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Abbreviated Pundit Round-up for November 12, 2010

Evans Liberal Politics
November 12, 2010

 

Abbreviated Pundit Round-up
for November 12, 2010


Abbreviated Pundit Round-up, Daily Kos, November 12, 2010, by DemFromCT, used with permission, quoted verbatim:

Friday opinion.

NY Times:

Perfectmatch.com

President Obama’s bipartisan debt-reduction commission has exposed fissures in both parties, underscoring the volatile nature of addressing the nation’s budget problems.

Among Democrats, liberals are in near revolt against the White House over the issue, even as substantive and political forces push Mr. Obama to attack chronic deficits in a serious way. At the same time, Republicans face intense pressure from their conservative base and the Tea Party movement to reject any deal that includes tax increases, leaving their leaders with little room to maneuver in any negotiation and at risk of being blamed by voters for not doing their part.

No one could have anticipated that from the catfood commission.

With Republicans taking charge of the House, they face pressure to go beyond campaign claims and produce a budget with cuts that live up to their promises.

“There is a ton of postelection survey evidence that the American people are fed up with rejectionism, and want the parties to work harder to find common ground,” said William A. Galston, a former adviser to Mr. Clinton. “But there’s a caveat, and this is critical: While a majority of independents, Democrats and swing voters are for compromise over standing on principle, a majority of Republican voters are against compromise and for standing on principle.”

Oops. Those independents voted for the GOP. Well, you get what you pay for.

Paul Krugman:

Count me among those who always believed that President Obama made a big mistake when he created the National Commission on Fiscal Responsibility and Reform — a supposedly bipartisan panel charged with coming up with solutions to the nation’s long-run fiscal problems. It seemed obvious, as soon as the commission’s membership was announced, that “bipartisanship” would mean what it so often does in Washington: a compromise between the center-right and the hard-right.

William D. Cohan:

David Stockman has never been one to shy away from a roaring economic-policy debate. The former boy-wonder budget director in the first Reagan administration and the architect of Reagan’s supply-side economic policies, Stockman has been very busy lately rejecting the tax-cutting recommendations of Republicans in Washington and arguing that we must get our fiscal house in order or watch our way of life continue its decline. As an “imperialist power,” he says, America is in danger of being at “sundown.” Stockman, who turned 64 on Wednesday, has always been ahead of the curve on tax and fiscal issues, and it appears that he is ahead of it again this time, too.

WaPo:

On the heels of the Democratic Party’s huge losses in last week’s midterm elections, liberal activists have begun planning to push President Obama on a series of issues, demanding that he not cede any ground to Republicans.

Might help to explain your position, whatever it is. We’ll do what makes sense, but the assumption that we will support anything on good faith is long gone.

Dana Milbank:

Democrats in the House are set to keep the same three leaders – Nancy Pelosi, Steny Hoyer and Jim Clyburn – who led them to their historic wipeout. This is the preschool-soccer theory of accountability: Nobody keeps score and everybody gets a trophy. The fallen House speaker seems to speak for a number of her colleagues when she says she has “no regrets” about the past two years.

As usual, the Villagers want accountability only for Democrats.

Eugene Robinson:

“Why don’t they fight back?”

That’s the question I’ve been hearing from the Democratic Party’s stunned and dispirited base. For the past month, I’ve been on a book tour that has taken me to Asheville, N.C., Terre Haute, Ind., Austin and elsewhere. Everywhere I go, supporters of President Obama and his agenda ask me why so many Democrats in Washington don’t stand up for what they say they believe.

Good question.

Michael Gerson:

Following the midterm elections, attention understandably focused on those parts of the South and Midwest where the Obama coalition collapsed. But a second wave of trouble is coming for the president and his party, precisely in those states where the first wave barely reached. Having experienced the revolt of red America, Democrats must now deal with the fiscal crisis of blue America.

The one that Republicans caused? We haven’t forgotten it was on your watch when you were in the WH, Michael. That’s why those states are still blue.

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DemFromCT is a longtime member of the Daily Kos community with interests ranging from polling to Iraq to bird flu, and has graciously agreed to allow us here at Evans Liberal Politics to publish his articles on an ongoing basis. He is a founding editor of Flu Wiki (www.fluwikie.com) and its sister site, the Flu Wiki Forum (www.newfluwiki2.com). Since its inception in June 2005, Flu Wiki has grown into an international clearinghouse of pandemic influenza information and links.

You can view his diaries at Daily Kos, here. DemFromCT is a featured writer at Daily Kos, and you can read more about him here. You are invited to email DemFromCT.

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Sunday, October 10, 2010: Abbreviated Pundit Round-up

Evans Liberal Politics
October 10, 2010

 

Sunday, October 10, 2010:
Abbreviated Pundit Round-up


Abbreviated Pundit Round-up, Daily Kos, October 10, 2010, by DemFromCT, used with permission, quoted verbatim:

Sunday opinion.


