believe it or not…

Posted on Tuesday 6 January 2009

Op-Ed Contributors
Restore the Senate’s Treaty Power
By JOHN R. BOLTON and JOHN YOO
Published: January 4, 2009

blah, blah, blah…
So, here’s a New York Times op-ed by John Bolton and John Yoo warning about letting the President have too much power in Foreign Affairs. By John Bolton and John Yoo? Warning about the President having too much power? In Foreign Affairs? Advocating strong Senate Oversight?

People reporting this article all say the same thing - "you couldn’t make this stuff up!" These two self appointed A.E.I. pundits have both been advocates of a strong, almost omnipotent Executive Branch - particularly in the arena of Foreign Affairs. They’ve both been vocal antagonists of Congress. Yoo acted like an asshole in his Congressional Hearing [outdone only by Mr. Arrogance, David Addington]. Bolton got to the U.N. Ambassadorship by skirting Senate confirmation because everyone hated him [he's hard to love]. And now they’re stumping for the Senate to have more power?

I mean I’m not dumb. I get what they’re saying. They don’t want Obama "making nice" with the rest of the world. They want us to continue to pretend that we’re Caesar and the U.S. is the Roman Empire and to continue pounding our chests and rattling our sabers like George Bush and Dick Cheney did. Maybe we could throw in a little Torture to let people know that we’re tough as nails. They each skipped the military themselves - too busy being vocal pugilists to actually fight themselves.

But for them to advocate their neoconservative  neofascism under the guise of strengthening the Senate and limiting the Executive is a remarkable bit of hubris with their shared history. They must think that either we’re dumb as goats or maybe they just like to see their names in print. One wonders why the Times would print such a thing…
Mickey @ 10:02 pm
Filed under: politics
still hope…

Posted on Tuesday 6 January 2009

The Little Bomblet for Turdblossom in the New Rules
By: emptywheel
Tuesday January 6, 2009

Kagro has been tracking the passage of the new House rules package over at his new digs. As he described earlier, John Conyers stuck something in the new rules that will allow the House Judiciary Committee to continue its lawsuit against Harriet Miers and Bolten to get their testimony in the US Attorney scandal.
    One nice goody buried in the new House Rules package: the House will authorize the Judiciary Committee to continue its lawsuit seeking to enforce its subpoenas and contempt of Congress citations against Bush White House Chief of Staff Josh Bolten and former White House counsel Harriet Miers.

    Technically, Miers and Bolten were in contempt of the 110th Congress. But with its adjournment, the 110th Congress no longer exists, so there’s nothing to be in contempt of, nor any plaintiff in the lawsuit. The courts had indicated that this might give them cause to moot the whole case and drop it. But the Rules package specifically authorizes the Judiciary Committee in the new 111th Congress to continue the suit. And we had earlier word that the 111th was considering reissuing those subpoenas.
And, as Kagro now points out (now that the rules have passed), there’s a little bomblet in there specific to Rove.
    There’s one more juicy nugget in the rules package that just passed. Regarding the Judiciary Committe’s power to continue its suit against Miers and Bolten.
    In addition, it authorizes the Judiciary Committee and General Counsel to add as a party to the lawsuit any individual subpoenaed by the Committee in the 110th Congress who failed to comply.

Who else was subpoenaed by the Judiciary Committee in the 110th Congress and failed to comply? Karl Rove and Michael Mukasey.
Nice going, Chairman Conyers and Speaker Pelosi.
In other words, Rove - and Michael Mukasey, who refused to turn over documents particularly relating to the Siegelman prosecution - is about to get added to HJC’s lawsuit forcing him to testify before House Judicial Committee in the 111th Congress.
This is actually big news, big news. I think the American people need to see in bold relief the truth about Bush’s White House. And I’d like for them to see the truth about how the right wing media was a part of that. The best place to show that would be at the interface - Karl Rove himself. There’s no better place to do that than the U.S. Attorney firings scandal. That little piece of work effectively took out the Department of Justice arm of the Republican Party. But it stopped short of the top - the link into the White House via Harriet Miers and Karl Rove [AKA Mr. Fox News]. Outside of the term of the Bush Administration, it’s going to be hard for Executive Privilege to matter. Since they’ve never testified, I can’t see Bush pardoning them. There’s nothing to pardon. While I would personally prefer a Special Prosecutor as a more appropriate way to investigate something as big as what is alleged in this case, a Congressional Hearing would be a fine start [followed by a Special Prosecutor]. This case shows the Bush Administration’s true colors as well as any…
Mickey @ 9:03 pm
Filed under: politics
de-Bushification…

