Tuesday, December 31, 2024

Face Vocal Band - The Parting Glass

We have come to the end of another year.  Modern New Years' Eve celebrations include the singing of Robert Burns' Auld Lang Syne, a traditional Scottish ballad. But that's not the only song that was included in the party.  This one is older, perhaps almost two hundred years older.  It sings of the sorrow of parting, of reminiscing of times now gone.  The "parting glass" was the final toast offered to a departing guest, frequently served when the guest mounted his horse (i.e. a stirrup cup).

Burns referred to this song, so it was not only common but famous in his day - the music was incorrectly attributed to Joseph Haydn (!).  But the song dropped into obscurity.  It was Tommy Makem and The Clancy Brothers who re-introduced it into popular use; it became a signature number of theirs, and they would typically close concerts with it.
 
So this New Years' Eve when everyone dusts off the old Robert Burns, hoist a glass of cheer to the anonymous authors of this.  We even now saddle up to ride into the New Year; a parting glass is not too much to ask from 2024.
 

The Parting Glass (traditional)
Of all the money that e'er I had
I spent it in good company
And all the harm I've ever done
Alas it was to none but me
And all I've done for want of wit
To mem'ry now I can't recall
So fill to me the parting glass
Good night and joy be to you all

So fill to me the parting glass
And drink a health whate’er befall,
And gently rise and softly call
Good night and joy be to you all

Of all the comrades that e'er I had
They're sorry for my going away
And all the sweethearts that e'er I had
They'd wish me one more day to stay

But since it fell unto my lot
That I should rise and you should not
I gently rise and softly call
Good night and joy be to you all

A man may drink and not be drunk
A man may fight and not be slain
A man may court a pretty girl
And perhaps be welcomed back again
But since it has so ought to be
By a time to rise and a time to fall
Come fill to me the parting glass
Good night and joy be with you all
Good night and joy be with you all
To all our readers, we wish you a happy and healthy New Year!

 

Monday, December 30, 2024

Security cats and dogs, living together

This was so full of win that it is in danger of collapsing into a Black Hole of win.

But let me give you some background about why.  Longtime readers know how I enjoy Christmas light displays that people put up at their houses.  As it turns out, Rob Joyce (they guy who led the NSA's attack team, TAO) is one of these people.  OK, cool - the Fed.Gov's chief h4X0r dude likes his light show.  So what?

Well, he went out to ShmooCon and gave a preso about how he did it. For those not in The Biz, ShmooCon is a very long running hacker convention - it's not at all corporate button-down.  Still has a whiff of the old school to it.

And so Joyce gave a talk about his Christmas lights there.


El Reg has an interview with him about this, which is a great read.  Here are my two favorite bits:

[Driving around looking at other people's displays] It was over the top and gaudy, and just really made me happy. I said "I think I could do that," meaning I have the technical chops to achieve it. And [Joyce's wife] said, "yes you can," and I took that as license to mean, "yes, you can do it." And so when boxes started arriving in the mail in February and March, she's like, "what the hell is this?"

I can totally hear The Queen Of The World saying those very same words to me ...

The Register: A senior person in the NSA ordering huge amounts of electronic equipment from China didn't set off any red flags?

Joyce: None of the compute comes from China, just the LED strings themselves. I would applaud somebody if they could supply chain that.

I do take a little more care in the control system itself. It's not connected to the internet and is a standalone network – because I do have friends who have interesting hobbies and would love to change my display and make it say some interesting things.

In this business you don't last very long - or rise very high - if you're not paranoid.

Highly, highly recommended - both the interview and the video.

Sunday, December 29, 2024

Ernest Tomlinson - Fantasia on Auld Lang Syne

This is one of the most clever and enjoyable pieces of classical music that I know.  Ernest Tomlinson's story is quite an impressive one, but the quick story here is that he weaved bits of 152 other songs in this composition.  It's a challenge to recognize them all which is why I have a (partial) cheat sheet below.  What a fun song.


