Philosophy and the Economy : View from Berlin

Front Page of the German daily newspaper Die Tageszeitung (TAZ) from Dec. 3, 2008. Photo by David MacBryde / The Rag Blog.

Decisions, decisions, decisions… and the common good.

By David MacBryde / The Rag Blog / February 3, 2009

BERLIN — Many decisions are being made now in Germany as we gain greater insight into what is happening in the economy. Comparison and contrast with what is happening in the USA can be helpful.

One small decision of mine: because I think The Rag Blog is significant I will be contributing articles at least once a week

Since my area of “expertise” is in philosophy, some articles will be “philosophical,” specifically in the field of ontology – what “is” “reality” (e.g. are there “common goods” and, with reference also to the US Constitution, how do “we the people” promote “the general welfare?” — one core stated purpose in the founding of the United States. Living in exciting Berlin in these “interesting times,” to reference a Chinese saying, I will also try to report on decision-making processes here.

For instance, the Chinese premier was just here for work on BOTH the capital market systemic financial crisis AND the deepening recession, including issues related to what kinds of “economic growth” are helpful, and what kinds are destructive, for getting “beyond” the various crises. The German foreign minister is meeting today with the US Secretary of State. Historians will have “rich times,” having much history to look back upon and to research. We get to live in these times. I will try to point to some current developments as we live in these times.

There are three dominant issues here:(a)what to do about the financial system crisis, (b) what to do about the deepening recession, and (c) what does it mean to “get beyond” the various crises.

For this article, and in the spirit of providing some press review, I chose as a lead picture the front page from the German daily Die Tageszeitung (TAZ) showing masses of automobiles and concerning one specific European Union decision. I will explain that below. First I will focus not on details but on one huge difference between Germany and the USA.

Focus: What is meant by, and how are decisions made about, “common goods” and “promoting the general welfare?”

  • (A) On the German side, very briefly:

Since WW II there has been a broad and deep consensus that it is important to have a “mixed economy,” that “pure” capitalist markets create disasters and that democratic decisions are fundamental for creating and improving societies in which humans the right to self-determination. Here the decisions being made are NOT about whether or not to make decisions about economic activity, but how decisions are made, by whom, and which decisions are best. The traditional linguistic term used here, since the 19th century, was “social democracy.” After the last Great Depression here ended with the Nazis (and the insight: “been there, done that, regret it”) there has been broad consensus about the importance of a “democratic society,” and considerable differences about how best to make that work.

Since WW II there have been some huge changes here. One has been the commitment to work on what is the best “mix” in a “mixed economy.” Another is, based on the huge increase in productive power, facing the physical, environmental “limits” of “growth,” what kinds of “growth” are helpful or desirable and what kinds are destructive or dangerous. A broad consensus has been achieved to face such issues, and to work to transform the economy in ways that increase rather than destroy opportunities now and for future generations.

But now there is BOTH the crisis in the financial system AND the crisis of the deepening recession. No one here argues against democratic actions to get beyond the crises. Now the main debates about decisions involve whether the responses to the multiple crises will harm or improve the transition to a viable future. What kinds of “growth” are helpful, what kinds harmful, to get beyond the crises and positively on into the 21st century?

In Germany there is broad consensus that decisions about and in the economy need to be made, and that they must be socially and environmentally responsible decisions now and for the future. Germans take “common good” and “the general welfare” very seriously. For instance, regarding the financial system crisis, decisions are being worked on at this time to enable the large scale pubic takeover of banks, if necessary for the common good. Even “conservatives” here are willing to face this issue. Regarding the deepening recession, a large stimulus package is being developed and will be passed in a few weeks.

  • (B) On the USA side, just one point in this article:

As I wrote in The Rag Blog upon Obama’s visit in Berlin before the election:

Obama has one very difficult problem, and one huge problem.

In contrast to German proportional voting, Obama has to win a majority off the bat, or he is off the field. So he has the very difficult problem of getting a numerical majority.

And then there is the huge problem: I think that we in the United States have a problem in our culture with identity politics.

Germans, even those who know the US well, often have a hard time getting their head around this. Some Germans know a lot about the great efforts of the civil rights movement, with its successes and failures. What I think they do not understand is that the very successes (as limited as they were) of the civil rights movement(s), the women’s movement, all the various efforts for empowerment, often were based on specific group identification, on identity politics. Philosophically put, there is a fundamental and ontological difference between an identity defined against others and an identity defined with respect for others. And “identity politics” in a diverse country does not necessarily lead to a sense of common ground, to agreement on “public goods” and “the general welfare”. Greg Calvert reflected a lot on this in writing his 1991 book Democracy from the Heart.

How do those in the USA treat the “public good” and “the general welfare?” Can there be agreement about, can democratic decisions be made about such things?

The current Republican line of attack on the US stimulus plan is to try to dismiss it as a “Christmas tree” of many particular wishes rather than a move towards the common good, and to push instead for tax cuts so that individuals can decide better than “Washington bureaucrats.” A philosophical extreme on this point was achieved by Margaret Thatcher in England when she said that there is no such thing as “society,” only individuals. Along with her impoverished ontology she helped impoverish England.

I am not suggesting that Germans are “better,” or that the Germaan philosophy should be imported to the United States. (The beer is definitely good.) I do note that Germany was a very homogeneous society until recently, and in that regard they may have had less trouble in identifying their “common interest.”

My Question:

Looking over say three centuries of our history, the sheer fact that Obama did win a majority of the US electorate says something about changes in our culture. That was difficult enough – and yes, we did it. Now comes the hard part: Can US citizens define and achieve decisions about the “general welfare” and the “common good.”

Back when I was a kid it may have seemed easier. Back in the 1950’s a dominant saying was, “What is good for General Motors is good for the USA.” What was good for us, what was in “the national interest,” was defined by the decisions of General Motors (and General Dynamics etc.).

Now GM management can hardly dominate anything (except maybe some bad headlines).

As a long-time union member, I can certainly empathize with those (still) building cars, even though I was a shuttle bus driver. Something needs to be done. Decisions need to be made. But, for instance, bailing out the whale-oil industry will not help.

For those with a long-term interest in more democracy, in greater participation in deciding what is in our interest, the crisis does create potential for more democratic decision-making.

This brings me to the Front Page of the German daily newspaper Die Tageszeitung (TAZ) from Dec. 3, 2008, which featured a cover picture of many cars in eye-smarting smog.

HEADLINE:

THE AUTO LOBBY CRIES — FOR JOY

The provocative title of the front page editorial: “Omnipotence of the Auto Industry.”

Of course even the German auto industry is NOT omnipotent. In fact it is a mess.

The TAZ was being its provocative self, exaggerating to make a point about one specific decision by the European Union (EU). In the face of the increasingly deep recession, one EU agency granted a two year postponement, from 2013 to 2015, for strict EU wide limits on CO2 exhaust from motor vehicles. Other decisions — for instance, to change the vehicle tax from engine size to CO2 emissions — are in the works in Germany.

My point here is that the EU and Germany are certainly no utopias regarding good stewardship of common goods. The auto lobby did manage, under the circumstances, to get a little relief time for retooling. But even that was, for the TAZ, a big mistake.

The larger issue is whether the financial system crisis AND the recession will hinder and slow down — or will speed up — the transformation of economic activity to enable a viable future. What kind of “growth” will help, and what will hinder, our getting beyond the crises?

I will go into further details from Germany in future blogs.

My point in this piece is that even if Germany is no utopia, there are decision processes here which take “common goods” and “promoting the general welfare” seriously. I suggest this will be a challenge in the USA we need to meet. Obama alone can not do this. The situation does seem to open up potentials for “more democracy” in the long-term, for “we the people” to participate in good governance and for creative, intelligent design of a future “beyond the crisis”.

[David MacBryde — our correspondent in Berlin — was an Austin activist and a contributor to The Rag Blog’s historical precursor, The Rag , an icon of the 60s-70s underground press.]

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Jury Nullification : Peers Refuse to Convict Disabled Vet in Pot Bust

Get Out of Jail Free / wayneandwax.