Posted on Tuesday 6 January 2009

Solving the Rootsgap
by: Matt Stoller
Tue Jan 06, 2009
(I wanted more people to see this, and not just because I am running errands today and won’t be able to blog until later. Best wishes to Matt, who for three years has been the best writing partner I could ask for. If our efforts to create a progressive governing majority are to succeed, we need people organizing on the inside, too. Also, Open Left isn’t going anywhere, and over the next couple of days, we will have a series of announcements on our new content. Stay tuned

- promoted by Chris Bowers)

Well, I suppose I had to make the announcement at some point, so here goes.  I won’t be blogging at OpenLeft for some time.  I’ve taken a job inside the House of Representatives (more on that when I’ve cleared what I can say) to see how the place works and to help create the space for more progressive policies
Matt Stoller have been mainstays of the progressive blogging community. It’s exciting to read that he’s "going inside." I’ve been wondering if that would happen. I read in Krugman’s blog today a reference to Digby, and I’ve felt like the House Committees have channeled Marcy Wheeler for some time. There’s a lot of talent in these blogs, and it would be a great idea for it to become part of the story of how we de-Bushify…
Mickey @ 8:27 pm
Filed under: politics
pictures at an exhibition…

Posted on Tuesday 6 January 2009

What does it mean, Madoff’s end game? A Ponzi Scheme has to end sometime. Maybe sometimes, the perpetrator of such a fraud sort of slid into it by covering up previous failures, and hopes to find a way of turning it into a legitimate business venture. But Madoff was in so impossibly deep that it seems outside the realm of possibilities that he could believe he could bring it to any other end.

On the day before his arrest, he told his sons that he only had 200 or 300 million dollars left and he wanted to disperse it to employees and certain favored accounts before he was going to turn himself in. His sons short circuited his plans by turning him in themselves the next day. Now, several weeks after his arrest, he’s mailing a million dollars worth of bling to his sons and vacationing friends - defying a court order that froze his assets. That mailing had cufflinks, expensive watches, and contained a pair of mittens. It was a stupid thing to do, mailing these things. It must have been important to him, like his plan to give bonuses to certain people at the end. His sons turned him in [again]. And then there’s that face - downturned eyes, something between a smirk and a smile that’s neither defiant nor ashamed, almost  detached.

The words empathy and sympathy are often confused. empathy is the human capacity to feel the inner experience of another person. sympathy implies a feeling of harmony with another. I have no sympathy for Bernard Madoff. I doubt many do. But I can have snatches of what it might have felt like to be Bernard Madoff. That his fraud was a conscious gambit on his part is unquestioned - he knew what he was doing, and he had to know how it would end. You can sort of see it in this picture plastered all over the Internet [far left] - a deep sadness. But it’s not there in the other oft-printed head shot [near left].

drama masksThe mental mechanism called denial is sort of complicated. It involves dealing with something by keeping it out of your mind. What’s complicated is that it doesn’t exactly work. The deteriorating alcoholic knows what’s happening some of the time [when they can't keep from not seeing it]. The pedophile is aware [no matter how elaborate the internal ruse] that what he’s doing is not okay. It comes and goes like in these two pictures. We don’t know how long Madoff has lived with his version of denial, but we do know that it has been a very long time. These end-game acts [the bonuses, the mailed presents] seem to me to be some kind of desperate attempt to feel positively about himself, and the only way he knows how to do that is to give people money or valuable things.

His sons want no part of him - that’s obvious. I expect there are reasons deeper than his financial duplicity that explain their consistent "No" response - turning him in to the S.E.C., refusing to bail him out of jail, reporting his mailing of these expensive trinkets. No matter how consciously he’s pondered how the end might feel, it’s something he couldn’t really know until he got there. Anyone who knew what he was doing is distancing themselves from him like a hot potato. People who suspected are feeling like they were part of this and are also showing him the back of their heads. JanusAnyone who knew him but didn’t know of his schemes is in shock and hardly a resource to him. Unless his wife Ruth was a willing confidante all along, she’s no pleasure to be locked up with no matter how grand their apartment.

