tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-80616402296053184012024-03-08T13:16:14.975-08:00Political LagoonJay Ackroyd (@jayackroyd)http://www.blogger.com/profile/17270262597090808369noreply@blogger.comBlogger46125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8061640229605318401.post-56932095570823477202012-12-17T04:46:00.001-08:002012-12-17T04:46:25.643-08:00CoT<a href="http://moonshinepatriot.blogspot.com/">Translation</a>. And <a href="http://bit.ly/12jUTfc">exegesis</a>.Jay Ackroyd (@jayackroyd)http://www.blogger.com/profile/17270262597090808369noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8061640229605318401.post-68360992662674312602010-08-02T09:01:00.000-07:002010-08-02T09:27:41.763-07:00Who mattersLast night at Virtually Speaking, nyceve and emptywheel had an interesting discussion about Afghanistan, the opportunity costs of continued military action in Afghanistan, where every soldier costs $100,000 to maintain. Funding that soldier apparently required not funding teachers in American schools, as the Democrats failed to force through a measure that would have tied funding the war to funding teachers in the US.<br /><br />You can listen to the entire broadcast either at <a href="http://www.blogtalkradio.com/virtuallyspeaking/2010/08/02/virtually-speaking-sundays-eve-gittelson-and-marcy">BlogTalkRadio</a> or <a href="http://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/virtually-speaking-blog-talk/id305728848?ign-mpt=uo%3D4">Itunes</a>.<br /><br />One point of discussion near the end involved what the members of the netroots, of the Democratic wing of the Democratic party, can do about what has been a fairly disappointing collection of policy decisions, in the areas of health care, job growth, Afghanistan, Iraq and civil liberties. Some people have been particularly disappointed by the role large corporations are playing, as "partners" in policy making, while others point to the impressive list of accomplishments racked up by Democratic leaders in Washington. (Last week, <a href="http://www.ianwelsh.net/netroots-schizo/">Ian Welsh discussed how these issues played out at Netroots Nation</a> in some detail.)<br /><br />Eve asked Marcy where she stood on this question, about whether we should accept that the administration and the Congress have accomplished all that could realistically be expected, or whether we are justified in being disappointed. Some of the ensuing discussion turned on whether the administration would follow through, and appoint Elizabeth Warren as the head of the new banking consumer protection agency, as a real voice representing ordinary Americans. Did Warren's nomination represent a line in the sand? Moreover, should even those who are disappointed suck it up, and work for a President who is unquestionably worlds better than any possible Republican replacement?<br /><br />In this context, Marcy wanted to make one thing very clear--that we are not talking about firebaggers vs Obamabots. We are really talking about the people who voted, many for the first time, for this President:<br /><br /><blockquote>Jay, I worked Detroit election day. I worked the polls in Detroit, I was a poll watcher in Detroit. I can tell you that those people haven't gotten much out of voting for the first time. Some of them were 50 some of them were 18. And frankly, again, Michigan probably has gotten the most from this administration, of any state, just because of the auto bail out. <br /><br />It's not about you and me, it's about the people without jobs. It really is that simple. Until we start making those people a priority; I don't see how Democrats win. It isn't about a guy named Barack Obama or a women named Elizabeth Warren. <br /><br />Until Democrats begin putting those people at the forefront, until Democrats begin really attending to the needs of those 10% who don't have jobs and the even larger percent who are under employed - part-time workers, what have you. Until they start paying attention to that, we don't win. That's not how Democrats win. We win by taking care of people; of the people who don't have any other help. And that's where we're at right now.<br /><br />My issue is civil liberties, but that's not what will make or break the next election. It's about whether or not people continue to leave their homes in record numbers, it's about whether people get back to work.</blockquote><br /><br />Are the netroots the pragmatists here? Is it, once again, "the economy, stupid."Jay Ackroyd (@jayackroyd)http://www.blogger.com/profile/17270262597090808369noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8061640229605318401.post-82805199830075364022010-04-28T06:11:00.000-07:002010-04-28T06:13:42.626-07:00Thought for the DayThe only people who participate in deciding whether a certain Military action was "worth it" are the people who survived the result. Sort of a skewed dataset if you ask me!Paul Dirkshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02953091429632551776noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8061640229605318401.post-27579441756992834912010-04-02T08:01:00.007-07:002010-04-02T08:43:29.310-07:00LyingThere is a lot of fuss being made over Veronique de Rugy's "study" claiming that stimulus funds were distributed disproportionately to Democratic Congressional districts. The skinny is that this is an aberration in the data, because funds delivered to state governments are reported as being delivered to the district the capital is in. This means that districts that contain Sacramento, Albany and so forth will appear to have funds they don't, because they will be disbursed by the state government to other districts through the programs funded by the stimulus package.<br /><br /><a href="http://www.fivethirtyeight.com/2010/04/study-claiming-link-between-stimulus.html">Nate Silver</a> kicked off the fuss (via the Shrill One):<br /><br /><br /><span id="fullpost"></span><blockquote><span id="fullpost">That de Rugy has <a href="http://mercatus.org/publication/stimulus-facts-1">testified before Congress</a> on the basis of her evidence, and never paused to consider why the top five congressional districts on her list overlap with Sacramento, Albany, Austin, Tallahassee and Harrisburg, is mind-boggling. The presence of a state capital is the overwhelmingly dominant factor it predicting the dispensation of stimulus funds. This could have been discerned in literally five minutes if she had bothered to look at the apparent outliers in her dataset and considered whether they had anything in common -- a practice that should be among the first things that any researcher does when evaluating any dataset.<br /><br /></span></blockquote>No it is <span style="font-style: italic;">not </span>"mind-boggling." She lied to Congress. She worked up a "study" that appeared to support a lie she wanted to tell to Congress. And the reason she wanted to tell this lie to Congress was so that this idea, that Democratic districts had been, corruptly, disproportionately allocated funds, could become a story on Fox news, be repeated by Limbaugh, and, eventually hit the mainstream as a "controversy."<br /><br />We have seen this before. <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/06/12/betsy-mccaughey-the-healt_n_215012.html">Betsy McCaughey </a>created the memes that took down the Clinton health care plan, by lying, plain and simple. She worked the same game this time around, only to be taken apart by a <a href="http://www.thedailyshow.com/watch/thu-august-20-2009/betsy-mccaughey-pt--1">late night comedian</a>. McCaughey had no interest in an honest assessment of the plans in either case, no interest in an actual policy debate, but rather wanted to get the "kill granny" meme going.<br /><br />Nate's characterization of de Rugy's results as a "mind-boggling" error by a researcher is not only too polite, it <span style="font-style: italic;">advances her cause</span>. Instead of a simple lie, this now becomes a conflict between academic researchers on both sides of the issue. And, by writing about it at all, Nate raises the profile of the claim.<br /><br />There has been much praise of Nate for his<a href="http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/04/01/a-devastating-takedown/"> devastating takedown</a>. And if this were about a publication by a tenure-seeking professor, it would be so. But this is about someone trying to distort reality. By treating this garbage as worthy of extended analysis is to lend it more credence than it deserves. This deserved a six line dismissal, not a detailed analysis, and those six lines should have included the word "lie." Another possible response is a letter writing campaign to her dean at George Mason. Treating this as fodder for thoughtful analysis helps her attain both the short term goal of getting this meme out, and <span style="font-style: italic;">her</span> personal goal of a permanent place on the wingnut welfare roll.Jay Ackroyd (@jayackroyd)http://www.blogger.com/profile/17270262597090808369noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8061640229605318401.post-18809972825394859112010-02-25T12:59:00.000-08:002010-02-25T13:35:13.802-08:00EllsbergThis morning at the conference sponsored by the New School, Limiting Knowledge in a Democracy, Daniel Ellsberg (apparently, according to the moderator/New School prof, few of his students knows who he is, or what the Pentagon Papers were) made observations that were new to me. This is all paraphrased, but I think it is accurate.<br /><br />He recounted a time in 1969 when he explained to Henry Kissinger what happens when you get the dozen clearances above Top Secret*. What happens first is that you feel like a fool. You've published books that you now discover were filled with stuff that was wrong. You have believed you understood how things worked, but you now find out you were completely wrong, that the real world is entirely different from what you have been told your entire life.<br /><br />But this stage only lasts a few weeks. After you have been reading this material hitherto unavailable to you for a while, you begin to see <span style="font-style: italic;">everybody else</span> as fools. Only with people with these top level clearances know the truth. People whom you previously regarded as experts become ignoramuses, doubly so because they don't realize that they actually know nothing.<br /><br />Moreover, you have to lie to the fools constantly, because the condition for your getting access to what is really going on is you cannot tell anybody what is really going on. So after a pretty short time period, your conversation with the foolish experts consists of telling them only what you want them to hear.<br /><br />This lying is essential to the secrecy. Ellsberg recounted a reporter friend calling him, and asking if there was anything to this Pentagon Papers business (which were in Ellsberg's office safe and the safes of a dozen or so others), he said "No. Never heard of this." You end up increasingly living in a bizarre hothouse.<br /><br />Which is why batshit crazy things like Vietnam, Afghanistan and Iraq come to be. Obama has reasons for continuing the Afghan adventure. But he can't say what they are. Eventually we will find out that they made as much sense as Vietnam, and that there were advisers like Clark Clifford pointing out that the war was batshit crazy.<br /><br />Oh wait, we already know this about Afghanistan and Obama, that there was much said in <a href="http://bit.ly/9bORd7">dissent with McChrystal's escalation</a>.Jay Ackroyd (@jayackroyd)http://www.blogger.com/profile/17270262597090808369noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8061640229605318401.post-12397133401994870142010-02-17T05:50:00.000-08:002010-02-17T06:06:20.786-08:00EditorialMy note to Clarke Hoyt, NYT Public Editor:<br /><br />Jackie Calmes' front page story today on deadlock impeding progress on <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2010/02/17/business/economy/17gridlock.htm">reducing the deficit</a> was not a news story. It was an editorial that focused on Republican talking points about the causes and remedies for the current deficit. Moreover, it is not merely an opinion piece, but it also featured conflations, erroneous statements,and a bizarre neglect of a huge chunk of the federal budget that could easily be cut.