Reading Richard Thaler’s Misbehaving is worth it if only for one turn of phrase — October 2, 2016

Reading Richard Thaler’s Misbehaving is worth it if only for one turn of phrase

I’m in the middle of Misbehaving: The Making of Behavioral Economics, and I just happened upon his phrase “the invisible handwave”. This is the argument — which doesn’t withstand a moment of scrutiny — that the discipline of the market will purge irrationality from irrational actors. It is a lovely turn of phrase.

(You can make a plausible case that the market’s aggregate outcome — e.g., price levels — must be rational in some sense. What makes that more plausible is that people who act irrationally systematically leave the market, for instance because their businesses go bankrupt. But it’s not correct to believe that individual actors must themselves become rational.)

Here’s where I’m honor-bound to recommend that you read Thaler’s The Winner’s Curse. If memory serves, it’s largely a collection of his “Anomalies” columns from JEP. If you can’t commit to reading a whole book, try reading his delightful paper on the law of one price.

You simply must meet Thomas. Thomas! — September 22, 2016

You simply must meet Thomas. Thomas!

The continuing Hamilton obsession reminds me: I’ve meant to read Dumas Malone’s six-volume biography of Jefferson for a long time; it’s supposed to be the definitive work on the man. I tried reading the first volume, but it was spending what seemed to me an excessive amount of time on Jefferson’s rural upbringing. That’s important to someone, surely; important when setting the stage for the famed philosopher’s veneration of rural life, surely; but not something I really need to read. So maybe I don’t need to read all six volumes. Maybe skip ahead to the time when he’s “off getting high [I always assumed it was ‘hot’] with the French”? Volumes 2 through 5 look like they cover the parts that most people would be concerned with, running from the Declaration through his time as president. Anyone interested in reading those four volumes with me?

As every schoolchild knows, Jefferson and Adams both died on the 50th anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence, which would be July 4th of 1826. So from the end of Jefferson’s time as president until his death, there was a span of about 18 years. I’m sure he did fascinating things during that time, and I’m sure in particular that the letters he wrote would make for amazing reading…come to think of it, that time would span the War of 1812, and Jefferson was on one side of Virginia while Washington, D.C. burned, so surely he had interesting things to say. Regardless, volumes 2 through 5 are likely gripping reading, so let’s start by focusing on those.

James Madison also gets short shrift in Lin-Manuel Miranda’s play: offhand, I recall that Madison is mainly involved in uttering the hilarious single word “France”, convincing Jefferson to agree to the Compromise of 1790, and fielding Hamilton’s complaint that Madison is “useless as two shits.” But Madison is terribly important; my understanding is that he’s responsible for our government’s three-branch structure, in contrast to the monarchy that Hamilton wanted. That seems reasonably important. If nothing else, I’d like to read about the writing of the Federalist Papers, and the debate over the Constitution.

As always, I welcome people joining me in this reading.

Periodic Jefferson Image reminder — September 7, 2016

Periodic Jefferson Image reminder

On one of the recent episodes of The Room Where It’s Happening (a podcast about Hamilton because, like I mentioned, I’m obsessed), they play a message from a caller who says, basically, “Wow, it sounds like Jefferson was a real bad guy. I’m glad I’m learning differently about him now.” Nothing wrong with hearing something different about a Founding Father, of course. But while we’re walking down that road anyway, I’d like to reiterate my love of a book called The Jefferson Image in the American Mind. It’s less about Jefferson the man (if memory serves, the book starts when Jefferson dies, or shortly before), and much more about what’s become of how we perceive him in the centuries since his death. That angle is, perhaps, as interesting as the man himself. You could, if you wanted, tell a coherent story of American governance as the playing-out of the Jeffersonian and Hamiltonian strains in American thought over 200-plus years. (Probably more valuable to tell the story of America as two centuries of trying to atone for our original sin of slavery, but sure: Jefferson/Hamilton is a good one.)

Depending upon the country’s self-perception, and depending upon what the ideology of the time called for, Jefferson’s image swung from socialist French fairy to Jacobin anarchist to father of freedom itself. It’s actually pretty funny.