“Jurors should acquit, even against the judge’s instruction… if exercising their judgement with discretion and honesty they have a clear conviction the charge of the court is wrong.” ~ Alexander Hamilton, 1804.

‘The Vietnam veteran walks with a cane, has bad knees and feet and says he uses marijuana to relieve body pain, as well as to help cope with post traumatic stress.’

Maybe this is how the war on marijuana ends.

A rural Illinois jury has found one of their peers innocent in a marijuana case that would have sent him to prison. Loren Swift (pictured below) was charged with possession of marijuana with intent to deliver, and he faced a mandatory minimum of six years behind bars.

According to Dan Churney at MyWebTimes , several jurors were seen shaking Swift’s hand after the verdict, a couple of them were talking and laughing with Swift and his lawyer, and one juror slapped Swift on the back.

The 59-year-old was arrested after officers from a state “drug task force” found 25 pounds of pot and 50 pounds of growing plants in his home in 2007. The Vietnam veteran walks with a cane, has bad knees and feet and says he uses marijuana to relieve body pain, as well as to help cope with post traumatic stress.

This jury exercised their right of jury nullification. Judges and prosecutors never tell you this, but when you serve on a jury, it’s not just the defendant on trial. It’s the law as well. If you don’t like the law and think applying it in this particular case would be unjust, then you don’t have to find the defendant guilty, even if the evidence clearly indicates guilt.

In jury nullification, a jury in a criminal case effectively nullifies a law by acquitting a defendant regardless of the weight of evidence against him or her. There is intense pressure within the legal system to keep this power under wraps. But the fact of the matter is that when laws are deemed unjust, there is the right of the jury not to convict.

Jury nullification is crucially important because until our national politicians show some backbone on the issue of marijuana law reform, it’s one of the only ways to avoid imposing hideously cruel “mandatory minimum” penalties on marijuana users who don’t deserve to go to prison.

Prosecuting and jailing people for marijuana wastes valuable resources, including court and police time and tax dollars. Hundreds of thousands of otherwise productive, law-abiding people have been deprived of their freedom, their families, their homes and their jobs. Let’s save the jails for real criminals, not pot smokers.

The American public is very near the tipping point where a majority no longer believes the official line coming from Drug Warrior politicians and their friends at the ONDCP, gung-ho narcotics officers protecting their profitable turf, and sensationalistic, scare-mongering news stories used to boost ratings. They are starting to see through the widening cracks in the wall of denial when it comes to marijuana’s salutary medical effects on a host of illnesses and its palliative effects for the terminally ill and permanently disabled.

People are coming to realize that not only have they been sold a lie when it comes to marijuana — they’ve been sold a particularly cruel lie, a self-perpetuating falsehood of epic proportions that has controlled U.S. public policy towards the weed for 70 years now. The extreme cruelty of the lies told about marijuana by drug warriors is in the effects this culture of fear and intolerance has in the real world — effects like long prison sentences for gentle people who are productive and caring members of society.

Because citizens are coming to this long-delayed realization, we are going to be seeing more and more cases like this where juries have chosen not to punish people for pot. As this consciousness permeates all levels of society, it is going to get harder and harder for prosecutors to get guilty verdicts in marijuana cases — and that’s a good thing.

Maybe this is how the war on marijuana ends… Not with a bang, but a whimper, as cousin T.S. would say.

What You Can Do

It is not only the juror’s right, but his duty to find the verdict according to his own best understanding, judgement and conscience, though in direct opposition to the instruction of the court.” ~ John Adams, 1771.

Source / FreedomsPhoenix / Posted by Alapoet / Jan. 30, 2009

Thanks to Ramsey Wiggins / The Rag Blog

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Petraeus Angry : Obama Overrides His Bid to Delay Iraq Withdrawal

A campaigning Barack Obama with Gen. David Patraeus in a helicopter ride over Baghdad. Pool photo by Ssg. Lorie Jewell / AP.

‘A White House staffer present at the meeting was quoted by the source as saying, “Petraeus made the mistake of thinking he was still dealing with George Bush instead of with Barack Obama.”‘

By Gareth Porter / February 2 / 2009

WASHINGTON — CENTCOM commander Gen. David Petraeus, supported by Defence Secretary Robert Gates, tried to convince President Barack Obama that he had to back down from his campaign pledge to withdraw all U.S. combat troops from Iraq within 16 months at an Oval Office meeting Jan. 21.

But Obama informed Gates, Petraeus and Joint Chiefs Chairman Adm. Mike Mullen that he wasn’t convinced and that he wanted Gates and the military leaders to come back quickly with a detailed 16-month plan, according to two sources who have talked with participants in the meeting.

Obama’s decision to override Petraeus’s recommendation has not ended the conflict between the president and senior military officers over troop withdrawal, however. There are indications that Petraeus and his allies in the military and the Pentagon, including Gen. Ray Odierno, now the top commander in Iraq, have already begun to try to pressure Obama to change his withdrawal policy.

A network of senior military officers is also reported to be preparing to support Petraeus and Odierno by mobilising public opinion against Obama’s decision.

Petraeus was visibly unhappy when he left the Oval Office, according to one of the sources. A White House staffer present at the meeting was quoted by the source as saying, “Petraeus made the mistake of thinking he was still dealing with George Bush instead of with Barack Obama.”

Petraeus, Gates and Odierno had hoped to sell Obama on a plan that they formulated in the final months of the Bush administration that aimed at getting around a key provision of the U.S.-Iraqi withdrawal agreement signed envisioned re-categorising large numbers of combat troops as support troops. That subterfuge was by the United States last November while ostensibly allowing Obama to deliver on his campaign promise.

Gates and Mullen had discussed the relabeling scheme with Obama as part of the Petraeus-Odierno plan for withdrawal they had presented to him in mid-December, according to a Dec. 18 New York Times story.

Obama decided against making any public reference to his order to the military to draft a detailed 16-month combat troop withdrawal policy, apparently so that he can announce his decision only after consulting with his field commanders and the Pentagon.

The first clear indication of the intention of Petraeus, Odierno and their allies to try to get Obama to amend his decision came on Jan. 29 when the New York Times published an interview with Odierno, ostensibly based on the premise that Obama had indicated that he was “open to alternatives”.

The Times reported that Odierno had “developed a plan that would move slower than Mr. Obama’s campaign timetable” and had suggested in an interview “it might take the rest of the year to determine exactly when United States forces could be drawn down significantly”.

The opening argument by the Petraeus-Odierno faction against Obama’s withdrawal policy was revealed the evening of the Jan. 21 meeting when retired Army Gen. Jack Keane, one of the authors of the Bush troop surge policy and a close political ally and mentor of Gen. Petraeus, appeared on the Lehrer News Hour to comment on Obama’s pledge on Iraq combat troop withdrawal.

Keane, who had certainly been briefed by Petraeus on the outcome of the Oval Office meeting, argued that implementing such a withdrawal of combat troops would “increase the risk rather dramatically over the 16 months”. He asserted that it would jeopardise the “stable political situation in Iraq” and called that risk “not acceptable”.

The assertion that Obama’s withdrawal policy threatens the gains allegedly won by the Bush surge and Petraeus’s strategy in Iraq will apparently be the theme of the campaign that military opponents are now planning.

Keane, the Army Vice-Chief of Staff from 1999 to 2003, has ties to a network of active and retired four-star Army generals, and since Obama’s Jan. 21 order on the 16-month withdrawal plan, some of the retired four-star generals in that network have begun discussing a campaign to blame Obama’s troop withdrawal from Iraq for the ultimate collapse of the political “stability” that they expect to follow U.S. withdrawal, according to a military source familiar with the network’s plans.

The source says the network, which includes senior active duty officers in the Pentagon, will begin making the argument to journalists covering the Pentagon that Obama’s withdrawal policy risks an eventual collapse in Iraq. That would raise the political cost to Obama of sticking to his withdrawal policy.

If Obama does not change the policy, according to the source, they hope to have planted the seeds of a future political narrative blaming his withdrawal policy for the “collapse” they expect in an Iraq without U.S. troops.