<br /><br />For example, she writes:<br /><br /> <blockquote> But he is hardly alone in sounding an alarm about the long-term budgetary outlook, which has Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security costs growing at unsustainable rates and an inefficient tax system that cannot keep up.<br /><br /> “I used to think it would take a global financial crisis to get both parties to the table, but we just had one,” said G. William Hoagland, who was a fiscal policy adviser to Senate Republican leaders and a witness to past bipartisan budget summits. “These days I wonder if this country is even governable.”</blockquote><br /><br />First, she incorporates a false Republican talking point, that there is some difficulty with Social Security. Social Security is solvent out to the mid 2040s with no change to the system whatsoever, and even that is easily solved by raising the ceiling more quickly, or through other minor tweaks. Likewise, Medicaid is not in any difficulty; the program is too small to represent a serious difficulty.<br /><br />It is true that Medicare is projected to grow at unsustainable rates, but that is not because it is a federally funded program. That is because the entire US health care system is being operated at unsustainably high costs, and rate of cost growth. The Times, of course, has published opinions to the contrary of those expressed by Calmes, articles like this one: <a href="http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/05/27/medicare-and-the-va/">Krugman</a><br /><br />Then she cites unnamed economists (why were these people granted anonymity?):<br /><br /> <blockquote>The same economists also say a significant deficit-reduction plan is not possible unless Mr. Obama breaks his campaign promise not to raise taxes for households making less than $250,000. Last week, Mr. Obama said he would not impose that condition or any other on a fiscal commission</blockquote><br />This is also an opinion unsubstantiated by facts. There are plenty of alternative methods for reducing the deficit that do not involve raising taxes on the bottom 9 deciles. The estate tax could be reestablished at high rates. Marginal tax rates above 250,000 dollars could be substantially raised. Any number of wasteful and counter productive programs could be cut, ranging from agricultural subsidies to elimination of Medicare Advantage to removing private institutions as middlemen to college loans. Most important, the soaring medical costs that afflict everyone, not merely Medicare recipients, could be brought in line with the rest of the OECD.<br /><br />Moreover, not a word is said about the US involvement in two wars of choice, costing literally trillions of dollars. The only mention of defense spending shows up in the very last sentence.<br /><br /> <blockquote>The poll also found that by a two-to-one ratio Americans oppose cutting health care and education; 51 percent oppose lower military spending.</blockquote><br />So, it is inevitable that the US has to reduce spending on programs supported by Americans at a two-to-one ratio, while programs that are not nearly so popular (and that is without any of the innumerable 200 dollar hammer stories that are not being written) are not even worthy of consideration.<br /><br />This would be barely tolerable on the op-ed page. People do exaggerate and distort facts on those pages (although I would prefer that your editors permit a great deal less of that). But there is no excuse for this kind of biased, opinion reporting being run as straight news.Jay Ackroyd (@jayackroyd)http://www.blogger.com/profile/17270262597090808369noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8061640229605318401.post-47214103231399666272010-01-14T15:25:00.000-08:002010-01-14T15:35:55.068-08:00Terrorists and Their Super-Powers & Kung Fu GripMichael Scherer <a href="http://swampland.blogs.time.com/2010/01/13/president-obama-in-2010-publically-demonstrating-leadership/#respond">writes at Swampland</a>:<br /><blockquote><i><br /> Obama's aides felt stung by the press criticism after Christmas, when Obama initially opted to hold off public comments, work behind the scenes and, to the dismay of several columnists, play golf. So after returning to Washington, by contrast, Obama gave two public addresses, abandoning his uber-cool façade and twice appearing visibly aggravated at the failures in U.S. intelligence that allowed the attack to take place.<br /></i></blockquote><br />Well, thank God "several columnists" were on hand to express "dismay". Lord knows where the nation would be without "press criticism" of the effort politicians need make towards the appearance of "muscular, public and dutiful demonstrations of authority"....probably a whole lot less comforted while our public integrity-bound press-corps maximizes anxieties over a kid with explosives in his underwear, that's where! Where would we get our desperately needed demonstrations of authority to calm and soothe our raging fears over terrorists and their super-powers and kung fu grip?<br /><br /><object width="425" height="344"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/KxjkADWMkOc&hl=en_US&fs=1&"></param><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"></param><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/KxjkADWMkOc&hl=en_US&fs=1&" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true" width="425" height="344"></embed></object><br /><br />With a press corps like ours, it's certain that the terrorists will fail miserably...to terrorize...the American people...Yes, that's right. We're just like the British during the battle of Britain...apart from facing the Luftwaffe nightly, and remaining calm, courteous and courageous in the face of huge bombs exploding in all our major cities, and citizens evacuating to subway tunnels year after year, and the literal threat of invasion by a vast army of Nazis. That's just like how we are right now with our superb press corps! How could the terrorists possibly win?<br /><br />Also, isn't it just super that we have people like the "aides" who "felt stung by the press criticism" in charge of national affairs? Isn't that the most awesome display of strength there is, when the most powerful administration in the world jumps up and down in fearful reaction to the "dismay of several columnists"? What aides were these, Michael Scherer? Who told you about this episode in these terms? Why, surely such honest dealers would put their names to their claims, right Michael Scherer?<br /><br />All I can say is that having a President who will, at a relative moment's notice, abandon an "uber-cool façade" for the façade of visible aggravation just fills me with total confidence that the focus of this Administration is problem-solving, not posturing. <i>Fan</i>-tastic.<br />I'm also supremely heartened by a press corps that focuses on real problems to solve, not the political posturing of the new Daddy-Figure-In-Chief to demonstrate his "ability to take charge", and its moment-by-moment effects on public perception.<br /><br />Thanks for this substantial review and critique of the Administration's security image handling and public relations efforts, and subsequent polling of attitudes, Michael Scherer. I'm sure we're all much safer as a nation for your efforts...at least I feel 2/3rds safer, anyway.stuart_zechmanhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14817215761981204304noreply@blogger.com15tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8061640229605318401.post-35216439450512245582010-01-04T15:21:00.000-08:002010-01-14T15:25:39.889-08:00Can We Talk Price?Over at Swampland, someone helpfully provided a link to National Geographic post in support of my arguments that graphically demonstrates the fact that the US consumer is getting ripped off by her/his profiteering health care system ( <a href="http://blogs.ngm.com/blog_central/2009/12/the-cost-of-care.html">link to NatGeo</a> ), but unfortunately, the copy then had to go like this:<br /><br /><blockquote><i>The United States spends more on medical care per person than any country, yet life expectancy is shorter than in most other developed nations and many developing ones. Lack of health insurance is a factor in life span and contributes to an estimated 45,000 deaths a year. <b>Why the high cost?</b> The U.S. has a <b>fee-for-service system</b>—paying medical providers piecemeal for appointments, surgery, and the like. That can <b>lead to unneeded treatment</b> that doesn’t reliably improve a patient’s health. Says Gerard Anderson, a professor at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health who studies health insurance worldwide, “<b>More care does not necessarily mean better care.</b>” —Michelle Andrews </i></blockquote><br /><br />No, no, no, no.<br /><br />Thanks Michell Andrews!<br /><br />Thanks for the graphic, but it's unfortunate that National Geographic had to explain the discrepancy in cost as a function of <i>use</i>, as opposed to a function of <i>price</i>.<br /><br />It fits a very neat storyline that contains a great deal of truth, but the fact that fee-for-service leads to unnecessary, i.e. wasteful costs doesn't explain the difference between the <i>price</i> of an MRI in Japan and the price of that procedure in Texas.<br /><br />It isn't just that there is an abundance of inefficiency in delivery, it's that what's being delivered costs more here than anywhere else.<br /><br />Take, for example, prescription drug pricing ( <a href="http://www.kaisernetwork.org/daily_reports/rep_index.cfm?DR_ID=24032">link to Kaiser Foundation</a> ):<br /><br /><blockquote><i>In a comparison of the 20 prescription drugs most commonly prescribed to Medicare beneficiaries, Families USA found that <b>the lowest prices available through the Medicare cards for 10 of the medications were at least 50% higher than prices negotiated by VA</b>, according to Families USA Executive Director Ron Pollack.<br /><br />The study also found that the <b>lowest drug card price for Lipitor</b>, a cholesterol-lowering medication and the most frequently prescribed drug for seniors, <b>was 59% higher than the price available through VA</b>. According to the study, the Medicare drug card price was 46% higher than the VA price for cholesterol-lowering drug Zocor, 56% higher for acid reflux treatment Prevacid and 65% higher for blood pressure medicine Norvasc. VA discounts also exceeded Medicare drug card prices for the other 10 drugs, although only by 7% in one case (Hartford Courant, 6/3).</i></blockquote><br /><br />Even within the United States, even within <i>Federal entitlement programs</i> there are discrepancies between the prices paid for <i>identical</i> prescription drugs.<br /><br />Extending the price comparisons internationally, even to our close neighbors, leads to more evidence of inflationary US prices:<br /><blockquote><i>One of the most important differences between the two countries is the <b>much higher cost of drugs in the United States</b>. In the U.S., $728 per capita is spent each year on drugs, while in Canada it is $509.[82] At the same time, <b>consumption is higher in Canada</b>, with about 12 prescriptions being filled per person each year in Canada and 10.6 in the United States.[84]<br /><br />The main difference is that <b>patented drug prices in Canada average between 35% and 45% lower than in the United States</b>, though generic prices are higher.[85] The price differential for brand-name drugs between the two countries has led Americans to purchase upward of $1 billion US in drugs per year from Canadian pharmacies.[86]</i></blockquote><br />But it's not just Canada, and it's not just prescription drugs.<br /><br />In <i>every</i> other OECD country almost <i>every</i> type of health care consumable, e.g. hospitals, medical procedures, prescription drugs and laboratory tests <i>is less expensive than in the US</i>, while their use is as high or higher than ours.