
With Proposed Glue Trap Ban, San Francisco Sides With the Pests
by Christian Britschgi, Reason, April 24, 2025.
Excerpt:
The “abundance” discourse, sparked by Ezra Klein and Derek Thompson’s book of the same name, has directed a lot of attention to liberal America’s failure to build.
Blue cities and blue states can’t deliver projects on time and on budget, which is dragging down economic growth and sending people fleeing to red states that can.
As much truth as there is to that complaint, it ignores the other reason people hate progressive governance: the complete inability of politicians and bureaucrats to keep their noses out of individuals’ private business.
Earlier this week, the San Francisco Chronicle reported on an in-the-works proposal from the city’s Commission of Animal Control and Welfare to ban the sale, and potentially even the use, of glue traps.
Per the Chronicle‘s reporting, the commission—an advisory body that makes policy recommendations to the San Francisco government—is considering such a ban because of the allegedly cruel nature of glue traps.
The Road to Campus Serfdom
by John O. McGinnis, Law & Liberty, April 24, 2025.
Excerpts:
It seems remarkable that seemingly antisemitic protests by undergraduates, such as those at my own university of Northwestern, could threaten the biomedical research funding of its medical school. But the structure of civil rights laws as applied to universities has long allowed the federal government to cut off funding to the entire university based on the wrongful actions of particular units or departments.
Ironically, the left, now alarmed by the federal government’s intrusive reach, bears direct responsibility for crafting the very legal weapons wielded against the universities it dominates. Almost four decades ago, progressive legislators demanded sweeping amendments to civil rights law, expanding federal oversight over higher education. The sequence of events reveals a cautionary tale of political hubris: progressive confidence that state power would reliably serve their ends overlooked the reality that governmental authority, once unleashed, recognizes no ideological master. Today’s circumstances starkly illustrate how expansive federal control over civil society, originally celebrated by progressives, returns to haunt its architects. The left’s outrage ought to focus not on this particular administration but on its own reckless empowerment of the state.
And:
And Democratic administrations made aggressive use of this leverage to change practices at college campuses in heavy-handed ways. The Obama administration’s “Dear Colleague” letter in 2011 effectively mandated that universities overhaul their procedures for sexual abuse and harassment cases or face total loss of federal funding. For instance, the letter asked that guilt be determined by a bare preponderance of the evidence standard, despite the heavy costs to a student from a guilty verdict and expulsion. It also undermined due process by discouraging cross-examination and mandating training in which investigators were encouraged to believe the accusers. The government was deploying its enormous power to dictate processes to universities and regulate their relations with their students and, by extension, students with each other.
The Obama administration did not limit itself to regulating conduct; it aggressively extended its authority to police campus speech. It argued that speech that listeners thought was of a sexual nature could lead to a finding of a hostile environment actionable under Title VI, even if that conclusion were not based on objective facts, but on subjective feelings. Such interventions encouraged speech codes and chilled debate.
In 2016, the Obama administration issued guidance interpreting Title IX to cover gender identity, advising schools that transgender students must be allowed to use facilities and participate in programs consistent with their gender identity or else be in violation of federal law. This requirement included access to bathrooms, locker rooms, and sports teams corresponding to their identity. Again, this interpretation represented an aggressive and expansive reinterpretation of Title IX. It seems plainly inconsistent with this language, which prevents discrimination based on sex—a concept that at the time of Title IX was passed—referred to biological sex. But colleges did not want to risk their federal funding by flouting such government ukases.
Will the ‘Abundance’ Agenda Make California Great Again?
by Steven Greenhut, Reason, April 25, 2025.
Excerpt:
Up until the 1970s, California was a state known for its commitment to boundless opportunities, with the Edmund G. “Pat” Brown governorship reflective of the can-do spirit that drew people here from across the world. Given the degree to which modern California is noted for its ineffectiveness, wastefulness, and regulatory sclerosis, it’s difficult to imagine a California that took its Golden State moniker seriously.
Brown “envisioned a future in which economic growth would be driven by a network of state-of-the-art freeways to move people, reservoirs, and canals to capture and transport water and intellectual capital from low-cost institutions of higher education. He sold that vision to the public and, in doing so, as the late historian Kevin Starr wrote, putting California on “the cutting edge of the American experiment,” per a Hoover Institution retrospective. The state grew dramatically as a result.
The Brown administration built most of the State Water Project in less time than it would take to complete an Environmental Impact Report these days. California officials still have big dreams, of course, but they are more of the social-engineering variety than the civil-engineering type. Brown built freeways that people actually use, whereas today’s big project is a pointless high-speed rail line that’s way over budget and unlikely to serve any serious need.
Sweet Melodies of the Catacombs
by Richard Gunderman, Law & Liberty, April 25, 2025.