That line seems likely to appeal to reporters covering the Iraq troop withdrawal issue. Ever since Obama’s inauguration, media coverage of the issue has treated Obama’ s 16-month withdrawal proposal as a concession to anti-war sentiment which will have to be adjusted to the “realities” as defined by the advice to Obama from Gates, Petreaus and Odierno.

Ever since he began working on the troop surge, Keane has been the central figure manipulating policy in order to keep as many U.S. troops in Iraq as possible. It was Keane who got Vice President Dick Cheney to push for Petraeus as top commander in Iraq in late 2006 when the existing commander, Gen. George W. Casey, did not support the troop surge.

It was Keane who protected Petraeus’s interests in ensuring the maximum number of troops in Iraq against the efforts by other military leaders to accelerate troop withdrawal in 2007 and 2008. As Bob Woodward reported in “The War Within”, Keane persuaded President George W. Bush to override the concerns of the Joint Chiefs of Staff about the stress of prolonged U.S. occupation of Iraq on the U.S. Army and Marine Corps as well its impact on the worsening situation in Afghanistan.

Bush agreed in September 2007 to guarantee that Petraeus would have as many troops as he needed for as long as wanted, according to Woodward’s account.

Keane had also prevailed on Gates in April 2008 to make Petraeus the new commander of CENTCOM. Keane argued that keeping Petraeus in the field was the best insurance against a Democratic administration reversing the Bush policy toward Iraq.

Keane had operated on the assumption that a Democratic president would probably not take the political risk of rejecting Petraeus’s recommendation on the pace of troop withdrawal from Iraq. Woodward quotes Keane as telling Gates, “Let’s assume we have a Democratic administration and they want to pull this thing out quickly, and now they have to deal with General Petraeus and General Odierno. There will be a price to be paid to override them.”

Obama told Petraeus in Baghdad last July that, if elected, he would regard the overall health of the U.S. Army and Marine Corps and the situation in Afghanistan as more important than Petraeus’s obvious interest in maximising U.S. troop strength in Iraq, according to Time magazine’s Joe Klein.

But judging from Petraeus’s shock at Obama’s Jan. 21 decision, he had not taken Obama’s previous rejection of his arguments seriously. That miscalculation suggests that Petraeus had begun to accept Keane’s assertion that a newly-elected Democratic president would not dare to override his policy recommendation on troops in Iraq.

[Gareth Porter is an investigative historian and journalist specialising in U.S. national security policy. The paperback edition of his latest book, “Perils of Dominance: Imbalance of Power and the Road to War in Vietnam”, was published in 200.]

Source / IPS News

Thanks to S. M. Wilhellm / The Rag Blog

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Dr. Keister : Obama and the Steelers Won! Next Up: Universal Health Care

President Obama holds up a Pittsburgh Steelers football jersey given to him by Dan Rooney, chairman of the Pittsburgh Steelers, during a campaign rally in Pittsburgh last October. Photo by Reuters.

I require two more coupes in the next year to depart this orb entirely satisfied, the economy to begin to show recovery and single payer, universal health care to become a reality.

By Dr. Stephen R. Keister / The Rag Blog / February 3, 2009

It would seem that even an ancient curmudgeon can have his happy days!

We elected Obama and the Steelers won the Super Bowl. These two incidents interact quite well as the President and Dan and Art Rooney seem to be morally and spiritually on the same page and Coach Tomlin and the President appear to be temperamentally and intellectually akin. I require two more coupes in the next year to depart this orb entirely satisfied, the economy to begin to show recovery and single payer, universal health care to become a reality. However, the Republicans in Washington are still determined to sabotage any legislation providing for the well being of the greater public and continue to show strict adherence to the Bush approach.

Russ Baker in his book “Family of Secrets” quotes Paul Krugman regarding that Bush’s policy: “He (Bush) wants the public to believe government is always the problem, never the solution. But it’s hard to convince people that government is always bad when they see it doing good things. So his philosophy says that government must be prevented from solving problems, even if it can. In fact, the more good a proposed government program would do, the more fiercely it must be opposed.” This is exactly the attitude relative to universal health care that the Republicans, and the insurance industry-subsidized Democrats, display. We still have rough sailing ahead.

Mr. Krugman is one of the few nationally quoted economists who is publicly pursuing universal health care, in this time of economic crises. In a column in the Jan. 30, 2009, issue of The New York Times he points out how dire the already bad health care situation will become as families lose their employer sponsored health care. Thus, a national plan becomes a must to avoid total chaos. Mr. Krugman calls our attention to research sponsored by the Commonwealth Fund which shows achieving universal coverage with a plan similar to that of Mr. Obama’s campaign proposals would add “only” about $104 billion to federal spending in 2010 — not a small sum, of course, but not large compared with, say, the tax cuts in the Obama stimulus plan. Dr. Krugman’s article is worth reviewing in its entirety.

We who support HR 676 again want to warn the progressive community, as is called to my attention in an e-mail from the Green Party dated Jan. 29, 2009, that Montana Sen. Max Baucus, chair of the Senate Finance Committee, wants the Single Payer option” off the table,” and along with other Democrats has proposed a market-based plan that would achieve universal coverage by REQUIRING Americans who lack health coverage to PURCHASE INSURANCE FROM A PRIVATE COMPANY. In short, Sen. Baucus will demand by fiat that one patronize a private company. As I have noted before, I have encountered prior information that questions the constitutionality of such a demand, and I would suggest that some of our readers who are scholars in constitutional law to further comment on the matter. I would also suggest that the constituents of the senators backing such a proposal investigate their donations from the insurance and pharmaceutical industries on opensecrets.org.

Further, Op-Ed News of Jan. 28, 2009, in an article by Bruce Dixon, quotes an interview on C-Span’s “Newsmakers” Program, where Democratic Whip James Clyburn of South Carolina declared that even with the biggest majority in a generation, Democrats will not even try to put a universal health care bill on the president’s desk this year, or maybe the next either.” This in spite of the fact that Clyburn last April signed on as a cosponsor of HR 676, the bill introduced by Rep. John Conyers, as proposed by Physicians For A National Health Plan. Why has the Democratic leadership in the House never made any move to open HR 676 to debate in Committee in an effort to get the legislation to the floor of the House? Why? Why? Why?

The administration does keep proposing new health information technology as an antidote to our current health care crisis. This was surveyed in some detail by a release from the Commonwealth Fund on Jan/ 28, 2009. The proposals that are in accord with the experience in several European nations, would surely advance the communications and information transfer within the medical profession, but it is not a panacea for the overall health care crisis.

There are still steps that Congress must pursue. The Alliance for Retired Americans noted in a Jan. 30 release, that Rep. Marion Berry (D-Ar) introduced the Medicare Prescription Drug and Choice Act of 2009 (HR 684), a bill to create Medicare-run prescription drug plans to compete with the private plans offered by Medicare Part D. The bill would also require that the Secretary of HHS directly negotiate the price of drugs with the pharmaceutical companies, similar to plans already in effect through the V.A. If half the present elderly who are being conned by private insurance under Medicare part D switched to the government plan it could add up to as much as $20 billion a year for the next 10 years.

The Obama Administration is planning a commission to review savings in Social Security and Medicare. These folks must focus on the Berry Bill, as well as on eliminating all Medicare Advantage Plans that were created by the Bush administration to deplete the Medicare Trust Fund, and further enrich the insurance industry.

In considering revisions to Medicare the commission members must include physicians and specialists in Medical ethics who can address the Medicare expenditure on needless and inhumane prolongation of life in the elderly. Our society in the United States cannot come to grips with the fact that we are born and that we die. Due to lack of public information on advance directives, powers of attorney and hospice care, we force many elderly, against their will, to survive on dialysis or respirators. A commission on Medicare can not only be responsible to the public purse, but to the ethics of one’s final days on earth. I have in a previous essay on The Rag Blog cited reference to the late Pope .Pius’s directive on “no abnormal means”

Further, as the Obama Administration investigates the law-breaking and favoritism of the Bush administration we should note an article in the Jan. 29, 2009 issue of Mother Jones, that looks at how the F.D.A. deals with the pharmaceutical industry, which rivals the gun manufacturers, and tobacco companies for the position of the most amoral in America.