<br /><br />If we simply over-prescribed, and over-tested, and over-treated because of fee-per-service inefficiencies, then we would probably see exemplary countries like Japan doing far less in comparison, wouldn't we? But that just isn't the case ( <a href="http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/08/21/AR2009082101778_2.html">link to the Washington Post</a> ):<br /><br /><blockquote><i>The world champion at controlling medical costs is Japan, even though its aging population is a profligate consumer of medical care. On average, <b>the Japanese go to the doctor 15 times a year, three times the U.S. rate. They have twice as many MRI scans and X-rays.</b> Quality is high; life expectancy and recovery rates for major diseases are better than in the United States. And <b>yet Japan spends about $3,400 per person annually on health care; the United States spends more than $7,000</b>. </i></blockquote><br /><br />Unfortunately, the idea that there are wide price discrepancies between what Americans pay and what everybody else pays seems to be very, very confusing for reporters. It's as if they believe that it's still 1980, and the dollar should buy them vast quantities of quality merchandise in quaint old Europe, and when it doesn't anymore, when even the Canadian Loonie has been worth more than the dollar for almost a decade, they can't get their minds around it.<br /><br />The problems with the United States' system are many, from an over-abundance of paper-pushing to a wildly uncoordinated supply chain, and yes, fee-for-service is a part of the high cost equation.<br /><br />But the basic facts of the matter are that a health care apple in one part of Texas can cost $10 compared to a health care apple in Hawaii costing $7, while a health care apple in Japan costs them $3.60. It's not the cost of <i>insurance</i> against the cost of health care apples that's bankrupting Medicare and the private system, just the price of the apples themselves.<br /><br /><i>Prices</i> are what's wrong with health care in the United States. <i>Prices</i> are what make fee-for-service unsustainable here. <i>Prices</i> are what will ultimately drive all insurance --Medicare and private-- into the ditch.<br /><br />The question is: why is it so hard for reporters to say the word "price" when talking about health care costs? Why is it so hard for them to comparison shop for MRI's around the wealthy world, and then tell the American people if we're actually getting a good price --or if we're getting ripped off?stuart_zechmanhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14817215761981204304noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8061640229605318401.post-28518825909466889152009-12-25T22:17:00.000-08:002009-12-25T23:07:50.865-08:00ConfusionJonathan Chait has a justly widely cited <a href="http://www.tnr.com/article/politics/just-noise?page=0,1">TNR post</a> summarizing the defense of the Senate health care bill. While he frequently does a fine job of presenting the arguments, he also says this:<br /><blockquote><br />Young people will have to pay for insurance that is, actuarially speaking, a bad deal, so that older and sicker people can get a good deal. That’s how insurance works. Fire insurance is a terrific deal for anybody whose home burns down and a bad deal for anybody whose doesn’t. The healthy and young who must overpay can be consoled by the knowledge that one day they may become the sick and old free-riders.</blockquote><br /><br />There is a serious bait-and-switch going on here. These arguments apply to a national health insurance plan, run by a government. They apply to plans like Social Security and Medicare. (The fire insurance argument is just a canard. Fire insurance is a good deal even if your house doesn't burn down. Insuring yourself against catastrophic risk at low prices is always a good deal*.) These arguments do not apply to a for-profit insurance company, even when people are forced to buy the company's policies.<br /><br />The correct arguments, in support of forcing people to buy health insurance they don't want from for-profit firms are <br /><br />1) Adverse selection: only people at risk will buy insurance.<br /><br />2) Free riders: Citizens are implicitly insured against catastrophic health events. EMT doesn't leave you in the street after an auto accident if you are uninsured.<br /><br />These are much less compelling arguments than the national insurance argument above, and imply different policy regimes. For example, limiting the mandate to buying (or paying taxes toward) a government-run, high-deductible catastrophic policy does a much better job of addressing these bits of market failure than does forcing people to buy a managed care plan they don't need.<br /> <br />Aetna, on the other hand, does not offer the consolation that when you're 64, someone 24 will be overpaying for her insurance so that you can be covered at a lower cost. In fact, it is in Aetna's interest to find a way to get you out of their pool by the time you are 64, while continuing to sweep up the taxpayer-subsidized premiums paid by unwilling participants. In fact, it is Aetna's <i>fiduciary responsibility</i> to do everything they can to get you out of their pool before then.<br /><br />The way the Senate bill deals with this incentive to drive people out of the pool as they age is to let insurers charge older people 3 times what they charge other people. This provision, of course, means that the young are not going to subsidize the old. They are both going to contribute to shareholder profits and senior executive compensation at Aetna.<br /><br />What this bill really amounts to are large increases in insurance company revenue, through higher premiums and more policyholders, subsidized by taxpayers. In return for this revenue increase, the companies are supposed to comply with new regulations regarding the acceptance and retention of potentially high-cost policy-holders. <br /><br />This is much like the finance sector bailout deal, where taxpayer funds were used to capitalize bankrupt institutions so they would lend to businesses and individuals so that the economy could be revitalized. <br /><br />We know how that worked out.<br /><br />-----------------------<br /><br />*Part of what is going on here is the degradation of the meaning of the word "insurance." When "health insurance" meant "coverage of in-patient treatment" while other expenses were out-of-pocket, the definition matched the coverage. When "insurance" came to mean "managed care," the definition no longer matched the coverage.Jay Ackroyd (@jayackroyd)http://www.blogger.com/profile/17270262597090808369noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8061640229605318401.post-22974602039305293812009-12-02T18:55:00.000-08:002009-12-02T19:54:40.335-08:00I Defend Tweety from Accusations of LiberalismOver at Swampland, <a href="http://swampland.blogs.time.com/2009/12/02/desirees-sure-to-be-bad-day/comment-page-1/#comment-114346">one of the rightist regulars pipes up</a>:<br /><br /><blockquote><i>anyone who worked for Tip O'Neal or Carter...can be considered anything but liberal.</i></blockquote><br />Hmmm...so people don't change?<br /><blockquote><br />David Joel Horowitz (born January 10, 1939) is an American conservative writer, thinker, and policy advocate. The son of two life-long members of the Communist Party, and a former supporter of Marxism as well as a former member of the New Left in the 1960s, Horowitz later renounced his "left-wing political radicalism" and became an advocate for conservatism.</blockquote><br /><br />Chris Matthews probably <i>was</i> a Jack Kennedy liberal back in the 1960's, when it was cool, "ask not what your country can do for you", marching against segregation, youth-y stuff. The second Reagan took office, whatever remained of Tweety's old liberalism was hurriedly thrown into the garbage with his bell-bottoms. He was probably one of the very first Villagers to be painfully embarrassed by connections to Jimmy Carter's "malaise". It's that same silly, late, desperate trendster-ism that led to that "tingle up my leg" Obama bandwagon-jumping moment of shame.<br /><br />Tweety plays the part of Reagan Democrat...or at least the Village's thirty-year old image of it. He assumes the persona of Tip O'Neill Democrat, whose working-class, Irish-Catholic roots inform his "radical middle", everyman-style low Broderism.<br /><br />Matthews' public image isn't of movement conservative, it's of the centrists' mythical "regular guy" moron who likes his politics marketed to him like his Bud Light. Saint Russert was from the same cloth, so is Brian "working class background" Williams. It appears GE's NBC broadcast network has a technique for branding its news division's product in the laughable formula of a "regular Catholic guy interviews savvy reporters and fiery conservatives" premised sitcom. They work hard not to let the idiot public in on the joke that they all summer on Nantucket with the rest of the swells.<br /><br />You'd be correct to say that Tweety isn't Chuck Norris to Mike Huckabee, but that's only because Chris Matthews is fundamentally a creature of the old, industrial, urban North East political machine --not the Baptist South. Tweety's fading memories of the Reagan revolution and the decline of his old boss are the last pre-Beltway images he has of ordinary people, before he started to live in the establishment journalists' privileged bubble. Tweety's no rightist, because he doesn't see movement conservatism as "normal", and therefore doesn't believe that adding that recent, somewhat alien patois helps his "regular voter" schtick --for which GE pays him 5 million dollars a year.<br /><br />You'd be an idiot to say that Tweety's a dirty fucking hippie, though. He's as left-wing as Tom Daschle, or Dick Gephart, or Hillary Clinton...or Barack Obama.stuart_zechmanhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14817215761981204304noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8061640229605318401.post-4545066582234847472009-11-30T20:28:00.000-08:002009-12-01T07:08:44.259-08:00Madeleine Albright's Friends Need Your Money to Fight TerrorI got an email from Maddy Albright today.<br /><br />In it, she warned me about how those big, bad Republicans are coming to get me:<br /><blockquote><i>Dear Stuart,<br /><br />Double your impact. Help the DSCC fight the lies and save 20% on items in the DSCC store! Deadline: Midnight tonight. Contribute.<br /><br />I believe in diplomacy - but sometimes actions speak louder than words.<br /><br />Tea-partiers and other ultraconservatives are pushing the Republican Party perilously far to the right. They have no interest in working with President Obama as he leads our nation in a way that reflects our highest values and our deepest hopes. They are committed to making sure our president fails - and to regaining control of the U.S. Senate.<br /><br />We face a choice. We can allow the right-wing radicals to reverse the long overdue progress we have made in the past year, or we can fight back.</i></blockquote><br /><br />Wow...extremism and dishonesty have come to the Republican party! I had no idea!<br /><br />Thinking back, I guess it first crossed <i>my</i> mind that the GOP had become slightly..."radical" when <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oliver_North">they admitted</a> to "<i>the sale of weapons via intermediaries to Iran, with the profits being channeled to the Contras in Nicaragua</i>." That sort of struck me as a fairly strange theory of how government should be run, but since there were no consequences for the participants, and nobody in the establishment political press corps talked about it ever again, I guess it just stayed an inkling.<br /><br />I was reminded of this inchoate impression again when the Republican Congress took the opportunity to impeach a Democratic President over a blowjob. It somehow seemed odd to me that this took place during a period of <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arkansas_Project">almost nonstop accusations</a> of (and Congressional investigations into) alleged criminality on the part of the Executive, including the First Lady's involvement in murder.