Bernard is a man who needed to be seen as a fine fellow. Right now, no one sees him that way - he’s alone, a pariah, and has no idea about how to be in his own skin. That look in the upper right picture is the look of a man with cognitive dissonance - and a dead man walking…
Mickey @ 4:35 pm
Filed under: politics
by the book…

Posted on Tuesday 6 January 2009

Cheney referenced Abraham Lincoln as an example of another president who "suspended the writ of habeus corpus" during a war, prompting this exchange:
    SCHIEFFER:But nobody thinks that was legal.
    CHENEY: Well, no. It certainly was in the sense he wasn’t impeached. And it was a wartime measure that he took that I think history says today, yeah, that was probably a good thing to do.
The vice president spent much of the interview defending eight years of the Bush administration’s policies, including its surveillance and interrogation programs. When Schieffer asked if the Bush administration had gone "too far" in its surveillance program, Cheney said no.
    CHENEY: I don’t believe we violated anybody’s civil liberties.

Cheney also urged President-elect Barack Obama to continue the Bush administration’s interrogation policies…
    CHENEY: I would hope [Obama] would avoid doing what others have done in the past, which is letting the campaign rhetoric guide his judgment in this absolutely crucial area… We were very careful, we did everything by the book, and in fact we produced very significant results
There is so much wrong with Cheney’s basic thought processes that it’s hard to even know where to start. Abraham Lincoln was a great man. He was the first Republican President and was a passionate Abolitionist. Of all the exemplary things that Abraham Lincoln did, Dick Cheney picks one of the flaws in this great man’s history to call a precedent. Cheney hardly supported Lincoln’s Mandate against racism, nor seemed to care much about Lincoln’s veneration of our Constitution, but he’s keen on Lincoln’s suspension of habeus corpus. It is unearned hubris for Cheney to equate himself with Lincoln, but to then pick this piece of Lincoln’s Presidency to emulate - priceless hubris.

He then claims that Lincoln’s suspension of the writ of habeus corpus must have been legal because Lincoln wasn’t impeached. What a piece of Cheney-think. Lincoln wasn’t impeached because he saved our Union, and he didn’t make a habit of slithering through the cracks. Cheney would do well to think that a major reason his boss, George Bush, wasn’t impeached is because we’d have him [Cheney] as President!

Next we have, "I don’t believe we violated anybody’s civil liberties." I presume he’s referring to surveillance, because it’s hard to imagine that even Cheney would argue that Torture isn’t violating Civil Liberties [my guess is that he doesn't consider P.O.W.'s to be fellow human beings]. But what he seems to be saying is that surveillance doesn’t hurt anybody. Privacy, itself, is the Liberty in question. What he means is that since we didn’t go shoot the people, they weren’t hurt. That’s not for him to decide. By definition, their Liberties were violated.

But then we come to his sickest thoughts. "I would hope [Obama] would avoid doing what others have done in the past, which is letting the campaign rhetoric guide his judgment in this absolutely crucial area." He’s big on this campaign rhetoric thing - often discounting others by saying, "Oh that’s just campaign rhetoric." But here, he reveals his true colors. Early in 2008, former Senator Lincoln Chaffee, a Republican "good guy" published Against the Tide:

In his new book, former Rhode Island Republican senator Lincoln Chafee reveals that even before President Bush was sworn into office after the 2000 elections, Cheney had rejected the “moderate course” laid out in their campaign:
    The former Senator describes a December 2000 meeting of Republican moderates with Vice President-elect Cheney. Chafee listened as Cheney swore off the moderate course he and Bush had just finished championing in their campaign.

    Hearing Cheney say “the campaign was over and that our actions in office would not be dictated by what had to be said in the campaign,” Chafee writes, was “the most demoralizing moment of my seven-year tenure in the Senate.”
In his book, Chafee angrily adds about the incident,
    Mr. Cheney tore our best campaign promises to shreds and the moderates acquiesced instead of pelting him with outrage.
For Dick Cheney, campaign rhetoric is what you say to get elected - a lie. It’s remarkable that he thinks it. It’s amazing that he says it. In essence, he’s saying, "You can’t believe a word I say." And I don’t.