0:33- Auld Lang Syne 
2:10
- Gounod’s Soldier Chorus from Faust
2:15
- The British Grenadiers
2:24 - Leroy Anderson’s The Rakes of Mallow
2:42
- Cesar Franck’s Symphonic Variations
2:52 - Chopin's Piano Sonata No.2, 2nd movement
3:09
- Elgar's Enigma Variations, main theme
3:37
- Beethoven's Symphony No.9, 4th movement, "Ode To Joy"
3:53 - Haydn’s St.Anthony Chorale
4:06
- Purcell's Abdelazer, "Rondeau" or Britten's The Young Person's Guide to the Orchestra
4:23 - Schubert’s Trout Quintet, 4th movement
4:32 - Haydn's Symphony No.94, 2nd movement
4:50
- Bach's Jesu, Joy of Man's Desiring
5:33
- Dvorak’s Humoresque no 7
5:41
- Foster’s Beautiful Dreamer
5:44
- Tchaikovsky’s Pathétique symphony 3rd movement
5:51
- A Life on The Ocean Wave
5:51
- Auld Lang Syne
5:54
- Khachaturian’s Adagio from Spartacus
6:14 - Mendelssohn’s Overture to The Hebrides
6:51
- Mozart's Piano Sonata No.16, first movement
7:09
- Handel's Entry of the Queen of Sheba
7:23
- Tchaikovsky’s Dance of the Little Swan from Swan Lake
7:27
- Bach’s Fugue in C minor from Well-Tempered Clavier
7:31 - Arthur Sullivan ... "Major General" (Pirates of Penzance)
7:32
- The Keel Row
7:44
- Bizet's Overture to Carmen
7:53 - This Old Man
8:00
- Thomas-Arne’s Rule-Britannia
8:08
- Strauss Jr’s Voice of Spring Waltz
8:53
- Tchaikovsky’s Valse no. 2 from Swan Lake
9:25
- Weber’s Invitation to the Dance
9:31 - Je veux vivre (Juliet's Waltz) from Romeo et Juliette by Charles Gounod
9:46 - Strauss. Jr’s Waltz from Die Flaudermaus
10:05
- Chopin's Grand Valse Brilliante
10:55
- Tchaikovsky - Serenade for Strings, 2nd movement
11:26 - Smetana’s Dance of the Comedian from The Bartered Bride
12:26
- Strauss. Jr’s Perpetuum Mobile Polka
12:35
- Mozart’s French Horn no. 4, 3rd movement
12:42 - Shenandoah
12:48 - Dvorak’s Slavonic Dance no 2 op.46
12:53
- Wi’a Hundred Pipers
12:59 - Offenbach's Can-Can Dance
13:02
- Schubert's Military March No.1, or Stravinsky's Circus Polka
13:13
- Offenbach's Can-Can Dance
13:22
- Rossini’s La Danza from Les Soirée Musicales
13:38 - Mysterious Pizzicato
13:44
- Bach’s A Riercar a 6 from The Musical Offering
14:24
- Rossini’s Overture to Semiramide
13:56
- Dark Eyes
14:07
- Koenig’s Post Horn Gallop
14:42 - Benjamin’s Jamaican Rumba
14:50
- Khachaturian's Sabre Dance
15:02
- Rossini's Overture to "The Barber of Seville"
15:04 - Bizet's L' Arlesienne Suite No.2, "Farandole"
15:07
- Glinka's Overture to "Ruslan and Ludmilla"
15:20 - Goodnight, Ladies
15:57
- Tchaikovsky's 1812 Overture
17:56
- Verdi's Le donna e mobile, from "Rigoletto"
16:41
- O, Come All ye Faithful
17:47
- La Curachacha
17:58 - The Girl I left behind 
18:04
- Yankee Doodle
18:06
- Good King Winceslas
18:10 - Sailor's Hornpipe
18:19
- Grieg’s Morning Mood from Peer Gynt
18:26
- Dvorak’s New World Symphony, 2nd movement

Wednesday, December 25, 2024

Tuesday, December 24, 2024

Luciano Pavarotti and Placido Domingo - O Holy Night

The World awaits its Savior. 

The Christmas Truce

The opening weeks of The War To End Wars is nothing like what we think.  In many ways it was worse for the men on the ground, which only makes the spontaneous outbreak of peace even more amazing.  The bitterness that the soldiers of both sides must have felt would have burned bright, and yet the feelings of the season overcame all that.

When we think of that war, we think of trenches, barbed wire, and machine guns.  That's quite a good description of the western front, but not until 2 or 3 months into the conflict.  Initially instead of a slog over No Man's Land, it was a war of movement, with massive armies covering hundreds of miles.  August and September 1914 saw men pushed to their limits because they had to march 15 miles and then fight the enemy, and then wake up and do it all over again.  And again.  And again.

