Saturday, November 27, 2010

Economy Dying Like Soviet Union Did GDP 63 Percent Casino Financial Matt Taibbi

Tags: Economy Financials 63 Percent GDP Scam Artists Part of Power Structure Ayn Rand Greenspan Taibbi

Kawakami: Matt Taibbi is the reason I subscribe to Rolling Stone. The recent issue lists the favorite songs by various singers. His articles are superb.


The SEC settles most lawsuits against the Wall Street firms because their lawyers are better than the government and they do a document dump that may take years to go through to say fuck you!


It warmed my heart that the FBI arrested some inside traders and likely has much further to go. They should also put the hedge fund owners in jail too! They can raid offices and pick up the important documents before shredding occurs or mixing documents occurs.


Jim Kawakami, Nov 21, 2010, http://jimboguy.blogspot.com



Matt Taibbi on Deluded Tea Partiers, Ayn Rand and How the U.S. Is Like the Soviet Union

Every country has scam artists, but only in a dying country are they part of the power structure.

November 21, 2010 |

pastedGraphic.pdf

Flickr Creative Commons / Lomo Cam

Photo Credit: Flickr Creative Commons / Lomo Cam

The United States has become mired in a complex web of economic instruments that are directly tied to the so-called “bubble” economy. Some economists held them as potential means to assist Americans buy homes, but others think these instruments have merely enabled fraudulent behavior that wrecked the U.S. economy. Making matters worse is the dearth of understanding among many in the public and the exploitation of that misunderstanding by particular politicians, according to author and journalist Matt Taibbi. His latest book, Griftopia: Bubble Machines, Vampire Squids and the Long Con That is Breaking America, identifies some of the personalities and looming problems within the troubled financial and political system.

Maria Armoudian: In Griftopia’s first chapter, you connect three important elements that are exacerbating our political and economic crisis. One is politicians’ rhetoric that feeds into the misunderstandings. Another is that mass media, when covering politics, tend to focus on the trivial, rather than the meaningful.

Matt Taibbi: Sure and I was part of that. The campaign press are trained to cover politics like a sports story because it’s a successful way to bring eyeballs to television. You present it as an ongoing conflict between these two great parties, red and blue, conservative and liberal, and the rhetoric is more and more heated with each successive electoral cycle. And we present it like a World Wrestling Entertainment smack-down showdown. Even if you watch the actual political shows, they’re even structured exactly like ESPN’s football analysis programs, where you have the anchor guy on one side and there are four commentators, two from each team. That’s the way we do the news; that’s the way we do politics, and we’re not really trained to look at a deeper, more nuanced story. That’s the reason we missed this finance thing because it doesn’t fit into that formula at all. It’s very complicated. It’s also not partisan. It’s not the fault of one side or the other. But it makes it hard for us to digest.

MA: And the rhetoric that you find that has been used over and over from politicians. Sarah Palin’s approach, you said, was right out of the playbook of Richard Nixon.

MT: Right. This is the whole silent majority idea is playing on this kind of Southern white resentment, this idea that, “we obey the law, we pay taxes, we work and somehow it’s all these other people that are reaping the benefits, these people who don’t want to work, these people who are immigrants, and they want to come and steal our social services.” That’s the same kind of idea, the silent majority. Hillary Clinton used some of the same rhetoric in her campaign as well, the “forgotten people” that she talked about. This rhetoric is very useful in getting people to not focus on what happened on Wall Street. It was creating resentment between white middle-class people. And lower-income minorities and the rich New Yorkers were never in the picture anywhere.

MA: How does the Tea Party fit in with your overall assessment of our economic disasters?

MT: I wrote Griftopia really as a crime book about what happened on Wall Street in the last ten or fifteen years. But the politics are an element of the crime, and there had to be a mechanism through which they could get ordinary people to not pay attention to what was going on. To me, the Tea Party was an example of exactly how that works. I see it as a phenomenon where Wall Street has found a way to convince ordinary people to back their political agenda and their deregulatory aims, under the rubric of “we’re going to get the government off our backs,” and it’s really, in the end, it’s just going to be off their backs, but ordinary people believe in it. … http://www.alternet.org/teaparty/148941/matt_taibbi_on_deluded_tea_partiers%2C_ayn_rand_and_how_the_u.s._is_like_the_soviet_union/

Friday, November 26, 2010

Religion Half of World Thinks religious beliefs promote intolerance, exacerbate ethnic divisions and impede social progress

Tags: Religion Force Good or Bad, Half of World Thinks religious beliefs promote intolerance, exacerbate ethnic divisions and impede social progress

Note the huge difference in religiosity between the United States and neighbor Canada. Amazing! Even Catholic countries are lower than the USA. Also interesting is that Turkey, a Muslim country is less religious than the USA.

