navigating the second Gilded Age through humor, invective and insight

“Even the gods fight in vain against stupidity” – Friedrich Schiller

My Politics

I call myself a liberal or a progressive, depending on the audience1. But I am also pretty focused on ensuring the train of politics doesn’t go off the rails in the pursuit of a more perfect union. That’s undoubtedly related to why I went into corporate finance as my private sector career.

Indeed, over on The Boiling Frog — a podcast site my buddy Seth and I set up — I correctly identify myself as a capitalist pig. But one who knows market capitalism isn’t the best system. Like every other political choice, it is “merely” the least bad…and the community, through its government, must offset its known flaws if it isn’t to become, like fire, a terrible master rather than a powerful servant.

My politics weren’t always liberal or progressive2. In my youth I was quite libertarian.

That’s not as odd an evolution as it might first sound. Smart, hard-working people from modest backgrounds naturally tend to conclude their success — if they achieve it — is due solely to their personal efforts. Because it’s all too easy to forget someone else paid for the public education you got, built the roads you traveled to the places where you worked and learned to be a successful adult, subsidized the medical research that led to the treatments that kept you from being hobbled by ill health or killed, kept order in the communities you inhabited so you didn’t have to spend large amounts of time and energy defending yourself, etc.

If you’re lucky, you eventually realize your success wasn’t all due to your own efforts…and that, even more importantly, your success depends on having as many of the people you live among be successful, too.

As I like to point out, Bill Gates3 didn’t get to be the richest person on the planet at one point because he was able to sell a few hundred copies of Windows to some billionaires. He became the richest man in the world because there were an enormous number of people who were educated enough, and well-off enough, financially, to see the value in spending a few thousand bucks on some hardware and software.


  1. Some dislike one term, some dislike the other 

  2. Something I always had to explain when seeking Democratic Party endorsements in my local political career 

  3. Thank you, Bill, for being born the same year I was, and succeeding so spectacularly! It made it much easier for me to tamp my own competitive drive. Because does it really matter whether you come in 27,869,458th or 27,869,459th? 

His Imperial Majesty Speaks!

mostly incoherently, but still…

“I think I have the power to end this war, and I think it’s going very well. but today I heard ‘oh, well we weren’t invited.’ well [Ukraine has] been there for three years.

They should have ended it three years ago. They should have never started it.

They could have made a deal.”