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S/SW blog philosophy -

I credit favorite writers and public opinion makers.

A lifelong Democrat, my comments on Congress, the judiciary and the presidency are regular features.

My observations and commentary are on people and events in politics that affect the USA or the rest of the world, and stand for the interests of peace, security and justice.


Showing posts with label economics-money-poverty. Show all posts
Showing posts with label economics-money-poverty. Show all posts

Friday, June 01, 2012

Without fear, the goal

Becoming Fearless is a new featured section in Huffington PostI discovered this because I follow Arianna Huffington on Twitter.  I also follow a few of her guest columnists, as well as Howard Fineman, her very fine editorial director.

Huffington is fearless.  I am not read-it-all consumer of The Huffington Post; it is just too much.  But I greatly admire the fact that the “HuffPo” has been so very successful at monetizing its popular website.  Ms. Huffington herself is a model of fearlessness when it comes to striding out.  So some reflections about “Becoming Fearless” seem in order.

First, Huffington is wealthy.  Note the tie-in with Arianna Huffington’s 2006 book of essays titled, On Becoming Fearless.... in Love, Work, and Life.  Find it at Amazon.com: Kindle edition–$8.99, hardcover-$4.40, paperback-$10.73.

Second, Huffington is careful.  Read the disclaimer at the bottom of the website page.
This website is for informational purposes only and is not a substitute for medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment.
Third, the assumption is that women have more fears than men.  The Blog section features a list of current blog posts with 10 female writers and 6 male writers.  Look also at one of the the current Sponsored Links list.  It is two-thirds pitched towards women:
Fear of being fat - “Get Skinny By Summer” by www.DietRatings.org

Fear of being old - “53 Year Old Mom Looks 33” by www.consumerproducts.com

Fear of President Obama “Romney vs Obama” by www.msn.com.  (AP photo copyrighted by Mary Schwalm)
Romney NH

Fourth, advertising aims at our emotions, including fear and anxiety.  Another sponsor list  for the Front Page sub section plays on the fears of readers:
Fear of being afraid - “3 Herbs that Beat Anxiety” by www.WiseLifestyles.com

Fear of identity theft - “LifeLock Official Site” to purchase their identity protection plan at www.Lifelock.com
Fear of being in the 99% forever - “Penny Stock Jumping 856%” at www.MyPennyStocks.com
Fifth, the Huffington Post Wants you to read as much as you can on their website.  Note the tie-in with HuffPo’s Healthy Living section, aka "Fear of Dying."  Here are that page’s sponsors:
Fear of Being fat - “5 Diet Pills that Work” at www.DietRatings.org

Fear of identity theft - “LifeLock Official Site” to purchase their identity protection plan at www.Lifelock.com

Fear of a heart attack – “Heart Attack Triggers” at www.Newsmax.com 

Sixth, sponsors want something for their investment.  So they maximize exposure to the product through advertising.  It might even be fun and beneficial:  Enter Toyota Corolla’s “Most Fearless Tweet” contest.
Official Rules:
1. To enter the Contest, you must first create a Twitter account. It's free! Go to Twitter.com for the how-tos.
2. Follow @HealthyLiving.
3. Tweet about fear or fearlessness in your own life by sending a tweet to @HealthyLiving and using the hashtag Third, notice the tie-in with Huffington’s 2006 book of essays On becoming Fearless. . . In Love, Work and Life. New from $4.40; Kindle $8.99.#becomingfearless. It's that easy!

Seventh, there is widespread assumption that we are more fearful than usual these days. For example, out of some sort of morbid fascination,  I have watched a good number of the Doomsday Preppers shows on the National Geographic channel. They are a really scary bunch who base their lives on preparing for the worst things that they imagine could happen.  Somehow I cannot imagine these folks ever reading the new Becoming Fearless section of the HuffPo.

Thursday, May 10, 2012

Rounding up the truth about U.S. poverty --

At the end of last year news reports began to focus on poverty in the United States.  

 

 The number of poor Americans hit a record 49 million in 2010, according to census figures reported by Reuters.  This census info was taken from the ( 9/14/11) Wall Street Journal article:  “Median Household Earnings Fall for Third Year.”

 

Economics experts expose inequality -- “The Texas model of creating more jobs through low wages seems to be catching on around America,” says former Secretary of Labor, Robert Reich (9/13/11).  “Our society has become more and more unequal,” Reich writes on 9/4/11.  Economist Jared Bernstein presented chapter and verse on this in 2007.

Reuters also reports -- Incomes for the wealthiest 1 percent of Americans nearly tripled from 1979 to 2007,” reported 10/26/11.   “Five ways income inequality happened,” reported on 10/28/11.  “Pockets of poverty grow in the United States,” was the conclusion of a study reported on 11/3/11.  More working people turned to NYC shelters in the downturn.  Also, inequality dents the U.S. rank in a U.N. development index,” was reported on 11/2/11.  The census revealed that poverty rates for the elderly, Asians and Hispanics are higher than previously known. Health inequality added to the problem, according to the Scientific American.

In conclusion, according to this 4/10/12 article, the wider the gap between the rich and those in poverty, the worse it gets for everyone.  A Scientific American article explores, “How Wealth Reduces Compassion.”  It seems that, “as riches grow, empathy for others seems to decline.”

Sunday, December 25, 2011

Remembering others as we celebrate Christmas:

Far to many people are without jobs this Christmas.  The decisions they have made about how to celebrate the holidays are different than they would have made otherwise.  The housing crisis still impacts many people, and the economic outlook remains poor as a result.  Families face foreclosure, doubling up or even homelessness.  Remember the faces of homeless people around the world.  And a particular face of the U.S. recession belongs to homeless children.  To quote from the Reuters story:
How does anyone explain to kids like Aeisha and countless others how they wound up homeless in the world's richest nation?
In a report issued earlier this month, the National Center on Family Homelessness, based in Needham, Massachusetts, said 1.6 million children were living on the streets of the United States last year or in shelters, motels and doubled-up with other families.
That marked a 38 percent jump in child homelessness since 2007. . . 