Former Prime Minister Blair who is a conservative Catholic is not a typical British where only 29 percent believe religion has been good for the world. I think the statistics correlate well with the rate of ignorance of history and poverty. Sophisticated Belgium which is half Catholic if I recall correctly, has about the lowest as well as France.

In Pope dominated society of Italy, I was surprised that it was as low as 50 percent. I know that men there have sexually harassed essentially all the women and girls there so religion has put no restraint and still reflects the male dominated society.

Those who read accurate historical accounts, neither the Catholic or Protestant churches act like Christ, but more like thugs. Imagine both sides killing those with other religions with abandon and six Popes in a roll taking bribes, having parties, burning at the stake anyone who said earth was not at the center of the earth except Galileo who was a long time friend of the Pope.

Religions were mostly created to control people by the leaders even at the small village stage. Brain study shows that those who have less prefrontal control of emotions, especially many highly religious persons, tend to commit crimes such as we have seen in our current Supreme Court.

Jim Kawakami, Nov 26, 2010, http://jimboguy.blogspot.com

The world is deeply divided on the question of whether religion is a force for good, a survey by Ipsos Reid suggests.


Is religion a force for good?

Country

% who agree

Saudi Arabia

92

Indonesia

91

India

69

United States

65

Russia

59

Italy

50

Turkey

43

Canada

36

Australia

32

Great Britain

29

Japan

29

France

24

Belgium

21

Sweden

19

Source: Ipsos Reid


The pollster found that 48 per cent of the more than 18,000 people it reached online in 23 countries agreed that "religion provides the common values and ethical foundations that diverse societies need to thrive in the 21st century."

A bare majority — 52 per cent — thought otherwise. They agreed with the sentiment that "religious beliefs promote intolerance, exacerbate ethnic divisions and impede social progress."

There was wide regional variation in the results. Respondents in Saudi Arabia and Indonesia, where there are large Moslem populations, overwhelmingly said they believed religion was a force for good, while respondents in European countries tended to disagree with that.

About two-thirds of Americans polled thought religion was a force for good, but only 36 per cent of Canadians thought the same.

The survey was commissioned as a backdrop to a much-anticipated debate on religion Friday night in Toronto between former British prime minister Tony Blair and writer Christopher Hitchens.

Be it resolved

The two men will debate the question of whether religion is a force for good in the world.

Taking the "No" side is Hitchens, author of God is Not Great: How Religion Poisons Everything.pastedGraphic.pdfFormer British Prime Minister Tony Blair and author Christopher Hitchens meet ahead of their debate on religion in Toronto Friday. (Mark Blinch/Reuters)

The avowed atheist has written that organized religion is "violent, irrational, intolerant, allied to racism, tribalism, and bigotry, invested in ignorance and hostile to free inquiry, contemptuous of women and coercive toward children."

Hitchens, who is battling terminal esophageal cancer, added that if "religious instruction were not allowed until the child had attained the age of reason, we would be living in a quite different world."

Blair will argue the opposite side. He converted to Roman Catholicism after leaving 10 Downing Street in 2007.

Blair has spoken often about the role of faith in his life since leaving office and has formed the Tony Blair Faith Foundation, which promotes "respect and understanding" among the world's major religions.

He will argue an understanding of faith is necessary in a world of globalization and rapid social change.

"Religious faith has a major part to play in shaping the values which guide the modern world, and can and should be a force for progress," he said earlier.

Debate sold out

The moderator of the debate said it's not about the existence of God.

“We have asked Mr. Blair and Mr. Hitchens to wrestle with the more immediate question facing developed and developing nations: is religion a force for peace or conflict in the modern world?” said Rudyard Griffiths, co-organizer of the Munk Debates.

The debate, at Roy Thomson Hall, quickly sold out. A live video stream of the debate can be watched online for $4.99.

The Munk Debates are a series created through the Aurea Foundation, a Canadian charity established by businessman and philanthropist Peter Munk.