Dan Balz:

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Who is ready to proselytize on behalf of candidates over the next few weeks? Just 22 percent of Democrats say they are very likely to do so, compared with 30 percent of Republicans, with liberal Democrats and conservative Republicans more committed. Topping them all are tea party supporters, 39 percent of whom say they’ll very likely make the effort to persuade others. And among strong tea party supporters, 49 percent say they’re ready to do so.

Dan Balz again:

A new study by The Washington Post, the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation and Harvard University shows that most Americans who say they want more limited government also call Social Security and Medicare “very important.” They want Washington to be involved in schools and to help reduce poverty. Nearly half want the government to maintain a role in regulating health care.

Michael Shear:

Webroot Software Inc.

Surveys suggest that the Republican case has made headway with the American public. By large margins, a healthy majority of people say the country is headed on the wrong track.

But Mr. Plouffe said he remained optimistic that the Republicans had made as much traction as they were likely to make with that argument. In a nutshell, he said that the conservative wave had peaked a month before Election Day.

“They are going to have very good turnout,” Mr. Plouffe predicted. But he said: “I don’t see that getting a lot better for them. The point is, I don’t see another surge here.”

Michael Shear again:

Candidates rarely want to draw attention to the commercials made on behalf of their opponents. But this year’s West Virginia Senate race is an exception.

Joe Manchin, the state’s Democratic governor and candidate for Senate, has condemned an ad made to benefit his Republican opponent, businessman John Raese, in which the production company said it was looking for “hicky” actors to portray real West Virginia voters.

The controversy over the ad has played right into the hands of Mr. Manchin, who had already been trying to portray Mr. Raese as a rich outsider whose family lives in Florida.

Joe Manchin Campaign Ad:



custom artwork thumbnail serves as a link to launch audio of a Hicks campaign ad "Hicks:" a campaign ad for the Democrat for U.S. Senate, Joe Manchin, attacking Republican businessman John Raese for playing down to the voters as hicks. — 0:30

Via Frank Rich:

Just as “The Social Network” hit the multiplexes, Malcolm Gladwell took to The New Yorker with a stinging takedown of social networks as vehicles for meaningful political and social action. He calculated that the nearly 1.3 million members of the Facebook page for the Save Darfur Coalition have donated an average of 9 cents each to their cause. He mocked American journalists’ glorification of Twitter’s supposedly pivotal role during last year’s short-lived uprising in Iran, suggesting that the rebels’ celebrated Twitter feeds — written in English, not Farsi — did more to titillate blogging technophiles in the West than to aid Iranians in their struggle against totalitarian rulers.

Also in the News This Sunday:


Recommended by the Yahoo Group Progressive: Listen to Politics News with AJA on BlogTalk Radio, TONIGHT from 11:30 p.m to 12:30 a.m.

See Vilified or Not, Pelosi Insists She’s Winning, The New York Times, October 9, 2010, by Mark Liebovich.

Gay Marriage Is Ruled Legal in Connecticut, The New York Times, October 10, 2010, by Robert D. McFadden.

Still haven’t made up your mind which party you are going to vote for in November? Read Top 10 Craziest Tea Party Quotes of All time, AlterNet, October 8, 2010, by Devona Walker. If you still haven’t made up your mind then, take my advice and see a psychiatrist.

MORE Evidence: U.S. Tea Party Teams Up With Koran Burning British Neo-Nazis, The Raw Story, October 10, 2010, by Daniel Tencer.

See also No More Sea Shells by the Sea Shore – New Evidence of the Impacts of Rising CO2 Levels, AlterNet, October 8, 2010, by Robin Madel. Really Sad.

Great Weekend Reading: Did dogs teach us to love?, Salon, October 9, 2010, by Kerry Lauerman: "In his latest look at animal behavior, Jeffrey Masson suggests a mutually beneficial evolution of our two species."

Watch the N.Y. Times video, Money in the Midterms — 1:42.

*****

DemFromCT is a longtime member of the Daily Kos community with interests ranging from polling to Iraq to bird flu, and has graciously agreed to allow us here at Evans Liberal Politics to publish his articles on an ongoing basis. He is a founding editor of Flu Wiki (www.fluwikie.com) and its sister site, the Flu Wiki Forum (www.newfluwiki2.com). Since its inception in June 2005, Flu Wiki has grown into an international clearinghouse of pandemic influenza information and links.

You can view his diaries at Daily Kos, here. DemFromCT is a featured writer at Daily Kos, and you can read more about him here. You are invited to email DemFromCT.

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This and That: Sunday New and Opinion Update

Evans Liberal Politics
July 25, 2010

 

This and That:
Sunday News and Opinion Update

 

Evans Liberal Politics, Sunday, July 25, 2010, by Paul Evans

 

Tony Hayward to Quit BP

 

Tony Hayward to Quite BP, Guardian.co.uk, July 25, 2010, by Terry Macalister, excerpt quoted verbatim:

Beleaguered oil firm chief executive to be replaced by Gulf of Mexico clean-up chief Bob Dudley

BP is planning to announce the departure of chief executive Tony Hayward alongside its half-year financial results on Tuesday.