The F.D.A. is riddled with Bush cronies who dominate the agency’s thinking, and many of whom have had past connections to the pharmaceutical industry. These folks are not only incompetent but can do irreparable harm. Witness, for instance, a recent decision to remove Darvon Compound, a 54 year old non-narcotic (though controlled) pain killer from the market, thus forcing individuals with chronic pain to switch to medications of opium derivation for relief. Hardly bright, especially since anyone on anticoagulants cannot take aspirin or any of several anti-inflammatory agents. Further, not only do many members of the board of FDA exhibit professional incompetence, but as Mr. Ridgeway points out have long-standing financial ties to the pharmaceutical or medical research institutions.

The new Secretary For Veterans’ Affairs must be encouraged to implement increased efficiency and funding for the V.A. Maya Schenuary points out in a Jan. 29, 2009, TruthOut article, that US casualties are still climbing from the wars in Iraq and Afghanastan. Battlefield injuries and deaths now number 81,361. There are from all wars 809,000 veterans with pending claims. Especially sad is the delay in treating those with a PTSD diagnosis; thus, accounting for the frightening number of suicides. The Bush administration too long ignored our veterans, thus Obama must move quickly in this area.

Another frightening aspect of our failing economy, and loss of insurance for health care, is the increasing number of suicides in the civilian population due to depression caused by loss of employment or homes. One example is the recent episode in California where a man killed his wife, five children and himself, after losing his job and his home.

Mr. Bush surely has left the nation in a situation that bodes to be worse than that of The Great Depression, yet I find folks who are oblivious tp the legacy that he leaves us with. I guess that it is understandable. Chris Hedges, In Common Dreams on Nov. 10, 2009, notes that there are 42 million American adults, 20 percent of whom hold high school diplomas, who cannot read, as well as the 50 million who read at a fourth or fifth grade level. Nearly a third of the nation’s population is illiterate or barely literate. And these numbers are growing at two million per year. These folks are dependant on skillfully manipulated images for information (“diitoheads?”), and cannot differentiate between lies and truth. They are informed by simplistic, childish narratives and cliches.

In “The Prosecution of George W. Bush For Murder,” Vincent Bugliosi quotes some alarming statistics from a recent poll. Very tellingly, although the poll found that “most everyone [in the civilized world] feels that the state has a responsibility to take care of poor people who cannot take care of themselves, only 23% of Americans did. In Britain and France, the figure was 62%, in Spain 71%, Italy 66%, Russia 70%, Germany 50%.”

Somewhere I encountered a poll that showed in our Christian Society that only 30% of the respondents have even actually read for themselves “The Beatitudes” or “The Sermon on The Mount.”

[Dr. Keister’s previous contributions to The Rag Blog can be found here.]

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Joseph Stiglitz : Should We Bail Out of the Bailout?


Stiglitz: ‘The hope that President Obama will be able to get us out of the mess is tempered by the reality that throwing hundreds of billions of dollars at the banks has failed to restore them to health, or even to resuscitate the flow of lending.’

By Charlie Jackson / The Rag Blog / February 2, 2009

See ‘Is the Entire Bailout Strategy Flawed?’ by Joseph Stiglitz, below.

In my first career I worked as an economic development professional with a focus on small business growth and underlying infrastructure elements needed for long-term community development. The towns in which I have worked have prospered (or I picked prospering communities to move to).

Over the years I’ve learned that it is most important to have a long-term STRATEGY with short-term goals. Execution requires good project management and controls.

Setting aside the amount of money needed for a moment, in my review of what is going on it appears that both strategy and project controls are missing – those in charge simply don’t understand economic development priciples nor do they have experience needed…..much like the execution of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and the response to Hurricane Katrina.

It’s not a partisan thing, but simply that we have a bunch of economists and lawyers who lack practical experience in charge of coming up with a economic plan.

My 2 cents.

[Charlie Jackson is the founder of Texans for Peace.]

Is the Entire Bailout Strategy Flawed? Let’s Rethink This Before It’s Too Late

By Joseph Stiglitz / February 2, 2009

We gave the banks hundreds of billions to start lending again, and instead they’re just hoarding the cash, waiting until things settle down.

America’s recession is moving into its second year, with the situation only worsening.

The hope that President Obama will be able to get us out of the mess is tempered by the reality that throwing hundreds of billions of dollars at the banks has failed to restore them to health, or even to resuscitate the flow of lending.

Every day brings further evidence that the losses are greater than had been expected and more and more money will be required.

The question is at last being raised: Perhaps the entire strategy is flawed? Perhaps what is needed is a fundamental rethinking. The Paulson-Bernanke-Geithner strategy was based on the realization that maintaining the flow of credit was essential for the economy. But it was also based on a failure to grasp some of the fundamental changes in our financial sector since the Great Depression, and even in the last two decades.

For a while, there was hope that simply lowering interest rates enough, flooding the economy with money, would suffice; but three quarters of a century ago, Keynes explained why, in a downturn such as this, monetary policy is likely to be ineffective. It is like pushing on a string.

Then there was the hope that if the government stood ready to help the banks with enough money — and enough was a lot — confidence would be restored, and with the restoration of confidence, asset prices would increase and lending would be restored.

Remarkably, Bush administration Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson and company simply didn’t understand that the banks had made bad loans and engaged in reckless gambling. There had been a bubble, and the bubble had broken. No amount of talking would change these realities.

It soon became clear that just saying that we were ready to spend the money would not suffice. We actually had to get it into the banks. The question was how. At first, the architects of the bailout argued (with complete and utter confidence) that the best way to do this was buying the toxic assets (those in the financial market didn’t like the pejorative term, so they used the term “troubled assets”) — the assets that no one in the private sector would touch with a 10-foot pole.

It should have been obvious that this could not be done in a quick way; it took a few weeks for this crushing reality to dawn on them. Besides, there was a fundamental problem: how to value the assets. And if we valued them correctly, it was clear that there would still be a big hole in banks’ balance sheets, impeding their ability to lend.

Then came the idea of equity injection, without strings, so that as we poured money into the banks, they poured out money, to their executives in the form of bonuses, to their shareholders in the form of dividends.

Some of what they had left over they used to buy other banks — to pursue strategic goals for which they could not have found private finance. The last thing in their mind was to restart lending.

The underlying problem is simple: Even in the heyday of finance, there was a huge gap between private rewards and social returns. The bank managers have taken home huge paychecks, even though, over the past five years, the net profits of many of the banks have (in total) been negative.

And the social returns have even been less — the financial sector is supposed to allocate capital and manage risk, and it did neither well. Our economy is paying the price for these failures — to the tune of hundreds of billions of dollars.

But this ever-present problem has now grown worse. In effect, the American taxpayers are the major provider of finance to the banks. In some cases, the value of our equity injection, guarantees, and other forms of assistance dwarf the value of the “private” sector’s equity contribution; yet we have no voice in how the banks are run.

This helps us understand the reason why banks have not started to lend again. Put yourself in the position of a bank manager, trying to get through this mess. At this juncture, in spite of the massive government cash injections, he sees his equity dwindling. The banks — who prided themselves on being risk managers — finally, and a little too late — seem to have recognized the risk that they have taken on in the past five years.

Leverage, or borrowing, gives big returns when things are going well, but when things turn sour, it is a recipe for disaster. It was not unusual for investment banks to “leverage” themselves by borrowing amounts equal to 25 or 30 times their equity.

At “just” 25 to 1 leverage, a 4 percent fall in the price of assets wipes out a bank’s net worth — and we have seen far more precipitous falls in asset prices. Putting another $20 billion in a bank with $2 trillion of assets will be wiped out with just a 1 percent fall in asset prices. What’s the point?

It seems that some of our government officials have finally gotten around to doing some of this elementary arithmetic. So they have come up with another strategy: We’ll “insure” the banks, i.e., take the downside risk off of them.

The problem is similar to that confronting the original “cash for trash” initiative: How do we determine the right price for the insurance? And almost surely, if we charge the right price, these institutions are bankrupt. They will need massive equity injections and insurance.