Notes on the poll: Ipsos Reid said its online panel included respondents aged 18-64 in Canada and the United States and 16-64 in all other countries. The respondents were polled between Sept. 7 and 23. About 1,000 were polled in each of Canada and the United States.

http://www.cbc.ca/canada/story/2010/11/26/religion-good-evil-poll-hitchens-blair.html

With files from The Canadian Press

Wall Street Investors Lower Wages for American Workers Costco Trader Joe’s No

Tags: Affluent Wealthy Investors Lower Wages for American Workers, Wall Street Wrong Costco Trader Joe, Pay Fair Wages, Flexibility, Training, Profits Increase

Because the government provided cheap education, cheap loans, and good schools, seniors who use to be the poorest people in the country became the only non-affluent group to have a reasonably good life, if not marvelous retirement. Of course half the senior or more still barely get by on an average of $14,000 per year of Social Security and are hard pressed to pay the bill for their illness largely due to Republican rule over the last 30 years including the Clinton years.


Why do 65 or more percent of Seniors vote Republican? Because as Alan Simpson (Wyoming) yesterday called Seniors now the greediest generation which many liberals condemned, but I largely agree. A majority of seniors almost always vote Republican because they are greedy and want to get more for themselves no matter what happens to others. They are condemning the government handouts which they generously got to help them move up the ladder.


Even about the worse high school in Los Angeles which I attended now approaches that as one of the better ones. The same high school now is overcrowded and almost no one even has the hope of finishing college. Why? Reagan and proposition 10 which kept property taxes from going up due to inflation and increasing costs. Billionaires not pay less taxes than new owners with much smaller properties as do the corporations. What a disaster! Some have condemned the Depression and war years born seniors taking handouts throughout their lives and then breaking the ladder.


Yes, I agree, many seniors are one of the greediest in our history! Include half the Baby Boomers too!


Jim Kawakami, Nov 26, 2010, http://jimboguy.blogspot.com


Higher Wages, Profit Sharing and Greater Flexibility Benefit All Employees -- And the Company Bottom Line Too

Costco is so convinced that its policy is sound that it has kept paying better wages than rivals, even as Wall Street has pressured the company to conform to industry standards. Trader Joe's is another large company known for paying its entry-level workers well and benefiting as a result. …


Higher Wages, Profit Sharing and Greater Flexibility Benefit All Employees -- And the Company Bottom Line Too

November 26, 2010 |

http://www.alternet.org/story/148975/higher_wages%2C_profit_sharing_and_greater_flexibility_benefit_all_employees_--_and_the_company_bottom_line_too

That's not as crazy as it sounds. A growing body of evidence is revealing that companies that pay fair wages, and offer flexibility and training to even entry-level and lower-skilled employees, do better than those that don't. A vast number of businesses mistakenly assume that their lowest-wage workers are easily replaced or not worth investing in, but those that do the right thing soon find that they're doing the right thing for their bottom lines. It's time that this becomes a business norm.

As the economy slowly recovers, it's no secret that companies would like to boost productivity and profits. Many think the best way to do so is to slash costs. As an entrepreneur and business owner, though, I'd like to suggest another idea: Pay your employees more.

Certainly, in tough times, higher wages, profit-sharing and training seem like optional perks. But here's the other side of the story: When you invest in people, they respond by performing well. In her rigorously researched book, Profit at the Bottom of the Ladder, Jody Heymann presents a well-documented lineup of businesses that have flourished in large part because their management practices include respecting and empowering their lowest-paid workers. Jenkins Brick, a major U.S. brick manufacturer in Alabama, credits higher wages and profit-sharing with increased productivity and quality, as well as reduced turnover and lowered accident rates. Dancing Deer, a Boston-based high-end baked goods company, opens the financial books, and makes training and stock options available to all employees because they are convinced that this gives the firm a competitive advantage. Specifically, management credits these practices with improving sales, boosting productivity and helping them attract talent.

Perhaps a more well-known example is Costco. The company pays more for an entry-level position than Sam's Club (Wal-Mart's wholesale branch), gives even part-time workers at least a week's notice about their schedules and offers all employees the option of getting on the management track. Costco also makes thousands of dollars more per employee than Sam's Club, which suggests their investment pays off. Costco is so convinced that its policy is sound that it has kept paying better wages than rivals, even as Wall Street has pressured the company to conform to industry standards. Trader Joe's is another large company known for paying its entry-level workers well and benefiting as a result.