Remember the needs of our Mother Earth.  As the carbon dioxide output soars, the problem of climate change is big enough to be defined an a national security issue.  "Water Poor" Will Suffer Most as Climate Change Hits Cities. To explain how the poor will suffer in India, for example: 
Like many cities in the developing world, Indore's water infrastructure and institutions face the mounting pressures of population and growth and urbanization. Experts worry that global warming will compound these problems, enlarging a category of people they call the "water poor."
Astronauts and cosmonauts are away from their families this Christmas.  The European Space Agency's International Space Station's representative just arrived on orbit.  Andre Kuipers is featured in this story: "Space-Flying Dutchman's Must-Haves: Time, Space Stamps & Cheese," is the headline from a Space.com.  To quote:
The first Dutch astronaut to return to space, André Kuipers is about to begin five and a half months on board the International Space Station (ISS), a mission the European Space Agency named "PromISSe."
<See also, a short slide show: "A Rare Stunning Glimpse Inside the World's Space Programs.">
Finally, if all this news is beginning to depress you, here are 8 Ways To Forget Your Troubles.  My wishes are that you are having happy holidays, and that your 2012 is a good year.

Thursday, December 15, 2011

It may be as bad as we fear when it comes to our long recession.

The United States and other nations, for that matter, are far from being out of the woods economically.  Almost half the people in the United States are poor or low income, according to recent census data.  Congress is unable to get its act together and the government may just shut down. Republicans and Democrats differ wildly on the reality of the current situation.  To quote from CBS News,
Congressional Republicans and Democrats are sparring over legislation that would renew a Social Security payroll tax cut, part of a year-end political showdown over economic priorities that could also trim unemployment benefits, freeze federal pay and reduce entitlement spending.

Robert Rector, a senior research fellow at the conservative Heritage Foundation, questioned whether some people classified as poor or low-income actually suffer material hardship. He said that while safety-net programs have helped many Americans, they have gone too far, citing poor people who live in decent-size homes, drive cars and own wide-screen TVs.
A compassion deficit within the Far Right seems apparent.  Politics trumps concern about what is currently happening to the so-called "99%" of us.  Reuters reports that, "Republicans introduced a $915 billion spending bill in the House of Representatives early on Thursday in an attempt to force Democrats to finalize legislation that would keep the U.S. government operating beyond the weekend."  We are again into hostage taking mode. Too many House Members and Senators have been "purchased" by corporate money. Fiscal ignorance and greed abounds.  We are at risk until Congress comes to understand the peril into which they are propelling us.
Read further and come to your own conclusion.  Joseph Stiglitz, Pulitzer prize winning economist, explained a great deal about our long term economic and fiscal crisis in a recent Vanity Fair article, "A Banking System  Is Supposed To Serve Society, Not the Other Way Around."  HT to @mattyglesias for the article.

Monday, October 31, 2011

Globalizing Occupy Wall Street: From Chile to Israel, Protests Erupt

by Lois Beckett,  ProPublica
Oct. 25, 2011, 12:27 p.m.

At first glance, the synchronized protests that took place in more than 900 cities around the globe on Oct. 15 seemed to indicate that Occupy Wall Street had achieved a kind of worldwide resonance.
But the truth is more complex. Many of the protests elsewhere grew out of movements that pre-date Occupy Wall Street and out of frustrations that, though similar in some ways, are also specific to their countries.
Here’s a look at the origins, demands and affects of five of these global protests, as well as the criticism they’ve faced.

In Chile, Students Protesting for Free Education Occupy Schools

The Santiago protest in solidarity with Occupy Wall Street took place during a week of ongoing national demonstrations. Since May, Chilean students have been staging protests demanding that the government make education free to all.
Secondary school students have occupied their schools, sleeping on the floor and holding their own classes. Last week, protesting students occupied Chile’s senate building in Santiago. Hundreds of thousands of people have participated in marches over the past six months. At times, the protests have become violent, with police using tear gas and water cannons on the protesters, and “masked assailants” setting fire to a city bus.
Opinion polls show more than 80 percent of Chile’s citizens support the protesting students, who also have the backing of labor unions and teachers. Government officials, including the president, have resisted the demands, saying the government cannot afford to pay for education for all students.

In Israel, a Summer Protest Against Rent Prices, Cost of Living

Protesters in Tel Aviv returned Oct. 15 to Rothschild Boulevard, the site of a summer occupation that prefigured the Occupy Wall Street movement.
During those demonstrations, which began July 14, hundreds of people set up tents along the most prestigious street in Tel Aviv’s financial district to protest the high cost of rent. Government ministers mocked the protesters, calling them “sushi-eaters” and “nargila [hookah] smokers with guitars.”
But over two months, demonstrations against Israel’s high cost of living brought out a record-breaking numbers of participants. A march on Sept. 3 drew 450,000 people, or roughly six percent of Israel’s population. In response, Israel’s prime minister proposed reforms, and, when they were rejected as insufficient, assembled a task force to consider ways to improve the standard of living for Israel’s middle class.
Tel Aviv’s tent city was dismantled earlier this month.

In Spain, High Youth Unemployment Rate Sparks Tent Occupations

The idea for a global day of protest on Oct. 15 was originally proposed by participants in Spain’s 15-M or “Los Indignados” movement.
The “indignados” movement began in May, when hundreds of protesters set up tents in Madrid’s historic Puerta del Sol, and others gathered elsewhere to protest Spain’s extremely high unemployment. Overall, unemployment was at more than 20 percent, and youth unemployment was at nearly 50 percent. On Oct. 15, tens of thousands of protesters gathered in Madrid, Barcelona and Seville.
Like the Wall Street protesters, protesters in Spain faced criticism for having no clear demands and using the protest as an excuse for a big party. Madrid’s tent city, which largely disbanded in June, was leaderless and had a legal advice tent, a library, a kitchen set up to prepare donated food. It also had a general assembly where participants made decisions through consensus on issues such as how to deal with police or complaints from neighbors. Some neighboring merchants were not enthused about the occupation, but, as in New York, the 24-hour pizzeria didn’t seem to mind.