There is a slight variant version of this, much like the original Paulson proposal: Buy the bad assets, but this time, not on a one by one basis, but in large bundles. Again, the problem is — how do we value the bundles of toxic waste we take off the banks? The suspicion is that the banks have a simple answer: Don’t worry about the details. Just give us a big wad of cash.

This variant adds another twist of the kind of financial alchemy that got the country into the mess. Somehow, there is a notion that by moving the assets around, putting the bad assets in an aggregator bank run by the government, things will get better.

Is the rationale that the government is better at disposing of garbage, while the private sector is better at making loans? The record of our financial system in assessing credit worthiness — evidenced not just by this bailout, but by the repeated bailouts over the past 25 years — provides little convincing evidence.

But even were we to do all this — with uncertain risks to our future national debt — there is still no assurance of a resumption of lending. For the reality is we are in a recession, and risks are high in a recession. Having been burned once, many bankers are staying away from the fire.

Besides, many of the problems that afflict the financial sector are more pervasive. General Motors and GE both got into the finance business, and both showed that banks had no monopoly on bad risk management.

Many a bank may decide that the better strategy is a conservative one: Hoard one’s cash, wait until things settle down, hope that you are among the few surviving banks and then start lending. Of course, if all the banks reason so, the recession will be longer and deeper than it otherwise would be.

What’s the alternative? Sweden (and several other countries) have shown that there is an alternative — the government takes over those banks that cannot assemble enough capital through private sources to survive without government assistance.

It is standard practice to shut down banks failing to meet basic requirements on capital, but we almost certainly have been too gentle in enforcing these requirements. (There has been too little transparency in this and every other aspect of government intervention in the financial system.)

To be sure, shareholders and bondholders will lose out, but their gains under the current regime come at the expense of taxpayers. In the good years, they were rewarded for their risk taking. Ownership cannot be a one-sided bet.

Of course, most of the employees will remain, and even much of the management. What then is the difference? The difference is that now, the incentives of the banks can be aligned better with those of the country. And it is in the national interest that prudent lending be restarted.

There are several other marked advantages. One of the problems today is that the banks potentially owe large amounts to each other (through complicated derivatives). With government owning many of the banks, sorting through those obligations (“netting them out,” in the jargon) will be far easier.

Inevitably, American taxpayers are going to pick up much of the tab for the banks’ failures. The question facing us is, to what extent do we participate in the upside return?

Eventually, America’s economy will recover. Eventually, our financial sector will be functioning — and profitable — once again, though hopefully, it will focus its attention more on doing what it is supposed to do. When things turn around, we can once again privatize the now-failed banks, and the returns we get can help write down the massive increase in the national debt that has been brought upon us by our financial markets.

We are moving in unchartered waters. No one can be sure what will work. But long-standing economic principles can help guide us. Incentives matter. The long-run fiscal position of the U.S. matters. And it is important to restart prudent lending as fast as possible.

Most of the ways currently being discussed for squaring this circle fail to do so. There is an alternative. We should begin to consider it.

[AlterNet and The Rag Blog are making this material available in accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107: This article is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. Joseph Stiglitz, a Nobel laureate, is a professor of economics at Columbia University.]

Source / CNN / AlterNet

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Genetically Modified Crops and the Coming Capitalist Consensus

“GMO giant Monsanto is steamrolling India:” A Greenpeace protester sprays milk-based paint on a Monsanto research soybean field near Atlantic, Iowa. AP photo.

These folks are pushing Genetically Modified crops (GMO’s) onto the Third World in the name of ending hunger, much as the Rockefellers did with the ‘Green Revolution’ that was used to open world markets to chemical and hybrid agriculture.

By Scott Pittman / The Rag Blog / February 3, 2009

Walden Bello has written a chilling essay about “The Coming Capitalist Consensus” [see below] for Foreign Policy In Focus.

This is one of the most succinct articles I have read on what we face right now. This is the beguiling rhetoric that has been brewing for the past five to eight years. If you notice, you have Bill Gates, and George Soros listed as part of this pack; they are joined by the Rockefeller brothers in Arkansas, The World Bank and other Capitalist cheerleaders.

The first so called revolutions killed millions of villagers around the world, just as now the GMO giant Monsanto is steamrolling India into the second go round of “squeezing blood from a turnip” which has resulted in unprecedented suicides among farmers who have lost their farmland to bad debt incurred from this unholy technology.

No one has talked to the farmers of India or of Africa as Gates and the Rockefellers put their millions to work convincing the various governing bodies in those countries to get on board the gravy train. They have managed to get Kofi Annan to sign on. This whole campaign is driven with the cynical appeal to world hunger which is a perfect neoliberal slogan to convince the ignorant and environmental poseurs of the campaign’s good intentions.

While we are focused on major bank greed and bailouts the uber rich are plotting control of the world’s food! What is really unsettling about this is that I think that Gates, and perhaps Soros think that they are doing a good thing. Being rich, unfortunately, doesn’t mean you have to be smart. The World Bank, on the other hand, knows exactly what it’s doing.

[ScottPittman, a former Austin activist and contributor to The Rag in Sixties Austin, is director of the Permaculture Institute.]

The Coming Capitalist Consensus
By Walden Bello

Not surprisingly, the swift unraveling of the global economy combined with the ascent to the U.S. presidency of an African-American liberal has left millions anticipating that the world is on the threshold of a new era. Some of President-elect Barack Obama’s new appointees – in particular ex-Treasury Secretary Larry Summers to lead the National Economic Council, New York Federal Reserve Board chief Tim Geithner to head Treasury, and former Dallas Mayor Ron Kirk to serve as trade representative – have certainly elicited some skepticism. But the sense that the old neoliberal formulas are thoroughly discredited have convinced many that the new Democratic leadership in the world’s biggest economy will break with the market fundamentalist policies that have reigned since the early 1980s.

One important question, of course, is how decisive and definitive the break with neoliberalism will be. Other questions, however, go to the heart of capitalism itself. Will government ownership, intervention, and control be exercised simply to stabilize capitalism, after which control will be given back to the corporate elites? Are we going to see a second round of Keynesian capitalism, where the state and corporate elites along with labor work out a partnership based on industrial policy, growth, and high wages – though with a green dimension this time around? Or will we witness the beginnings of fundamental shifts in the ownership and control of the economy in a more popular direction? There are limits to reform in the system of global capitalism, but at no other time in the last half century have those limits seemed more fluid.

President Nicolas Sarkozy of France has already staked out one position. Declaring that “laissez-faire capitalism is dead,” he has created a strategic investment fund of 20 billion euros to promote technological innovation, keep advanced industries in French hands, and save jobs. “The day we don’t build trains, airplanes, automobiles, and ships, what will be left of the French economy?” he recently asked rhetorically. “Memories. I will not make France a simple tourist reserve.” This kind of aggressive industrial policy aimed partly at winning over the country’s traditional white working class can go hand-in-hand with the exclusionary anti-immigrant policies with which the French president has been associated.

Global Social Democracy

A new national Keynesianism along Sarkozyan lines, however, is not the only alternative available to global elites. Given the need for global legitimacy to promote their interests in a world where the balance of power is shifting towards the South, western elites might find more attractive an offshoot of European Social Democracy and New Deal liberalism that one might call “Global Social Democracy” or GSD.

Even before the full unfolding of the financial crisis, partisans of GSD had already been positioning it as alternative to neoliberal globalization in response to the stresses and strains being provoked by the latter. One personality associated with it is British Prime Minister Gordon Brown, who led the European response to the financial meltdown via the partial nationalization of the banks. Widely regarded as the godfather of the “Make Poverty History” campaign in the United Kingdom, Brown, while he was still the British chancellor, proposed what he called an “alliance capitalism” between market and state institutions that would reproduce at the global stage what he said Franklin Roosevelt did for the national economy: “securing the benefits of the market while taming its excesses.” This must be a system, continued Brown, that “captures the full benefits of global markets and capital flows, minimizes the risk of disruption, maximizes opportunity for all, and lifts up the most vulnerable – in short, the restoration in the international economy of public purpose and high ideals.”