Yet despite the strong evidence we have that an employee who is paid fairly and treated respectfully will significantly outperform an employee who is underpaid and ordered around like a child, too many employers are unable to resist the apparent bargain of paying less per hour or buck the traditions of an authoritarian work culture. They tell themselves that standing at a cash register, working in an assembly line, or answering phones is so simple that anyone can do it — that workers doing these jobs can easily be replaced. And this shortsighted approach costs them. Simple math does not capture the human dynamics.

As an employer, I can personally bear witness to both the quantifiable and the more subtle benefits of treating everyone in the workplace with respect and dignity. The people who answered the phone and greeted visitors at our front desk at Berkeley Systems, the software company I co-founded, were at the bottom of our pay scale, but we knew that they also created people's first impressions of our organization. If they felt downtrodden, the first impression of our business was likely to be merely adequate. We needed the first face of our business to be enthusiastic and helpful.

At MomsRising.org, an advocacy group working for greater economic security for families, we offer flexible work hours, ask each member of our team to contribute to our decision-making processes, and look for pathways for our entry-level positions to grow into roles with more responsibility.

Wednesday, November 24, 2010

Climate Change UN Report Nov 24, 2010 Recession Not Slowed CO2 Rate Increase

Tags: Climate Change Carbon Dioxide Methane Permafrost Food Water Shortages Time Running Out

Carbon dioxide in the atmosphere was nearly constant at about 280 ppm 10,000 years ago. Since 1750 atmospheric CO2 has increased by 38%, primarily from combustion of fossil fuels, deforestation, and change in land use.

Some scientists suspect that the contribution of CO2 and methane from the melting permafrost is contributing to no change in the rate of increasing CO2 in our atmosphere in spite of less fuel use by Americans during the severe recession in 2008-2009.

The facts are conclusive, but will the world act in time. Now it looks like we will suffer the irreversible climate change well into the twenty-second and well into the twenty-third centuries.

Storable foods are still relatively cheap, but problems with crop yield decrease sharply due to excess storms or droughts in the Midwest, Florida, and California and worldwide such has occurred in Russia, Europe, and Asia, Food and Water will likely run out before oil. Increasing use of Coal and fracking gas will destroy our water, air, and land.

I don’t see convincing reasons for being optimistic for longterm comfortable survival of the human race. When needed commodities are scarce, we will likely have centuries of wars and smaller conflicts between neighbors and wholesale emigration to lands where they can survive.

Of course if you believe that you will sent to paradise when you die, why worry?

Jim Kawakami, Nov 24, 2010, http://jimboguy.blogspot.com

GENEVA — A report by the U.N. weather agency has found that greenhouse gas levels in the atmosphere reached record levels in 2009.

The World Meteorological Organization says efforts to reduce emissions of carbon dioxide, methane and nitrous oxide haven't diminished the atmospheric concentration of these gases widely blamed for stoking global warming.

The Geneva-based agency says concentrations of carbon dioxide rose in 2009 by 1.6 parts per million, to 386.8 parts per million. The preindustrial carbon dioxide average was about 280 parts per million. The higher the concentration of greenhouse gases, the more heat is trapped in the atmosphere.

WMO said Wednesday that the recent economic slowdown hadn't significantly affected emissions of greenhouse gases. http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/11/24/greenhouse-gas-concentrat_n_787959.html?utm_source=DailyBrief&utm_campaign=112410&utm_medium=email&utm_content=NewsEntry&utm_term=Daily+Brief

World Meteorological Organization http://www.wmo.int/pages/prog/arep/gaw/ghg/documents/ghg-bulletin2008_en.pdf … For about 10,000 years before the industrial revolution, the atmospheric abundance of CO2 was nearly constant at ~280ppm (ppm=number of molecules of the gas per million molecules of dry air). This abundance represented a balance between the atmosphere, the oceans and the biosphere. Since 1750, atmospheric CO2 has increased by 38%, primarily because of emissions from combustion of fossil fuels (8.62Gt carbon in 2007) and deforestation and land use change (0.5-2.5Gt carbon per year over

  1. This percentage is calculated as the relative contribution of the mentioned gas to the increase in global radiative forcing caused by all long- lived greenhouse gases since 1750 (http://www.esrl.noaa.gov/gmd/aggi). …