The losses were unbelievable.  The first six weeks saw the following killed, wounded, and missing: 300,000 (France), 300,000 (Germany), 300,000 (Austria-Hungary), 250,000 (Russia), 200,000 (Serbia), 15,000 (Britain).  That last seems out of place with the rivers of blood from the other combatants, but Britain's army in 1914 was not a mass of draftees - rather, it was a small force of professional veterans.  15,000 was a quarter of the entire force.

October followed up these million and a half with the Kindermord, the "slaughter of the children".  The generals were horrified at the losses, not so much because of the incredible human loss but because their forces were so rapidly depleted.  Trainees were rushed from basic training straight to the front.  At the First Battle of Ypres 60,000 of these kids were mowed down as they marched, singing, into the rifles of the Cold Stream Guards.

The German artist Käthe Kollwitz made a sculpture in remembrance of her son, Peter, killed in the Kindermord.  He, like most of his comrades, was 18.  You can see it if you go to the Vladslo German cemetery in Diksmuid, Belgum.  The grief and bitterness is captured in stone.



Only then did it settle down to trenches, barbed wire, and No Man's Land.  So if anyone was justified in holding a grudge, it was everyone in a trench on the Western Front in December 1914.  And yet, this happened instead.

110 years ago today, 100,000 soldiers in the trenches of the Western Front stopped shooting each other, at least for a little while.  Instead, moved by the spirit of the season, they met in No Man's Land to exchange greetings and brandy, and to play soccer.  
Image from the Illustrated London News, 9 Jan 1915

 

The Generals were less than amused, and cracked down in following years. Captain Sir Iain Colquhoun was Court-martialed for his participation.  After they convicted him someone recalled that he was related to the British Prime Minister, and so they quietly swept it all under the carpet.

Historians now occupy the field of battle because all the eye witnesses are now long dead.  All that we have are stories from those who remember those witnesses. But we know that December 1914 saw something unique in trench warfare: Christmas showed that the human heart still beat on the front lines.  This song from 1984 was back when some of those men still lived, and John 
McCutcheon tells of how some of them came to his concert because they heard the song on the radio:

All our lives, our family our friends told us we were crazy.  Couldn't possibly have happened to us.  Then we heard your song on the radio and said "See? See? We were there."


Christmas In The Trenches (Songwriter: John McCutcheon)

My name is Francis Tolliver. I come from Liverpool.
Two years ago the war was waiting for me after school.
To Belgium and to Flanders, to Germany to here,
I fought for King and country I love dear.

It was Christmas in the trenches where the frost so bitter hung.
The frozen field of France were still, no Christmas song was sung.
Our families back in England were toasting us that day,
their brave and glorious lads so far away.

I was lyin' with my mess-mates on the cold and rocky ground
when across the lines of battle came a most peculiar sound.
Says I "Now listen up me boys", each soldier strained to hear
as one young German voice sang out so clear.

"He's singin' bloddy well you know", my partner says to me.
Soon one by one each German voice joined in in harmony.
The cannons rested silent. The gas cloud rolled no more
as Christmas brought us respite from the war.

As soon as they were finished a reverent pause was spent.
'God rest ye merry, gentlemen' struck up some lads from Kent.
The next they sang was 'Stille Nacht". "Tis 'Silent Night'" says I
and in two toungues one song filled up that sky.

"There's someone commin' towards us" the front-line sentry cried.
All sights were fixed on one lone figure trudging from their side.
His truce flag, like a Christmas star, shone on that plain so bright
as he bravely strode, unarmed, into the night.

Then one by one on either side walked into no-mans-land
with neither gun nor bayonet we met there hand to hand.
We shared some secret brandy and wished each other well
and in a flare-lit soccer game we gave 'em hell.

We traded chocolates, cigarettes and photographs from home
these sons and fathers far away from families of their own.
Young Sanders played his squeeze box and they had a violin
this curious and unlikely band of men.

Soon daylight stole upon us and France was France once more.
With sad farewells we each began to settle back to war.
But the question haunted every heart that lived that wondrous night
"whose family have I fixed within my sights?"

It was Christmas in the trenches where the frost so bitter hung.
The frozen fields of France were warmed as songs of peace were sung.
For the walls they'd kept between us to exact the work of war
had been crumbled and were gone for ever more.