A few years ago we had the David McCullough bio of John Adams, which landed pretty hard on the anti-Jefferson side. Now we have Hamilton (the musical) taking a few little jabs at Adams (“That poor man / They’re going to eat him alive!”). Opinions change. Seems kind of silly to commit yourself to a battle over personalities. Committing yourself to a historiographical battle is more interesting. But it’s still more interesting, I think, to understand the forces that these men put into play, and what those forces mean for the basic structure of American governance.

Oh, and Barbarian Days — September 3, 2016

Oh, and Barbarian Days


I don’t know how I neglected to include Barbarian Days among the reviews. It’s great, and quite different from anything I’ve ever read. I wouldn’t have expected to care at all about a book by a guy who has devoted much of his life to surfing, but I ended up caring very much about this book. It’s a remarkable combination of technical surfing discussion that verges into the poetic (when have you ever read poetic technical writing?), plus the story of Finnegan’s own life. As he ages, he remains in love with surfing, but also comes to realize that there’s a larger world out there, and that he should stop just being a beach bum. The book becomes sort of the punchline: the man who was at the beach most days before the sun came up becomes the sort of man who can write a memoir like this. It’s magnificent.

Recent reads, 2016-09-03 —

Recent reads, 2016-09-03

Attention-conservation notice: 3,216 words on some recent books I’ve read. Consider this a downpayment on all the reviews I’ve neglected to write. I may end up defaulting on that particular mortgage, but at least I made the downpayment, right?

Cover of Private Empire

  • Steve Coll, Private Empire: ExxonMobil and American Power

    This book is far less polemical than the title suggests. The title would suggest that liberals will be waving this in their political enemies’ faces and spluttering something about Citizens United.

    The overarching thesis of Private Empire is far less exciting: that what ExxonMobil wants above all else is predictability. If it’s going to set up drilling operations in, say, Russia, it’s making an enormous upfront capital investment in exchange for returns that are expected to pay out over 20-30 years. On those kinds of timelines, it needs certain guarantees: that contracts will be honored, that its workers will be safe, that political corruption won’t be allowed to interfere with crude-oil extraction.

    The impression most of us might have, going into this book, is that Exxon’s hooks into the Federal government go deep. While Coll doesn’t dispute that Exxon — like any large corporation — does its share of lobbying, and doesn’t dispute that Exxon’s executives were chummy with the Bush administration, he seems to suggest that mostly Exxon wants the government to ensure stability of contract. Certainly the Federal government encourages foreign governments to sign contracts with Exxon, but Coll really suggests that the relation is hands-off.

    The ‘private empire’ piece comes in when Exxon places its drilling operations in dangerous countries; Equatorial Guinea figures prominently here. One could argue that Exxon has a responsibility to reinforce the security services of the country it’s operating in, but the company seems to believe in minimizing its political involvement. Instead its hunkers down in each country, sets up its drilling operation, surrounds it with high fences and armed guards, and tries (with uneven success) to remain an oil-extracting island.

    Along the way, of course, Exxon is arguing against the very idea of global warming, and lobbying against carbon taxes or cap-and-trade — though Coll suggests that the Rex Tillerson era at Exxon has been moderately more open to the idea of progressive legislation than was the Lee Raymond era.

Cover of Evicted

  • Matthew Desmond, Evicted: Poverty and Profit in the American City

    It’s extremely hard to imagine a more depressing book than this one; I repeatedly had to put it down for a while to catch my breath. It’s the story of people trapped forever in a cycle of eviction and poverty. In the same way that those who’ve been imprisoned are often prevented from finding jobs, which makes it that much easier for them to return to illegal employment, so eviction traps people in substandard housing. A double-digit fraction of renters seemingly pay more than 100% of their income in rent, and a quarter pay more than half. When they miss a few rent payments, they’re now on notice that they might be evicted, and at this point any legal protections that they may have had when complaining to their landlords about non-functioning plumbing or a leaky ceiling disappear.

