Posted on 02/10/2020 9:52:54 AM PST by SeekAndFind
Its been said by those who know Fred Smith well that when the visionary FedEx founder is asked about the U.S. Post Office, hes known to say that in a competitive market he could put the government-created monopoly out of business in a matter of months. Smiths confidence shouldnt surprise readers, conservative readers least of all.
Thats the case because at least in their rhetoric, conservatives preach the gospel of market discipline. The Post Office would be extraordinarily vulnerable to competition precisely because its never faced the kind of competition and investor pressure that conservatives at least rhetorically deem so essential to corporate progress. If funding will always be abundant, and if funding will actually rise the more that mistakes are made, why make the hard decisions that real businesses make every day?
Stating what should be obvious, and has long been obvious to conservatives, the Post Office is a low-quality provider of fourth-rate service, and its that way because always-there government funding has shielded it from the market realities that would have otherwise strengthened it over the years; that, or put it out of business. In short, copious government support has weakened the Post Office. No entrepreneur or business would ever consider emulating it since mimicry of what defines bad service in the minds of all too many would repel the very investors necessary for a business to open its doors in the first place.
Smiths opinion of the Post Office has routinely come to mind amid the odd conservative crack-up over Chinese communications giant Huawei. Republicans and conservatives inside and outside the Trump administration were very disappointed recently when British Prime Minister Boris Johnson announced that Huawei, a corporation so valued by its customers that it operates in 177 countries around the world, would allow the companys equipment to be used in Britains 5G wireless network.
GOP hand wringing is puzzling. Long the Party thats striven to properly associate itself with keeping government out of the rollout of anything commerce or market related, when it comes to whats expected to be next generation in communications, Republicans find themselves parroting the very wording that animates the rhetoric of their ideological foes on the left, and in the extreme, the rhetoric of central planners from the 20th century. Dont Republicans remember how horridly and murderously central planning failed, and dont they remember how very much their political hero (with good reason) in Ronald Reagan confidently predicted the failure of statist regimes precisely because politicians, not market-disciplined businesses, were calling the commercial shots?
Yet when it comes to 5G, its as though state planners have entered the bodies and minds of conservatives and Republicans. Out of one side of their mouth they talk of the enormous potential of 5G to transform how business is done for the much, much better, only for them to proclaim out of the mouths other side the genius of a public/private 5G partnership. As the Wall Street Journals Bob Davis and Drew FitzGerald recently reported, the White House is working with U.S. technology companies to create advanced software for next-generation 5G telecommunications networks. Yes, you read that right. Conservatives believe that which is anti-innovation, and that which is where innovation routinely goes to die, is necessary to build up that which is billed as a revolutionary driver of technological advancement. No less than the great free-market champion Larry Kudlow confirmed to Davis and FitzGerald that The big picture concept is to have all of the U.S. 5G architecture and infrastructure done by American firms. Say it aint so!
Thinking about this, readers would be wise to stop and marvel for a second or two. It wasnt too many years ago that conservatives figuratively trampled on one another as they raced to TV cameras and computers to mock the Obama White House and Democrats for the Solyndra bust-up, and that was just solar. Back then the very notion of public/private anything was anathema to conservatives, yet now theyre championing it for 5G. The technological future is coming, and it will be planned by conservatives in government!
Fear not, it gets weirder. Indeed, their support for government investment grows by the day. Hudson Institute senior fellow Thomas Duestenberg is the latest (but surely not the last) conservative to call for government planning in the development of 5G, along with government finance. Duestenberg et all want tens of billions of taxpayer dollars to allegedly bolster the 21st century equivalent of putting a man on the moon first. Funny here is that conservatives were up in arms back in 2011 when it was revealed that Solyndra had been the beneficiary of $535 million in government loan guarantees
Needless to say, the previous number is chump change to the overnight planners on the right. Duestenberg laments that Huawei allegedly has received $75 billion from the Chinese government (as though the feds dont wastefully shower all manner of taxpayer dollars on U.S. firms TARP comes to mind, so does ExIm ), so hes cheering bipartisan legislation and funding from Congress meant to encourage development of open-architecture systems to promote Western competition to Huawei and ZTE. Stranger still is that Duestenbergs op-ed was hosted prominently by the Wall Street Journals editorial page, long the Holy Grail of free market opinion. Needless to say, the Obama White Houses partnership with the solar industry amid lefty alarmism about global warming wasnt cheered by conservatives in the way that they now cheer government investment in that which alarms them.