In the UK, Occupation Follows Protests on Education Cuts, Riots Over Police Brutality

Over the past year, the UK has seen major student protests over rising school fees, as well as violent riots and looting this August after a young black man from a low-income neighborhood was killed by the police.
In comparison with the roughly 50,000 protesters who turned out last November to demonstrate against tuition increases, the Occupy London Stock Exchange movement is small: an estimated 600 people are camped out by St. Paul’s Cathedral, and a smaller cluster have gathered near London’s Royal Bank of Scotland and JP Morgan buildings. (At times, an estimated 2,000 protesters have gathered at the encampment. There also have been smaller protests in other cities across the UK.)
The encampment has prompted the closure of St. Paul’s Cathedral, which is reported to be considering legal action to dislodge the protesters.
Like those in New York, the Occupy London protesters have been criticized—by the Mayor of London, among others—for not having a clear set of demands. A Guardian reporter who spent a few days at the encampment reported that “a few of the key facilitators in last winter’s student protests haven’t come down” because “they’re not sure it’s radical enough.”
But the reporter, Patrick Kingsley, concluded that the lack of demands may be part of the point: “If anything, the camp itself is their demand, and their solution: the stab at an alternative society that at least aims to operate without hierarchy, and with full, participatory democracy. And to be fair, in its small way, it kind of works,” he wrote.

In Germany, a Country Less Burdened by the Financial Crisis, Protest May Reflect Fears for the Future

In Frankfurt, Europe’s financial center, roughly a hundred protesters are currently camped out in front of the European Central Bank, and at least 4,000 more took to the streets again last weekend to protest the banking system. (Smaller numbers protested in Berlin.)
The protests, inspired by the Occupy Wall Street movement, have been greeted with some bewilderment by commentators. While the American protests have focused on the nation’s increasing inequality and wealth disparity, Germany “has one of the most equitable distributions of family income in the world,” according to Foreign Policy magazine. German youth are not saddled with student loan debt, the Wall Street Journal points out, and have a very low unemployment rate of 9.7 percent.
Trying to explain the reason for protests in a country “largely unscathed by the global financial crisis,” German newspapers suggested that there was “bitter disappointment” that state bailouts of banks did not result in reforms to the financial system, or that the protests were forward-looking, sparked by “young people who are afraid that the debt crisis is robbing them of their future."




My Other Blogs: Check out my Amplify blog for synopses of current news stories. My creative website is Making Good Mondays. Follow me at Twitter. And Carol Gee - Online Universe is the home page for all my websites.

Thursday, October 06, 2011

Are you active or are you passive?

New York Stock Exchange on Wall Street in New ...Image via Wikipedia
 Surfing around the World Wide Web - Today I discovered a number of interesting sites that are part of the activist movements now getting coverage in the national news.  Here are a few links to the online efforts, movements and organizations about which you may have heard:
  •  Occupy Wall Street - Since the middle of September demonstrators, growing into the thousands, have been staging a protest on Wall Street in New York City.
  1.   Occupy Together - Includes a list of all the other "Occupy" movements beyond Wall Street.
  2. The NYC General Assembly at #Occupy Wall Street: Needs of the Occupiers are spelled out in this interesting post.
  3. AnonOps Communications -  Includes a good Michael Moore video from the Wall Street protest.
  • Get Money Out - learn about an idea for cleaning up corporate influence in Washington and sign the petition.  Almost 125,000 have so far signed.
  1. Dylan Ratigan organized a petition drive that could free America from the influence of unlimited campaign contributions via a Constitutional amendment.
  2. Ratigan explains at Huffington Post.
  • Rebuild the Dream - A large number of Progressive organizations joined together this summer to fight to restore the American dream for the 99% of us who are not rich.
  1. Founder Van Jones organized this week's Take back the American Dream Conference.
  2. About the Partners in the American Dream Movement - participating organizations listed at the bottom. 
    [Post date: 10/6/11]

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    My Other Blogs: Check out my Amplify blog for synopses of current news stories. My creative website is Making Good Mondays. Follow me at Twitter. And Carol Gee - Online Universe is the home page for all my websites.

    Tuesday, September 21, 2010

    A bit about the President's Deficit Commission

    Lori Montgomery, in April  at the Washington Post, wrote: ". . . the commission plans to hold monthly public meetings and to invite the public to submit written comments. The meetings are tentatively set for 9:30 a.m. to noon monthly, on the last Wednesday of May through September, as well as Nov. 10 and Dec. 1, the date President Obama has asked commission members to deliver a plan to stabilize the soaring U.S. debt. . .Because the commission is operating on "a shoestring," Reed writes, it has few paid staff members and no money to organize field hearings outside Washington. Instead, the memo says, "we will work with outside organizations to give you additional opportunities to address these issues in your capacity as commissioners. The commission has "a small office" on F Street NW, [Reed] writes, "down the street from the Dubliner and the Irish Times," well-known Capitol Hill watering holes. The Commission's office number is 202-233-3000."

    http://amplify.com/u/avh4
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    Monday, September 07, 2009

    Labor Day Links

    South by Southwest 10-26-08

    "Labor Day sales you can't afford to miss," is the pitch of U.S. News and World Report. The lead reads, "In the sluggish economy, retailers lure shoppers with big discounts." Reuters' Rolfe Winkler writes his own "Labor Day Links," mostly focused of financial and economic news bits. The New York Times presented a slide show titled, "Faces of the Uncounted Unemployed," which is a study of the people who are too discouraged to continue to look for work. The Washington Post's Harold Meyerson posted "Unhappy Labor Day." His conclusion, unhappily, is a viewpoint with which I agree:

    The Reaganite ideology of the past 30 years insisted that if Americans were freed from the constraints of government and unions and made responsible for their own economic security, a golden age would come. Sure enough, American businesses have eluded regulation and cast off their unions -- but they've left their workers in the lurch. If we fail to enact universal health care and laws that truly make it possible for workers to form unions again, each of our Labor Days will be grimmer than the last.