    All of Desmond’s subjects are sympathetic, including the slumlords; their tenants are often not people you’d want living in your home. They’re hoarders; they’re drug addicts; they allow filth and cockroaches to accumulate. But the tenants are sympathetic, too; poverty in the United States makes life more expensive for the poor than it does for the rich. Desmond’s book certainly comes from a place of outrage, but I read it more as the housing version of The Wire: the system has evolved to the point that no one wants to be part of it, but no one has a choice.

Cover of Streetcar Suburbs

  • Sam Bass Warner, Jr., Streetcar Suburbs: The Process of Growth in Boston, 1870-1900

    A delightful little history of how Boston became a small city with thick suburbs. Essentially — this is a point I infer from both Warner’s book and from Crabgrass Frontier, below — Americans have always dreamed of living in idealized suburbs; everyone has always wanted to have a few acres of land to call his or her own. So streetcars were built off into the country, and the development followed. Warner notes that as the suburbs were being built, it always looked to their new residents like they were surrounded by farmland — right until their neighbors moved in and they realized that they weren’t living in the city or the country, but rather in some new variety of housing that they were creating.

    Initially the pattern was that those who needed transit to get to work in Boston lived on streetcars near to the city, while the wealthy could afford to live further out on their estates. But the land near the city was already more thickly settled, hence more expensive; hence the working class were from the beginning more burdened by high housing costs than the wealthy were.

    Certain neighborhoods, like lower Roxbury, developed in a self-negating way: the housing stock was constructed cheaply, in a hurry, with the intent of luring the working class. This meant that anyone who could would leave the neighborhood for better housing as soon as he could afford it. In short, Roxbury’s housing was never aspirational; the neighborhood was always a halfway house. Smarter neighborhood design would have offered housing for multiple economic levels. As Warner tells it, lower Roxbury sealed its own fate from the beginning.

    Warner’s central argument, indeed, is that Boston has done a poor job fashioning a cultural community from its neighborhoods. Neighborhoods may be unified religiously (Catholic versus Protestant), or they may be unified economically (wealthy or working class), but they’re still ultimately balkanized. Boston, and perhaps American cities generally, have done a bad job correcting for the U.S.’s steep economic hierarchy. This devastating paragraph sums up the state of the city as Warner saw it in 1977:

In 1900 the new metropolis lacked local communities that could deal with the problems of contemporary society at the level of the family and its immediate surroundings, and it lacked a large-scale community that could deal with the problems of the metropolis. As a result Boston community life fell into a self-defeating cycle. Each decade brought an increase in the scale and complexity of economic and social life; each decade’s problems demanded more wide-scale attention, more complex solutions. Because of the physical arrangement of the new metropolis, each decade also brought an ever greater fragmentation of community life into town and ward politics, church groups, clubs, and specialized societies of all kinds. The growing parochialism and fragmentation resulted in a steady relative weakening of social agencies. Weakness, in turn, convinced more and more individuals that local community action was hopeless or irrelevant. From this conviction came the further weakening of the public agencies. The self-defeating cycle, begun by the streetcar metropolis, has continued with increasing severity to this day. It has proved, both for the metropolis and its constituent political units, an iron cycle, a cycle which once established, is difficult to break.

That still describes Boston to this day.

Miscellaneous notes I took while reading this book:

  • As of 1851, more than a quarter of the 46,000 people commuting into Boston did so on foot. (Via the Hunt’s Merchant Magazine, page 759.)
  • This book contains a history of the development of the South End that looks to be worth reading.
  • If you believed that there were a lot of Washington Streets around here, you were not wrong:

Excluding the Washington avenues, alleys, and boulevards, there are at the moment of writing thirty-six Washington streets in metropolitan Boston, six in the different quarters of Boston itself. For the purposes of this book the reader should distinguish between two different Washington streets. One is the long street which runs north and south from the downtown shopping center of the city, along the South End, through Roxbury, up the Stony Brook Valley to Forest Hills, West Roxbury, and thence through West Roxbury until it passes out of the city limits into Dedham. The other important Washington street is in Dorchester. The street, which is unconnected to its Roxbury counterpart, begins at Blue Hill avenue and runs through Codman Square to the village of Lower Mills, where it ends in a junction with Dorchester avenue.