My name is Francis Tolliver. In Liverpool I dwell.
Each Christmas come since World War One
I've learned it's lessons well.
That the ones who call the shots won't be among the dead and lame
and on each end of the rifle we're the same.
This Christmas Eve, remember those caught up in the killing fields of Flanders, and the Ardennes, and Khe Sanh. And remember those who still stand post far from home and family tonight.

Monday, December 23, 2024

Michael Bublé and Thalia - Mis Deseos/Feliz Navidad

This is very funny, and very toe tapping.  Love this.

"Open the garage door, HAL."

Home AI computer for $250:

NVIDIA is taking the wraps off a new compact generative AI supercomputer, offering increased performance at a lower price with a software upgrade.

The new NVIDIA Jetson Orin Nano Super Developer Kit, which fits in the palm of a hand, provides everyone from commercial AI developers to hobbyists and students, gains in generative AI capabilities and performance. And the price is now $249, down from $499.

Available today, it delivers as much as a 1.7x leap in generative AI inference performance, a 70% increase in performance to 67 INT8 TOPS, and a 50% increase in memory bandwidth to 102GB/s compared with its predecessor.

Don't think I need one of these, but that's me.

(via)

Sunday, December 22, 2024

Arthur Fiedler & The Boston Pops - Christmas Album

You don't get more traditional Christmas music than this.

Saturday, December 21, 2024

Jimmy Buffett - Mele Kalikimaka

A great Parrot Head version of the song made famous by Bing Crosby.

Thursday, December 19, 2024

Dad Joke CCCXLVIII

Which reindeer likes to clean?  Comet.

Tuesday, December 17, 2024

Sir Christopher Lee - Jingle Hell

This is a little different, as Christmas music goes.  We've seen Christopher Lee here before in Christopher Lee: Metal Rocker and Total Badass. There's a lot of background in that post about his badassery, but also about his collaboration with the Metal band Rhapsody of Fire.

This 2013 song was released when he was 91 and went to #22 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart, making him the oldest person ever to enter the music charts.  That's pretty badass right there, over and above his SAS career killing Nazis.

 

Badass.

Note: I do believe that this is the first ever Christmas post here that I've tagged "Badass".

Trump Administration to up cyber attacks overseas?

This is interesting:

President-elect Donald Trump's team wants to go on the offensive against America's cyber adversaries, though it isn't clear how the incoming administration plans to achieve this. 

...

"We have been, over the years, trying to play better and better defense when it comes to cyber," Waltz said. "We need to start going on offense and start imposing, I think, higher costs and consequences to private actors and nation state actors."

There's no question that attacks on US critical infrastructure have massively increased during the last decade, and there's also no question that foreign governments often take the stance that "Shucks, it must be criminal gangs".

The idea of threatening higher (retaliatory) costs to another country seems very Trumpian.

 

Monday, December 16, 2024

Quote of the Day - Hawaii 2nd Amendment nullification

From Francis Porretto:

The irony here is that the issue of concern to the author is an explicit element of the Constitutional contract, rather than an arbitrary change to it or a dismissal of one of its terms. Had the federal government passed a law asserting that the Second Amendment doesn’t apply to Hawaiians, that would have been a violation of the contract; the Hawaiian government would be right to oppose it. But the facts are the other way around. By applying for statehood, Hawaii agreed to abide by the Constitution as it stands; it could not claim afterward that it agreed “except for that inconvenient ‘right to keep and bear arms’ stuff.”

I have no idea what would follow were Hawaii to announce that it is seceding from the Union. In the fantasy case of a successful secession, Hawaii would no longer be bound by the Constitution’s prescriptions and proscriptions. In the real world as it stands today, Hawaii has agreed to the Constitutional contract; therefore, the Second Amendment is binding on Hawaii. Nullification and Interposition are irrelevant to the matter. Charlton Allen should not have mentioned them at all. I cannot imagine why he did so.

Read the whole thing which discusses how the Civil War did not establish nullification.

Sunday, December 15, 2024

Yo-Yo Ma and Alison Krauss - The Wexford Carol

He plays like an angel, she sings like one. That's why this video has 6 million views.

Saturday, December 14, 2024

Faith Hill - Where Are You Christmas?

The Queen Of The World and I watched the 1999 live action Grinch movie and quite enjoyed it.  This song got prominent play, for obvious reasons.