And then, as if he hadn’t already said enough, he adds, "We were very careful, we did everything by the book, and in fact we produced very significant results.
  • "We were very careful" to make sure we wouldn’t be held responsible for what we did.
  • "we did everything by the book" meaning we found a lawyer [John Yoo] who would rationalize what we were doing and put the DoJ stamp of approval on it.
  • "we produced very significant results" There are grave doubts whether either domestic surveillance or torture got us any intelligence at all. But there have been significant results - the world’s disdain and our own shame.
And, of course, his argument rests on that fallacious principle, "the ends jusify the means." Dick Cheney’s basic thought processes are inconsistent with American Principles at every level…


30 second commercial up front - sorry
Mickey @ 1:51 pm
Filed under: politics
just another Talking Point

Posted on Monday 5 January 2009

The Anti-Stimulus Crowd: The Fear of Success
by: Dean Baker, t·r·u·t·h·o·u·t | Perspective


At least some Republicans are starting to muster an anti-stimulus drive, claiming that President-elect Obama’s package will not help the economy. Their drive is centered on what they claim is a careful rereading of the history of the New Deal. According to their account, President Roosevelt’s policies actually lengthened the Great Depression. In their story, we would have been better off if we just left the market to adjust by itself. New Deal programs that directly employed people, or in other ways supported living standards, created an uncertain investment climate. They claim that this uncertainty slowed the process of market adjustment that was necessary for returning to high levels of employment.

"… we would have been better off if we just left the market to adjust by itself." That was Herbert Hoover’s great idea. The crash in 1929 happened just seven months into his Administration. The Stock Market rallied for a couple of months, then began a steady decline until he left office [falling below the baseline from before the "bubble" of the roaring twenties]:
During his Administration’s wait for the Market to "adjust by itself," there were a few problems:

The Wagner Act, which created the legal framework for the union organizing drives of the era, stands out as being especially pernicious in their story. The Fair Labor Standards Act, which created the 40-hour workweek and established the first national minimum wage, also gets singled out for criticism. In this new reading of history, what most people consider the great successes of the New Deal simply worsened the Great Depression. In reality, any careful reading showed that the New Deal policies substantially ameliorated the effects of the Great Depression for tens of millions of people. The major economic failing of the New Deal was that President Roosevelt was not prepared to push the policies as far as necessary to fully lift the economy out of the Great Depression.

Roosevelt was too worried about the whining of the anti-stimulus crowd that he confronted. He remained concerned about balancing the budget when the proper goal of fiscal policy should have been large deficits to stimulate the economy. Roosevelt’s policies substantially reduced the unemployment rate from the 25 percent peak when he first took office, but they did not get the unemployment rate back into single digits. It took the enormous public spending associated with World War II to fully lift the economy out of the depression. The lesson that economists take away from this experience is that we should be prepared to run very large deficits in order to give the economy a sufficient boost to generate self-sustaining growth.

However, from the standpoint of Republicans, the more ominous lesson of the New Deal policies is that it left the Democrats firmly in power for more than 20 years. The Republicans did not regain the White House until 1952, 20 years after President Roosevelt was first elected. Imagine how terrifying the prospect of 20 years of Democratic presidencies must be for the current generation of Republican leaders. This would mean that they would not retake the White House until 2028, just 20 years before the Social Security trust fund is first projected to face a shortfall…

In short, we should realize that the main concern of some of those opposed to stimulus may not be that it will fail, but rather that it will succeed. Most of us don’t have the same set of concerns.

Paul Krugman [due diligance...] worries that Republicans will oppose to the economic stimulus package because Keynesian Economics is so opposite from the Republican Party line. Here, Dean Baker, of the Center for Economic and Policy Research in Washington has another take on things. He thinks that the Republicans are afraid that Obama will suceed and usher in another half century of Democratic dominance of the government.

In Krugman’s model, the Republicans are thinking about what to do for the country, but they’re just wrong. In Baker’s way of thinking, they’re thinking about the long term viability of their Party. I find myself thinking that both Krugman and Baker are giving the Republicans too much credit. I don’t think they think that much about what they’re doing. At least, not in that way.