Cover of Between Meals

  • A.J. Liebling, Between Meals: An Appetite for Paris

    This is a little book by a great big fat man, lamenting the era when you could spend the entire day eating spectacular quantities of food in Paris. Everything went to shit, says Liebling, when the doctors started obsessing over the health of your liver. Then the copious quantities of meat and wine went away.

    It’s a fun book, about a lost era, and about a time in Liebling’s life when he was “poor” (more on why I put that in air quotes below) and spent most of his money on food. I seem to recall that there’s a passage in here where Liebling says that, to become a gourmand, you really need to be neither too poor nor too rich. If you’re too poor you can’t afford to eat anything good; if you’re too rich, you spend money on food whose main selling point is that expensive, rather than that it’s good. Only if you’re in that sweet spot in the middle do you develop some discernment in your palate: you can afford to eat the good stuff, but you need to be choosy.

    I have a hard time believing that the pre-World War II Parisian life that Liebling describes was ever the life that most people could experience. Most people at most times, I imagine, had to grind through their days trying to earn enough to eat; it was the rare person who could spend practically his whole life eating. Liebling was lucky enough to have a father who paid for him to live and eat in Paris for months, ostensibly because the son was attending school there. Liebling’s experience in Paris resembles A. Scott Berg’s description of Princeton before Woodrow Wilson took over: largely a playground for the rich to spend their days idly.

    So Between Meals is a study of a particular class of person at a particular time in world history. And it’s fun, for all that.

Cover of Coming Into The Country

  • John McPhee, Coming into the Country

    McPhee’s general schtick, more or less camouflaged, is to write about people under the guise of writing about things. In Oranges he writes about, well, oranges, but he’s writing just as much about the men who pick them. The Curve of Binding Energy is as engrossing a walk through the construction and safeguarding of nuclear weapons as it is a biography of Ted Taylor. Uncommon Carriers gives fascinating accounts of how coal makes its way via train from the mine to a Georgia power plant, of boats on the Russian River, and of the paths of packages through the UPS facility in Louisville, but it’s just as much about trainmen, ship captains, and UPS employees.

    So it is with Coming Into The Country. John McPhee has as much to say about Alaskan wildlife, as he perceives it while hiking and kayaking, as he does about the peculiar sort of person who decides to become Alaskan. You “come into the country” when you move way, way, way off the grid. For the sort of person who lives near the Arctic Circle, Juneau and Anchorage are too crowded; all those people create anxiety and a desire to run away. If American history is the story of people moving westward to stake their claim and make their fortune, one branch of that history contains people who veered to the right while everyone else was moving westward to California.

    People who make it in Alaska, as McPhee observes them, are self-sufficient to an admirable degree. I wish that I had it in me to move off into the woods, fashion my own home from trees I chop down, and eat food that I hunted myself. I wish I were so confident in my own skills that I could fly a little prop plane around the backcountry and bandage the plane with paperclips and chewing gum when the need arose — because without those skills, I am stuck in the middle of an empty vastness containing one-fifth the area of the Lower 48.

    Unfortunately, I don’t have it in me. I don’t know whether to feel bad about this. Reading this book, you really can’t help but consider what civilization really means; it’s a place where people come together to handle problems together that they simply couldn’t tackle on their own. The positive side of civilization is that we achieve things we couldn’t otherwise; the negative side is that we may have evolved — Maynard Smith-style — in an irreversible way: the division of labor may mean that it’s now impossible for most of us to go back to an earlier, more-solitary way of life. Small tribes don’t have the collective knowledge to construct an iPhone, but the inhabitants of large cities may be unable to hew their own wood. Your judgment of this situation may rest on how you evaluate the relative importance of iPhones and wood-hewing.