The BP boss will be replaced by Bob Dudley, who is currently overseeing the oil spill operation in the Gulf of Mexico.

The exit of Hayward, who has been vilified by American politicians since the 20 April blowout on the Deepwater Horizon rig, is the second dramatic change of leadership at BP in less than four years. Lord Browne, Hayward’s predecessor, left the oil group after a spat with the then chairman, Peter Sutherland, and a sinking of the share price after the Texas City refinery fire.

Hayward, 52, is today locked in meetings with the rest of the BP board about the final details of his financial leaving package, but he is expected to go under basic contractual terms. That means a one year’s £1m pay package but a giant pension pot of over £10m, capable of paying out more than half a million pounds a year from the formal retirement age of 60.

Get with the New Public Option!

 

Schakowsky: Want to cut the deficit? Get with our new public option:

The Raw Story, July 25, 2010, by Sahil Kapur:

LAS VEGAS – Rep. Jan Schakowsky (D-IL) said Saturday that serious deficit hawks ought to get behind a new “robust” public option bill that she and more than a hundred other members introduced days ago.

In an interview with Raw Story at the Netroots Nation conference, Rep. Jan Schakowsky (D-IL) predicted that a new “focus on deficit reduction” and rising public distrust of the insurance industry would generate stronger support for it among members of Congress.

“We’ve seen the cost [savings], and we’ve seen the behavior of the insurance companies,” she said. “I think that really puts a new atmosphere on the prospects for a new public option.”

Unveiled last Thursday by Rep. Lynn Woolsey (D-CA), Schakowsky, and more than 120 co-sponsors, the measure would give consumers a choice between private and public health insurance plans in the new law’s exchanges. The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office projects that it would cut the deficit by $68 billion between 2014 an 2020.

See Grijalva: Deficit hawks against public option are ‘hypocrites,’ ‘phonies’, The Raw Story, July 25, 2010, by Sahil Kapur, excerpt quoted verbatim:

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LAS VEGAS – Progressive caucus co-chair Rep. Raúl Grijalva (D-AZ) on Saturday issued an ultimatum to opponents of a public option who invoke deficit concerns: get behind this program, or you’re hypocrites.

In an exclusive interview with Raw Story at Netroots Nation, a large conference for progressive activists and media, Grijalva lamented how “one of the most important mechanisms [to cut the deficit] was left out of the [health reform] bill.”

Fear of Freedom, N.Y. Times Editorial, July 25, 2010, by N.Y. Times:

The Obama administration should not deliver Guantánamo prisoners to governments that have a record of torture and lawlessness, like Algeria.

“Rubicon”: Eerie portrait of “Top Secret America”, Salon, July 24, 2010, by Heather Havrilesky: AMC’s stylish drama about a powerful intelligence contractor isn’t pure fantasy, according to the Washington Post.

Please Give: Help Charities Working in the Gulf, American Express and Takepart.

How Charlie Rangel Can Survive, Salon, July 23, 2010, by Steve Kornacki.

We’re Not Winning. It’s Not Worth It, Newsweek, July 18, 2010, by Richard N. Haass, president of the Council on Foreign Relations, excerpt quoted verbatim:

GOP chairman Michael Steele was blasted by fellow Republicans recently for describing Afghanistan as “a war of Obama’s choosing,” and suggesting that the United States would fail there as had many other outside powers. Some critics berated Steele for his pessimism, others for getting his facts wrong, given that President George W. Bush ordered the invasion of Afghanistan soon after 9/11. But Steele’s critics are the ones who are wrong: the RNC chair was more correct than not on the substance of his statement, if not the politics.

The war being waged by the United States in Afghanistan today is fundamentally different and more ambitious than anything carried out by the Bush administration. Afghanistan is very much Barack Obama’s war of choice, a point that the president underscored recently by picking Gen. David Petraeus to lead an intensified counterinsurgency effort there. After nearly nine years of war, however, continued or increased U.S. involvement in Afghanistan isn’t likely to yield lasting improvements that would be commensurate in any way with the investment of American blood and treasure. It is time to scale down our ambitions there and both reduce and redirect what we do.

Thrown to the Wolves, The New York Times, Editorial, July 23, 2010, by Bob Herbert, excerpt quoted verbatim:

The Shirley Sherrod story tells us so much about ourselves, and none of it is pretty. The most obvious and shameful fact is that the Obama administration, which runs from race issues the way thoroughbreds bolt from the starting gate, did not offer this woman anything resembling fair or respectful treatment before firing and publicly humiliating her.

Moving with the swiftness of fanatics on a hanging jury, big shots in the administration and Bill O’Reilly of Fox News came to exactly the same conclusion: Shirley Sherrod had to go — immediately! No time for facts. No time for justice.