<br /><br />I just had to wonder a little bit about the Republican right when one of them wrote a best-selling book during wartime in our country called "<a href="http://www.amazon.com/Treason-Liberal-Treachery-Cold-Terrorism/dp/1400050324/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1259642102&sr=1-1">Treason: Liberal Treachery from the Cold War to the War on Terrorism (Paperback - Oct 5, 2004)</a>," in which I (and millions of my terrified, shoeless-in-line-at-the-airport, duct tape-purchasing fellow Americans) was informed <i>“Everyone says liberals love America, too. No, they don’t.”</i> <br /><br />I couldn't help but notice that things might have gotten a little bit out of hand on the right when one of their leading online voices <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Defense-Internment-Racial-Profiling-Terror/dp/0895260514/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1259643707&sr=1-1">published a book</a> entitled "<i>In Defense of Internment: The Case for Racial Profiling in World War II and the War on Terror (Hardcover)</i>," which was not some kind of perverse metaphor, but literally concentration camp apologia that detailed "<i>how both Japanese American and Arab/Muslim American leaders have united to undermine America's safety.</i>" I don't know; somehow, when it was proclaimed by Maglalang's blurb-writers at Regnery that these books were meant to "outrage, enlighten, and radically change the way you view the past-and the present," I just wasn't able to put it together that the right was, you know, <i>radical</i>.<br /><br />But...no more. Maddy Albright has opened my eyes.<br /><br />And, do you know what else? As incomprehensible and shocking as this might seem, apparently the rightists have some kind of organized "message machine," as it were:<br /><br /><blockquote><i><br />Click here to make a donation of $5 or more to the DSCC. Every dollar you give will be matched, doubling its impact, and you will receive a coupon code for 20% off items at the DSCC Store. Give today. Victory depends on it.<br /><br />Unfortunately, in today's political environment, it is not enough to have better ideas; it is also necessary to get our message across to our fellow citizens. Thus, in order to defeat our right-wing opponents, we must also back our principles with our wallets. The DSCC's November deadline is today, and the committee must raise $98,765 or risk losing Democratic control of the Senate in 2010. Since it is so crucial that we meet our goal, a group of senators will match your timely gift, effectively doubling its impact. In return, you will receive a code worth 20% off items at the DSCC Store, where every purchase helps our candidates.</i></blockquote><br /><br />"Necessary to get our message across"? I had no idea! I thought that folks like Maddy were supposed to <a href="http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/10364730/">go on Meet The Press every once in a while</a>, sit genially next to Huckleberry, and talk hopefully about the Republican President laying out "benchmarks" for the Iraqi government to meet, instead of a deadline to get the crap out. I couldn't have known that, all along, Maddy was just itching to get "our message across" to folks who'd had enough of our kids getting blown up just so that the bipartisan, Serious Foreign Policy establishment could save face.<br /><br />...And when I think of defeating "our right-wing opponents", the first battalion of unconquerable warriors that comes to mind is the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee. Isn't that everyone's Family Feud Lightning Round answer?<br /><br /><blockquote><i><br />Q: Name something you stand in line for...<br /><br />A: Ahhh...Roller coaster ride...?<br /><br />Q: Name something you'd bring a teacher...<br /><br />A: Umm...An apple...<br /><br />Q: Name an organization supremely dedicated to the political annihilation of the lunatic, rightist opposition...<br /><br />A: The DSCC!<br /></i></blockquote><br /><br />Yes, for every dollar spent, a "a group of senators will match your timely gift." Hmm...a "group of Senators" somehow so recently flush with cash that they could give up their own money to help the cause of re-electing other incumbent Senators...would that be members of the Finance Committee, perhaps? The Gang of Six?<br /><br /><blockquote><i>Our reputation abroad is finally beginning to heal. Each day, President Obama is sending a message that America wants to work as a partner with friends around the world to build a future based on law, justice, human rights, and a commitment to peace. We cannot afford to lose all that we have gained. We have a duty to show the world that the real America - the best America - is back.<br /><br />Holding the line will not be easy. The Republican Party is more energized now than it has been in years. Only three times since the Civil War has the party holding the White House gained congressional seats in midterm elections. We cannot let the Republicans surge ahead.<br /><br />Please click here to make a donation of $5 or more to the DSCC and receive your coupon code. It must raise $98,765 by midnight tonight to defend our Democratic majority in 2010. Every dollar you give will be matched, doubling its impact. Progress depends on your donation.<br /><br />The president is doing his part to move our country in the right direction; we need to do ours. President Obama needs help from Congress to bring about the change that he promised. He needs a Democratic Congress. </i></blockquote><br /><br />Oh! I get it!<br /><br />How do we finally know after all this time that the Republicans are radical rightists?<br /><br />They're preventing Democratic Senators from helping President Obama "bring about the change that he promised."<br /><br />"Energized" Republicans are undermining our brave President's plan to...er, message that he wants to someday "build a future based on law."<br /><br />"Progress depends on your donation"..."We cannot let the Republicans surge ahead"..."we can fight back"...<br /><br />Get used to it. Get just as accustomed to this line of attack as you've become to taking your shoes off at the airport. Get used to being afraid --very afraid-- of Democrats "losing control of the Senate" because you fucked up and didn't support centrists like Blanche Lincoln through your contribution to the DSCC. <br /><br />Get used to being blamed for your lack of enthusiasm for President Obama, because you were stupid enough to read his "hope n' change" message too literally, you stupid ideological purist, you. Stupid! Purist! He never said that! You obviously heard what you wanted to hear! How could have possibly done all of those things? He's not suicidal! What about those terrifying, radical, right-wing Republicans? Aren't you afraid enough of them to shut up <i>right now</i> about our President Obama? <br /><br />Didn't you watch Olbermann or Maddow last night? They bring guns to political rallies...to support the radical idea that the Second Amendment applies to them! They are scared of the federal government that invaded the wrong country and killed a hundred thousand innocent people! "Tree of Liberty!" "Blood of Tyrants and Patriots!" Normal people who are angry enough to become political activists! Be afraid! Be tribally afraid of these other Americans!<br /><br />Don't criticize your own. Hate the other. Be afraid. It's your fault that they're winning.<br /><br />Get used to being told to shut the fuck up, lest you blow it for everyone. Get used to being told to put your principles in the back drawer until we get 2010 wrapped up --then told to "back our principles with our wallets." <br /><br />What if you were to linger a moment too long on what exactly Maddy means by "our principles?" What if you fail in your responsibilities as an ATM for the DSCC? Don't you realize that "Victory depends on it?" You and your shameful, negative, perhaps unconsciously racially motivated ideological purity and stubborn naivete are the reason why the Democratic base will be insufficiently enthusiastic for the midterms! You simply aren't afraid enough of Republicans to properly appreciate just how wonderful Democratic Senators are!<br /><br />Thanks, Maddy, for these terror-inspiring...sorry, sober and pragmatic words of political wisdom. To think that I might have forgotten how radical and right-wing the Republicans have become in the 13 months since they started to criticize President Obama! They're so much scarier than the Democrats who won't do what we elected them to do...<br /><br /><blockquote><i>There is no other option.<br /><br />Sincerely,<br /><br />Madeleine Albright</i></blockquote><br /><br />That's right. With the New Democrats fully in control of the Democratic leadership, there really is no other option, is there? <br /><br />We go to war with the Democrats we have, not the Democrats we wish we had. It's not like we can, you know, somehow change the Democratic party's leadership with all of our money, and effort, and time, and words and votes...correct? We need to be more terrified of the Republican right...not the Democratic center?<br /><br />I'll be sure to send my hard-earned money to the DSCC right away.<br /><br />Won't you?stuart_zechmanhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14817215761981204304noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8061640229605318401.post-79685463315043216542009-11-25T04:46:00.000-08:002009-11-25T05:24:56.362-08:00BrandingSZ's view that that "moderate" and "centrists" are not synonyms, even though they are used that way in the traditional media, is something I have found a hard time wrapping my head around. There is, for me, cognitive dissonance in the phrase "radical centrist," which makes the argument difficult to understand.<br /><br />This is, of course why this brand is used. How can "centrist" be a radical position? It also feeds directly into the media's love for the "center" and for "balance."<br /><br />But what are we talking about here? We are talking about a public/private partnership between large oligopolies and the Federal government. The goal of the is partnership is to hold down wages, set prices at monopoly levels, and increase <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2006/08/28/business/28wages.html">the share of productivity growth going to capital holders and senior management.</a><br /><br />They have largely succeeded in the endeavor:<blockquote><br /><br />But in recent years, the productivity gains have continued while the pay increases have not kept up. Worker productivity rose 16.6 percent from 2000 to 2005, while total compensation for the median worker rose 7.2 percent, according to Labor Department statistics analyzed by the Economic Policy Institute, a liberal research group. Benefits accounted for most of the increase.</blockquote><br /><br />This is a profoundly unbalanced policy regime, one that could indeed be fairly described as "radical."<br /><br />In fact, what we call a public/private partnership to create monopolies that operate at the expense of workers and consumers is "fascism." Since this word is normally associated with the Nazis, it is a label seldom used. <br /><br />Of course, the Nazis also engaged in foreign aggression and made scapegoats of a religious minority group as a populist distraction, using media sources like Bertelsmann to distributed propaganda on the part of the government.<br /><br />So unlike the United States...