    One further note on the moral economy of cities. The economic view of their importance — which you’ll encounter in, for instance, Ed Glaeser’s Triumph of the City, or at a more formal level in Fujita/Krugman/Venables — focuses on this specialization aspect. People working in close proximity to one another can accomplish things that none of them individually could. As the city grows, entire industries become possible that wouldn’t even make sense in small towns; you can ask how many piano tuners there are in the city of New York, but it doesn’t really make sense to ask how many there are in Stewart Township, Pennsylvania. New York is not just a larger Stewart Township; it’s an entirely different variety of thing.

    This division-of-labor story is fruitful, and you can go in a number of interesting directions with it. It’s part of a rebuttal to Malthus: as the number of people increases, the existence of larger cities is a reason why you can expect more output rather than less. But even still, this economic view is impoverished, in a way that Lewis Mumford recognized: the city should be understood as a place where we can be collectively uplifted. It should be the place where collective education allows us to learn more and faster than our rural brethren; it should be the place where our cultural accomplishments go beyond anything that small towns could dream of. The Museum of Fine Arts is in Boston rather than in Burlington, Vermont for a reason; Boston has about 15 times the population of Burlington, but it shouldn’t be understood as just 15 Burlingtons lined up next to one another. The large city can accomplish what the small city cannot.

    Mumford’s attitude here is pessimistic: the moral arc of the city has been basically downhill ever since Ancient Greece understood the collective greatness available to the Athenians. When Mumford wrote in the 60s, cities were in the middle of being decimated by the automobile. We’re in the middle of rolling that back ever so slightly (not nearly so completely as the optimists would have it), but we still don’t appreciate the possibilities that the city brings us: that our collective accomplishments will make humanity better. Instead we mostly follow the economists: the city is a place where jobs are plentiful and incomes are higher than average. High-paying jobs are important, but they shortchange what the city can achieve.

    It’s hard not to think of all of this when McPhee writes about Alaska. Americans move off into the wilderness to make their own solitary civilization, and in many ways I admire them for it. As Americans, they come from a civilization that has done much to destroy its cities, so it’s even easier to understand why they’d want to desert those cities. (I wonder whether Pericles would have decamped for Juneau if the opportunity had presented itself.) In my most fevered dreams, I imagine an American civilization that honors our cities to such an extent that moving off into the woods would be an unthinkable act of lunacy.

Cover of Up In The Old Hotel

  • Joseph Mitchell, Up in the Old Hotel: Reportage from “the New Yorker”

    Delightful candy about old New York, where I understand that “old New York” is always the good old city that had disappeared by the time you arrived. In old New York, everyone in the neighborhood knew the crank. In old New York, owners of seedy movie theaters watch over the Bowery and give the occasional dime to those same cranks. In old New York, crotchety old men spent their days nursing warm beer at McSorley’s.

    Old New York was seemingly also filled with an assorted collection of fishermen and oystermen who plied their trade off Long Island, and who sold their catch to fishmongers in the Fulton Street market. I don’t know if that part of New York has changed (here The Downeaster ‘Alexa’ is playing softly in the back of my head). Either that part of old New York has disappeared, or writers like Joseph Mitchell have.

Cover of Crabgrass Frontier

  • Kenneth T. Jackson, Crabgrass Frontier: The Suburbanization of the United States

    This is the definitive history of how the U.S. came to be suburb-dominated; like Caro’s biographies of LBJ and Robert Moses, it’s hard to imagine another book that would tell the story as clearly and completely as Jackson has. (It’s a Bancroft Prize winner, and like all Bancroft Prize winners that I’ve had the good fortune to read, it’s extraordinary.) The main thing I take away from Jackson is that the process of unwinding suburbanization will take a lot more than just some wealthy people — even all the wealthy people — moving back in. (Among many other reasons, this “great inversion” story irritates me because it tends to hand-wave over the problems of schools, mass transit, and affordable housing.) Suburbanization is as much a part of the American ethic as is the Jeffersonian love of rural life. And our particular variety of it comes, in no small part, from our having had ample unoccupied (well, “unoccupied”) land from the very beginning. It’s still an extremely sparse country: if the U.S. were as densely populated as Somerville, Massachusetts, you could easily fit all 319 million of us in West Virginia.