Comment: I have see other editorials to the effect that, given that Ms. Sherrod ultimately got some kind of justice in the affair and was reinstated to a position in the Agriculture Dept., that overall the whole drama represents a victory in the battle for fair race relation. Admittedly the initial response was, as Herbert suggests, all wrong. ~ Evans Liberal Politics owner Paul Evans.

Watch CNN Anchors Call For Crackdown on Bloggers, CNN YouTube video — 5:51 All about anonymous bloggers and the case of Shirley Sherrod’s smear.

Addicted to Bush, The New York Times, Editorial, July 22, 2010, by Paul Krugman, excerpt quoted verbatim:

For a couple of years, it was the love that dared not speak his name. In 2008, Republican candidates hardly ever mentioned the president still sitting in the White House. After the election, the G.O.P. did its best to shout down all talk about how we got into the mess we’re in, insisting that we needed to look forward, not back. And many in the news media played along, acting as if it was somehow uncouth for Democrats even to mention the Bush era and its legacy.

The truth, however, is that the only problem Republicans ever had with George W. Bush was his low approval rating. They always loved his policies and his governing style — and they want them back. In recent weeks, G.O.P. leaders have come out for a complete return to the Bush agenda, including tax breaks for the rich and financial deregulation. They’ve even resurrected the plan to cut future Social Security benefits.

Also see the latest Krugman column: Chocolate and Copper, The New York Times, July 25, 2010, by Paul Krugman.

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Shameful: Pentagon workers tied to child porn, Boston.com, July 23, 2010, by Brian Bender, with video, excerpt quoted verbatim:

WASHINGTON — Federal investigators have identified several dozen Pentagon officials and contractors with high-level security clearances who allegedly purchased and downloaded child pornography, including an undisclosed number who used their government computers to obtain the illegal material, according to investigative reports.

The investigations have included employees of the National Security Agency, the National Reconnaissance Office, and the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency — which deal with some of the most sensitive work in intelligence and defense — among other organizations within the Defense Department.

Also see First year stands out for Sotomayor on Supreme Court, Boston.com, July 25, 2010, by Robert Barnes, excerpt quoted verbatim:

WASHINGTON — Several partygoers were on their way into the Supreme Court one Saturday evening in May to toast retiring Justice John Paul Stevens when they ran into Justice Sonia Sotomayor. She was not heading to the festivities, but coming from her chambers, where she had put in a weekend shift.

She looked neither tired nor overwhelmed by her new responsibilities, one of the partygoers noticed. “She was beaming.’’

In some ways, Sotomayor’s just-finished first term on the court was like those of many who have come before her: She worked constantly, turned down interview requests and most speaking engagements, wrote unglamorous and largely noncontroversial opinions, and was ideologically true to the president who appointed her. She voted with Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg more than any other colleague on the court.

In the news: Three Spaniards file charges over Israel flotilla raid, BBC News, July 23, 2010, by BBC, excerpt quoted verbatim:

Two Spanish activists and a journalist arrested in a raid by Israel on a Gaza-bound flotilla are filing charges against Israel’s prime minister.

The three accuse Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu, six cabinet ministers and the navy commander of illegal detention, torture and deportation.

The UN has meanwhile named a team of experts to investigate the raid.

image of floods in China with a reporter highlights this world news update from AlJazeera news Listen to the Latest: World News Update from AlJazeera English. All the latest news from around the world.

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Disaster Capitalism’s Catastrophic Success In Ireland … And America

Evans Liberal Politics
July 3, 2010

 

Disaster Capitalism’s
Catastrophic Success In Ireland … And America

 

Disaster Capitalism’s Catastrophic Success In Ireland … And America, Campaign for America’s Future, July 2, 2010, by Terrance Heath, used with permission, quoted verbatim:

It probably seems like I’m “a day late and a dollar short,” with a post about Ireland’s economic disaster days after the New York Times story about the high cost of austerity measures in Ireland echoed all over the progressive blogosphere. But I’m not. It just took me a few days to recover from the intense deja-vu.

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See, back in April, the Heritage Foundation ranked Ireland #5 in its “economic freedom” index for 2010. That, of course, warranted some investigation.

I can’t claim to have known much about Ireland or it’s economy at the time. But a few days of research was enough to paint a disturbingly familiar picture, as the causes and impacts of Ireland’s economic crisis and America’s are pretty much the same.

“Sharp economic adjustments” must be another way of saying what every estimation of the Irish economy states outright: that after the bubble-burst heard ’round the world happened in 2008 — as housing bubbles popped worldwide — Ireland was among the hardest hit. The “openness and flexibility” that made it one of the high-fliers of the boom period came at a high price, causing it to hit the ground harder than other countries. And the damage from that crash may be permanent.