Which brings us to a basic question: just what are conservatives so afraid of? If Huawei is truly a tool of the state as they want to believe, and as they keep telling us, then its a safe bet that its efforts to lead the world toward an amazing 5G-enhanced future will fall very short. Whats innovative and has major market applications of the technological variety is never hatched by government. So let the Chinese government spend enormous sums weakening Huawei as it produces something that consumers will reject.
On the other hand, and with Huaweis seminal role in rapidly advancing global communications top of mind, lets consider the possibility that conservative scholars and politicians have well overstated the Huawei threat (havent they overstated other threats before?). As in, lets consider the very real possibility that Huawei is actually a great company, and that it thrives despite state investment. If so, whats there to be afraid of? Most of us dont live in Cupertino, Mountain View or Seattle, but open markets make it seem as though Apple, Google and Amazon are right next door.
When markets are open, location of business doesnt matter. If Huawei can bring 5G to market the quickest, brilliant. Just as the Chinese arent hurt by Apple selling 1/5th of its iPhones in China, and just as Los Angelenos arent hurt because Microsoft is in Seattle, New Yorkers wont be harmed by technological advances that happen in Shenzhen.
The main thing is that conservatives need to act like conservatives again. State planning fails. Always. If Huawei is truly a creation of the state, then conservatives neednt worry about it growing so rapidly in the U.S. such that it can spy on us, and do other scary things. If not, conservatives might reacquaint themselves with their support of the open markets that similarly always succeed when it comes to lifting everyone up.
Sabotage. Backdoors. Loss of control.
Because we don’t want the Chinese Secret Service to have access to all of our communications?
It’s cute how the author pretends to believe that this Chinese company is some private enterprise working for a simple profit.
Control the network 1
Control access device technology 2
Watch Apple get locked out of market 3
Tamny’s right - we know from the example of the liquidation of Airbus as a business entity that a government-backed corporation could never compete in the marketplace. That is why Boeing pretty much owns the market for large commercial jets, and Airbus exists only in the history books.
Author must have gotten 30 pieces of silver from Xi. This isnt just a product, Its infrastructure, and hence is a national security issue.
The author did seem to skip over that, didn’t he?
Just ppl like you who need to ask the question!
The USA backdoor-ed into most foreign governments because we were the people who produced the telephone switching equipment. Really want to trust the Chinese with the 21st century equivalent?
Curious how much money this author was paid by China to write this garbage?
Yeah. You can almost hear the whiny, nasally voice of the Leftist saying “What do conservatives have against Huawei? Aren’t they always going on and on about how the Free Market always outperforms the government?”
Sure.
Except I will take the US military over a home grown and paid for Army any day of the week. And if we allow the open market to create something, we at least have some protections from being ill used in the process.
Communist China has none of that. In fact, they have been engaging in government directed open economic warfare against the West for decades.
I believe if you look up the term “willful ignorance” in the dictionary, John Tamny’s mug appears as an example pic.
Free trade and open borders are not Conservative. They are destructive. It is a Libertarian globalist position.
Every piece of tech assembled in China is a spying device for the Chicoms.
Partisan Media Shills update.
When the writer thinks the USPS is still funded by the gov’t he has no credibility.
Other than controlling the networking, device technology and locking out american companies what have the chinese ever done to us. (Monty Python life of Bryan)
It's about China's real objective of using 5G penetration as a future weapon to control/extort/bankrupt/attack nations that adopt their systems. This moron doesn't get that his point is akin to someone asking why we don't let Russia install our nuclear missiles if they do it more cheaply.
Try a search for:
Huawei Iran
If the USA believes its sanction program is being violated, there will be consequences.
The USA is trying to reduce the danger Iran presents to Israel, Europe and the USA.
Don’t mess with Trump’s efforts to ensure a peaceful and safe world.
On top of all your points, this gasbag author and his good buddy Fred Smith don't mention that Smith would put the Post Office out of business with low low prices - but that in three years you'd be forced to give half a pint of blood to get anything mailed, once the "inconvenient and incompetent" Posties were out of the way.
Just look at your cable bill to see the effect of a local market monopoly.
BTW - I've actually gotten a bill from Fedex for a Census mailer (by accident). Was mailing in a 9x11 flat pak with 4-5 time sheets for my crew (just pieces of paper), and Fedex accidentally sent me the bill.
$30.00
Fred Smith sez: Cha-CHING!!!
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