    Of course, there’s suburbanization and then there’s suburbanization. An East Coast urban liberal snob such as myself sees a world of difference between Brookline, Massachusetts — a 19th-century streetcar suburb — and a modern 20th-century car-dominated suburb like Woburn, Massachusetts. Automobile dependence is even harder to unwind; the most Boston could do to the highways when it wanted to reverse the decades of damage that they’d done was to move them them underground. “(Nothing But) Flowers” this is not.

    I don’t mean to be entirely cynical and pessimistic; you have to start somewhere, after all, and the fact that New York and Boston are growing faster than the nation as a whole could only please me. But the point of Jackson’s work is that the suburbs were a long time in the making, from which I infer that they’ll be a long time in the destroying.

The Compromise of 1790 — August 28, 2016

The Compromise of 1790

I’m completely obsessed with Hamilton. I’ll be seeing it in New York shortly, and have been listening to an unhealthy degree to the soundtrack. Tonight I was listening to “The Room Where It Happens”, which made me want to read what “Thomas [Jefferson] [actually] claim[ed]”. I went back to The Age Of Federalism, a wonderful Bancroft Prize winner by Elkins and McKitrick which I’ve thought about often over the years; the discussion of the Compromise of 1790, and specifically Jefferson’s views on it, are on pages 155 et seq.. The National Archives have the full text of Jefferson’s account. Elkins and McKitrick point to Jefferson’s other account of the Compromise, which appeared in a letter to Washington:

I was duped […] by the Secretary of the Treasury and made a tool for forwarding his schemes, not then sufficiently understood by me; and of all the errors of my political life, this has occasioned me the deepest regret.

I’d recommend that part of Elkins and McKitrick, also, for their masterly walk through what the bargain actually accomplished. There were three factions vying for a Federal district: the Pennsylvanians, who wanted it to be at least temporarily in Philadelphia; the South, which wanted it along the Potomac; and the New Englanders and New Yorkers, who just wanted it to not be on the Potomac. Most the votes were seemingly lined up before the Jefferson/Madison/Hamilton dinner, but Elkins and McKitrick explain the moral force behind those three men’s support, and what it meant for the eventual compromise.

This makes me want to reread The Age of Federalism, and perhaps reread Chernow.

Graham Robb, The Discovery of France — July 23, 2016

Graham Robb, The Discovery of France

Cover of _Discovery of France_: brown background, title set in Art Deco-ish font. A map of France is overlaid on the silhouette of a man on a bicycle -- seemingly an old man, wearing a hat like gentlemen would have worn in the 1920s or so.

In lieu of a proper review: please go read this book. I read it a few weeks ago, and it’s been quietly haunting me ever since. At one level, it’s a book about the weirdness of France when you dig just below the surface. At another level, it’s about the weirdness lurking under the surface of the entire modern world. We live in a world that has been, in some sense, normalized and channeled in non-weird directions. Come to any place like Boston or Paris, and the weirdness is hidden from you; tourists are directed to completely normal tourist attractions, which present a rather bland and unsurprising face to the world. In the specific case of France, the face that we see is the face of Paris: even the vaunted “French cuisine” is really Parisian cuisine. Consider the provinces:

For tourists who ventured beyond Paris, the true taste of France was stale bread. The degree of staleness reflected the availability of fuel. A manual of rural architecture published in Toulouse in 1820 stated that the public oven should be large enough to allow the week’s bread to be baked in a single twenty-four-hour period. In the Alps, enough bread was produced in a single batch for a year and sometimes two or three years. It was baked, at least once, then hung above a smoky fire or dried in the sun. Sometimes, the ‘loaf’ was just a thin barley and bean-flour biscuit. To make it edible and to improve the colour, it was softened in buttermilk or whey. Rich people used white wine.

As I copy down that passage, the final sentence reminds me of something else I love about this book: the economy of a dry observation. A lesser writer could have elaborated that “Even the wealthy ate no better than this; rich people used white wine.” Robb lets the observation stand on its own, and moves on.

