Book Review: ‘Real Change’ Newt Gingrich. Read it.

Article by C. Read

Gingrich is probably the smartest man in US politics and political activism – at least as far as real policies based on real world demands are concerned. His latest book, ‘Real Change’ is a synthesis of what his new organisation American Solutions [www.americansolutions.org] has been working on, to give policy makers some ideas to fix key problems in US society and politics. For anyone interested in fixing parts of America which do not work, this book is a good overview of what ails America and what can be done to fix it. As one may expect, it is government, the bureaucracy and the fantastical naive and bloody-minded faith in government, which is in need of real change. Gingrich outlines why that is.

Keynesians, the eco-cult fanatics, the race reductionists, the protectionists and the appeasement minded would of course, never read such a book. For these happy little Marxist minds, the warm blue blanket of the nanny state and creating clients out of citizens, is the main objective. Security, risk reduction, guaranteed incomes and jobs, and total safety are the primary concerns of these chattering trolls. These ideals are the root of the issues facing America and every other industrialised state for that matter. In order to break the current vicious and immature cycle of broken behavior and bankrupted systems, some real change as Gingrich outlines, is urgently needed.

Gingrich summarizes quite well and transparently, why government fails and what can be done to correct these failures. He discusses the key subject areas facing the US and then proposes some common-sensical and relevant options to change the system. Importantly he focuses on results – applying simple models and patterns to solve questions and then monitoring the outcomes. Metrics, and implementing concepts which actually work, are anathema to government and bureaucracies.

Some topics Gingrich discusses:

1. Iraq and Afghanistan

These ten pages on what went wrong in Iraq and also in Afghanistan [pp 107-118] are perhaps the most interesting in the book. Gingrich has over 30 years affiliation as a trainer and confidante of the military. From 2003 until the 2007 surge, Iraq as a policy was failing, and it was the fault not of the military personnel on the ground, but of the civilian and military bureaucracy outside the war zones.

As Gingrich relates: -In 2003 after a stunningly successful 3 week invasion, the Bush administration reduced Iraqi intelligence resources [which were vital to secure the country]. -Instead of using the Iraqi army to help police the country, the military bureaucracy disbanded the Iraqi armed forces. -The Iraqi adminstration under Paul Bremer did not learn from Afghanistan where you had to liberate and not occupy the country. Instead of using Iraqi’s and an Iraqi bureaucracy to help stabilise and rebuild the country, the American administration acted as an occupier not a liberator. This directly gave rise to the insurgency and general malcontent in Iraq. -No civilian support in infrastructure, economics, health or energy was forthcoming. The State Department and the military bureaucracy had no plans nor any ideas about how to stabilise a failed state like Iraq. -Billions of dollars were spent in Iraq with no results and no metrics. The US bureaucracies totally failed in their objectives to help the military rebuild Iraq and to take active and productive roles in stabilising a failed state.

As Gingrich rightly points out, basically the US military was asked to perform 2 impossible tasks – win the war and act as a functioning bureaucracy. The second task is not something a military can credibly do.

Even in Afghanistan, the bureaucracy was the problem. As Gingrich states, ‘In 2002, I learned that the United States had been unable to pave a single mile of road in Afghanistan during the summer season.’ This was due to bureaucratic incompetence not a lack of money. Like Iraq, billions were spent in Afghanistan with no results, no metrics and no rush to implement something which would work. Thousands of swarming bureaucrats covered both countries like locusts, bunkered down, meeting, meeting again, meeting some more, with no view on being effective and without a coordinated and intelligent plan about meeting key metrics in energy, transportation, infrastructure build, policing or public safety. The burden was placed solely on the military.

2. Immigration Gingrich voted for the Reagan amnesty bill of 1986 because it promised to be a one time deal. The deal was simple: illegal amnesty would be granted once; border security and control would be effected immediately; and there would be a verification of all foreign workers now and going forward. Only the amnesty occurred. The US now has most likely over 30 million illegals. It is a cultural, social and economic burden that is unsustainable. Contrary to myth uneducated illegals are a net drain on the US economy – by at least billion per annum.

According to Gingrich and American Solutions over 75% of Americans want the border secured and do not want amnesty given to illegals; and they want more skilled workers on work visas. Yet they will most likely receive the opposite of that from their politicians. The border remains – even with the building of the southern fence – open with all the risks regarding terrorism and fascist Islam that entails; and most politicians eying the Hispanic and minority vote want to appear sympathetic to the idea of amnesty. The idea of extending skilled workers visas does not sit well with protectionists, unions and those who prefer illegal immigration to legal, documented visa based immigration.

3. Tax and spending cuts Only a few politicians really believe that government is fundamentally too large, and that taxes are ridiculously high. For most politicians the tax payer is a faceless robot, who should pay more into the system to establish more programs and more welfare services. Gingrich outlines why historically, regimes with high taxes and big government have failed. Dynamic and productive societies have a true belief in entrepreneurship, capital formation, science and technological innovation. Static and regressive states do not.