…On top of the housing bubble, Ireland’s economy largely relied on exports, 90% of which were made by foreign-owned multinationals, attracted by the corporate tax rate that was among the lowest in Europe. The tax rate was sweetened by more lucrative concessions designed to attract multinationals. Indeed, when tax-cutting advocate Charlie McCreevy became Labour Finance Minister in 1997, he soon implemented what some deemed were unnecessary property-tax incentives, along with a 20% cut in capital gains tax for property investment. Banking on permanent prosperity, essentially, led to tax cuts that have deprived the country of much-needed reserves, and left it stuck choosing between severe budget cuts in service of the national debt, or investing in programs to keep people working and stimulate the economy.

As in the U.S., warnings about the signs of a coming crash were ignored or dismissed in favor of unfounded confidence in unending growth.

Calls for austerity are — or ought to be — laughably ironic in the context of a crisis caused by conservative economic policies that were incredibly and unjustifiably generous to wealthy and corporate interests whose.

Just as the warnings of an impending crash were ignored, now warnings that “austerity” is likely to make the damage from this economic crisis permanent are being ignored. Instead, deficit hawks and Blue Dog Democats on Capitol Hill are drowning out the voices of Americans who are hurting the most in the crisis, with calls for more pain, blocking yet another vote to extend unemployment benefits.

Given the implications of — not the least of which is the possible creation of a chronically unemployed permanent underclass — and the rejection of every opportunity to make even modest efforts to avoid this outcome, it’s reasonable to question the desired ends such inaction is meant to achieve.

That requires some reframing. Not that the president was wrong when he said that today’s economic reality is rooted in failed conservative ideology.

But to be fair, the other party’s opposition has also been rooted in their sincere beliefs about how the economy works. They believe that our economy will do better if we simply let the banks and oil companies and insurance industry make their own rules. They still believe that—even after Wall street crashed and the BP oil well blew. They think we should keep on doing what they did for most of the last decade, leading up to the recession. Their prescription for every challenge is pretty much the same: cut taxes for the wealthy, cut rules for corporations and cut working folks loose to fend for themselves.

The problem is, we’ve already tried these ideas. We tried them for a good part of the last decade. And we know where they led us.


They led us — and Ireland, and lots of other countries — here, with catastrophic results for millions of people. But whether that’s a failure or a success depends on your point of view.

The current economic crisis may be a result of conservative failure, with catastrophic results that have impacted most Americans in one way or another. But I think there’s a better way to describe it, by borrowing phrases from a former president and best-selling author: What’s happening in Ireland and here in America is really a “catastrophic success” for something called “Disaster Capitalism.”

“Had we had to do it over again, we would look at the consequences of catastrophic success, being so successful so fast that an enemy that should have surrendered or been done in escaped and lived to fight another day.”

~ George W. Bush, on the war in Iraq, August 2004

§§§

“I, like most Americans, have no idea what that means…”

~ John Edwards, on Bush’s “catastrophic success”

George W. Bush, during the 2004 presidential election described the war in Iraq as a “catastrophic success,” a phrase which had most Americans scratching their heads, at a time when the war in Iraq looked like anything but a success. After all, growing chaos, increasing violence, a fraying coalition, an increased attacks on U.S. personnel had combined to postpone Iraq’s elections for seven months.

None of which proved that the war was a failure far as the president and the war’s supporters were concerned. As William Saletan put it, “Does this prove Bush is failing? No. It proves he’s succeeding.” Or, the worse it gets the more “we” must be winning. Likewise, the economic crisis — as it continues to grow, and economic pain continues to spread — can be seen as the success of policies that brought it about and the philosophy that suports them.

The question is, “Succeeding at what, and for what purpose?”

Naomi Klein, author of The Shock Doctrine, describes a “disaster capitalism” that exploits disasters and catastrophic events of all kinds to advance “a vision of a ruthlessly divided” world.

After each new disaster, it’s tempting to imagine that the loss of life and productivity will finally serve as a wake-up call, provoking the political class to launch some kind of “new New Deal.” In fact, the opposite is taking place: disasters have become the preferred moments for advancing a vision of a ruthlessly divided world, one in which the very idea of a public sphere has no place at all. Call it disaster capitalism. Every time a new crisis hits—even when the crisis itself is the direct by-product of free-market ideology — the fear and disorientation that follow are harnessed for radical social and economic re-engineering. Each new shock is midwife to a new course of economic shock therapy. The end result is the same kind of unapologetic partition between the included and the excluded, the protected and the damned, that is on display in Baghdad.

What does “catastrophic success mean?” How can anything be both catastrophic and success? I think it’s derived from catastrophic failure.

a 'catastrophic failure' computer warning sign

A catastrophic failure is a sudden and total failure of some system from which recovery is impossible. Catastrophic failures often lead to cascading systems failure.

The term is most commonly used for structural failures, but has often been extended to many other disciplines where total and irrecoverable loss occurs. Such failures are investigated using the methods of forensic engineering, which aims to isolate the cause or causes of failure.

Catastrophic success isn’t necessarily concerned with executing a planned destruction of a system. It can refer to the successful exploitation of a crisis or catastrophic event — engineered or otherwise — to achieve a particular end. The destruction may be engineered, but it may just as easily be the result other actions or conditions, and even natural disasters.