Wednesday, December 11, 2024

Vince Guaraldi Trio - Peanuts Christmas Special

When Charles Schultz agreed to let the TV folks do an animated Christmas special, he insisted on two things that gave the studio execs major heartburn: he insisted on a reading from the Book of Matthew, and he insisted on a jazz score.  The studio execs blinked first, and both of those additions were wildly popular.

DoD grounds all V-22 Osprey aircraft

This doesn't sound good:

The US Navy, Air Force, and Marine Corps have grounded their fleet of Boeing-Bell-made Osprey V-22s on safety grounds.

A spokesperson for the Naval Air Systems Command (NAVAIR) told The Register that the decision had been made following an incident where one of the aircraft made an emergency landing.

...

The move comes after a V-22, operating out of the Air Force Special Operations Command (AFSOC) in Florida, was forced to make a "precautionary landing," its spokesperson told us. No one was injured in the incident.

The decision comes barely a year after the last grounding of the V-22 fleet, which came after a fatal crash by a V-22 operated by the Air Force which killed both pilots and six passengers. The cause of that crash was reportedly one of the two engines failed, and the fleet was grounded for three months of checks.

The V-22 is too complex and too expensive, and keeps killing its passengers.

 

Tuesday, December 10, 2024

Nat King Cole - Chestnuts Roasting On An Open Fire

One of the greatest (of many great) Christmas songs.

Dad Joke CCCXLVII

What do you call a cow with no legs?  Ground beef.

Saturday, December 7, 2024

Coldplay - All My Love

The Queen Of The World pointed this out.  She sure finds all the good stuff.  This isn't really a Christmas song, but it's sure a song for the Christmas season.  Dick van Dyke reflecting on a life well lived.


"What is Love?"  Ah, this is one of the Great Questions.  The greatest minds have grappled with these questions throughout the ages.  But the Great Questions do not have answers - that is not their purpose.

What a great video.

Friday, December 6, 2024

If you have one of the D-Link home routers, you need to replace it now

This is not good:

Owners of older models of D-Link VPN routers are being told to retire and replace their devices following the disclosure of a serious remote code execution (RCE) vulnerability.

Most of the details about the bug are being kept under wraps given the potential for wide exploitation. The vendor hasn't assigned it a CVE identifier or really said much about it at all other than that it's a buffer overflow bug that leads to unauthenticated RCE.

This bug is so serious that the vendor is not releasing any details about it at all, because this will help the Bad Guys create exploits.  There will not be a patch because all of these devices are End-Of-Life.

Affected devices (all hardware revisions) include:

  • DSR-150 (EOL May 2024)

  • DSR-150N (EOL May 2024)

  • DSR-250 (EOL May 2024)

  • DSR-250N (EOL May 2024)

  • DSR-500N (EOL September 2015)

  • DSR-1000N (EOL October 2015)

If you have one of these, you need to replace it.  Details are interesting (at the link) but the bottom line is: get shopping.

 

Wednesday, December 4, 2024

New Zealand Navy ship lost due to series of human errors

They didn't turn off the autopilot:

A Court of Inquiry that was stood up following the grounding of the Royal New Zealand Navy dive and hydrographic ship HMNZS Manawanui in Samoa on October 5, 2024, determined that the incident was the result of human error.

"The direct cause of the grounding has been determined as a series of human errors which meant the ship’s autopilot was not disengaged when it should have been," said Rear Admiral Garin Golding, who stood up the Court of Inquiry in order to understand the facts of what occurred.

"The crew did not realise Manawanui remained in autopilot and, as a consequence, mistakenly believed its failure to respond to direction changes was the result of a thruster control failure."

And so the autopilot drove the ship onto the reef.  It seems that the manual on how to deal with this has "check that the autopilot is turned off" as step 1.

 

Monday, December 2, 2024

The importance of D.O.G.E.

Donald Trump has asked Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy to lead what is basically an audit of the entire US Federal Government.  There is much consternation about this in the expected circles - no doubt due in part of the proclivity of Musk and Ramaswamy to stir the pot and troll their opponents.

I mean, the Department of Government Efficiency?  D.O.G.E.?  Srlsy?

 Fun and games aside, this is a really important project.  It's not just that Elon says you can reduce the Federal budget by $2T/year - nice though that would be.  Instead, it circles back to something that Trump has been talking about for years.  Remember him asking why we can't get a growth rate of 4%?