What initially drew me to this book (when my friend Chris directed me) was an absolutely insane passage about babies being carted off to Paris from the provinces, stuffed into bicycle panniers. It’s not just that the pre-industrial era is not far behind us; and it’s not just that the provinces were backwards until quite recently; it’s that our entire way of looking at the world has been canalized into a particularly boring 21st-century mode, and that the world is a phenomenally strange place.

There are many other levels to this book. The only other one I’ll point out is the mutual incomprehensibility in which even adjoining villages often lived. The “French language” is a construct, enforced by the Académie Française, hammered out of the thousands of dialects that filled the countryside. Again, the picture that we moderns — maybe especially Americans — have of the world around us is a world of nations with well-defined borders, governed by strong central governments, speaking basically one (or at most a few) language, with the language and the government spanning roughly the same territory. Graham Robb’s book puts us back in a world where the governments, the languages, and the cultures are all fluid and unnamed.

I recommend it without reservation. And I want to read more books like this one, which give us the historical imagination to return to a just-barely-buried world.

Why this is not quoted anywhere on the Internet, I have no idea — June 28, 2016

Why this is not quoted anywhere on the Internet, I have no idea

I tried any number of reasonable Google searches to get this text, then finally gave up and found it in my paper copy of Anthony Lane’s Nobody’s Perfect. Lane is reading each of the top 10 New York Times bestsellers from the week of May 15, 1994. Hence I give you:

No. 5 on the list is Inca Gold, by Clive Cussler. The plot is some farrago about buried treasure in the Andes, and the characters, though intended to be as tough as old boots, are not quite tough enough to curse properly. “Those fornicating baboons” is about as close as they get. The fruitful comparison here is with Judith Krantz, who I thought would be partial to soft-core euphemisms like “manhood” and “moistness” but never hesitates to call a fuck a fuck. The only point of interest in Inca Gold, in fact, is Cussler’s attempt to out-Folsom Alan Folsom, sometimes in the most unsuitable places: “the underwater blast came like the eruption of a huge depth charge as a seething column of white froth and green slime burst out of the sinkhole, splattering everyone and everything standing within 20 meters (66 feet) of the edge.” I love that parenthesis more than I can say. Someone should ask Mr. Cussler to edit an anthology of English verse. He could start with Robert Frost:

And miles (multiples of 1.6 kilometres)
to go before I sleep.
And miles (multiples of 1.6 kilometres)
to go before I sleep.

(British spelling of ‘kilometers’ is [sic], by the way, because The New Yorker. These are the same people who spell it ‘focussed’.)

Did someone say Canadian statistics? — May 3, 2016

Did someone say Canadian statistics?

A couple years ago I reviewed a book about Canada’s then-Prime Minister Stephen Harper. Among other things, I wrote:

Then there are Harper’s moves that just seem outright slimy, like getting rid of the long-form census and generally gutting Statistics Canada. Again, this seems to be part of a pattern: if you remove the fundamental tools underlying the welfare state, including its financing and its means of measuring the populace, then there are questions you just never think of asking. If you stop measuring the same people over time, for instance, it’s harder to say that income mobility has gone down.

Gutting the collection of official statistics is right out of the U.S. GOP’s playbook. Wells touches on this a little bit, but perhaps not as much as I’d like. Is Canadian conservatism very similar to its American cousin? Wells is more focused on Harper the man, and on the details of Ottawa politics, so The Longer I’m Prime Minister has more to say about the politics than about these broader questions.

Well look what we have here!

Canada’s long-form census, known as the National Household Survey, was made optional by then-Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s conservative government back in 2010. As a result, participation in the NHS plummeted from 93.5 percent in 2006, to 68.6 percent four years later. “Voluntary surveys are simply a waste of money,” Munir Sheikh, Statistics Canada’s chief statistician who resigned over the switch, told CityLab last year. “[They] cannot provide you the kind of accurate information that you need to make your policy decisions.”

Seems good!

Ulysses S. Grant, Personal Memoirs of Ulysses S. Grant — May 1, 2016

Ulysses S. Grant, Personal Memoirs of Ulysses S. Grant

I can recommend reading this book if you either

a) can somehow get your hands on just the highlights; or
b) are really into military minutiae.