Catastrophic success is, in a sense, what happens when the total failure of a system in which total and irrecoverable loss occurs, is the desired goal. That pretty clearly defines what’s happening in Ireland right now — the total collapse of an economic system, in which many Irish citizens are experiencing total and irrecoverable loss. That pretty clearly defines where we’re headed if our political leaders don’t act to reverse current trends.

Total destruction of a system, including the people’s level of trust in the system, is a success if the destruction is exploited to achieve desired end — in this case, a restructuring of the economy to the disadvantage of the working- and middle-classes, widening economic disparities and further concentrating wealth into the hands of a narrow few. The result is presicely the “ruthlessly divided world” Klein describes, with its “unapologetic partition between the included and the excluded, the protected and the damned.”

Whether the crisis is set in motion intentionally, or rises from other conditions, it creates an opportunity that can be successfully exploited if recognized and acted upon — or not acted upon. In Ireland, it means acting to worsen the crisis with policies like “austerity measures” that increase economic pain. In the U.S., it takes the form of inaction, like the Senate’s failure to extend unemployment benefits amid chronic, long-term joblessness, thus increasing economic pain and desperation for millions of Americans.

Either way can yield success out of crisis. Depending, of course, how you define success and what you want to achieve.

Visit Campaign for America’s Future.

Terrance Heath: I’m currently the Online Producer at Campaign for America’s Future. Prior to my current position I worked as a Blogging and Social Media Consultant for a number of organizations and agencies, as an outgrowth of my work as Blogmaster for EchoDitto, Inc. I stumbled into blogging and social media after starting my own blog, The Republic of T., but I cut my teeth as an activist working on LGBT equality and HIV/AIDS issues. In that capacity I’ve worked for the Human Rights Campaign and the National Minority AIDS Council.

Thanks, Terrance, for allowing Evans Liberal Politics permission to republish your articles on an ongoing basis.

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Now the Truth Comes Out… July 3, 2010

Evans Liberal Politics
July 3, 2010

 

Now the Truth Comes Out…

 

Evans Liberal Politics, July 3, 2010, by “A Rather Vocal Critic”, quoted verbatim: Note by Paul Evans: This writer has been a friend of mine for many years. Although initially a supporter of Obama, he has felt obligated to be somewhat against the President in recent months. These opinions are his and not necessarily the opinion of Evans Liberal Politics. We felt he should have a voice. (chart by CNN money, editing by Paul Evans)

See 7.9 million jobs lost, many forever, CNN Money hosted on Yahoo, July 2, by Chris Isidore.

graph of positive and negative job growth month by month, December 2009 to June 2010

Why is it so hard for Republicans to understand that the majority of jobs lost (today or yesteryear) are not coming back? This is really not a “loss” contributed only by Democrats. These job losses started back in the 80s and probably earlier. Of course, NAFTA, CAFTA etc. didn’t help. I can remember working at Grumman and we were doing "collabrorative work" with foreign countries in 1979 and that cost jobs then here in Ohio. Krogers pulled out of Northern Ohio (late 1970s?) because they decided it was too expensive for workers because of the unions. I remember when they closed all their stores in NE Ohio. It was big news back then. Now there is rumor that Honda may take the majority of its production over to Indiana. The Ohio Honda plant has threatened to unionize. Honda said, "you do and we are out of here."

This Yahoo article addresses some of the issues of jobs that are lost forever. So who do you blame, the unions?, Congress, Republicans, Democrats, Presidents, workers for being so greedy in the past? When Bank One pulled its headquarters from Columbus as well as so many other companies why is the support from Columbus people still there for these companies?

The talk is that DFAS is going to be shut down when Gates get through with the Defense budget. The various services of the military want control back of their accounting services. This will affect many cities, St. Louis, Denver and many others.

The report today on the unemployment numbers (+83 thousand business, -208 thousand government, -125,000 overall) was skewed. There are so many who dropped off the unemployment roles — that is one reason the number went down. Plus, I hope every last Congress person gets voted out when their term is up (no matter what party) leaving DC without voting either up or down on the unemployment for 1+ million Americans. That is shameful.

How many of you or people you know rushed out and bought a street policy for health insurance? What the news is saying is what I posted several days ago….the cost is too high. Those who need it can’t afford it. Oh well, now they will have to pay a tax penalty for not getting insurance.

For all you Sherrod Brown and Dennis Kucnich lovers, DSCC and DFAS are still letting people go based on poor credit and other issues as far back as 20 years ago. They were NEVER able to stop the process that has been ongoing for over two years now. POOF…..these workers are gone in an instant, never to return.