    The image illustrating today's post is from Wordle.net. I chose it because it reflects how much of the past still influences my feelings about Labor Day and the situation in which we find ourselves today. I am not in a celebratory mood, nor are many of my friends and news sources in the blogosphere. Bankers are pulling down big bonuses, unemployment nears double digits, and the body politic is rent with insanity on its right wing and discouragement on its left wing. The center is soft.

    "Happy Labor Day Banana Republic Day. . . There is little to celebrate," wrote (O)CT(O)PUS at The Reaction. Presenting the facts, the author suggested we call Labor Day by its real name "National Banana Republic day." He had a point. You would have thought that the lessons learned from the economic downturn would have taught us that the corporatocracy will not take good care of the American people, left on its own.

    Another blog friend, Spadoman of Round Circle, wrote a powerful piece that helped me understand some of what has been driving my down mood. It began and ended,

    I don't really want to rant about it, but the proclamation of labor Day and all it means these days has me depressed somewhat. In the past, when I was in the labor force as a Teamster, Labor day seemed to mean something. Maybe it's because I'm not working for wages any longer that I don't see the honor in being a working person. But maybe it's the way corporate America has taken the life away from so many, as those high on the food chain of American life use the backs of labor to make their millions.

    . . . Remember the working class. Use your own definition of who that might be. I know it must vary as to when labor cuts off and management begins. Look at the fast food industry. Get hired as a manager and you have to work all the hours of every shift from time to time to cover the shifts of those that quit and call in, and that means weekends and holidays like Labor Day. In my book, the fast food manager is still labor, with a different moniker, a ploy, no doubt, dreamed up by those who will actually have the day off and profit from the fruits of that labor.

    "I sit and look out," by Walt Whitman, was posted by my friend Betmo earlier this month, presaging Labor Day for me. Whitman's silent, and so am I. So I linked to others who can speak better for me. To quote the poem's ending:

    . . . I observe the slights and degradations cast by arrogant
    persons upon laborers, the poor, and upon negroes,
    and the like;
    All these--all the meanness and agony without end I sitting
    look out upon,
    See, hear, and am silent.


    (Cross posted at Sirens Chronicles) [9/8/09]


    See also Behind the Links, for further info on this subject.

    Blogs: My general purpose/southwest focus blog is at Southwest Progressive. My creative website is at Making Good Mondays. And Carol Gee - Online Universe is the all-in-one home page for all my websites.

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    Monday, June 22, 2009

    Under the Heading of Republicans


    Under the heading of "Poor Baby" -- It is hard to have compassion sometimes. And I have compassion fatigue when it comes to feeling sorry for Republicans.
    • Senator John Ensign's poll ratings have plummeted since he disclosed his affair with a married staffer.

    • Former Senator Norm Coleman still wants to help pay his legal expenses out of his Senate Campaign funds, but the FEC may deny part of his request.

    • Senator Jeff Sessions, Ranking Member, got his feelings hurt when he heard that Senate Judiciary Committee Hearings on the confirmation of Judge Sotomayor had been scheduled without his knowledge. Senator Leahy tried to contact him ahead of time but was unsuccessful.
    Under the heading of "The Party of No" -- It looks like the Republican Party prefers that over 40 million people are without health insurance, program costs are skyrocketing and service quality is diminishing.
    • Senators Pat Roberts and Tom Coburn brought Health, Education, Labor and Pension Committee debate on Medicare's possible use of comparative effectiveness research to a halt recently, charging that it would lead to rationing of service.

    • Senator Jon Kyle reminded C-SPAN listeners that Senator Chuck Grassley "is not negotiating with Max Baucus" on the health care bill. "Sen. Grassley has been given no authority to negotiate anything by all of us Republicans on that committee,” Kyl said. “The bill that [Baucus] comes up with . . . will not be a bipartisan product.”

    Under the heading of "Geez, they still don't get it!" --
    Bigotry is one thing and hypocrisy is another. We see too much of this from Republicans.
    • Pat Buchanan, Standard Republican Television Pundit, admits that he "prefers the old bigotry" to affirmative action policies that benefited Sonia Sotomayor, saying "at least they were honest," according to TPM Muckraker.

    • Representative Pete Hoekstra may have leaked classified information regarding what was discussed in a closed committee hearing on enhanced interrogation techniques, says TPM Muckraker. What's worse, he is on record criticizing leakers for giving information to the NYT in the Valerie Plame case.
    Under the heading of "Now, who was it that won the election?" -- The Change-Energy policy train has already left the station. But Republicans remain stuck in the environmental mistakes of the previous century.

    • Senator Lisa Murkowski still wants to drill for oil in the Alaska Wildlife refuge. Representatives Eric Cantor, Joe Barton, John Boehner, Mike Pence, John Shimkus and others have presented their own energy bill which includes a title focusing on nuclear power. In congressional hearings, industry representatives are defending a federal loophole for drilling using hydraulic fracturing that causes water contamination, according to ProPublica.
    Under the heading of Rants, I will try to hold these to a minimum, probably once a week or so.

    [Post date - June 22, 2009]

    See also Behind the Links, for further info on this subject.

    Blogs: My general purpose/southwest focus blog is at Southwest Progressive. My creative website is at Making Good Mondays. And Carol Gee - Online Universe is the all-in-one home page for all my websites.