It’s a highly detailed account of Grant’s time in the military, basically from the Mexican-American War through the end of the Civil War. Scattered throughout is this kind of thing:

About four in the afternoon I sent for the corps commanders and directed the dispositions to be made of their troops. Sherman was to remain in Jackson until he destroyed that place as a railroad centre, and manufacturing city of military supplies. He did the work most effectually. Sherman and I went together into a manufactory which had not ceased work on account of the battle nor for the entrance of Yankee troops. Our presence did not seem to attract the attention of either the manager or the operatives, most of whom were girls. We looked on for a while to see the tent cloth which they were making roll out of the looms, with “C. S. A.” woven in each bolt. There was an immense amount of cotton, in bales, stacked outside. Finally I told Sherman I thought they had done work enough. The operatives were told they could leave and take with them what cloth they could carry. In a few minutes cotton and factory were in a blaze. The proprietor visited Washington while I was President to get his pay for this property, claiming that it was private. He asked me to give him a statement of the fact that his property had been destroyed by National troops, so that he might use it with Congress where he was pressing, or proposed to press, his claim. I declined.

This man is cold-blooded. But then you get this sort of passage that I find devastating:

There was no time during the rebellion when I did not think, and often say, that the South was more to be benefited by its defeat than the North. The latter had the people, the institutions, and the territory to make a great and prosperous nation. The former was burdened with an institution abhorrent to all civilized people not brought up under it, and one which degraded labor, kept it in ignorance, and enervated the governing class. With the outside world at war with this institution, they could not have extended their territory. The labor of the country was not skilled, nor allowed to become so. The whites could not toil without becoming degraded, and those who did were denominated “poor white trash.” The system of labor would have soon exhausted the soil and left the people poor. The non-slaveholders would have left the country, and the small slaveholder must have sold out to his more fortunate neighbor. Soon the slaves would have outnumbered the masters, and, not being in sympathy with them, would have risen in their might and exterminated them. The war was expensive to the South as well as to the North, both in blood and treasure, but it was worth all it cost.

I learned a lot from this book. For instance, Grant says bluntly that “The Southern rebellion was largely the outgrowth of the Mexican[-American] war,” and that “The occupation, separation and annexation were, from the inception of the movement to its final consummation, a conspiracy to acquire territory out of which slave states might be formed for the American Union.” And while I’d seen it referred to in other works (e.g., David Herbert Donald’s biography of Lincoln), I’d never appreciated just how consistently the Union refused to treat the South as a real nation: Grant consistently refers to “to so-called Confederate government,” and explains “that their object was to negotiate terms of peace between he United States and, as they termed it, the Confederate Government.”

Grant believed that the war could have been over in mere months had his bosses been willing to take advantage of their early successes; instead he and the chief military officer, Henry Halleck, were in conflict throughout the war, with Halleck constantly taking a cautious approach. Grant’s reserve throughout his memoirs makes me wonder what he really thought of Halleck; Grant must have believed that Halleck’s slow pace cost tens of thousands of Union lives.

Ta-Nehisi Coates quotes a number of other passages, including a long must-read passage about the lead-up to the Civil War, about a purported Constitutional right to secede from the Union, and about much else besides. It was the passages Coates quotes that drew me to read Grant’s book. I’m very glad I did.

One bit toward the end really puzzled me. Grant says that President Andrew Johnson started out wanting to treat the South as contemptible criminals — to punish them and isolate them. Soon, though,

Mr. Johnson, after a complete revolution of sentiment, seemed to regard the South not only as an oppressed people, but as the people best entitled to consideration of any of our citizens. This was more than the people who had secured to us the perpetuation of the Union were prepared for, and they became more radical in their views.

So Johnson’s about-face caused a counter-reaction among Northerners? At the time Grant wrote — 1885, completing the book just days before his death — all his readers must have known what he was talking about; 130 years on, I do not. Nor do I understand Grant’s reference to “legislation enacted during the reconstruction period to stay the hands of the President”. Joan Waugh’s Grant biography is next in queue, so perhaps she’ll explain these things to me. Or perhaps I need to reread Foner.