Gingrich and his organisation are calling for some needed and dramatic fiscal reforms including: tort and legal liability reform; a national flat tax on consumption with a change in the constitution to prevent income from being taxed in the future; abolishing all other taxes on income and capital gains and reducing non-essential spending by over half. If even a small part of this plan was adopted the US economy would add millions of jobs literally over night and be running huge federal budget surpluses.

These are just some of the issues Gingrich discusses. He goes into market based reforms of Social Security, Health Care, Education, Crime, Energy and the need for overhauling the Judicial system. Neither major US party believes that fundamental change is needed.

The Democrats are witless and clueless and would return America back to the days of Herbert Hoover, FDR or Peanut boy Jimmy Carter. The Republicans are big spending conservative statists, who believe in tax cuts, but also in ramping up the size of government in every possible sphere even as they subsidise huge corporations in auto manufacturing, ethanol development, agricultural production or sundry other industrial segments. As Gingrich observes it is only the American people who will effectively force change by demanding results across a broad range of important issues, accountability, fairness and wealth creation, not destruction.

For those interested in thoughtful intelligent policy, this book is a great primer. For people interesetd in real change which would effectively help cure what ails parts of America, this book is indispensable.

Eco-cult and Islam are both something we wish we would do without in this modern world.










Reading Abbey

Today, Reading Abbey is mostly in ruins, but that does not detract from the fact that it was once a prime symbol of royalty and solidarity in Reading and, as such, stood proudly in the very centre of town.

Its main reason for being, as stated by Henry I when he founded Reading Abbey in 1121, was “for the salvation of my soul, and the souls of King William, my father, and of King William, my brother, and Queen Maud, my wife, and all my ancestors and successors.” According to its foundation charter, Reading Abbey took the place of three other monasteries, namely, Reading, Choisey and Leominster. It was dedicated in honour of the Blessed Virgin and St. John the Evangelist.

Upon its foundation, Reading Abbey was established by a monks from Cluny, a French abbey, as well as monks from St. Pacras, a Cluniac priory in Sussex. The Hugh of Amiens served as the first abbot in 1123.

The abbey was constructed to attract the most number of people as a possible.

Practically anyone who travelled to the most populous cities of England had easy access to the abbey. As the chronicler William of Malmesbury noted during the 12th century, it was built “between the rivers Kennet and Thames, on a spot calculated for the reception of almost all who might have occasion to travel to the more populous cities of England.” The two rivers provided convenient transport for all surrounding areas. This was enhanced by the construction of wharves on the River Kennet which, aside from provide access to the abbey, also powered the abbey’s water mills.

The abbey occupied about 30 acres and was enclosed on three sides by a great wall with four gateways, one of which served as the local prison. Visitors entered through an inner gatehouse. The church itself was about 450 feet long and 95 feet wide and included 200-foot transeptsm, a 75-foot lady-chapel and a square central tower with a spire. The chapter house featured a vaulted hall that served as a national council chamber for Parliament. The premises also housed a leper-hospital, a hospitium and other structures.

In 1135, upon the death of Henry I in France, his remains were brought back to Reading and buried before the altar of what was then a still-incomplete abbey. Over the years, many persons of royalty were also buried at Reading Abbey (at least in part), including Empress Matilda, William of Poitiers, Constance of York and others.

Its royal heritage also made the abbey one of the most renowned and visited pilgrimage centres in medieval England as well as one of the richest religious houses. Its possessions could be seen in such remote destinations like Herefordshire and Scotland. At the abbey itself, around 230 relics were accounted for, including the hand of St. James, literally a shrivelled human hand discovered amid the abbey’s ruins in 1786 and later moved to St. Peter’s Roman Catholic Church in Marlow.

The abbey also earned the distinction of featuring the earliest known four-part harmony in the UK, which is the song Sumer is icumen in, which is believed to have been written down in the around 1240.

In 1538, during Henry VIII’s infamous Dissolution of the Monasteries, Reading Abbey was nearly demolished. Hugh Cook Faringdon, its last abbot, was convicted of high treason and hanged right in front of Abbey Church. This was followed by a systematic robbing and looting of the abbey, including the removal of lead, glass and facing stones, which were later reused elsewhere.

Today, what is left of the abbey’s major buildings are mainly the inner rubble cores of the walls, which have been conserved in recent years and are now Grade I listed. Visitors have free access to the abbey remains, which are now part of the Forbury Gardens Park. A significant part of the abbey is buried beneath Reading Gaol.

Meanwhile, the abbey’s inner gateway is still intact, thanks to efforts to restore it during the Victorian era. The same goes for the abbey’s hospitium dormitory, which was recently incorporated into office development. The abbey school, founded in 1125, is now a state grammar school renamed as Reading School, although it now stands on a different site.

Only the grave of Henry I is marked by a plaque near its original location, while all other graves are unmarked. Plaques also appear on the walls of the ruined chapter house to commemorate significant events of the past.

Starting in 1996, the chapter house has been the venue for the Progress Theatre’s annual outdoor Shakespeare production, which is undertaken in partnership with the Reading Borough Council. It was expanded into the Reading Abbey Ruins Open Air Festival in 2007.

 

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