I wrote this a long time ago, and updated it 6 years ago for the age of Donald Trump.  I think that it's even more important today, with D.O.G.E. explicitly intended to address the issues I called out.

(last ported 2 January 2018)

Why Donald Trump will transform America

Donald Trump understands something that nobody else knows, and he is doing something about it.  If he accomplishes what he is setting out to do, it will completely change America.  To understand what this is, we need to look at what's changed in the past few decades, and before.

Something unprecedented happened during the eighteenth century, something that is a sharp dividing line between the modern world and what came before. The Industrial Revolution transformed first Britain, then Europe and the United States, and then the world.

It started with cloth making, where initially water power drove a set of rapidly evolving machine types that made cloth literally thousands of times easier to make. Prices plummeted, and consumption rose by a factor of 12 between 1770 and 1800. People's lives began to change, as now underwear was affordable to more than just the wealthy.

Then came steam and iron. James Watt invented the first really successful steam engine, but it was only unleashed when Henry Cort approached him with a "grand secret". Up until then, Iron was frightfully expensive, because manufacturing basically had to heat the molten ore until the slag floated off. Cort had figured out how to use Watt's engines to drive huge hammers to beat the slag out of the metal. He could make fifteen tons of wrought iron in twelve hours. Iron production soared by a factor of 150 between 1740 and 1852. The price of iron plummeted, to the point where it entirely changed architecture.

Something was in the air - creativity had been unleashed, and continued in the nineteenth century, infecting industry after industry: Bessemer and Steel, Tennant and industrial chemicals (chemicals manufactured in ton weights, like chlorine bleach), railroads, electricity, internal combustion, aviation, the communications revolution of telegraphy-radio-television-Internet.
 

What was striking about this was that each industry would exhibit precisely the same growth characteristics. The "S" curve described a slowish initial takeoff, an exponentially rising growth period, and then a slow tailing off. All of these industries followed it in turn: cotton, iron, steel, railroads. What was key to the miracle that occurred between 1720 and 1990 was that as one reached the top of the curve and began to falter, a new industry emerged to drive things forward. Income per capita went from around $450 in what would become the United States (in 1700) to $18,300 in 1989.

In many ways, this seems to be spinning down. More and more industries seem to be in the top flat part of the curve. Fewer new industries are emerging with robust growth to pick up the slack. People look towards the future and do not see a doubling of real per capita national income.

We are told that the people are ignorant, and aren't smart enough to know what they're talking about. We're told this by an Educated Class with complex computer models of the financial system. We're asked, what do the hoi poloi know of the grand sweep of the world economic system?

I think that the feeling of dread is well justified, by a good view of the forest rather than the trees. And after all, the financial models didn't predict the 2008 collapse or the stagnation that followed, so a little more humility might be called for. But in general, the critique is correct - people don't know what's causing this, just that they're unhappy. They see a change, which makes them unhappy. They don't know the cause.

Immodestly, I would like to say that I think that I do. It's related to the size of government, but the usual arguments over which side of the Laffer Curve we're on, or what the optimal rate of marginal taxes are pretty much beside the point. Something is slowing the system down, and it's not the 35% that the Fed.Gov takes off the top (OK, a little, but that's a second order effect).

Let's think about fast and slow. The Empire State Building was built in a little over 15 months. The World Trade Center (Tower 1) took 52 months, and that was in 1970. Most recently, One World Trade Center took 7 years to complete.  We're slowing down; we're not as good at what we used to do.

The reason for this is regulation (and its bastard child, litigation). That's the problem. We have buildings full of people that make us stop what we're doing, fill out forms in triplicate, and then wait months or years before we are allowed to pick up where we stopped. Think for a minute what this does. It pushes some of the middle of the S-Curve into the flat part, reducing the overall value of the industry, as resources get sidelined instead of being engaged in production. More damagingly, it pushes the next S-Curve to the right, increasing the time that it takes to bring a new industry online. Most damagingly of all, it possibly completely eliminates some S-Curves from appearing at all, because the risk is too high to attract investors.