During the McCain Campaign, I was appalled by what the man said. I’ve always liked McCain, but during the Campaign, his negativity and irresponsibility shocked me. It had me asking, "Who is this person I thought I knew?" Since the Campaign, he has seemed tp me like his old self.  And that’s how the Republican Party has worked since Nixon days. - C.R.E.E.P., Donald Segretti, Lee Atwater, Karl Rove, Steve Schmidt, Ken Starr, Dick Cheney, etc. They’ve had a formula - unrelenting contemptuous attack on anything the Democrats say or do. They destroyed Carter and wounded Clinton. There’s no reason to think they won’t try to do the same thing with Obama. This Republican Mythology about the New deal is just another Talking Point, nothing more. It’s all over Fox News, Rush Limbaugh, and coming out of the mouths of the usual Republican suspects - always suffused with contempt and sarcasm. It’s what they do. I don’t think it has anything to do with the issues - it’s just how they finally got some power. "Lets everyone say the same thing over and over and maybe it will stick." How easily we forget:

A few may be thinking like Krugman or Baker describe. But mostly, Karl Rove or someone like him put together an F.D.R./New Deal Talking Point and got it out through whatever network they have to rapidly deploy these things. The reason to think about it this way is simple. If you follow Klugman’s or Baker’s logic, you argue with the content. If you follow the wisdom of Obama’s Campaign, you refute it once - then you point out that it’s just a Talking Point and ignore it except to talk about it being a Talking Point. Engaging a Republican Talking Point is "pointless." Calling them on their strategy is the "point." And taking them seriously is the biggest mistake of all. They aren’t…
Mickey @ 10:27 pm
Filed under: politics
put them under the jail [Bernie and Ruth]…

Posted on Monday 5 January 2009

Feds: Jail Madoff For Violating Bail 4:29 PM ET: Federal prosecutors are asking a judge to throw alleged $50 billion Ponzi-schemer Bernie Madoff — currently out on bail — in jail for mailing $1 million worth of assets to third parties. According to assistant U.S. attorney Marc Litt, testifying in Manhattan federal court today, Madoff and his wife Ruth mailed five items, including "very valuable jewelry," Bloomberg reported, to others, violating the terms of his asset freeze.

The act violated Madoff’s bail — he is under house arrest in his apartment — Litt said, so Madoff should be sent to the slammer. Madoff’s defense lawyer, Ira Sorkin, disputed that his client has violated the terms of his bail. The government has recovered three of the items, Litt said.

Jan. 5 (Bloomberg) — Bernard Madoff, awaiting trial for securities fraud, remained free on bail while a federal judge considered a request by prosecutors to send him to prison for mailing $1 million of valuables in violation of an asset freeze.

Madoff disposed of five items including “very valuable jewelry,” Assistant U.S. Attorney Marc Litt said today in Manhattan federal court. The government has three of the items, Litt told U.S. Magistrate Judge Ronald Ellis. Defense lawyer Ira Sorkin said the objects, including watches and cuff links, were heirlooms innocently sent to Madoff’s relatives. Sorkin said he told his client to retrieve them and alerted the government.

The Securities and Exchange Commission was given a list of disgraced businessman Bernard L. Madoff’s personal assets last week, as government regulators try to size up the remaining wealth of the alleged Ponzi scheme operator. Madoff handed over an accounting of all of his investments, loans, lines of credit, business interests, brokerage accounts and other holdings, including possible offshore accounts. According to federal court documents, his assets total an estimated $200 million to $300 million, but federal regulators are refusing to make the list public.

While that debate rages, the Post Investigations blog decided to round up what is known about Madoff’s holdings from public records and published accounts:
  • A Palm Beach, Fla., mansion located at 410 N. Lake Way. Price tag: $9.4 million
  • A pricey New York penthouse on the Upper East Side, located at 133 E. 64th St., No. 12A.Price tag: $7 million.
  • A 55-1/2-foot wooden fishing boat, purchased in 1977 for $462,000
  • Country club memberships in Palm Beach, Fla., and Amagansett, N.Y.
  • An East Hamptons, N.Y., getaway, located at 216 Old Montauk Highway on Long Island. Price tag: $3 million.
  • Madoff’s 17th floor New York office,Price tag: $3 million to $5 million.
  • From vintage watches from George Somlo, Tiffany & Co. wedding bands and Savile Row suits, Madoff apparently spared no expense when it came to personal accoutrements.
  • He also owns a gray outfitted Brazilian-built Embraer Regional Jet 145, which costs roughly $29 million, along with stock in BLM Air Charter.
  • A small villa overlooking Cap d’Antibes on the French Riviera; a Mayfair office in London; and a yacht on the Mediterranean. His office at 12 Berkeley Street in London is "modest," according to the Evening Standard, but still pricey. And Madoff had stored millions in capital in the British subsidiary.
"the objects, including watches and cuff links, were heirlooms innocently sent to Madoff’s relatives." Right! Go directly to jail. Do not pass Go. Do not collect $200…
Mickey @ 5:37 pm
Filed under: politics
due diligance…

