Tuesday, February 19, 2008

The First.

General Washington,
Crossing the Delaware


February 18 is President's Day, more particularly Washington's birthday. His example and leadership still guides Americans, some 250 years later. Here are a few stories that stand out to me.

Not long into the Revolutionary War, during the winter at Valley Forge, the colonial armies were cold, hungry, poorly out-fitted, and dejected. General Washington refused the customary offer to stay in a home so that he could sleep out-of-doors with his men in the snow and cold. He could not ask of his men what he could not do himself.

He guided the colonial armies in that war and led his men into battle under the most difficult of circumstances, with little support and inadequate supplies. His military strategy of letting the battle come to him kept his small army alive and able to fight another day. His decisions would either bring them victory or defeat and victory was far from certain. But the colonialists were victorious and when the war was over he resigned as commander-and-chief and returned control of the military to Congress.

A few years later, he reluctantly attended the Constitutional Convention, knowing that without his presence at the head of the table, party disagreements could splinter the then confederated states into several small nation-states. He said little during the formal meetings, he knew too much deference would be given his words.

After the ratification of the Convention's Constitution a new nation needed a first President. He won by 69 unanimous votes of the electoral college and served eight years. He declined a third term. He knew everything that he did would be the standard for all Presidents following.

Notwithstanding these virtues, in this era of deconstructing the True and Good, someone will find some fault for which he should be chastised and disrespected, and since courage and self-sacrifice are illusions, Washington's true motives must have been money or fame or some other less than noble purpose. Maybe it was because of this that I was most happy to watch MSNBC's Chris Matthews offer tribute to President Washington at the end of today's news-show. I can't quote Matthews, but I will quote historian Paul Johnson on the same story with which Matthews closed his show.

From Johnson's book on Washington:
In London, George III questioned the American-born painter Benjamin West what Washington would do now he had won the war. "Oh," said West, "they say he will return to his farm." "If he does that," said the king, "he will be the greatest man in the world."

Monday, February 18, 2008

Fort Worth: Dodging the Downturn Bullet?



The late House Speaker "Tip" O'Neill said that all politics is local, a statement with layers of meaning, but the simplest one is that both the source and the consequences of action in Washington, DC are in small communities.

The same could be said of wealth, or more accurately, wealth distribution and accumulation. It too has its source and its effects locally. A visible example in our state is the wealth that Dell Computer has brought to the relatively small city of Austin. A company started by a Michael Dell while he was a student at the University of Texas. International reach, local source and a large local effect.

The Star Telegram had a comprehensive article in the February 17 online edition about how we in North Texas and especially Tarrant County may be able to bypass the full effect of the sluggish economy and housing crisis because of a strong local economy. Why? Primarily, Barnett Shale production, but also the old and reliable: ground and air transportation, rail carriers, military equipment, inexpensive property values, banking, tourism, retail corporate headquarters, etc.

So far, the standard economic statistics show us faring better than the national averages in just about everything including, job growth, housing starts, foreclosures, even the aptly named Booze Barometer, which measures bar and restaurant alcohol sales, up 7% year-over-year for January.

The fact that wealth is primarily locally generated is not to say that a failing national or world economy doesn't effect us, it does, the value of the dollar, interest rates, tax rates, wars, etc. are influences on our economy, but as long as people are needing natural gas North Texas may be able to duck what looks like a bullet that will hit a target.

Sunday, February 17, 2008

The Transfiguration / Giovanni Bellini / 1500

F&FW is making an occasional feature a regular feature, to wit: Sundays we will highlight a work of art. We will attempt, as here, to relate the work to the calendar. Monday we return to local food, news and bad, dad jokes.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

The Second Sunday of Lent
Jesus took Peter, James, and John his brother,
and led them up a high mountain by themselves.
And he was transfigured before them;
his face shone like the sun
and his clothes became white as light.
And behold, Moses and Elijah appeared to them,
conversing with him.

The Gospel of St. Matthew 17:1