The Manila Times

Miscellane­ous musings

- LAURA HOLLIS CREATORS.COM

IS there more irritating nonsense days? Or am I just getting old? (Ok, both.) Instead of writing a column about each of the things driving me nuts, here are a few observatio­ns on a number of them:

1. Former “Today” show staffer Addie Zinone decided to come clean about her affair with Matt Lauer, which—although consensual and completely voluntary—she now says was “an abuse of his power.” Give me a break. No one forced her, threatened her or conditione­d her advancemen­t opportunit­ies on sexual favors. She messaged him after a lunch at which he made it clear he was interested, and then ran up to meet him in his dressing room for a tryst. Being “under his spell” (her words, not mine) is not duress and not abuse of power. Zinone says she only wanted Lauer “to see her as a human being.” Did she see Matt Lauer’s wife as a human being?

There’s a larger message lost in the legitimate outrage about male exploitati­on. One reason so many of these creeps think they’re entitled to any woman who crosses their path is because so many women have made their availabili­ty abundantly clear. Even if he’s married. (Ask any woman married to a famous, successful or powerful man. Or any man, for that matter.) Here’s the takeaway: If you’re willing to sleep with another woman’s husband, you’re part of the problem.

2. No, President Trump never banned words. Please stop posting them on your Facebook pages to show how brave and revolution­ary you are. Real bravery would be getting up onstage at the Golden Globes and announcing that you voted for Trump.

3. Children in Venezuela are starving to death. Physicians are forbidden by the Venezuelan government from reporting the cause of death. American newspapers aren’t, but they’re reluctant to admit that it is socialism and government control over the means of production that has killed these children and destroyed Venezuela’s economy, rich though it is in natural resources. The level of misery and death that collectivi­st political and economic systems has caused is almost immeasurab­le. Defending these systems in the face of such vast human suffering is inexcusabl­e. And yet 44 percent of US millennial­s said in a recent survey that they would rather live in a socialist than a capitalist country. Shame on them. And shame on those who have instilled such foolish, fatal ideas in their empty, impression­able heads.

4. Here’s further proof of how anti-intellectu­al and ahistorica­l the defense of socialism is. Two years ago, the American Enterprise Institute published a statistica­l chart, showing that the world’s worst poverty—de a day—was reduced by 80 percent in just 36 years. In 1970, 28.6 percent of the world’s population lived on less 5.4 percent. The cause of that remarkable transforma­tion was the spread of the free enterprise system, which AEI President Arthur Brooks calls “the best anti-poverty measure ever invented.”

5. The internet evolved to be the informatio­n and economic powerhouse that it is without much in the way of government control. Yet now, people scream that the internet will be destroyed unless the government controls it, under the guise of “net neutrality.” Hysterical nonsense. The “net neutrality” rules have been in place for only two years. The FCC under President Obama asserted sweeping jurisdicti­on over the internet by reclassify­ing broadband as a public utility under Title II of the old Telecommun­ications Act. There could hardly be better proof of how ill-equipped government is to run disruptive technology like the internet—that law was written when Bell Telephone was a monopoly. (Threequart­ers of those reading this won’t even know what I’m talking about.) Analogizin­g the internet to Ma Bell is not just an anachronis­m; it’s an absurdity. Title II rules include the power to set prices and control business operations, which the FCC promised not to do, saying it would regulate using a “light touch.” Who on earth believes that would last? (A pithy tweet I read this week said, “Net neutrality is ‘neutral’ the way the Affordable Care Act was ‘affordable’.”) It’s bad enough that Facebook, Google, YouTube and Twitter are actively censoring conservati­ve content; can you imagine what a left-wing government could do with complete control over the internet? (Or right-wing, for you antifa types.)

think it’s “big business.” Here are some the US, only 6.8 million employ anyone other than the owner(s). Of those percent) employ fewer than 20 people. And 47.8 percent of all US employees work for companies that employ fewer than 500 people; most work for companies with fewer than 100 people. Most business in this country is small business, and small-business owners desperatel­y need tax cuts.

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