Joining Brown in articulating the Global Social Democratic discourse has been a diverse group consisting of, among others, the economist Jeffrey Sachs, George Soros, former UN Secretary General Kofi Annan, the sociologist David Held, Nobel laureate Joseph Stiglitz, and even Bill Gates. There are, of course, differences of nuance in the positions of these people, but the thrust of their perspectives is the same: to bring about a reformed social order and a reinvigorated ideological consensus for global capitalism.

Among the key propositions advanced by partisans of GSD are the following:

  • Globalization is essentially beneficial for the world; the neoliberals have simply botched the job of managing it and selling it to the public;
  • It is urgent to save globalization from the neoliberals because globalization is reversible and may, in fact, already be in the process of being reversed;
  • Growth and equity may come into conflict, in which case one must prioritize equity;
  • Free trade may not, in fact, be beneficial in the long run and may leave the majority poor, so it is important for trade arrangements to be subject to social and environmental conditions;
  • Unilateralism must be avoided while fundamental reform of the multilateral institutions and agreements must be undertaken – a process that might involve dumping or neutralizing some of them, like the WTO’s Trade-Related Intellectual Property Rights Agreement (TRIPs);
  • Global social integration, or reducing inequalities both within and across countries, must accompany global market integration;
  • The global debt of developing countries must be cancelled or radically reduced, so the resulting savings can be used to stimulate the local economy, thus contributing to global reflation;
  • Poverty and environmental degradation are so severe that a massive aid program or “Marshall Plan” from the North to the South must be mounted within the framework of the “Millennium Development Goals”;
  • A “Second Green Revolution” must be put into motion, especially in Africa, through the widespread adoption of genetically engineered seeds.
  • Huge investments must be devoted to push the global economy along more environmentally sustainable paths, with government taking a leading role (“Green Keynesianism” or “Green Capitalism”);
  • Military action to solve problems must be deemphasized in favor of diplomacy and “soft power,” although humanitarian military intervention in situations involving genocide must be undertaken.

The Limits of Global Social Democracy

Global Social Democracy has not received much critical attention, perhaps because many progressives are still fighting the last war, that is, against neoliberalism. A critique is urgent, and not only because GSD is neoliberalism’s most likely successor. More important, although GSD has some positive elements, it has, like the old Social Democratic Keynesian paradigm, a number of problematic features.

A critique might begin by highlighting problems with four central elements in the GSD perspective.

First, GSD shares neoliberalism’s bias for globalization, differentiating itself mainly by promising to promote globalization better than the neoliberals. This amounts to saying, however, that simply by adding the dimension of “global social integration,” an inherently socially and ecologically destructive and disruptive process can be made palatable and acceptable. GSD assumes that people really want to be part of a functionally integrated global economy where the barriers between the national and the international have disappeared. But would they not in fact prefer to be part of economies that are subject to local control and are buffered from the vagaries of the international economy? Indeed, today’s swift downward trajectory of interconnected economies underscores the validity of one of anti-globalization movement’s key criticisms of the globalization process..

Second, GSD shares neoliberalism’s preference for the market as the principal mechanism for production, distribution, and consumption, differentiating itself mainly by advocating state action to address market failures. The kind of globalization the world needs, according to Jeffrey Sachs in The End of Poverty, would entail “harnessing…the remarkable power of trade and investment while acknowledging and addressing limitations through compensatory collective action.” This is very different from saying that the citizenry and civil society must make the key economic decisions and the market, like the state bureaucracy, is only one mechanism of implementation of democratic decision-making.

Third, GSD is a technocratic project, with experts hatching and pushing reforms on society from above, instead of being a participatory project where initiatives percolate from the ground up.

Fourth, GSD, while critical of neoliberalism, accepts the framework of monopoly capitalism, which rests fundamentally on deriving profit from the exploitative extraction of surplus value from labor, is driven from crisis to crisis by inherent tendencies toward overproduction, and tends to push the environment to its limits in its search for profitability. Like traditional Keynesianism in the national arena, GSD seeks in the global arena a new class compromise that is accompanied by new methods to contain or minimize capitalism’s tendency toward crisis. Just as the old Social Democracy and the New Deal stabilized national capitalism, the historical function of Global Social Democracy is to iron out the contradictions of contemporary global capitalism and to relegitimize it after the crisis and chaos left by neoliberalism. GSD is, at root, about social management.

Obama has a talent for rhetorically bridging different political discourses. He is also a “blank slate” when it comes to economics. Like FDR, he is not bound to the formulas of the ancien regime. He is a pragmatist whose key criterion is success at social management. As such, he is uniquely positioned to lead this ambitious reformist enterprise.

Reveille for Progressives

While progressives were engaged in full-scale war against neoliberalism, reformist thinking was percolating in critical establishment circles. This thinking is now about to become policy, and progressives must work double time to engage it. It is not just a matter of moving from criticism to prescription. The challenge is to overcome the limits to the progressive political imagination imposed by the aggressiveness of the neoliberal challenge in the 1980s combined with the collapse of the bureaucratic socialist regimes in the early 1990s. Progressives should boldly aspire once again to paradigms of social organization that unabashedly aim for equality and participatory democratic control of both the national economy and the global economy as prerequisites for collective and individual liberation.

Like the old post-war Keynesian regime, Global Social Democracy is about social management. In contrast, the progressive perspective is about social liberation.

[Walden Bello is a columnist for Foreign Policy In Focus, a senior analyst at the Bangkok-based Focus on the Global South, president of the Freedom from Debt Coalition, and a professor of sociology at the University of the Philippines.]

Source / Foreign Policy in Focus / Originally posted Dec. 24, 2008.

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Ragblogapalooza!

If you’re down Austin way…

Please come by and say Hey.
RAGBLOGAPALOOZA: A benefit for The Rag Blog
Featuring The Melancholy Ramblers
Tuesday, Feb. 3, 6-9 pm
Scholz Garten, 1607 San Jacinto St., Austin

Click on image to enlarge.

Poster designed by James Retherford / The Rag Blog

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Loving: She’ll Be Comin’ ‘Round the Mountain


Cartoon by Charlie Loving / The Rag Blog

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Foodie Friday: The Bacon Explosion

I know, I know – I’m two days late. So, I forgot, but this is so worth spreading around that I’m posting it anyway. Just think – 5,000 calories and 500 grams of fat in one little dish !! It’s utterly mind-boggling – pork, pork, and more pork !! Only in America ….

Richard Jehn / The Rag Blog

The Bacon Explosion is a rolled concoction that can be baked or cooked in a smoker. Photo: Don Ipock for The New York Times.

Take Bacon. Add Sausage. Blog.
By Damon Darlin / January 27, 2009

FOR a nation seeking unity, a recipe has swept the Internet that seems to unite conservatives and liberals, gun owners and foodies, carnivores and … well, not vegetarians and health fanatics.

Certainly not the vegetarians and health fanatics.

This recipe is the Bacon Explosion, modestly called by its inventors “the BBQ Sausage Recipe of all Recipes.” The instructions for constructing this massive torpedo-shaped amalgamation of two pounds of bacon woven through and around two pounds of sausage and slathered in barbecue sauce first appeared last month on the Web site of a team of Kansas City competition barbecuers. They say a diverse collection of well over 16,000 Web sites have linked to the recipe, celebrating, or sometimes scolding, its excessiveness. A fresh audience could be ready to discover it on Super Bowl Sunday.

Where once homegrown recipes were disseminated in Ann Landers columns or Junior League cookbooks, new media have changed — and greatly accelerated — the path to popularity. Few recipes have cruised down this path as fast or as far as the Bacon Explosion, and this turns out to be no accident. One of its inventors works as an Internet marketer, and had a sophisticated understanding of how the latest tools of promotion could be applied to a four-pound roll of pork.

The Bacon Explosion was born shortly before Christmas in Roeland Park, Kan., in Jason Day’s kitchen. He and Aaron Chronister, who anchor a barbecue team called Burnt Finger BBQ, were discussing a challenge from a bacon lover they received on their Twitter text-messaging service: What could the barbecuers do with bacon?