I have decided NOT to pursue the following fun fact because I have other issues I am tackling. A major pharmacy offered to the State of Ohio and many other states to offer generics to people on Medicaid to help keep health care costs down of Ohio and other states. The answer was “NO. We want brand name only for people on Medicaid”. Hell, I can’t afford to keep up with co payments of some brand names. Medicaid, as Congress alluded last week, is out of control spending in each state. WHY WHY WHY would the State of Ohio and others NOT allow generics to those who PAY NOTHING (no co payments) for their medications? Again, I have not fully researched this. It was told to me by a regional manager for a large store. It would make a great investigative story. I thought generics were safe? If generics are good for old people and the disabled, why not people on Medicaid? Think of the cost savings that could happen. Hmmmmm What is the states’ hidden agenda? (Or do the states have a choice? Maybe there is some federal mandate. At any rate this law needs to be changed. There is an opportunity for someone to do some investigative journalism here, too. ~ Paul Evans)

See The Jobs Just Aren’t Out There, Daily Kos, July 2, 2010, by bmaples, excerpt quoted verbatim:

I hear it over and over from my co-workers and friends:

“The jobs are out there if you want to work.”

I got sick and tired of hearing it, so I decided to do some research. In the process I stumbled across a research paper at the Bureau of Labor Statistics that pretty well blows up the “jobs are out there” lie.

*****

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The Third Depression

Evans Liberal Politics
June 29, 2010

 

The Third Depression

 

The Third Depression, The New York Times Op-Ed, June 27, 2010, by Paul Krugman, excerpt quoted verbatim:

Recessions are common; depressions are rare. As far as I can tell, there were only two eras in economic history that were widely described as “depressions” at the time: the years of deflation and instability that followed the Panic of 1873 and the years of mass unemployment that followed the financial crisis of 1929-31.


Neither the Long Depression of the 19th century nor the Great Depression of the 20th was an era of nonstop decline — on the contrary, both included periods when the economy grew. But these episodes of improvement were never enough to undo the damage from the initial slump, and were followed by relapses.

We are now, I fear, in the early stages of a third depression. It will probably look more like the Long Depression than the much more severe Great Depression. But the cost — to the world economy and, above all, to the millions of lives blighted by the absence of jobs — will nonetheless be immense.

And this third depression will be primarily a failure of policy. Around the world — most recently at last weekend’s deeply discouraging G-20 meeting — governments are obsessing about inflation when the real threat is deflation, preaching the need for belt-tightening when the real problem is inadequate spending.

In 2008 and 2009, it seemed as if we might have learned from history. Unlike their predecessors, who raised interest rates in the face of financial crisis, the current leaders of the Federal Reserve and the European Central Bank slashed rates and moved to support credit markets. Unlike governments of the past, which tried to balance budgets in the face of a plunging economy, today’s governments allowed deficits to rise. And better policies helped the world avoid complete collapse: the recession brought on by the financial crisis arguably ended last summer.

But future historians will tell us that this wasn’t the end of the third depression, just as the business upturn that began in 1933 wasn’t the end of the Great Depression. After all, unemployment — especially long-term unemployment — remains at levels that would have been considered catastrophic not long ago, and shows no sign of coming down rapidly. And both the United States and Europe are well on their way toward Japan-style deflationary traps.

In the face of this grim picture, you might have expected policy makers to realize that they haven’t yet done enough to promote recovery. But no: over the last few months there has been a stunning resurgence of hard-money and balanced-budget orthodoxy.

Read the full article, here.

See Rift Forms Between Obama and Other G-20 Leaders, CBS News, June 27, 2010, by Chip Reid. President Obama largely unsuccessful in convincing his G-20 colleagues in further deficit spending.

See In Ireland, a Picture of the High Cost of Austerity, The New York Times, June 28, 2010, by Liz Alderman.

*****

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Your Abbreviated Pundit Round-up: June 26, 2010

Evans Liberal Politics
June 26, 2010

 

Your Abbreviated Pundit Round-up

 

Your Abbreviated Pundit Round-up, Daily Kos, June 26, 2010, by DemFromCT, used with permission, quoted verbatim:

Saturday edition.

Reuters:

A proposed tax on banks and hedge funds to fund the landmark financial overhaul bill will last a decade and proceeds will be barred from use to bail out failing firms, according to text of the legislation…

Click President Obama
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funny Mad Magazine cover titled 'Obama, the first 100 minutes'

Add that to ‘things this Congress has done’.

NY Times:

“This is a clear respite from the theme that Obama had lost control,” said David Rothkopf, a former Clinton administration official who wrote the definitive history of the National Security Council, the organization American presidents have used for 60 years to assert authority around the country and the world. “He sent a loud and clear message to the generals about who is in charge. And he has engineered a pivot-point in U.S. economic history, an end, or at least a big change, to the ‘leave it to the markets’ era.”

Chris Cillizza:

In some circles, Petraeus was regarded as Republicans’ strongest potential 2012 candidate against Obama. His new post effectively ends that speculation.