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    Tuesday, May 19, 2009

    Follow-up on Congressional Favorites --

    The Senate just passed HR 627, a credit card regulation bill, with 90 votes of yes and 5 voting no. Sponsored by Senator Chris Dodd (D-Conn) and Republican Senator Shelby, the bill mandates stiffer protections for consumers. Its provisions include a prohibition against raising card rates until after 60 days of delinquency, requiring 45 days notice before rates can be raised and prohibiting raising rates during the first year the card is issued.

    The House had passed its own version of the bill April 30 by a vote of 357-70. The Senate, in an obvious compromise, included an amendment to allow guns in national parks and recreation areas. The Senate failed, however, to pass an amendment that would have given bankruptcy judges the authority to include mortgages in bankruptcy settlements.

    Senators congratulated Senior Senator Carl Levin (D-Mich) just prior to the vote, for casting his 11,000 vote in a 30 year career. The Majority and Minority Leaders spoke in glowing terms about him as one of their most respected colleagues, whom one speaker characterized as "rumpled and unassuming, with a towering intellect, a good legal mind and an attention to detail."

    His brother Sander Levin came to the U.S. House of Representatives five years after Senator Levin. His Michigan colleague, Junior Senator Debbie Stabenow also spoke about her honor at serving in the Senate with Senator Levin. He grinned shyly, he spoke briefly, and with his eyes twinkling, he quickly got back to work, helping to pass the credit card reform legislation.

    Addendum --

    This post is a follow-up to an earlier post regarding "What's to like about these legislators?" (cross posted at TPM Cafe). That earlier TPM post created a lively discussion sparked by KateO, who commented,
    "I remember. I worked for a congressional agency in the 1980s-early 1990s. I'd say there was coequal status in the 1980s, despite Reagan's popularity. In the 1990s, especially after 1994, it just became a battleground between the Executive and Legislative Branches--purely partisan. Then, in the 2000s, we had the Imperial Presidency with a totally subservient Congress. I would like Congress to be coequal, but we need smarter people in both Chambers, especially the House, for that to be something we actually want to happen."

    I replied,

    "Kate, I had that thought as I made my brash proposal re "coequal." Several things have made the talent pool diminish: need for fundraising makes lots of the good ones retire in disgust; the self-marginalization of the Republican party towards religiosity, regionalism, and reactionary views; and jerry-mandered congressional districts that happened after the last census. Last, and I hate to say this, because I have always liked Bill Clinton, he gave the Republicans far too many excuses for partisanship with his personal foibles.
    I still think the only answer is public financing of campaigns. The money has such a corrupting influence.
    Thanks for such a thoughtful comment. You nudged my ideas towards another post, I think. :-)"

    Kate replied:

    "Oh goody. Sometimes I feel like a dinosaur--I've lived and worked in DC for a LONG time (health and science policy). It helps to run things against someone who has a sense of history. So, please write that new blog. Although I am a lifelong Democrat, I very much miss the days when there were smart, honest Republicans in Congress, to provide a balance. I firmly believe in balance of power and it is a bit sad that the Republicans don't understand that that means responsible and informed leadership. We need to get away from the politics of personal vendetta. I worked for the Clinton Administration, and have said many times on this site that I was personally hurt by his personal lapses. It undercut all the good things we were trying to do. You just can't give your enemies that ammunition. I am hopeful that Obama realizes that. In fact, I am sure he does. So, here's to the best of all branches of government. We sure as hell deserve it! There are good people in government trying to do good things. Thanks for acknowledging that."

    Now, back to C-SPAN.

    [Post date - May 19, 2009]

    My all-in-one Home Page of websites where I post regularly: Carol Gee - Online Universe

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    Monday, May 18, 2009

    Clinton leftovers --


    Health care reform failed to get passed during President Clinton's administration. President Nixon also tried to reform the health care system. But here it 2009 and it looks like there is a chance to do something about the 40+ million people who lack health insurance. People in Washington have actually tackled the issue. I imagine even Hillary Clinton is optimistic and supportive of success. President Obama is working hard to sway moderate Republicans, inviting them to a White House meeting last week, Politico reports today.

    However, "Swift Boat" ads have already been launched to defeat President Obama's reform of the current health care system. The Democratic Strategist's J.P. Green wrote a good piece containing several effective arguments for countering the distortions in the ads. According to CQ Politics, message guru Frank Luntz says the GOP needs to "get away from markets and foscus on patients," with the goal of killing Democrats' reform plans. But I believe the train has already left the station in the direction of progress.

    Despite the "watershed event" of companies offering $2 trillion in health care savings over 10 years, some reformers worry that it might allow "companies to stay at the table long enough to kill a government-run health insurance program," according to Politico. The health insurance company lobby, in what CQPolitics calls "a strategic retreat," is pushing for more comprehensive federal regulation of health insurance, hoping to avoid any proposal with a government public plan.

    Real progress would include a "public" aspect to the plan, in my opinion. But we are not there yet. But bit by bit the President is trying to make it all happen. For example, his nominee to head the Center for Disease Control leads the New York City Health Department, Dr. Thomas Frieden, an activist who is willing to tackle even the toughest issues. We are in good hands.


    [Post date - May 18, 09]

    See also Behind the Links, for further info on this subject.

    Carol Gee - Online Universe is the all-in-one home page for all my websites.

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    Saturday, May 09, 2009

    Foreign affairs news digest

    Foreign news items that may have slipped past during the past few weeks follow in today's post. We have not seen as much about piracy recently. That may be because of the get-tough policies of some of the main players on our side.

    And it turns out that we have some new allies: "Thousands of dolphins block Somali pirates (Xinhua News Agency)," from Memeorandum (4/15/09). This is an amazing story. To quote:

    Thousands of dolphins blocked the suspected Somali pirate ships when they were trying to attack Chinese merchant ships passing the Gulf of Aden, the China Radio International reported on Monday.

    Foreign news items that may have slipped past during the past few weeks follow in today's post. We have not seen as much about piracy recently. That may be because of the get-tough policies of some of the main players on our side.