At the same time, Mr. Chronister wanted to get attention for their Web site, BBQAddicts.com. More traffic would bring in more advertising income, which they needed to fund a hobby that can cost thousands of dollars.

Mr. Day, a systems administrator who has been barbecuing since college, suggested doing something with a pile of sausage. “It’s a variation of what’s called a fattie in the barbecue community,” Mr. Day said. “But we took it to the extreme.”

He bought about $20 worth of bacon and Italian sausage from a local meat market. As it lay on the counter, he thought of weaving strips of raw bacon into a mat. The two spackled the bacon mat with a layer of sausage, covered that with a crunchy layer of cooked bacon, and rolled it up tight.

They then stuck the roll — containing at least 5,000 calories and 500 grams of fat — in the Good-One Open Range backyard smoker that they use for practice. (In competitions, they use a custom-built smoker designed by the third member of the team, Bryant Gish, who was not present at the creation of the Bacon Explosion.)

Mr. Day said his wife laughed the whole time. “She’s very supportive of my hobby,” he said.

The two men posted their adventure on their Web site two days before Christmas. On Christmas Day, traffic on the site spiked to more than 27,000 visitors.

Mr. Chronister explained that the Bacon Explosion “got so much traction on the Web because it seems so over the top.” But Mr. Chronister, an Internet marketer from Kansas City, Mo., did what he could to help it along. He first used Twitter to send short text messages about the recipe to his 1,200 Twitter followers, many of them fellow Internet marketers with extensive social networks. He also posted links on social networking sites. “I used a lot of my connections to get it out there and to push it,” he said.

The Bacon Explosion posting has since been viewed about 390,000 times. It first found a following among barbecue fans, but quickly spread to sites run by outdoor enthusiasts, off-roaders and hunters. (Several proposed venison-sausage versions.) It also got mentions on the Web site of Air America, the liberal radio network, and National Review, the conservative magazine. Jonah Goldberg at NationalReview.com wrote, “There must be a reason one reader after another sends me this every couple hours.” Conservatives4palin.com linked, too.

So did regular people. A man from Wooster, Ohio, wrote that friends had served it at a bon voyage party before his 10-day trip to Israel, where he expected bacon to be in short supply. “It wasn’t planned as a send-off for me to Israel, but with all of the pork involved it sure seemed like it,” he wrote.

About 30 people sent in pictures of their Explosions. One sent a video of the log catching fire on a grill.

Mr. Day said that whether it is cooked in an oven or in a smoker, the rendered fat from the bacon keeps the sausage juicy. But in the smoker, he said, the smoke heightens the flavor of the meats.

Nick Pummell, a barbecue hobbyist in Las Vegas, learned of the recipe from Mr. Chronister’s Twittering. He made his first Explosion on Christmas Day, when he and a group of friends also had a more traditional turkey. “This was kind of the dessert part,” he said. “You need to call 911 after you are done. It was awesome.”

Mr. Chronister said the main propellant behind the Bacon Explosion’s spread was a Web service called StumbleUpon, which steers Web users toward content they are likely to find interesting. Readers tell the service about their professional interests or hobbies, and it serves up sites to match them. More than 7 million people worldwide use the service in an attempt to duplicate serendipity, the company says.

Mr. Chronister intended to send the post to StumbleUpon, but one of his readers beat him to it. It appeared on the front page of StumbleUpon for three days, which further increased traffic.

Mr. Chronister also littered his site with icons for Digg, Del.icio.us and other sites in which readers vote on posts or Web pages they like, helping to spread the word. “Alright this is going on Digg,” a commenter wrote minutes after the Explosion was posted. “Already there,” someone else answered.

Some have claimed that the Bacon Explosion is derivative. A writer known as the Headless Blogger posted a similar roll of sausage and bacon in mid-December. Mr. Chronister and Mr. Day do not claim to have invented the concept.

But they do vigorously defend their method. When one commenter dared to suggest that the two hours in the smoker could be slashed to a mere 30 minutes if the roll was first cooked in a microwave oven, Mr. Chronister snapped back. “Microwave??? Seriously? First, the proteins in the meats will bind around 140 degrees, so putting it on the smoker after that is pointless as it won’t absorb any smoke flavor,” he responded on his site. “This requires patience and some attention. It’s not McDonald’s.”

Source / The New York Times

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Sunday Snapshot : Present, Absent, Dead

Palestinian boy Mohammed Kutkut, 14, right, covers his face as he sits next to the name sign of his killed friend Ahed Qaddas in the Fakhoura boys school in Jebaliya, northern Gaza strip, Saturday, Jan. 24, 2009. AP Photo/Anja Niedringhaus.

Source / Yannone

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Greenwald: The Socioeconomic and Racial Inequities in Our Justice System


The definition of a “two-tiered justice system”
By Glenn Greenwald / January 28, 2009

Aside from the intrinsic dangers and injustices of arguing for immunity for high-level government officials who commit felonies (such as illegal eavesdropping, obstruction of justice, torture and other war crimes), it’s the total selectivity of the rationale underlying that case which makes it so corrupt. Defenders of Bush officials sing in unison: We shouldn’t get caught up in the past. We shouldn’t be driven by vengeance and retribution. We shouldn’t punish people whose motives in committing crimes weren’t really that bad.

There are countries in the world which actually embrace those premises for all of their citizens, and whose justice system consequently reflects a lenient approach to crime and punishment. The United States is not one of those countries. In fact, for ordinary citizens (the ones invisible and irrelevant to Ruth Marcus, Stuart Taylor, Jon Barry and David Broder), the exact opposite is true:

Homeless man gets 15 years for stealing $100

A homeless man robbed a Louisiana bank and took a $100 bill. After feeling remorseful, he surrendered to police the next day. The judge sentenced him to 15 years in prison.

Roy Brown, 54, robbed the Capital One bank in Shreveport, Louisiana in December 2007. He approached the teller with one of his hands under his jacket and told her that it was a robbery.

The teller handed Brown three stacks of bill but he only took a single $100 bill and returned the remaining money back to her. He said that he was homeless and hungry and left the bank.

The next day he surrendered to the police voluntarily and told them that his mother didn’t raise him that way.

Brown told the police he needed the money to stay at the detox center and had no other place to stay and was hungry.

In Caddo District Court, he pleaded guilty. The judge sentenced him to 15 years in prison for first degree robbery.

Under federal law, “the simple possession of just 5 grams of crack cocaine, the weight of about two sugar packets, subjects a defendant to a mandatory five-year prison term.” In Alabama, the average sentence for marijuana possession — an offense for which most Western countries almost never imprison their citizens — is 8.4 years. Until recently, the state of Florida “impose[d] mandatory-minimum sentences of 25 years for illegally carrying a pillbox-worth of drugs such as Oxycontin” and still imposes shockingly Draconian mandatory sentences even for marijuana offenses.

Our political class has embraced mandatory minimum sentencing schemes as a way to eliminate mercy and sentencing flexibility for ordinary people who break the law (as opposed to Bush officials who do). The advocacy group Families Against Mandatory Minimums details just some of the grotesque injustices here, including decades of imprisonment for petty drug dealing which even many judges who are forced to impose the sentences find disgraceful. Currently in the U.S., close to 7,000 people are serving sentences of 25 years to life under our merciless “three-strikes-and-out” laws — which the Supreme Court upheld as constitutional in a 5-4 rulingincluding half for nonviolent offenses and many for petty theft.

As I’ve noted many times before, the United States imprisons more of its population than any other country on the planet, and most astoundingly, we account for less than 5% of the world’s population yet close to 25% of the world’s prisoners are located in American prisons. As The New York Times‘ Adam Liptak put it in an excellent and thorough April, 2008 article, revealing how self-absorbed and hypocritical are the cries for mercy, understanding and “moving on” being made by media stars and political elites on behalf of lawbreaking Bush officials:

Indeed, the United States leads the world in producing prisoners, a reflection of a relatively recent and now entirely distinctive American approach to crime and punishment. Americans are locked up for crimes — from writing bad checks to using drugs — that would rarely produce prison sentences in other countries. And in particular they are kept incarcerated far longer than prisoners in other nations. . . .