Sam Stein on Dave Weigel’s firing:

But within the Washington Post, Weigel’s politics (he is a libertarian with clear progressive leanings) appeared to surprise management, some of whom assumed he was a conservative. The ethos (or perhaps perception) of impartiality is still closely held in the Post newsroom. And with a recent slew of opinion/reporter hires (Ezra Klein, Greg Sargent, and Weigel), some of old guard felt uncomfortable.

How on earth could management be surprised? Do they read his columns? And why is being a conservative more important than being a good reporter?

Greg Sargent on Dave Weigel’s firing:

So this isn’t about whether Weigel could have continued to be fair, accurate and professional. I have no doubt that he could have.

But if he thinks that his relationship to the movement has become so tainted that he’d have a tough time with sources, if he believes he’s become the story to a fault, and if he thinks he could cover other political beats more effectively, then he did the right thing in giving up the blog. And I believe this is what happened.

Weigel is a talented reporter and a great blogger, and won’t have trouble flourishing in this profession. His departure also shouldn’t preclude The Post from hiring someone who covers the conservative movement every bit as aggressively as he does, which I hope The Post will do.

Ezra Klein on Dave Weigel’s firing:

Broadly speaking, neither journalism nor the public has quite decided on how to handle this explosion of information about people we’re interested in. A newspaper reporter opposing the Afghanistan war in a news story is doing something improper. A newspaper reporter telling his wife he opposes the war is being perfectly proper. If someone had been surreptitiously taping that reporter’s conversations with his wife, there’d be no doubt that was a violation of privacy, and the gathered remarks and observations were illegitimate. If a batch of that reporter’s e-mails were obtained and forwarded along? People are less sure what to do about it. So, for now, they use it. Facebook pictures get used too, though there’s a bit of shame in it. If the trend continues as it is, people will become much more careful in those forums. For now, we’re in an awful transition, where haven’t quite adjusted for the public sphere’s ability to appropriate the freshly-enlarged private sphere.

Ezra ended journalist as well.

Andrew Alexander (Ombudsman) on Dave Weigel’s firing:

Alas, it took only one listserv participant to bundle up Weigel’s archived comments and start leaking them outside the group. The result is that Weigel lost his job. But the bigger loss is The Post’s standing among conservatives.

The biggest loss is that the Post feels they have to pander to conservatives. This ain’t the paper of All The President’s Men.

The Hill:

Elena Kagan’s confirmation hearings, to begin Monday, will feature four military personnel among the GOP witnesses, one of whom drew criticism in 2003 for comparing the War on Terrorism to a struggle against Satan.

The high proportion of military personnel in the GOP lineup suggests Republicans hope to highlight Kagan’s efforts to restrict military recruitment at Harvard.

Oops… The Hill:

Judiciary Republicans have disinvited a controversial military officer from testifying at the confirmation hearing of Elena Kagan.

The minority staff of the Senate Judiciary Committee had announced earlier Friday that retired Lt. Gen. William “Jerry” Boykin would appear before the panel next week, likely to discuss Kagan’s efforts to restrict military recruiting while dean of Harvard Law of School.

Satan was unavailable for comment.

See After 41 years, a belated victory for butter, Salon, June 25, 2010, by David Sirota: David Obey’s message to spend at home, not at war, might finally be catching on.

See Pelosi Faces Off with Obama on CIA Oversight, Time, June 25, 2010, by Massimo Calabresi, excerpt quoted verbatim:

Nancy Pelosi and Barack Obama are unlikely political foes, but the House Speaker is in the middle of an ugly fight with the President — as well as the CIA and powerful House and Senate Democrats and Republicans — about Congress’s watchdog powers over the U.S. intelligence services.

Bucking a veto threat by Obama and overruling a deal among the White House, Republicans and two Democratic committee chairmen, Pelosi is pushing to dramatically expand congressional oversight of the CIA and other intelligence agencies. At issue is Congress’s ability to monitor the intelligence programs deemed most sensitive and closely held by the Executive Branch. And the battle is turning into the biggest confrontation yet over Executive power between the liberal House Speaker and a White House that has moved steadily to the center on national security matters.

See Hands Off Social Security: There Are Better Ways to Cut the National Debt, Truthout, June 26, 2010, by Robert Weiner and Jonathan Battaglia.

For a critical viewpoint on Wall Street reform, see Wall Street ‘Reform’ in a Nutshell: The Politicians Lied, Media Applauded, and We Americans Will Suffer, AlterNet, June 26, 2010, by Dylan Ratigan.

*****

DemFromCT is a longtime member of the Daily Kos community with interests ranging from polling to Iraq to bird flu, and has graciously agreed to allow us here at Evans Liberal Politics to publish his articles on an ongoing basis. He is a founding editor of Flu Wiki (www.fluwikie.com) and its sister site, the Flu Wiki Forum (www.newfluwiki2.com). Since its inception in June 2005, Flu Wiki has grown into an international clearinghouse of pandemic influenza information and links.

You can view his diaries at Daily Kos, here. DemFromCT is a featured writer at Daily Kos, and you can read more about him here. You are invited to email DemFromCT.

*****

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