    And it turns out that we have some new allies: "Thousands of dolphins block Somali pirates (Xinhua News Agency)," from Memeorandum (4/15/09). This is an amazing story. To quote:

    Thousands of dolphins blocked the suspected Somali pirate ships when they were trying to attack Chinese merchant ships passing the Gulf of Aden, the China Radio International reported on Monday.

    the front gate and main building of xinhua new...Image via Wikipedia: Xinhua News Agency

    China may be on a roll, acquiring some new boosters as well as acquiring a huge amount of foreign reserves. "China's foreign reserves hit $1.95 trillion at end of March" from China News (4/10/09 ). Summary: "China's foreign exchange reserves rose 16 percent year-on-year to $1.9537 trillion by the end of March, said the People's Bank of China on Saturday." Though China finances a significant amount of our ballooning national debt, we must remain upset with their record of human rights violations.

    And we may have a new set of allies --or adversaries -- towards that end. This news item explains:
    "A New Era of Engagement," from the ACLU Blog of Rights (4/12/09). To quote:

    Yesterday, the Obama administration announced that it would reverse a Bush administration decision and make bid to join the United Nations Human Rights Council, "with the goal of working to make it a more effective body to promote and protect human rights." The Council is the highest human rights body within the U.N., composed of 47 countries working to promote and strengthen human rights worldwide. It replaced the historical U.N. Commission on Human Rights in 2006, but was voted against by the Bush administration along with the Marshall Islands, Palau, and Israel. Countries bid for election for membership within the Council. Terms last for three years, and the elections are scheduled for mid-May.

    . . . We look forward to the Obama administration’s constructive engagement with the council and other global human rights bodies such as the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, and hope that human rights will be central not only in U.S. foreign policy but also in domestic policy.

    Human rights violations take place all over the world, even south of the border. I cannot think of a worse case than the dramatic increase in violence against innocents by the Mexican drug cartels. The issue is high on our national agenda, as indicated by the recent visits to Mexico by our highest officials as well as major boosts in foreign aid. This post was illuminating, as it appeared just prior to those trips. "Mexico: So Close and Yet So Far," was written by Faith Smith for The Washington Note (4/7/09). To quote rather extensively from this handy little "primer:"

    The label "failed state" has repeatedly been applied to Mexico. Jorge Castaneda, former Mexican Foreign Minister and fellow at the New America Foundation, recently made the case against this erroneous label, "The government represents the nation abroad, exercises a quasi monopoly on the use of force within its borders, collects taxes and ensures the integrity of its citizens against perils from within and without. By these measures-- indeed by any standard definition of a failed state--Mexico is clearly acquitted." While Mexico's current state may not warrant the exasperating label "failed" it surely deserves more attention and cooperation than the U.S. traditionally offers.

    Forty percent of Mexico's citizens survive on less than $2 per day; an unacceptable figure for a nation that shares a 2,000 mile border with the World's richest (and arguably most generous) nation. Policy makers have simply overlooked Mexico time and again. Mexico has been just stable enough to ignore. The FY2009 budget allocates little more than $500million in foreign assistance to Mexico or one-third what we annually offer Egypt. Mexico is our next door neighbor; for the sake of regional stability and national security the United States must invest in Mexico and its leaders. While Mexico is not a failed state, it is facing a crisis the United States cannot afford to ignore. President Felipe Calderon does not lack the will to fight the drug lords and corruption, but the resources. The legitimate economy of Mexico is severely undermined by two shadow economies that are difficult to track and impossible to tax. The drug economy is estimated at $10billion to $50billion and revenue from remittances in 2008 was around $25billion.

    . . . Mexico's process of democratization has left a power void that the drug lords happily filled. I see two ways to reclaim power from the drug lords: the state can re-consolidate power into a strong, centralized state relying heavily on the army--which would be a reversal of their recent democratization-- or they must push ahead with the democratization and decentralization process. Which means local governance, with an uncorrupted police force and judicial system supported by civic participation, will prevail. I believe the latter is necessary for Mexico to not only survive the drug war but to thrive as a prosperous, democratic nation.

    A wider view of the world improves my perspective. Therefore I regularly visit my "News from other countries" folder in my Bloglines aggregator. Today's post is the result. More follows.

    References to miscellaneous recent items:

    • Congressional Quarterly - Homeland Security: Behind the lines e-mail newsletter by David C. Morrison (5/7/09). To quote: At least 6,000 immigrants have been denied refuge in the United States because the Patriot Act and other post-Sept. 11 laws label them as “terrorists,” even if they supported pro-democracy efforts and opposed despots and dictators, McClatchy Newspaper’s Marisa Taylor surveys. . . .

      Algeria is one of the Middle Eastern nations that has the scientific and technological capacity to develop nuclear weapons, Secrecy News notes, offering an open-source bibliography on the same. North Korea runs a cyber warfare unit that tries to hack into U.S. and South Korean military networks to gather secrets and disrupt service, AP learns. . . .

      Bibles in Afghan languages sent to a U.S. soldier at a base in Afghanistan were confiscated and destroyed to ensure no breach of regulations forbidding proselytizing, Reuters reports — and check the Al Jazeera story that sparked the response. Libyan authorities have applied for the transfer to their custody of the sole perpetrator convicted of the 1988 Lockerbie bombing, who would have to drop his appeal to qualify, The Scotsman says. One of the “Toronto 18” has pleaded guilty to aiding a plot to detonate bombs in the city’s bustling downtown core, The National Post notes — as AP has a German investigator testifying that terror defendants were caught on tape discussing bombing a U.S. air base and joking about the probable reaction.

    [Post date, May 9, 2009]

    See also Behind the Links, for further info on this subject.

    Carol Gee - Online Universe is the all-in-one home page for all my websites.

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    Tuesday, March 31, 2009

    Congress and the President

    [3/31/09]

    Democrats together -- President Obama came to the Capitol Monday to meet with House Democrat before leaving on his first big foreign trip, according to today's Politico. Saying that,

    . . . passage of the budget was linked to his economic strategy as well as the ability to act on major issues.