<br /><br />Oh wait! <br /><br />There is still the Holocaust, of course. But "fascist" is a much more accurate word than "centrist" for these radical policy positions.Jay Ackroyd (@jayackroyd)http://www.blogger.com/profile/17270262597090808369noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8061640229605318401.post-69217191110678454532009-11-23T17:42:00.000-08:002009-11-23T20:18:27.266-08:00Can We Stop with All the Self-Congratulatory "Crazy Right" Crap Now?Commenter shepherdwong at Swampland says <a href="http://swampland.blogs.time.com/2009/11/23/reconciliation/comment-page-1/#comment-112813">this</a> about the difference between our threats to primary centrist Dems, and the rightists' dissatisfaction with the comfortable establishment GOP:<br /><br /><blockquote><i>Anyway, "conservative" "ideological purity" just makes the Republican Party even crazier and less responsive to middle class issues, our purges make the Democratic Party more responsive to average voters and more small "d" democratic. That's no eff-up.</i></blockquote><br /><br />I respectfully disagree. I think that the Republicans do speak to middle class issues, and very effectively in comparison to most Democrats. It is probably only that they've been such naked, catastrophic failures over the past eight years that they've lost credibility and majority power.<br /><br />I believe that there is a large constituency that is sympathetic to populist conservatism, mostly because liberals have yet to effectively address that population. Liberals haven't had the opportunity to speak, have our ideas debated and prove ourselves through successful governance because the Democratic party is controlled by a centrist faction (the DLC and New Democrats) who are largely hostile to liberalism, liberals and popular accountability in general. We can't get a fair hearing. The people who speak "for us" on Meet The Press are centrists --either politicians or journos-- matched up against movement conservatives.<br /><br />Also, the right has an established messaging infrastructure all to themselves, while we largely depend on institutional media, which are dominated by centrists or their corporatist allies. The left has nothing analogous that's that large and organized...yet. Liberals who do make their way up the establishment ladder do so by appealing to elites, and looking the other way when press corps hierarchy and conventions damage our interests.<br /><br />The whole "crazy Republicans" thing is a way for the centrists who control our discourse to demean populism, period. The only reason they're "crazy" now is because they're accountable to their base, which the political-media establishment despises and fears.<br /><br />We fucked up, because "our purges" will be portrayed by our populism-fearing political press corps as identical to the right's, and indicative of our decline. The whole idea of being "responsive to average voters" in a way that doesn't come from Madison Avenue techniques is alien, and will be denounced as subversive, just like the tea party movement ultimately was --not because it was portrayed as inauthentic astro-turfing, but because it was portrayed as authentic, angry people demanding things from politicians.<br /><br />It's not that the people at the Post and NBC hate the right and believe they're wrong on the merits when they mock the tea partiers, it's that they don't have respect for normal people expressing themselves in an unmanaged way --right or left. When they mock the tea partiers, it's just another version of their contempt for <i>us</i>.<br /><br />Does anyone really imagine that elites like Chuck Todd and Andrea Mitchell, or David Gregory and Brian Williams, or Joe Klein and David Ignatius, or Rick Stengel and Ruth Marcus think there's any difference between the "activist, liberal base" of the Democratic party --people who opposed the Iraq war in 2003, for example-- and the firearms-at-rallies popular right?<br /><br />We fucked up.<br /><br />When the rightists demanded the Republican party be accountable to the folks who reliably turn up and vote, and who donate their time and effort to elect candidates and spread messages, and who show up across the country and in the capitol at political rallies, we should have cheered, not screamed "<i>Oh my god, look at the crazy people carrying signs and demonstrating!</i>". We should have said "<i>Good for them! That's democracy in action,</i>" not "<i>They're crazy to think that politicians should be accountable! They're sure to lose elections!</i>" We should have talked about how it would motivate the Republican base in 2010, instead of reciting the anti-populist, centrist CW script about how people "naturally gravitate toward the center."<br /><br />We took our eye off of the ball, and let ourselves be manipulated. Look, how can we call the GOP crazy, and then say that the goal of legislation should be "finding common ground" with their representatives in Congress? Let's not kid ourselves: the Republican Party isn't being called crazy on our behalf --Krauthammer, Gingrich, the Cheneys & co still have platforms, don't they?-- it's that <i>ordinary people</i> are being called crazy <i>again</i>, and this time they're Republicans.<br /><br />We fucked up because, when it comes right down to it, so many of us just love to hate the right, so much so that we forget about the center who hates us even more. We so predictably love to hate the right so much that we just can't seem to get our minds around the notion that such reactions are being manipulated largely to keep us out of power.stuart_zechmanhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14817215761981204304noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8061640229605318401.post-43852897168718320972009-11-22T18:52:00.000-08:002009-11-22T20:59:34.725-08:00Centrists on Fiscal ResponsibilityAt this point in the health care reform legislative process, we've seen all kinds of games being played with deficit numbers, especially with the more-expensive Senate bill, all of which --most notoriously having the CBO score benefits starting in 2014 (not the House's 2013)-- revolve around getting reporters to stick with the now-familiar storyline: centrist Dems are "fiscally responsible".<br /><br />How "fiscally responsible" are the centrists ( <a href="http://www.dlc.org/ndol_ci.cfm?contentid=3255&kaid=103&subid=110">link to the DLC's "New Democrat of the Week"</a> )?<br /><blockquote><br />DLC | New Dem Of The Week | April 16, 2001<br /><b>New Dem of the Week: Mary Landrieu</b><br />U.S. Senator, Louisiana<br /><br /><i>Committed to <b>fiscal responsibility and debt reduction</b>, Sen. Landrieu has also joined those in the Senate leading the way in bipartisanship negotiations over the President's tax cut and budget resolution. She worked with fellow Louisianian Sen. John Breaux and a bipartisan group of Senate moderates in crafting a compromise between the President's $1.6 trillion tax cut proposal and the Democratic alternative.<br /><br />"Today I joined with Sen. Breaux in <b>voting for a $1.2 trillion tax cut</b>," said Landrieu in a press release -- "<b>the product of a bipartisan team of senators</b> working together to produce a tax cut that all Louisianians and Americans can be proud of, while leaving room for investments in defense, education and debt reduction." </i></blockquote><br /><br />The story of centrist spending discipline is truthy, not true.<br /><br />We can't let centrist Dems get away with labeling us the fiscal profligates, and themselves the sober, Serious kitchen-table planners.<br /><br />There's a lot we can say about Republicans looting the treasury when they're in charge, but there's a lot more we should be saying about New Democrats' record of budget-busting, the first of which would be:<br /><br /><i>"How dare they..."</i>stuart_zechmanhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14817215761981204304noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8061640229605318401.post-9012879299765819452009-11-21T09:47:00.000-08:002009-11-21T09:54:37.092-08:00DiscourseOur current political and policy discourse is profoundly broken.<br /><br /><blockquote>Beginning in the first two weeks of May, Obama took harder lines on government secrecy, on the fate of prisoners at Guantánamo Bay and on the prosecution of terrorists worldwide. The President was moving away from some promises he had made during the campaign and toward more moderate positions, some favored by George W. Bush.</blockquote><br /><blockquote></blockquote><a href="http://www.time.com/time/printout/0,8816,1940537,00.html">TIME</a><br /><br />Indefinite detention without trial or charge is a "moderate" position? The routine monitoring of everyone's phone and mail is a "moderate" view?<br /><br />The Overton Window now puts the Constitution into some crazy left wing corner in the attic?Jay Ackroyd (@jayackroyd)http://www.blogger.com/profile/17270262597090808369noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8061640229605318401.post-7735401060754258692009-11-20T12:05:00.000-08:002009-11-20T12:52:44.615-08:00For the MSM, AEI is the New FiveThirtyEightAt Swampland, Jay Newton-Small posts <a href="http://swampland.blogs.time.com/2009/11/20/landrieu-for-100-million/#comments">"Landrieu for $100 million"</a>, in which she references <a href="http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601070&sid=a78Uz9zaIhBw">this Bloomberg piece</a> calmly reporting another huge take-home win for one of the centrists who call the shots in the Democratic Party, this time Mary Landrieu (DLC, Louisiana). Apart from the odd, blasé nature of a piece describing dollars for votes --something most Americans have a problem with, at least conceptually-- there was the equally blasé passing on of poor reporting.<br /><br />Hard as it might be for readers to believe this, I feel that a response is necessary.<br /><br />Jay Newton-Small:<br /><br />Perhaps the most egregious problem in the Bloomberg piece is this example of He Said/She Said:<br /><blockquote><i><b>Landrieu, Lincoln and Nelson</b> have all criticized a central element of the legislation, a new government-run insurance program to compete with private insurers like Hartford, Connecticut-based Aetna Inc.<br /><br /><b>The three lawmakers “all represent states where Obama is pretty unpopular</b>, and they will at least need to split their votes on health care, casting some key skeptical votes,” <b>said John Fortier, a research fellow at the American Enterprise Institute in Washington</b>. </i></blockquote><br />First of all, everybody knows what the American Enterprise Institute is, right? We're all aware that it's not a political analysis house, but <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Enterprise_Institute">a conservative agenda policy factory</a>?<br /><blockquote><i>The American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research (AEI) is a <b>conservative think tank founded in 1943.</b><br /><br />AEI scholars are considered to be some of the <b>leading architects of the second Bush administration's public policy.[2]</b> More than twenty <b>AEI scholars and fellows served either in a Bush administration policy post</b> or on one of the government's many panels and commissions.[3]<br /><br />Among the prominent former government officials now affiliated with AEI are former U.S. ambassador to the U.N. John Bolton, now an AEI senior fellow; former chairman of the National Endowment for the Humanities <b>Lynne Cheney, a longtime AEI senior fellow</b>; former House Speaker <b>Newt Gingrich, now an AEI senior fellow</b>; former Dutch member of parliament Ayaan Hirsi Ali, an AEI visiting fellow, and former deputy secretary of defense <b>Paul Wolfowitz, now an AEI visiting scholar</b>.<br /><br />Other prominent individuals affiliated with AEI include David Frum, Kevin Hassett, <b>Frederick W. Kagan</b>, Leon Kass, <b>Irving Kristol</b>, Charles Murray, Michael Novak, Norman J. Ornstein, <b>Richard Perle</b>, Christina Hoff Sommers, and Peter J. Wallison.[4]</i></blockquote><br />Does anybody who works in journalism understand the professional need to fact-check claims?<br /><br />Let's see, how about Nebraska, where "Obama is pretty unpopular", according to the rightist think-tank guy (<a href="http://journalstar.com/news/local/article_087e035c-86bd-11de-a646-001cc4c03286.html">Link to Lincoln Journal Star</a>):<br /><blockquote><b>Obama gets 57 percent approval in Nebraska</b><br /><br />By DON WALTON / Lincoln Journal Star | Posted: Tuesday, August 11, 2009 4:20 pm<br /><br /><i>President Barack Obama enjoyed 57 percent job approval in Nebraska in a Gallup Poll released Tuesday.