Excerpts:
In 1953, subscribers to the Great Soviet Encyclopedia received a replacement page, one of many examples of Soviet attempts to rewrite history to suit the ruling Communist party’s interests. The page in question extended the article on idealist philosopher George Berkeley, after whom Berkeley, California, is named. The page it replaced contained an article on Lavrentiy Beria, one of Stalin’s longest-serving secret police chiefs. After a successful coup led by rival Nikita Krushchev that same year, Beria was arrested, tried as a “traitor and capitalist agent,” and executed, the historical record of his existence having become a matter of embarrassment to those in power.
It is hard for the inhabitants of a free nation such as the United States, with its First Amendment protections for free speech, to appreciate the pervasiveness of state censorship within the Soviet Union. Accounts of such varying events as the starvation of Moscow’s population during the October Revolution, defeats of the Red Army, the civility and generosity of Westerners, and the advanced state of technology and high Western living standards were all rigorously repressed. Likewise, photos were doctored to remove repressed persons, films were edited to promote Soviet ideals, and newspapers and broadcast media were all subject to strict state control.
And:
One of the most intriguing means of thwarting the censors was known as roentgenizdat, sometimes referred to as “bone music.” “Roentgen” was Wilhelm Röntgen, the German physicist who received the first Nobel Prize in Physics for the 1895 discovery of x-rays. Medical x-ray film represented a relatively inexpensive and widely available medium onto which such audio recordings could be etched, enabling the production of homemade phonograph records. Three basic ingredients were required: the original audio of a live performance, a recording lathe, and a piece of x-ray film, onto which a circle could be traced using a compass, with a hole cut in the middle. Running at 78 rpm, most such discs could hold three to four minutes of material, enough to capture many of the most popular songs of the day.
Everyone Says They’ll Pay More for “Made in the USA.” So We Ran an A/B Test.
Afina, April 23, 2025.
Excerpts:
Our bestselling model—manufactured in Asia (China and Vietnam)—sells for $129. But this year, as tariffs jumped from 25% to 170%, we wondered: Could we reshore manufacturing to the U.S. while maintaining margins to keep our lights on?
An important part to mention is that our most filter materials (KDF-55) is sourced from the US. So technically we partly source from Asia.
We found a U.S.-based supplier. The new unit cost us nearly 3x more to produce. To maintain our margins, we’d have to sell it for $239.
So we ran an experiment.
We created a secret landing page. The product and design were identical. The only difference? One was labeled “Made in Asia” and priced at $129. The other, “Made in the USA,” at $239.
And:
Add-to-carts for the U.S. version were only 24! Conversion? 0.0% (zero).
Not a single customer purchased the Made-in-USA version.
DRH note: This is zero for U.S. version vs. 584 for the Asia version. The vast majority of economists would not be surprised, and probably a majority of Americans would not be surprised.
HT2 Ross Levatter.
READER COMMENTS
Craig
Apr 27 2025 at 1:30pm
“Per the Chronicle‘s reporting, the commission—an advisory body that makes policy recommendations to the San Francisco government—is considering such a ban because of the allegedly cruel nature of glue traps.”
Let’s hope they don’t go through with this foolishness. In South FL there seems to be a perpetual state of Rattenkrieg which is never fun of course. Was it better when I caught one by the tail with a snap trap and it was perfectly fine otherwise waiting for me to have to administer a bloody coup de grace? Indeed the snap trap in the AC pan caught one by the snout and there was rat blood all over the pan. Now some of the glue traps might not kill as quickly. My glue traps set in the garage unfortunately caught a black bird because I had opened the garage to get to that far front corner of the garage and while I was momentarily distracted apparently a black bird hopped into my garage and got ensnared in the trap. I got the blackbird off of the trap with vegetable oil. He actually caught himself again (Pretty sure it was the same one) because a day or two later I found him caught in another trap by the interior garage door a place he really had no business being and I must say he’s going to have a tough time making it through the year, but I let him go again. One of the rats also got to my dishwasher while I was in TN; the rats seem to sense my absence.
Another bad side effect is that I have caught my son no fewer than three times stepping in traps.
We’re talking about vermin here, they’re disgustingly dirty little creatures. They come complete with a risk of hanta virus. The battle is never over. You’ll think you’ve won and then you’ll hear the pitter patter of their feet in the ceiling.
Monte
Apr 27 2025 at 8:07pm
One method we’ve discovered for getting rid of cockroaches is to feed them a combination of sugar and baking soda. It’s physically impossible for cockroaches to flatulate, so when they consume this mixture, gases build up inside their stomach causing them to explode. Would this come under the heading of cruel in progressive governance?