It's not the tax rate, it's the regulation rate that's making the economy run down. Sarbanes-Oxley, passed in great haste after Enron's collapse, has all but destroyed the high tech IPO market. Think of that as S-Curves that never came into existence.  The Silicon Graybeard posted about this 7 years ago:
Although the legislators and regulators never consider this, every regulation consumes some amount of time and money to comply with.  The new Finance Reform bill has been estimated to required the development of 250-300 new regulations.  Every regulation slows down, hinders and costs every honest business real money.  Despite the widespread talk of corrupt CEOs and general lack of corporate ethics, I've been working in the manufacturing industry since the mid 1970s, and every company has had an active, if not aggressive, ethics compliance program with requirements for training and seminars every year.  There are exceptions but most companies do their best to be honest and law-abiding.  Government seems to think it's mere coincidence that countries with lower tax rates and lower regulation attract business, and they demonize companies for moving to countries where the environment is better.  
As SiGraybeard points out, Big Business excels at managing the top end of the S-Curve, and they have big offices capable of dealing with the paperwork. Big Business doesn't mind regulation - in fact, if you believe (as I do) that Regulatory Capture is the equilibrium state of any government agency, Big Business uses regulation to hobble small but dangerous competitors. They get the Fed.Gov to do their dirty work, while they extract maximum value from the end phase of their old products. We pay for that in higher prices and lack of better alternatives.

Scale this up to cover the entire economy, as the government has tripled in the post war period, and it becomes obvious why we can't build skyscrapers any more. They don't seem to have trouble with this in Dubai - it's us that keeps us from doing it.

Regulation stifles innovation - quick, name the last revolutionary program that came out of the Department of Education. That effectively transfers wealth from future generations (our children and grandchildren, who will have lower standards of living). The recipients of that transfer are government employees - those folks that read and file your application (in triplicate) and the Big Business that captures the regulatory agency.

We have made so many layers of cruft - allowed so many barnacles to grow on the bottom of the ship - that we're noticeably slowing down. People feel it. People are nervous, because they think it's going to get worse. And while the recent Congresses and the Obama Administration poured gasoline on that flame with Health Care "Reform" (written by Big Pharma, the Insurance Companies, and the AMA), I'd like to point out that the Republicans ran Congress and the White House when Sarbanes-Oxley passed.

One way to look at things is that it's been a good long 300 year run. Too bad it's over, nothing lasts forever. Get used to stasis, with fewer and smaller S-Curves, and get used to declining living standards as Big Business and a bloated government take ever more from National Income, immizerating the masses.

A different way to look at things is government regulation didn't give people affordable underwear, or bleach to keep them clean. Get out of our way, and we'll do it again. The tax rates are annoying, but the buildings full of fussy balls-and-chains telling us that we'll hear back from them in 3 to 6 months are infuriating.

This is what Donald Trump knows.  He knows that there are winners in this game - the Ivy League, the Non-Governmental Organizations, "Big Green" (The Sierra Club, Friends of the Earth, Greenpeace).  Trump knows that they all hate him, and are engaged in a scorched earth campaign to destroy him. He also knows that the losers in this game are the working classes, who vote for him.  

So what do you think is his motivation?  Is it to change governance to unleash economic growth, rewarding his supporters and humiliating his opponents?  Or is it to fade quietly into the background, sitting in the corner and thinking about his many failings?  To ask the question is to answer it.


This is the big thing that Trump knows that nobody else does.  It's a big idea, which seems to be how he likes to think.  It's transformative.  So far, he has quashed nearly 2000 regulations in his first year, and seems only to be getting started.  And all the geniuses who hate him are so focused on his tweets that they have no idea what's hitting them.

Note: This post is based on one I did 7 years ago.  It's taken this long for a politician to come on the scene who looks like he wants to do something about it.

UPDATE 2 January 2018 22:17: Even the New York Times recognizes this in an (inadvertently) hilarious story.  It would take a heart of stone not to laugh at their attempts to spin soaring business confidence due to reduced regulation under Trump.  Almost every person quoted is a former Democratic administration aparachick, and there are precisely no quotes from business leaders who think that reduced regulation helps business expansion, hiring, and wage increases.  And there's this, of course:
There is little historical evidence tying regulation levels to growth. Regulatory proponents say, in fact, that those rules can have positive economic effects in the long run, saving companies from violations that could cost them both financially and reputationally. Cost-benefit analyses generally do not look just at the impact of a regulation on a particular business’s bottom line in the coming months, but at the broader impact on consumers, the environment, public health and other factors that can show up over years or decades.
Oooooooh kaaaaaaay.  [rolls eyes]