<br /><br />The daily tracking results were compiled from January through June and were billed by Gallup as the president's "half-year approval rating."<br /><br />Obama's disapproval score in Nebraska was 32 percent.</i><br /></blockquote><br />OK, but I can hear you saying "<i>Well, the rightist propagandist goofed on NE, but what about Arkansas, Lincoln's state, or Louisiana, Landrieu's?</i>"<br /><br />So what does Gallup say about those states (<a href="http://www.gallup.com/poll/122165/obama-approval-highest-d.c.-hawaii-vermont.aspx">Link to Gallup state breakdown</a>)?<br /><blockquote>Arkansas: Approve 56, Disapprove, 31<br /><br />Louisiana: Approve 55, Disapprove, 34<br /></blockquote><br />Oh horrors! A mid-fifties approval rating!<br /><br />Only in the minds of people who would bestow the laughable title of "visiting scholar" upon the fool ideologue Wolfowitz do these numbers signify that "<i>Obama is pretty unpopular</i>" in these states.<br /><br />I know that you don't work there anymore, Jay Newton-Small, but is it possible for you to mention something to James Rowley and Kristin Jensen, the authors of that eye-rollingly bad piece, if you were to still be in contact?<br /><br />Could you maybe point out that when journalists turn to the AEI for political analysis on politicians' votes on a "government-run" anything, they should probably expect something along the lines of "<i>that would be bad politically</i>" --even if the Senator were, say, Dick Durbin of Illinois?<br /><br />Thanks so much in advance for letting your former colleagues know that many of their readers aren't idiots, Jay Newton-Small!stuart_zechmanhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14817215761981204304noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8061640229605318401.post-20095073341412169982009-11-19T13:43:00.000-08:002009-11-19T13:57:44.676-08:00Abortion: Why We LoseA few days ago, I put in my two cents on the dynamics behind public support for abortion restrictions:<br /><br />The energy and funds spent by the Beltway pro-choice lobby could be even better spent persuading Americans that this is <b>not</b> what their tax dollars would be used to promote (<a href="http://www.cwfa.org/articles/10589/BLI/dotcommentary/index.htm">link to rightist scoundrels demonizing "loose" women</a>):<br /><blockquote><br /><b>Abortion as Birth Control</b><br /><br /><i> Abortion is no longer primarily an act of teenage desperation; instead, more and more it is the calculated choice of adults <b>unwilling to accept responsibility for their behavior</b>. Abortion is becoming more “rare” among the nation’s teens, but a larger percentage of women in their mid to late 20s –– women who are supposed to be responsible, mature and informed –– are, to put it bluntly, <b>using abortion as a form of birth control</b>.<br /><br />According to the Alan Guttmacher Institute, 6 million American women become pregnant every year — <b>almost half of them unmarried</b>. The abortion rate for unmarried women is four times greater than that of married women. <b>Obviously, these women engage in irresponsible and risky sexual behavior with men who are poor candidates for marriage</b> and even worse candidates for fatherhood. Of those 3 million unmarried pregnant women, almost half have an abortion and almost half become single mothers. Very few of them marry the father of their child or give the child up for adoption.<br /><br />In summary, over the past couple of decades, <b>abortion has enabled women to engage in sexual activity without marriage or any other commitment</b> –– regardless of whether either person is able or willing to commit to a permanent relationship and regardless of whether either person is willing or able to take responsibility for the consequences. <b>That’s the driving force behind the so-called “pro-choice” movement.</b> </i><br /><br /><b>Dr. Janice</b> Shaw Crouse is Senior Fellow of <b>Concerned Women</b> for America’s <b>Beverly</b> LaHaye Institute.<br /></blockquote><br />This is what we're up against.<br /><br />To argue past these people is to forfeit the debate, IMO.<br /><br />Who in the Democratic party are the standard-bearers against this frame? Who in the Beltway lobby speaks to this rhetoric at all?<br /><br />Who's getting up on their elected perches, and telling Americans that abortion isn't about promiscuous women defying their communities' moral codes? Who is standing their ground on the position that public funds <i>should</i> be available for abortion, because tax-payer support does <b>not</b> mean promoting irresponsible, immoral behavior in young women?<br /><br />(I say this to point out that the two sides keep talking past each other, with the result being that the anti-choicers are winning the public debate.)<br /><br />When we argue the issue in terms ("<i>over 500,000 families have a child who went hungry</i>") that lie outside the rightists' core proposition, I believe that we're avoiding the real fight.<br /><br />We have to be able to look ordinary folks in the eye and say<br /><blockquote><br />"<i>Young women who get pregnant in bad situations and have abortions <b>are taking responsibility</b> for their actions. It's the responsible thing to do. Abortion is about saving women from all the things that can go wrong in people's lives, from medical concerns to future-ruining mistakes to family survival.<br /><br />That's why it's legal in the United States and around the developed world, because people have always known that these things happen to us when we expect them least. That's why public money should be available to <span style="font-weight: bold;">help women do the responsible thing in bad situations</span>, however they ended up in that doctor's office --because sometimes it's the only responsible decision to make.</i>"<br /></blockquote><br />Nothing less will do until this issue is confronted head on, in my opinion. People understand "Girls Gone Wild", but child hunger statistics? Not so much.<br /><br />If the professional liars in the pro-life lobby can get away with doing this --with persuading most Americans who aren't firmly convinced abortion is murder to their core <i>that it encourages irresponsibility and immorality</i>, then we're going to lose, period.<br /><br />If the debate were had honestly, on its merits, Americans would be confronted by this frame:<br /><blockquote>Q: <i>In terms of pregnancy and birth, do you know when a baby is a baby, exactly?</i><br /><br />A (anti-abortion): <i>From the moment sperm touches egg.</i><br /><br />A (pro-conscience): <i>I don't know. I don't think we can know that for sure.</i><br /><br />Q: <i>If you were in a burning hospital with a test-tube full of 10,000 fertilized eggs on the one hand, and a single newborn baby on the other, and you had to choose one to save, which would it be? The test-tube with 10,000 potential babies, or the one live baby?</i><br /><br />A (anti-abortion): <i>I don't know. I don't think we can know that for sure.</i><br /><br />A (pro-conscience): <i>The baby.</i><br /></blockquote><br />If that were the sober discussion, whose side do you really think most Americans would be on?<br /><br />Instead, they are presented with "Concerned Women for America" telling them a story about something that concerns their lives every day, i.e. young women having sex and making Moms and Dads uncomfortable, and a pro-choice lobby that seemingly would rather talk to itself than deal with that story.stuart_zechmanhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14817215761981204304noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8061640229605318401.post-18430779933195103242009-11-19T12:17:00.000-08:002009-11-19T13:28:55.962-08:00AbortionI was gonna put up a tweet noting that the controversial issue of government paying indirectly for abortion is much less controversial, in terms of popular opinion, than paying directly for killing civilians in Afghanistan and Iraq.<br /><br />But it turned out <a href="http://">this is not unequivocally true</a>. <br /><br /><blockquote> CBS News Poll. Nov. 13-16, 2009. N=1,167 adults nationwide. MoE ± 3.<br /> <br />"Which of these comes closest to your view? Abortion should be generally available to those who want it. OR, Abortion should be available, but under stricter limits than it is now. OR, Abortion should not be permitted."<br /><br />Generally Available 34%<br />Stricter Limits 40%<br />Not permitted 23%<br />Unsure 3%<br /><br /></blockquote><br /><br />This is very depressing. It reminds me of the stories clinic workers tell of women who picket the clinic, and then one day walk inside. For an abortion. <br /><br />On the one hand, three quarters of Americans think that abortion should be legal and available. It is hard to believe that the restriction that comes to mind of the 40 percent is that the procedure should not be paid for by the government. Stuff like parental notification or restrictions on third trimester abortions (which Roe itself permits) are probably what the respondents are thinking of.<br /><br />But I am absolutely certain that all of that 40 percent, and a good chunk of the not permitted 23% would discover that when they or their daughter were pregnant at a time when a child would be a bad idea, for the woman and the kid, they would have the abortion. <br /><br />These polling numbers spook politicians. And they lead to a distortion of public policy. The Stupak-Pitts amendment rests on these numbers. The Village thinks this is <a href="http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/11/17/AR2009111703139.html">much ado about nothing</a> because they, and their daughters don't have to worry about access to reproductive health services. So, they say, make the women who can't pay for abortion out of pocket be forced to bear a child.Jay Ackroyd (@jayackroyd)http://www.blogger.com/profile/17270262597090808369noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8061640229605318401.post-39782158668823280172009-11-19T04:34:00.000-08:002009-11-19T05:01:01.975-08:00Joe Klein once agains brags about his Civil Liberties Cluelessness<i>I don't have much patience for legal niceties when thousands of innocents are being targeted and killed.</i><br /><br />Read more: http://swampland.blogs.time.com/2009/11/18/the-al-qaeda-trial/<br /><br />I responded with a hypotheitical:<br /><br /><i><br />We've always loved that about you Joe. Unfortunately legal niceties are the only thing that stands between civilization and chaos. Lets pretend for arguments sake that a rogue group of true believing neocons, started engaging in terrorist-like activities like perhaps sending Anthrax spores to people in the mail. Let's further assume that a prominent lobbying group with foreign connections was found to be involved. </i><br /><br /><i>Certainly the nature of the threat would dictate that waterboarding would be an appropriate tool for investigation and that failing that, preemptively arresting and permanently detaining the members of that lobbying organization would be AOK. And of course providing 'material support' for that organization in the form of monthly donation checks would itself be a prosecutable offense.</i><br /><br /><i>They might even come after YOU!</i><br /><br />Needless to say he will dismiss such concerns as contrived and unlikely but the whole reason we like to refer to "blind justice" is because the key to the law is that it can stand independent of the identities of the perpetrators and victims. It's sad to note but the current debate over whether it's appropriate to try KSM in New York is based on simple bigotry. If there's any more evidence necessary then we need simply ask why the anthrax letters didn't result in wholesale detainee abuse and an unofficial declaration of war. (FBI stalking doesn't qualify!)Paul Dirkshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02953091429632551776noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8061640229605318401.post-80218974552339420402009-11-17T22:16:00.000-08:002009-11-22T07:57:10.149-08:00Centrists on the Up or Down Vote<div class="comment-text"> <p>Jay Newton-Small put up <a href="http://swampland.blogs.time.com/2009/11/18/trigger-happy/#comments">a post called "Trigger Happy" at Swampland</a> late this evening, in which she dutifully stenographs DLC-ers ideas on procedure:<br /></p><blockquote><i>...if you talk to centrists <span style="font-weight: bold;">the only word you hear is trigger</span>: there's the Snowe trigger, the “hair” trigger and something Senator Tom Carper, a centrist Delaware Democrat, is calling the “hammer.”