Posted on Monday 5 January 2009

Paul Krugman has done his due diligance. He’s written his New York Times column throughout the Bush Era under the heading Consciance of a Liberal - a brave thing to do during these years. At the same time, he’s done the academic work required to win this year’s Nobel Prize in economics. And he’s continued to keep us on the straight and narrow through the financial crisis. The only slip-up so far was his contention that there was no oil bubble. I think he was very wrong about that, but you don’t lose points for being wrong [and he was correct in his conclusions that we need to look towards the day we 'run out of gas']. So, at this time in our history, Paul Krigman is a guy we ought to be listening to  right now[particularly this article of all his recent columns]. So, I’ll reprint the whole thing with some commentary…
Fighting Off Depression
By PAUL KRUGMAN

“If we don’t act swiftly and boldly,” declared President-elect Barack Obama in his latest weekly address, “we could see a much deeper economic downturn that could lead to double-digit unemployment.” If you ask me, he was understating the case.

The fact is that recent economic numbers have been terrifying, not just in the United States but around the world. Manufacturing, in particular, is plunging everywhere. Banks aren’t lending; businesses and consumers aren’t spending. Let’s not mince words: This looks an awful lot like the beginning of a second Great Depression.

So will we “act swiftly and boldly” enough to stop that from happening? We’ll soon find out.

Krugman usually limits himself to commentary. Recently, he’s turned his column into an Economic Advice column - the financial version of Dear Abby. He’s scared, and it shows. Frankly, if Krugman is scared, then I’m scared.

We weren’t supposed to find ourselves in this situation. For many years most economists believed that preventing another Great Depression would be easy. In 2003, Robert Lucas of the University of Chicago, in his presidential address to the American Economic Association, declared that the “central problem of depression-prevention has been solved, for all practical purposes, and has in fact been solved for many decades.”

Milton Friedman, in particular, persuaded many economists that the Federal Reserve could have stopped the Depression in its tracks simply by providing banks with more liquidity, which would have prevented a sharp fall in the money supply. Ben Bernanke, the Federal Reserve chairman, famously apologized to Friedman on his institution’s behalf: “You’re right. We did it. We’re very sorry. But thanks to you, we won’t do it again.”

It turns out, however, that preventing depressions isn’t that easy after all. Under Mr. Bernanke’s leadership, the Fed has been supplying liquidity like an engine crew trying to put out a five-alarm fire, and the money supply has been rising rapidly. Yet credit remains scarce, and the economy is still in free fall.

Apparently, economists looked to the Federal Reserve Bank as the prevention arm to insure us against a Depression. That’s what Alan Greenspan thought too. And Greenspan used that tool to keep us in the black for a long time. But Greenspan made a huge mistake - the derivatives and deregulation. At least he admitted it. See:
Friedman’s claim that monetary policy could have prevented the Great Depression was an attempt to refute the analysis of John Maynard Keynes, who argued that monetary policy is ineffective under depression conditions and that fiscal policy — large-scale deficit spending by the government — is needed to fight mass unemployment. The failure of monetary policy in the current crisis shows that Keynes had it right the first time. And Keynesian thinking lies behind Mr. Obama’s plans to rescue the economy.

But these plans may turn out to be a hard sell.

News reports say that Democrats hope to pass an economic plan with broad bipartisan support. Good luck with that. In reality, the political posturing has already started, with Republican leaders setting up roadblocks to stimulus legislation while posing as the champions of careful Congressional deliberation — which is pretty rich considering their party’s behavior over the past eight years.

More broadly, after decades of declaring that government is the problem, not the solution, not to mention reviling both Keynesian economics and the New Deal, most Republicans aren’t going to accept the need for a big-spending, F.D.R.-type solution to the economic crisis. The biggest problem facing the Obama plan, however, is likely to be the demand of many politicians for proof that the benefits of the proposed public spending justify its costs — a burden of proof never imposed on proposals for tax cuts.