    “If we do not have growth, we will not succeed,” the president said, adding that the “momentum” of the budget would help Democrats move ahead on health care reform.

    Democratic Leadership -- Senator Majority Leader Harry Reid, up for reelection in 2010, characterizes his relationship with the head of the executive branch as a partnership: “President Obama and I work with each other as partners to address the challenges facing our country.” House Speaker Nancy Pelosi has not yet committed to a second stimulus package saying, “I really would like to focus on the first one. I know that people have made suggestions that we should be ready to do something, but I really would like to see this stimulus package play out.” However, Speaker Pelosi and President Obama have worked together to tighten the earmark process, following much controversy following passage of the omnibus spending bill for the reminder of this fiscal year.

    Republican leadership -- Minority Whip Eric Cantor has been a very outspoken critic of the Obama legislative agenda items. He, like all of the "big fat NO" crowd. seems most determined to get in the way of progress. "Budget, Britney dim Cantor's star," from Politico.com (3/30/09). To quote:

    . . . six weeks after the stimulus vote, Cantor finds himself at least momentarily on the defensive, the result of unforced errors, squabbles with other party leaders, a Democratic push to label him “Dr. No” — and the indignity of having his name appear in print next to the words “Britney Spears.”

    No one thinks Cantor is in serious trouble, and there’s a real possibility that not a single House Republican will vote yes on Obama’s $3.6 trillion budget. But the GOP’s meteoric star has slipped a bit this month — and his enemies couldn’t be happier.

    Conservative columnists are having fits, too. For example, The Washington Post's George F. Will wrote (3/24/09), "The toxic assets we elected," To quote his conclusion:

    Jefferson warned that "great innovations should not be forced on slender majorities." But Democrats, who trace their party's pedigree to Jefferson, are contemplating using "reconciliation" -- a legislative maneuver abused by both parties to severely truncate debate and limit the minority's right to resist -- to impose vast and controversial changes on the 17 percent of the economy that is health care. When the Congressional Budget Office announced that the president's budget underestimates by $2.3 trillion the likely deficits over the next decade, his budget director, Peter Orszag, said: All long-range budget forecasts are notoriously unreliable -- so rely on ours.

    This is but a partial list of recent lawlessness, situational constitutionalism and institutional derangement. Such political malfeasance is pertinent to the financial meltdown as the administration, desperately seeking confidence, tries to stabilize the economy by vastly enlarging government's role in it.

    Budget -- As President Obama leaves for Europe, he leaves Congress with a full agenda, including consideration of his 2010 budget and what to do about the auto industry. The Senate is now in the midst of 30 hours of debate on the Obama budget for the next five years. And the debate is spirited, even among Democrats. Many questions are unanswered, but Senator Kent Conrad asserts that he and his drafting committee adhered to the President's priorities. These are, of course, education, energy and health care reform. Leaders in both the House and Senate would like to adopt their respective budget resolutions prior to leaving for the spring recess that starts April 4. Republican leaders in both the House and Senate are united in their opposition to the President's budget.

    Energy -- President Obama hopes to lead the nation towards energy independence and slowing global warming. But he will need a lot of help from Congressional Democrats. "Consensus could be a conundrum for Climate-Change bill," from CQ Politics (3/29/09). To quote:

    When Henry A. Waxman tries to get a global warming bill out of his House Energy and Commerce Committee this spring, much will depend on the views of moderate and conservative Democrats whose votes could be critical in moving the legislation forward.

    . . . Waxman can expect little help from Republicans on his committee. Few are expected to vote for a global warming bill and the panel’s ranking Republican, Joe L. Barton of Texas, says he is playing no part in writing the bill.

    Economy/Housing -- "Debate on 'Cramdown' bill postponed; compromise elusive." from CQ Politics (3/20/09) To quote:

    Senate debate on legislation that would allow bankruptcy judges to modify mortgage terms for troubled homeowners will be postponed until after the spring recess, a spokesman for Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid said Friday.

    The announcement further highlights the difficulty Senate leaders are having with the thorny issue — often referred to as “cramdown.” Senators on both sides of the aisle have been attempting to find amenable language in the past two weeks through staff negotiations, but to this point, both sides have come up empty.

    In conclusion, this is how my people (all Republicans!) in Congress voted last week: The Edward M. Kennedy Serve America Act: Senator Kay Bailey Hutchison - Yes; Senator John Cornyn - No. This passed (79-19). The Omnibus Public Land Management Act of 2009: Rep. Kay Granger did not vote. This passed (285-140).

    Reference: Sign up for the Congressional Quarterly Newsletters.

    See also Behind the Links, for further info on this subject.

    Carol Gee - Online Universe is the all-in-one home page for all my websites.

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    Wednesday, March 25, 2009

    Obama sparks conversation

    [3/25/09]

    Everybody has an idea about how President Obama is doing now that he is 60+ days into his presidency. "He's doing to much. He's not moving fast enough. He shouldn't be laughing during such times. He says one thing and does another. He is overexposed in the media, etc., etc." Today's post talks about last night's prime time news conference media fallout. It says a bit about the President's upcoming trip abroad, and it concludes with conversation about citizen involvement in the political process and in the community.

    The Chattering Class includes White House correspondents -- President Obama held his second formal news conference Tuesday night. When MSNBC's Chuck Todd asked the President why he hadn't asked the American people to make more sacrifices, President Obama (to paraphrase) pointed out that a lot of people are making great sacrifices due the the severity of the current economic crisis.

    The Chattering Class regarding Obama's news conference -- All the beltway pundits are weighing in with judgments about how it went in my morning's e-mailed newsletters.

    • Snark -- John Harris and Jonathan Martin at Politico.com were particularly edgy and unfavorable in their presumptuous theater critic style piece, "What Obama said and what he meant." The piece fell rather short of its "cute and clever" mark. It came of as "bent out of shape." I'll quote a few examples:

      Obama fluently answered the questions, sometimes at considerable length. But his responses were typically variations on a single-word theme: Whatever.