<br /><br />Carper is trying to build <span style="font-weight: bold;">centrist unity</span> around his idea in order to offer it as an alterative if and when the opt-out public option fails – a provision, he says, that just doesn't have the votes to pass the Senate. “We'll see what comes out of Reid's bill but I think at the end of the day we may need something along the lines of what I'm suggesting<span style="font-weight: bold;"> in order to finish debate</span> on the bill and report [the bill] out,” Carper said.<br /><br />Carper is meeting with centrists such as Joe Lieberman, Olympia Snowe, Mary Landrieu, <span style="font-weight: bold;">Ben Nelson</span>, Evan Bayh and Blanche Lincoln asking them what kind of a trigger they might vote for.<br /></i></blockquote>So the problem is preventing a Democratic filibuster of a Democratic bill, making sure that the centrists don't join together with the Republicans against the disorganized (and apparently brainless zombie) liberals, and that they will vote for cloture --ensuring that the bill gets a straight up and down vote: <blockquote><p><i>“What we're asking centrists is: 'What concerns do you need to have addressed to <b>vote for cloture</b>?'” Carper said. “And the two concerns that we hear over and over again is government run and government financed.”</i></p></blockquote> <p>OK, "<span style="font-style: italic;">government run</span>" is what the Republicans say over and over again like jack-in-the-boxes --check. "<span style="font-style: italic;">Government financed</span>" is what the health insurance industry complains about over and over again --check.<br />Yep, they've just <i>got</i> to filibuster and obstruct the business of the Senate.<br /><br />Hmm..."cloture"..."filibuster"..."straight up and down vote"... I'm sure I've read <a href="http://www.dlc.org/ndol_ci.cfm?contentid=253373&kaid=103&subid=111">those words somewhere before</a>...</p> <blockquote><p><i>The seven Republicans made a commitment to vote against a nuclear maneuver for the rest of this Congress. The seven Democrats agreed to reserve filibusters against judicial nominees to "extraordinary" cases, which aptly captures <b>the extraordinary nature of filibusters</b> themselves. The two sides compromised...[Nebraska Senator and New Democrat Ben] Nelson said[,] "Now the Senate can move forward and get to important business."</i></p></blockquote> <p>So...the last time it was beautiful and principled for centrist Democrats to join together with Republicans in an orgy of bipartisanship, it was to promise <b>not</b> to filibuster, so that "important business" could proceed.<br /><br />Now, of course, they absolutely <i>must</i> filibuster health care reform, so that they can hold the flag of bipartisanship high once again (and satisfy the DLC's corporate "partners", just like all principled Third Way Democrats do), and important business cannot proceed.<br /><br />Centrists <i>do</i> have principles, but just like conservatives' opposition to big government (except when spying on citizens en masse or torturing "suspects" in secret prisons or looting the treasury for war profiteers), those principles certainly do appear rather contradictory at times to folks of other political persuasions.</p> </div>stuart_zechmanhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14817215761981204304noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8061640229605318401.post-13588928279883798982009-11-16T18:34:00.000-08:002009-11-16T18:56:36.546-08:00IPOne of the more brilliant bits of marketing language is "Intellectual Property." "Property" conveys the notion of permanence, while "Intellectual" conveys the sense of of seriousness.<br /><br />Here is what <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Copyright_Clause">the Constitution says </a> (pdf) about copyright and patent:<br /><br /><blockquote>To promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts, by securing for limited Times to Authors and Inventors the exclusive Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries.</blockquote><br /><br />As always, the Founders recognized that times change, and that it is best to draw broad guidelines rather than precise definitions of stuff like how long monopolies on developments in science and useful arts should be in place. But they did clearly say "limited." <br /><br />Current law doesn't reflect any notion of "limited" times. <br /><br /><blockquote>The duration of copyright in these works is generally computed in the same way as for works created on or after January 1, 1978: the life-plus-70 or 95/120-year terms apply to them as well. The law provides that in no case would the term of copyright for works in this category expire before December 31, 2002, and for works published on or before December 31, 2002, the term of copyright will not expire before December 31, 2047</blockquote>.<br /><br />So Mickey is good until 2048, at which time Disney will have gotten another renewal.<br /><br />The entire point of having patents and copyright exist for a limited time is so that the work can eventually enter into the public domain, that the creators get a period of time where they exploit their ideas in a monopolistic environment, but, at some reasonable time after their invention or creation, the work becomes publicly available. The idea of copyright and patent is to protect innovation, for long enough that it encourages such innovation, but not so long that it remains out of the public sphere.<br /><br />This idea has been lost. Walt Disney is long dead. He isn't around to take advantage of his ability to develop a new Mickey Mouse character. The corporate inheritors of his legacy of genius are stifling innovation, in violation of the intent of the Founders. But they are well-funded, and fund their legislators to keep Mickey, and every other work that took place after Mickey, out of the public domain.<br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><a href="http://www.copyright.gov/circs/circ1.pdf"></a>Jay Ackroyd (@jayackroyd)http://www.blogger.com/profile/17270262597090808369noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8061640229605318401.post-18320524398319746372009-11-15T15:34:00.000-08:002009-11-15T16:15:44.479-08:00Shilling 2.0Every so often, one hears of these flacks and operatives that supposedly go through commentary in establishment media sites, and will post agenda-advancing comments posing as ordinary readers. I hadn't seen one for myself until today.<br /><br />This is one of these shills in action up <a href="http://swampland.blogs.time.com/2009/11/15/drug-industry-pulls-the-strings-in-congress/comment-page-1/#comment-110795">at Swampland</a>, in an important lobby-busting post from Karen Tumulty on a Times article on corporate influence called "<b>Our Chatty Cathy Congress</b>" (the hyperlink to the post is given the helpful URL "swampland.blogs.time.com/2009/11/15/drug-industry-pulls-the-strings-in-congress"):<br /><br /><blockquote><i><br />Why is the headline linking to this story entitled "How the Drug Industry Pulls Congress's Strings? Once you review the actual article it becomes a discussion of the standard operating procedure of lobbyists and elected congressional representatives. Nothing in the story raises even a hint of an industry wide scheme of manipulation, never mind anything untoward at all.<br /><br />The industry isn't perfect, but then I challenge you to find one that is, and I'd ask you to start with the profession of journalism. I long for someone to merely present me with the relevant facts so I may make my own judgments and conclusions, and weary of a focus on the sensational to the complete absence of presenting all sides of the issue.<br /><br />Why has the Times chosen to denigrate an industry? Can I trust media if they don't present all sides of a story? You are supposed to present information, not simply tar industries, groups, individuals, with a brush and a label such as the one leading into this article. Don't you understand, I can't tell the difference between you and Fox; neither of you will give me the facts without bias or even give me all the facts.<br /><br />Time, prove yourself journalists, and write an article about the good in this industry and the people who labor in it, rather than just focus on the negative aspects. The costs of prescription medications gets loads of press, but have any of you ever stopped to calculate and compare the annual costs of blood pressure medication vs the cost of treating a stroke. If you don't write this story, please change your tabloid, sensational tactics.<br /><br />Give me Joe Friday and just the facts please.<br /><br />Posted by: mdfstx<br />November 15, 2009<br />at 5:30 pm <br /></i></blockquote><br /><br />Wow...What naked propaganda. How fucking stupid do these jackals think we, the politically engaged public, are?<br /><br />This was my response:<br /><blockquote><br /><blockquote><br /> The industry isn't perfect, but then I challenge you to find one that is... <br /></blockquote><i><br />If by "perfect" one means "unwilling to subvert through material influence the democratic processes our nation has preserved with the blood of patriots", then no, there doesn't seem to be a "perfect" industry in sight.<br />.<br />The challenge isn't to find an industry that's "perfect", but to find and implement the system through which industry influence is minimized, and public influence is raised to its proper level. To do so necessarily means to weaken the power of corporations.<br />.<br />...and all the yelling of "Bias! Bias!" is so much cheap working of the refs. The press should be biased --biased toward the public interest where it conflicts with industry's. Dutifully presenting "all sides of the story" has no public value whatsoever when one side is the public interest, and the other is industry interest. Only a shill or a fool would demand that the tobacco companies' point of view be given equal time and emphasis along side lung surgeons' in a piece on the dangers of smoking.</i><br /><blockquote><br /> Time, prove yourself journalists, and write an article about the good in this industry and the people who labor in it, rather than just focus on the negative aspects.<br /></blockquote><i><br />That's a truly ridiculous demand, completely at odds with what the problems of journalism actually are. Balance for balance's sake (or to satisfy the criticisms of industry PR shills) isn't synonymous with presentation of the truth. Real journalists don't "balance" negative aspects of a story for the sake of deflecting criticism. There either is significant equivalence, or there isn't. The industries themselves are more than capable of buying advertising time and public relations expertise testifying as to "the good in this industry and the people who labor in it", something of which ordinary folks are well aware.<br />.<br />Luckily for the institution of journalism, this kind of bogus criticism can now be countered by so many more engaged news consumers demanding an end to He Said-She Said. Luckily for us, most of us see this kind of demand for fake balance for what it is, and can tell journalists directly to reject it on our behalf --which they are starting to do.<br /></i></blockquote><br />I've always thought that this sort of sock-puppetry was more urban mythology than everyday reality, but I'm starting to reconsider.