Whatever the reason, the gap between American justice and that of the rest of the world is enormous and growing.

It used to be that Europeans came to the United States to study its prison systems. They came away impressed.

“In no country is criminal justice administered with more mildness than in the United States,” Alexis de Tocqueville, who toured American penitentiaries in 1831, wrote in “Democracy in America.”

No more.

Far from serving as a model for the world, contemporary America is viewed with horror,” James Whitman, a specialist in comparative law at Yale, wrote last year in Social Research. “Certainly there are no European governments sending delegations to learn from us about how to manage prisons.”

Prison sentences here have become “vastly harsher than in any other country to which the United States would ordinarily be compared,” Michael Tonry, a leading authority on crime policy, wrote in “The Handbook of Crime and Punishment.”

Indeed, said Vivien Stern, a research fellow at the prison studies center in London, the American incarceration rate has made the United States “a rogue state, a country that has made a decision not to follow what is a normal Western approach” . . . .

The American character — self-reliant, independent, judgmental — also plays a role.

America is a comparatively tough place, which puts a strong emphasis on individual responsibility,” Whitman of Yale wrote. “That attitude has shown up in the American criminal justice of the last 30 years.”

And that’s to say nothing of the brutal and excessive tactics used by our increasingly militarized police state (Digby’s writing on the use of tasers is indispensable) and the inhumane conditions that characterize our highly profitable prison state.

Under all circumstances, arguing that high political officials should be immunized from prosecution when they commit felonies such as illegal eavesdropping and torture would be both destructive and wrong [not to mention, in the case of the latter crimes, a clear violation of a treaty which the U.S. (under Ronald Reagan) signed and thereafter ratified]. But what makes it so much worse, so much more corrupted, is the fact that this “ignore-the-past-and-forget-retribution” rationale is invoked by our media elites only for a tiny, special class of people — our political leaders — while the exact opposite rationale (“ignore their lame excuses, lock them up and throw away the key”) is applied to everyone else. That, by definition, is what a “two-tiered system of justice” means and that, more than anything else, is what characterizes (and sustains) deeply corrupt political systems. That’s the two-tiered system which, for obvious reasons, our political and media elites are now vehemently arguing must be preserved.

* * * * *

See also this post from earlier today on the superb 60 Minutes report on expanding West Bank settlements.

UPDATE: Last week, GOP Senators threatened to hold up Eric Holder’s confirmation as Attorney General unless he vowed, in advance, that he would not prosecute any Bush officials for having ordered or perpetrated the torture of detainees. Today, Holder’s nomination was approved by the Senate Judiciary Committee by a vote of 17-2, and according to The Washington Times, Sen. Kit Bond is claiming that Holder “assured him privately that Mr. Obama’s Justice Department will not prosecute former Bush officials involved in the interrogations program.” This story depends upon the credibility of both The Washington Times and Sen. Bond, so who knows if it’s really true, but would anyone be surprised if it were true?

Several people in comments have highlighted the socioeconomic and racial inequities in our justice system, which are both numerous and substantial. But that’s a separate issue. It’s one thing for a wealthy defendant to have a higher chance of acquittal in a criminal trial because a private lawyer can devote more time and resources to the case than a public defender can, or for an African-American defendant to have a higher chance of conviction because of juror bias. But it’s another thing entirely for a small class of people — political leaders — to be granted immunity in advance from prosecution of any kind, even when they commit grave felonies in the course of their duties.

UPDATE II: Marcy Wheeler expresses some insightful skepticism about the Bond report. As Washington Times reporters go, the one who is reporting Bond’s comments (Eli Lake) is relatively reliable, at least as far as this sort of reporting is concerned, so it’s possible, as Marcy says, that Bond is distorting Holder’s comments (it’s also possible that Holder sent the clear signals to Bond that Holder knew Bond wanted to hear while maintaining plausible deniability that he made such a commitment, which would obviously be improper). In any event, something caused virtually all of the Committee Republicans to vote to confirm Holder today, and Holder should obviously be asked about this claim from Bond.

UPDATE III: Both Sen. Leahy and Sen. Whitehouse express serious doubts about the Bond/Washington Times report, noting (correctly) that it would be a highly improper act (to put it mildly) for a Senator to demand, and for a nominated Attorney General to agree, that no prosecutions will be pursued in a specific case in exchange for the Senator’s support for the nomination. That said, it’s hardly inconceivable that Holder said things to Bond which, by design or effect, implicitly conveyed to Bond the assurances he wanted to hear, or at least enabled Bond to be convinced that he got those assurances. Either way, it is Holder who should be asked very clearly whether he made the statements to Bond that Bond claims he made.

UPDATE IV: At his new Washington Post blog, Greg Sargent reports that a Holder aide — rather emphatically — denies that Holder made any such comments to Bond: “Eric Holder has not made any commitments about who would or would not be prosecuted. He explained his position to Senator Bond as he did in the public hearing and in his responses to written questions.” Greg notes that Holder’s public comments explicitly left open the possibility of prosecutions and, referring to my statement above that “something caused virtually all of the Committee Republicans to vote to confirm Holder today,” Greg writes: “It seems unlikely that Bond’s version of events is it, however.” I agree; it is unlikely.

Source / Salon

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Hirschhorn: The Greed Tax

Great idea, but this is definitely a post-revolution happening. At the least, I have mailed this article to my member of Congress and both Senators, telling them I believe this is a proposal that reflects true justice. We’ll see what comes of that!!

Richard Jehn / The Rag Blog


Tax Solution to Wretched Greed
By Joel S. Hirschhorn / January 30, 2009

A law should be immediately passed that imposes a new special federal income tax of 99 percent on all income in excess of $500,000 annually for single taxpayers and $1 million for couples, starting for 2008 income. Call it a greed tax.

By now most Americans have experienced extreme disgust upon hearing about the nearly $20 billion in bonuses given to people in New York City’s financial sector at the end of 2008. After sending the nation into the current economic black hole there is no way of comprehending the audacity of financial company executives in giving themselves and their colleagues shameful rewards for abysmal and disgraceful performance. Other than screaming and moaning about all this dishonorable behavior what should the Obama administration and Congress do?

Here is the solution that the overwhelming majority of Americans should demand: A law should be immediately passed that imposes a new special federal income tax of 99 percent on all income in excess of $500,000 annually for single taxpayers and $1 million for couples, starting for 2008 income. Call it a greed tax. Call it justice. Call it getting even for too many years of uncontrolled greed that has given the nation nothing but economic injustice and inequality, and given capitalism a very bad name. Call it a sensible way to raise federal revenues to help offset the cancerous national debt.

Considering that nearly all of the people who received the 2008 bonuses also received high salaries and even larger bonuses in previous years, and the many billions of dollars of federal dollars going into bailouts of companies, there should be no qualms about such a greed tax. For example, in the two previous years a total of about $70 billion in bonuses were received by these greedy financial sector elites.

Even outside the financial sector, executives also received obscene bonuses in 2008 despite terrible performance. The compensation research firm Equilar, for example, reports that the average performance-based bonuses for top executives, other than the chief executive, at 132 companies with revenues of more than $1 billion increased by 14 percent, to an average of $265,594, in the 2008 fiscal year, in addition to high salaries.

As just one of countless examples of greed, consider that the CEO of Hewlett-Packard, Mark Hurd, received $42.5 million in 2008 pay. He had received over $20 million in signing inducements in 2005. During his tenure some 40,000 jobs have been eliminated at H-P. And consider this nice little perk: In 2008 the company also paid out about $181,000 for his business meals.

And then there is the case of Robert Rubin at Citigroup. During his nine years there the company lost over $65 billion. What did Rubin earn? He pocketed $126 million. What did he say when he left? “I bet there’s not a single year where I couldn’t have gone somewhere else and made more.”

Enough already. Drastic action is needed to achieve some justice. With all the attention on the Obama stimulus plan based on spending money the nation does not really have or can afford, it is appropriate to use this proposal to raise more revenues. Tax greed!

Source / Nolan Chart

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