquito eradication was discovered as a preventive.

Meanwhile, when Andrew Jackson stole the southeastern US from the natives--defying both Georgia's and the US Supreme Courts--the cotton planters were ecstatic. They quickly borrowed to buy slaves and farm what was the Cherokee's land as the Indians walked the "Trail of Tears" to move to what would become Oklahoma.

Then, in 1835, Andy Jackson did what many people even today believe would be a good idea. He paid off national debt entirely and closed down the central bank. This meant there were no publicly-issued dollars. People did their business with monetized gold ("specie") and over 7,000 varieties of private bank notes of varying reliability. 

The planters with their new, stolen land, were unable to pay their loan payments because the cotton surplus made the price of cotton hit the floor, even with 60% of the crop warehoused, and Jackson's debt payoff depleted their dollar savings. A wave of  asset forfeitures and foreclosures ensued. As is the case for all significant reductions of national debt, the economy tanked in the subsequent "Panic of 1837." 

One further bit of encouragement for civil war: slaves tend to not care about long-term soil health, so the typical slaver would deplete his soil, then move west to get more. The North was unwilling to bless making new states in the West slave states.

What can we conclude about the historical precedents for the American temperament? First, unrealistic optimism was an absolute requirement for new immigrants from Europe. Second, perceived economic necessities trumped any reasonable accommodation of the natives, even if they had something to offer. Third, slavery was a clear dedication to putting some (white) people in the driver's seat.

So...has much really changed? 

Meanwhile: JFK and LBJ's Defense chief Robert McNamara dined with his Vietnamese counterparts after the Vietnam war was over and done (and lost by the US). The Vietnamese asked McNamara why the US bothered with Vietnam in the first place. McNamara--by all accounts an intelligent and even charming dinner companion--responded by saying it was to contain China. The Vietnamese were outraged. "We've been fighting China literally for millenia!" was the gist of their response. So that war was simply a waste of men and money. Yet large populations in the US remain optimistic that warfare--now in Ukraine, Gaza and Iran--can have a miraculously wonderful outcome. 

How to respond? Is it sad? Frustrating? Testimony that "The more things change, the more they remain the same"? [sigh!]

The Corruption in the Punishment Bureaucracy

 

Wednesday, March 18, 2026

A Letter to Sacramento County Supervisors about Homelessness

 

Dear Public Servants,

I recently attended one of Supervisor Rodriguez's public meetings and was nonplussed by the way she spoke about homeless people. To her (and her accompanying policeman), homelessness is a "choice," driven by mental illness or addiction.

 

Truth be told, there are more empty homes than homeless in the US--five times San Francisco's homeless population! Is there any discussion of doing what Vancouver (B.C., Canada) did successfully, enacting a vacant home tax to discourage investors from buying homes and leaving them vacant to artificially curtail the supply of housing? Not that I've heard.

There are some signs of progress in addressing the lack of affordable housing--the Beech Hill Apartments on Beech and Greenback in my neighborhood, for one, but these are slow to appear. And the narrative that says homelessness is the result of some shortage of housing, or a "choice" by the people, or mental illness, or addiction, doesn't help.

Evicting homeless populations from their camps and/or criminalizing homelessness are the County's responses. Even worse are the moves to incarcerate people for the crime of being poor. The County Jail is full, true, but 60% - 80% of its prisoners aren't convicted of anything except being too poor to afford bail. Any discussion of no cash bail or supervised release? Not that I can detect. 

Incidentally, the US and the Philippines are the only countries on earth that require cash bail, and both Illinois and Washington, D.C. have successful no-cash bail programs.

So...are they really mentally ill/addicted? Really? 

Even our response to addiction is misdirected. Here's a video entitled "Everything you think you know about addiction is wrong." 
 

 
 
I encourage you to view it and take it to heart. Sacramento County's management of homelessness and addiction needs to make a U-turn.

Your Constituent,

Mark Dempsey

Monday, March 16, 2026

The Wisdom of the Ages

At a party given by a billionaire on Shelter Island, Kurt Vonnegut informs his pal, Joseph Heller, that their host, a hedge fund manager, had made more money in a single day than Heller had earned from his wildly popular novel Catch-22 over its whole history. Heller responds, “Yes, but I have something he will never have … enough.”

Update: Thorstein Veblen Question: If much of modern consumption exists not to meet human needs but to signal status and superiority, why do we treat rising consumption as evidence of prosperity rather than as evidence of social rivalry and waste?

Sunday, March 15, 2026

John Mearsheimer Evaluates the Iraq War (Hint: the US is losing)

See the full interview with Chris Hedges here. Excerpt:

You know, we go far enough up the escalation ladder and the Iranians really go after the Gulf States and really go to great lengths to destroy their oil infrastructure and gas infrastructure, the consequences could be disastrous for everyone on the planet. And the Trump administration understands that. They don’t want to take any chances here. This is why you see evidence that the Trump administration is looking for an off-ramp.

Chris Hedges

Well, the Iranians aren’t going to give it to them, are they?

John Mearsheimer

They’d be crazy to give it to them unless they get a good deal. You hardly see any talk about this in the mainstream media, but all of the talk revolving around the question of an off-ramp in ending this war has to do with how we think we fared in the end and how we think the Israelis fared in the end.

In other words, the Israelis are fearful that if we cut a deal now without regime change or without destroying Iran, this will be a victory for Iran and the Americans might be happy, but we’re not happy.

Saturday, March 14, 2026

The Limitations of AI (Ever wonder why Amazon had an outage last week?)

 

The Historical Precedents for America's Temperament

"The past is never dead. It's not even past." - William Faulkner Thinking about what it took our forefathers to come   to the ...