      . . . Most of all, he’s entirely comfortable with his bet that he and the country can worry about certain inconvenient facts—like a 10-year deficit total of $9.3 trillion under his plan — some time later. . .

      [concluding with] ON DEFENSE SPENDING.

      What he said: “Kevin Baron, Stars and Stripes. Is Kevin here? There you go.”

      What he meant: You have to admit, I am clever. I get to call on a reporter who is not from one of the big news organizations, whose subject is going to be easy to predict, and whose question I can answer by pointing out that I want to improve health care for veterans.

      Obama also told Baron he supports reforming military procurement policies, a bipartisan goal, but acknowledged it is hard to do.

      He also called on reporters from other niche outlets, such as the Hispanic network Univision, while stiffing reporters from the New York Times, Washington Post, and Wall Street Journal.


    • Straight -- Contrast the snarky tone of the Politico article with that of Adriel Bettelheim at Congressional Quarterly/Politics. To quote from the article "Obama's Push for Patience and Faith in his Goals":

      . . . Obama has embarked on a publicity blitz that included recent appearances on “The Tonight Show” and “60 Minutes” and continued Tuesday night with his hourlong session in the East Room with reporters.

      “We will recover from this recession. But it will take time, it will take patience, and it will take an understanding that when we all work together, when each of us looks beyond our own short-term interests to the wider set of obligations we have to each other — that’s when we succeed,” Obama said in his opening remarks.

      . . . The appearances also could mobilize public if not business support for expanded regulation of hedge funds and non-bank financial companies that Obama is expected to push at the Group of 20 economic summit in London early next month.

    The Advocates regarding the President's upcoming trip to the G-20 --

    Leaders of the world's largest economies will get together in London in a few days. Josh Peck of ONE.org wants President Obama to exercise his influence over other world leaders to include the poorest nations in their solutions to the financial crisis. And he wants us to join in the effort. To quote:

    Please advocate for the resources, reform, and regulation that developing countries need to weather the financial crisis. Please sign the petition.

    The President said at his news conference that he wanted us to keep up with what is going on in our government. We should work to stay informed and to stay involved by letting the government know our opinions about issues. We are encouraged to continue the conversation by raising our citizen voices. One way to do that is through the Pledge Project at Organizing for America, the old Obama campaign organization now housed at the Democratic National Committee. Michelle Obama has already "set an example at the nation's table and beyond," reports Christy Hardin Smith of Firedoglake. At Democracy for America - Howard Dean returns to celebrate the March 25 anniversary of the founding of his community action organization.

    Congress is doing its part to encourage community action. They are currently working on legislation that expands community service opportunities. The House passed the "GIVE Act" that rewards young people with education stipends, job training and more. The Senate will soon take up its version, the "Serve America Act." Heather Smith is at Rock the Vote. She encourages us to speak up for passage of the measure: We need the Senate to pass the Serve America Act, the boldest service legislation in 70 years.


    Additional Advocacy Resources:


    See also Behind the Links, for further info on this subject.

    Carol Gee - Online Universe is the all-in-one home page for all my websites.

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    Tuesday, March 24, 2009

    What's up with Congress?

    [3/24/09]
    On the hot seat -- President Obama will hold a prime time news conference tonight. And Secretary of the Treasury Tim Geithner and Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke are testifying before Congress today. It looks as if the Senate may put off dealing with the AIG bonus situation. Key Senator, Chris Dodd picked up some vulnerability due to his handling of the AIG controversy, according to Fox News. Due to a sense of potential Obama and Republican reservations about the House clawback bill, action will not take place until after the April 6 recess, according to the Washington Post.

    Approval up -- Last week Democrats pointed to a new Gallup poll showing congressional approval ratings at the highest point in 4 years, 39%. To quote Glenn Thrush at Politico,

    Republicans are trying pry behind those numbers to show that they’re mostly driven by Democrats who are finally content, rather than independents or Republicans. The poll shows 57 percent of self identified Democrats in the poll approve of Congress, up just 14 points
    in a month.
    Split on the budget -- Regarding President Obama's budget battle in the Senate, Republicans are warning that they intend to play hardball when it comes to using the reconciliation process, that would not require 60 votes to pass. They threaten to "shut down the Senate" through the use of parliamentary procedures. And a few conservative Democrats could join them. Monday, Senate Budget Committee Chairman, Kent Conrad (D-N Dakota), was reported to be pressing to cut up to $28 billion, or almost half, of the increased appropriations sought by President Obama. This leaves a 6% increase intact. The House process generally seems easier than the Senate, but the budget bill faces an uphill battle there, also, due to the increasing tension between Liberals and the Blue Dog coalition.

    Winners and losers -- Naturally, my two Texas Senators, Hutchison and Cornyn, voted to confirm former Dallas Mayor Ron Kirk to be the U.S Trade Representative. He was confirmed 92-5. They both voted against the Omnibus Land Management Act of 2009. It passed the Senate, 77-20. My Representative, Kay Granger voted against the GIVE Act, a bill to reauthorize and reform national service programs. It passed the House 321-105. Granger also voted against the bill to impost an additional tax on certain TARP recipients. That vote passed 328-93. Despite these losses Republicans can't wait to take advantage in the mid-term elections, of what they see as missteps by the Obama administration as well as Democrats in Congress.

    Looking to after the recess -- House Members and Senators will leave town the first week in April. By that time a lot of the AIG mess will have died down and the stock market will have taken the measure of the new plan for removing troubled assets from the books of financial institutions. Congress must still send President Obama's remaining nominations to the floor for approval. And by the time Congress returns to town, a lot more will be know about how the President's 2010 budget will fare with the legislators. It will all be fun to watch.

    See also Behind the Links for other Congressional info.
    My all-in-one Home Page of websites where I post regularly: Carol Gee - Online Universe
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