<br /><br />Here's some video of mdfstx expressing another honest opinion at an "Americans For Prosperity" rally (he's the man in the top hat passing out fliers):<br /><br /><object width="425" height="344"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/c9FiPaSdiL0&hl=en_US&fs=1&"></param><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"></param><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/c9FiPaSdiL0&hl=en_US&fs=1&" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true" width="425" height="344"></embed></object><br /><br />If you see bogus calls for "balance" and silly invective involving "bias" that doesn't emanate from the rightist "liberal media"-bashing crowd, it might make some sense to take thirty seconds to add your two cents about how journalism that seeks refuge from criticism in balance is useful to public relations shills --and nobody else.stuart_zechmanhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14817215761981204304noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8061640229605318401.post-31887555021829197662008-12-31T08:09:00.001-08:002008-12-31T09:55:43.384-08:00From the Beltway Pundits' Mindreading Textbook Comes...<a href="http://swampland.blogs.time.com/2008/12/30/classy-indeed/">This post</a> by Swampland's newest "contributor" Amy Sullivan almost perfectly illustrates the chattering class' inability to distinguish facts from their own imaginations:<br /><br /><blockquote><i><span style="font-weight: bold;">Showing he's still really good at thinking things all the way through</span>, Blago has picked Roland Burris <span style="font-weight: bold;">no doubt in part because he thinks Senate Democrats</span> would have a tough time refusing to seat a man who would be the Senate's only African-American member. <span style="font-weight: bold;">He's right to think</span> they wouldn't be thrilled about it. But<span style="font-weight: bold;"> they're even less thrilled</span> about lending any legitimacy to Blago himself or accepting a replacement for Obama who would have an uphill battle retaining the seat in 2010.<br /><br />Although Burris was the first African-American elected to statewide office in Illinois as the state's comptroller, he has struggled in campaigns as well, losing races for governor, U.S. Senate, and mayor of Chicago. Even <span style="font-weight: bold;">Blago has expressed concerns about Burris' electability</span>. In a 2002 radio interview on V-103's Cliff Kelley Show, after Blagojevich defeated Burris in a primary contest for <span style="font-weight: bold;">the Democratic gubernatorial nomination</span>, Blago said that the color of Burris' skin "hurt him" at the polls.<br /><br />It's a quirky strategy, appointing a candidate <span style="font-weight: bold;">you don't think can win</span>. But I'm sure it will turn out just as well as Blago's other creative efforts.<br /></i></blockquote><br /><br />As I say to Amy Sullivan in my commentary, that sure is a lot of mind reading going on. Does this person truly believe that these simple conjectures are actually verifiable in any way? Yes, if what constitutes "verifiable" in your world is the merely plausible as represented by your colleagues' cocktail party chatter/cable news show round-table.<br /><br />A cursory reading of her blather prompted <a href="http://swampland.blogs.time.com/2008/12/30/classy-indeed/#comment-30855">this comment from me</a>:<br /><blockquote>Amy Sullivan:<br /><br />That's sure a lot of mind-reading in this post.<br /><br />Is there any information to be had out there for some intrepid political reporter to discover that might indicate why Roland Burris has had a less-than spotless win track record in Illinois? Might that information have something to do with less-than-pure factors in Illinois pushing back against Burris' clean politics? Or maybe the races in which he ran had more to do with demographics issues?<br /><br />After reading your post, I don't know the answer to these questions, and apparently you don't even care to know. Perhaps you might be so good as to provide something more in the way of background and insight than this rather facile cable news-talk segment.<br /><br />Thanks in advance for not settling for the least insightful, most easily repeated storylines, Amy Sullivan.</blockquote><br /><br />What I didn't mention in my comment was the particularly egregious conflation of Burris' gubernatorial primary defeat with "Burris' electability" in general. Let's set aside for a moment an examination of the sheer ludicrousness of Amy Sullivan's quoting Governor Pay-to-Play McConflict-of-Interest in support of <i>any</i> candidates' prospects at the polls. If we look squarely at this post's message, we get to see an incredible sleight-of-hand take place: Burris' defeat in the <span style="font-style:italic;">Illinois Democratic machine's primaries</span> somehow morphs into "electability" <i>in general</i>.<br /><br />When Amy Sullivan writes "<i>losing races for governor, U.S. Senate, and mayor of Chicago</i>", she somehow neglects to mention that these were <i>Democratic primaries</i>, and not actual statewide races for these offices between a Republican and a Democrat. Perhaps she doesn't know. I have no idea.<br /><br />In the possibility that she doesn't appreciate the difference in Illinois between a Democratic primary and any other race, <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roland_Burris">let's look at who won these primaries</a>, shall we?<br /><blockquote>From 1979 to 1991, Burris was elected to the office of Comptroller of Illinois. He was the first African American to be elected to a statewide office in the state of Illinois. <span style="font-weight:bold;">Burris was an unsuccessful candidate for the Democratic nomination for U.S. Senate in 1984, losing to Paul Simon who went on to defeat incumbent Senator Charles Percy.</span><br /><br />From 1991 to 1995, he was Attorney General for the State of Illinois, where he supervised over 500 lawyers. There, he was the second African American elected to a state office of Attorney General in the United States.<br /><br />In 1994, <span style="font-weight:bold;">he was an unsuccessful candidate for the Democratic nomination for Governor of Illinois</span>. While Burris had been favored for much of the primary campaign, <span style="font-weight:bold;">he and Cook County Board President Richard Phelan were both defeated by State [Comptroller Dawn Clark Netsch, who</span> had a strong late showing in the final weeks of the campaign despite being seen as the underdog. Netsch <span style="font-weight:bold;">would go on to defeat the following November against incumbent Republican Governor Jim Edgar in an election <i>where Democrats lost every single race for statewide office</i></span>.<br /><br />In 1995, he ran for mayor of Chicago, <span style="font-weight:bold;">losing to incumbent Richard M. Daley</span>. In 1998 and 2002, he again unsuccessfully sought the Democratic Party nomination for Governor of Illinois, running in 2002 against, among others, Rod Blagojevich. In 1998, Burris famously caused a controversy by referring to his Democratic primary opponents -- Jim Burns, Glenn Poshard (who eventually won the nomination) and John Schmidt -- as "nonqualified white boys."[6] While arguably true, <span style="font-weight:bold;">the statement was considered racist by many and backfired politically</span>.</blockquote><br /><br />OK now, if Wikipedia has this right, Burris lost the US Senate primary <i>in 1984</i> to one of <a href="http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9A03E2DD1F3DF933A25751C1A9659C8B63&sec=&spon=&pagewanted=1">the most revered of Illinois' Senators</a>, then won Attorney General over the Republican, then lost a three-way primary for governor in an election in which <i>no Democrat won their election</i>, lost an unwinnable primary to <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_J._Daley#Democratic_Party_machine_politics">Chicago's reigning Daley Machine heir</a>, then lost another primary to Blagojevich, perhaps because of the racial overtones in his/the campaign (to which the Governor alluded in his radio interview).<br /><br />In my mind, none of this speaks to Burris' "electability" whatsoever. I'm from Chicago, and believe me, this track record says a lot more about politics in Illinois over the past few decades to me than it does about Burris' capability of winning that US Senate seat in an upcoming election. <br /><br />Beyond even the silly mind-reading parlor tricks on display, Amy Sullivan's post captures the rank ignorance of the storylines upon which our pundit class settles in order to create consensus around their own inane readings of our nation's politics. She apparently just couldn't be bothered to consider actual facts and actual history before weighing in with a regurgitation of the Village consensus that Burris <i>shouldn't</i> be capable of winning a contest should his appointment stand.<br /><br />None of this is remarkable in any way, apart from that it serves to demonstrate just how little thought, research or context goes into these peoples' formulations of their inane opinions about our politics. Amy Sullivan is not necessarily the worst offender, nor this post the worst example of this tabloid clique's collective guilt, but nevertheless we should be reminded of how much public push-back we need to do on an ongoing basis to correct their ongoing failure.<br /><br />Welcome to Swampland, Amy Sullivan.stuart_zechmanhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14817215761981204304noreply@blogger.com5tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8061640229605318401.post-33446146220407228362008-12-19T04:14:00.000-08:002008-12-19T04:17:01.657-08:00I wanted to make sure Jay Saw this!<em>people don't hold a special place here on the planet, nor in the universe</em><br />Another spot where we disagree (slightly)<br /><br />I like to say:<br /><br />The Universe should be given as least as much credit for consciousness as its contents. We are part of the Universe and conscious therefore, in that sense, the Universe itself is conscious.<br /><br />Anything past that however is belief in magic.Paul Dirkshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02953091429632551776noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8061640229605318401.post-4868405523455391582008-11-16T09:24:00.000-08:002008-11-16T09:36:05.450-08:00Michael Scherer's Swampland post <a href="http://swampland.blogs.time.com/2008/11/15/the-silent-change-to-section-382/">The Silent Change to Section 382</a> addresses only a small part of the secret billion dollar spending sprees. <a href="http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601070&sid=adS_SnA8CLKg&refer=home">Bloomberg News</a> is filing a lawsuit to force the Federal Reserve to release details on the nearly 2 trillion dollars in emergency loans it has given to unknown financial institutions:<br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-style: italic;">Members of Congress, taxpayers and investors urged the Federal Reserve to provide details of almost $2 trillion in emergency loans and the collateral it has accepted to protect against losses... Bloomberg News has sought records of the Fed lending under the U.S Freedom of Information Act and filed a federal lawsuit Nov. 7 seeking to force disclosure... In a separate FOIA request, Bloomberg asked for details of the collateral the Fed accepted against a $29 billion loan to facilitate the merger between JPMorgan Chase & Co. and Bear Stearns Cos. to prevent the investment bank's collapse. The bank rejected that request in a letter dated Nov. 7.<br /></span><br /><br /><br />We're talking about trillions of dollars. I'm not an economist and I have no idea how much of this is necessary, and what kind of collateral is appropriate in this situation. But do the Feds know any better? Their actions have contributed to the economic collapse, and now they're asking for carte blanche in cleaning up the mess.Rosehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01785209862089387438noreply@blogger.com2