This is a problem with which Keynes was familiar: giving money away, he pointed out, tends to be met with fewer objections than plans for public investment “which, because they are not wholly wasteful, tend to be judged on strict ‘business’ principles.” What gets lost in such discussions is the key argument for economic stimulus — namely, that under current conditions, a surge in public spending would employ Americans who would otherwise be unemployed and money that would otherwise be sitting idle, and put both to work producing something useful.
John Maynard Keynes was a British economist who first published The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money in 1936. He was to economists what Einstein was to physics ,in that his theories are anti-intuitive. I’ll ignore his reasons [just as I might ignore Einstein's] because I’m not sure I understand his logic and because what’s important are his conclusions. There are situations in a Capitalist economy where something called a Depression occurs. The cause isn’t what matters. What matters is how people act. People begin to hold onto their money [for obvious reasons]. Businesses drop prices or lay off people. Unemployment rises and people hold on tighter. Prices then get slashed. No one makes loans, so credit basically disappears. But all of these automatic, intuitive things people are doing send the economy into a tailspin. The only option to stop this is massive deficit spending, pouring money and jobs into the system to restore normal economic behavior. So the long and short of it is that the only solution is to do the opposite of what feels right. F.D.R. and World War II proved Keynes to be correct. Like Einstein, his ideas continue to boggle the mind, except they are right. Therein lies the problem.

All of this leaves me concerned about the prospects for the Obama plan. I’m sure that Congress will pass a stimulus plan, but I worry that the plan may be delayed and/or downsized. And Mr. Obama is right: We really do need swift, bold action.

Here’s my nightmare scenario: It takes Congress months to pass a stimulus plan, and the legislation that actually emerges is too cautious. As a result, the economy plunges for most of 2009, and when the plan finally starts to kick in, it’s only enough to slow the descent, not stop it. Meanwhile, deflation is setting in, while businesses and consumers start to base their spending plans on the expectation of a permanently depressed economy — well, you can see where this is going.

So this is our moment of truth. Will we in fact do what’s necessary to prevent Great Depression II.

Of course Barack Obama is right. Of course John Maynard Keynes was right. Of course the Republicans caused this mess [with a little help from Clinton]. But now those same Republicans are winding up to moralize against our doing the only right thing there is to do. No wonder Krugman is scared…
Mickey @ 4:36 pm
Filed under: politics
speaking of crises…

Posted on Monday 5 January 2009

So, on the December the 26th after my daughter headed back home from a good holiday visit, I took a nap. I drove my truck on Saturday the 27th - which was fine. On the 28th, I got in my truck and it was "missing" and an ominous light on the dashboard lit up, shaped like an engine. I turned it off. The next morning, a friend followed me as my truck limped and sputtered to Jasper Jeep where it still sits. Later that day, they called and said I might want to call my insurance company. Seems that a rat/mouse/squirrel/possum had moved in on Saturday night and built a nest.

Fortunately, I have full coverage for rodent attacks on my truck, because it was a $2000 nest that the rat/mouse/squirrel/possum had created on Saturday night. I’m now locally famous as the most recent such victim. Every time I tell this story, more people appear who have been similarly afflicted. The guy at Jasper Jeep says it happens a lot, particularly on cold nights. I told him that I preferred calling it a possum attack for aesthetic reasons, but they were adamant that it was either a rat or a "very industrious field mouse."

I’m thinking of starting a Support Group…
Mickey @ 3:03 pm
Filed under: politics
memories…

Posted on Monday 5 January 2009

Sometimes I get those “Oh my God, Bush and Cheney have destroyed America!” feelings - or - “America’s been destroyed. That’s why Bush and Cheney got re-elected!” feelings. Like while I was writing the last post. But then I can always go to Youtube and remind myself how awful things really can be, by replaying a Nixon moment or two. This one is worth watching, as it will remind you of how much Bush and Cheney reincarnated the “Nixon Way.” Wait, what about the “Reagan Way?”

Okay, in my last post, I said that we’ve never had an Administration that didn’t believe in our form of government. I take it back…
Mickey @ 12:13 am
Filed under: politics