Craig
Apr 27 2025 at 8:15pm
Don’t know if that would work with water bugs in FL which are nothing short of Jurassic, but if they eat this concoction don’t you then have exploded cockroach guts all over the place?
Monte
Apr 27 2025 at 10:01pm
It basically blows a hole in their gut. Fully intact but belly up.
Herb
Apr 30 2025 at 5:07pm
When we lived in Austin & Houston, baking soda worked wonderfully. We just spread it around the bottom of the walls, near doorways, & under cabinets. Without the sugar, it did not attract more bugs, though it was a lower slower to act.
John R. Samborski
Apr 27 2025 at 3:23pm
The high-speed rail is not only way over budget, but it’s unlikely that it will ever transport a single passenger.
David Henderson
Apr 28 2025 at 10:15am
And even if it did, it’s unlikely to be high-speed. That’s why I always refer to it as the medium-speed rail.
Monte
Apr 27 2025 at 7:40pm
The Afina showerhead example doesn’t truly reflect broader consumer preferences. Price isn’t the only variable consumers take into account when purchasing a product. Brand loyalty, durability, craftsmanship, and, above all, quality are all driving factors of consumer preference. There’s a host of American-made products that are more expensive and in higher demand than their foreign-made counterparts.
That said, the challenge of rebuilding American industry remains. From The Daily Economy (A Better Way to Bring Back Manufacturing to the United States):
Jon Murphy
Apr 28 2025 at 7:29am
Right, but that’s the point. “Made in America” isn’t a preference (at least insofar as people are willing to pay for it). Buyers choose American-made products because they satisfy preferences, not because they are made in America.
Monte
Apr 28 2025 at 10:15am
Not true. Consumer research consistently shows “Made in the USA” is a preference Americans are willing to pay for:
The Results Are In: Americans say they prefer products made in the USA and are willing to pay up to 20% more for them.
Americans want to buy Made in USA products, and this preference can be an important impetus for bringing U.S. manufacturing back home.
Americans want the government to buy US made goods, even if they cost more.
Americans say they prefer products made in USA and will pay more for them.
Ideology may not rank as high as price and quality, but it ranks, nonetheless.
steve
Apr 28 2025 at 1:29pm
People say lots of stuff. We want to know what they will actually do. This was a real world experiment to see if people would actually follow up on what they say. It showed they weren’t willing to pay extra. Now, it’s just one product and the price jump was large but practical consumer research over the centuries has shown that people prefer to pay less.
Steve
Monte
Apr 28 2025 at 1:42pm
Unless you’re arguing that these surveys/polls are complete BS, the results are self-evident: Idealism is, a consumer preference. This is reflected in consumer behavior, market dynamics, and strategies of companies that capitalize on the “Made in the USA” brand.
Jon Murphy
Apr 28 2025 at 1:42pm
Monte-
Two things:
First, one of your links (the Reuters article), finds that American’s do not want to pay more (the very first line).
Second, I think we should be careful here. Like Steve rightfully says, what people say and what they do matters. All the polls you point two are fairly old. One of the things we have seen quite clearly is that people do not like paying more. Inflation greatly harmed Biden’s reelection chances and it is one of the factors driving the huge decline in popularity the Trump Admin has seen. If there is a reason to pay more (eg quality), people will. But just to virtue signal, not really. Indeed, it’s why tariffs are needed in the first place. If there was a desire to buy American for the sake of buying American, then firms would have no problem charging more.
Monte
Apr 28 2025 at 2:00pm
The most recent article is 2022 (the remaining surveys were conducted within the last few years). By what standard is that considered “old”? Regardless, consumer attitudes have remained fairly consistent over the decades and shows that idealism influences consumer behavior to varying degrees.
The poll you cite does indicate Americans don’t want to pay more, but at the same time points out they believe buying American-made products is important, especially if those products include other factors like quality and reliability. That’s not virtue signaling, that’s value signaling.
Alan Goldhammer
Apr 28 2025 at 8:43am
Pat Brown was underrated as a Governor. Today he is perhaps best known for losing to Ronald Reagan when he sought a third term in 1966.
I have my own anecdote. I was working on a double major at UCSB during the late 1960s. I was primary in chemistry and secondary in poli sci. It was during the first semester of constitutional law in the winter quarter of 1969 when the Union Oil platform in the Santa Barbara channel suffered a blowout with a huge release of oil that damaged beaches as far south as Oxnard. Our professor decided it might be a good project to look at how offshore oil leases were handled. I took on the project of interviewing Governor Brown, who was in office when the leases were made. He was very kind, giving me about 45 minutes to talk about offshore oil drilling and the issues he confronted during his administration. Ultimately, a book was published using the student’s research.
David Henderson
Apr 28 2025 at 10:17am
Interesting story. Thanks.