Globally averaged

CH which means an increase of 7 ppb from the year before. It exceeds the highest annual mean abundance recorded so far, which was in 2007 (Figure 4). Methane was

increasing by up to 13 ppb per year during the late 1980s, while the growth rate decreased during the past decade. The 7ppb rise from 2007 to 2008 follows the 7 ppb rise the previous year and they represent the highest annual increases since 1998. From the existing data it is not clear if this 14ppb increase over two years

represents the beginning of a new upward trend in CH . In

1600 1985

4

4 order to improve our

understanding of the processes

that affect CH4 emissions more in situ measurements would be needed close to the

source regions. …

Obama Republicans Conservative Dems May Pass Bills in Senate without Liberals

Tags: Liberals Cannot Rely on Obama to Veto Conservative Bills, Profiles Pelosi, Jim Webb, VA, Obama

Articles hard to find on Newsweek’s website but easy to find in magazine is one reason I prefer to pay for magazines. It is harder to hide important articles as often the NY Times tries do, but often ends of to be on Most Popular list.


I found three that is worth the attention of liberals who feel that they can block radical House bills.


The article below about Obama will explain why he still feels he can work with Republicans. His ideology gained from his mother that he should not reject ideas from those who oppose his plans. Include them. You can never find out from our corporate press and media, but many Republicans really like and admire Pelosi because she is tough and clever.


Show that all of us cannot think accurately without a surplus of information on ideas we like to think and consider.


Jim Kawakami, Nov 24, 2010, http://jimboguy.blogspot.com


Pelosi Plans to Block Obama-GOP Deals AP, Nov 24, 2010,

… Pelosi's mandate is diverging from the president's at a critical time, with potentially damaging consequences for Obama's ability to cut deals with Republicans in the new Congress.

Their partnership is strained after an election in which Pelosi and many Democrats feel the White House failed them. They believe Obama and his team muddled the party's message and didn't act soon enough to provide cover for incumbents who cast tough votes for his marquee initiatives. … http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2010/11/pelosis-mission-block-obama-deals-gop/

It is a race Webb could lose. His victory over Allen in 2006, followed by the large majority won by Barack Obama in Virginia in 2008, led many Democrats to believe that the state was finally trending blue. This proved to be wishful thinking. In 2009 conservative Republican candidate Bob McDonnell took the governorship in a landslide, and this year Republicans knocked out three Democratic incumbent congressmen and now control eight of the state’s 11 House seats. Still, a recent poll by Democratic-affiliated Public Policy Polling shows Webb leading Allen, his most likely opponent, by 49–45 percent. The fact that Webb has a fighting chance, much less an outright lead, is a tribute both to his personal popularity and the right-center positions he has staked out on behalf of what he refers to as Jacksonian democracy. It is also what makes him a potential role model for other endangered Democrats up for reelection in 2012.

It is a political truism that a lot of things can happen in two years. The national mood could shift in the progressive direction. President Obama might pull a Clinton and move to meet the electorate halfway. Republicans could overreach. But none of these things will necessarily happen. Politicians, like generals, tend to view the next campaign through the lens of the last one. By that standard, senators from deep-blue states—like Ben Cardin of Maryland, Kirsten Gillibrand of New York, or Daniel Akaka of Hawaii—can look toward 2012 and relax, confident that sticking up for the president’s agenda, no matter how liberal it is, will not hurt their chances. But for Webb and his endangered colleagues from deeply conservative areas of the country, or swing states where the Democrats got clobbered this year, following the leader in the White House doesn’t feel like an effective electoral strategy. “I’ve been saying this for five years,” Webb told me. “Democrats have to reach out to the working class. Something has to change in the Democratic Senate.”

After the ceremony I followed Senator Webb into the Marshall mansion, up two flights of stairs to a small meeting room. On the way I noticed that he limps, the result of throwing himself between one of his men and an enemy grenade. This was our first meeting, but I had heard about Webb from Washington journalists. Several warned me with variations of “He doesn’t suffer fools lightly,” an admonition I tried not to take personally. His fearsome reputation was enhanced in 2007 when one of his senior aides was busted carrying Webb’s loaded handgun into a Senate office building. Webb, it emerged, has a permit to carry a concealed weapon in Virginia. It concentrates your mind to sit down with a U.S. senator who you assume is packing. …


Webb also firmly believes that the base of the Democratic Party—African-Americans, Hispanics, college students, and urban elites—is missing a crucial piece, the white working class, and he has not been shy about saying so. In July he published an article in The Wall Street Journal titled “Diversity and the Myth of White Privilege,” in which he argued against affirmative-action programs for all but African-American descendants of slaves. “Those who came to this country in recent decades from Asia, Latin America and Africa did not suffer discrimination from our government, and in fact have frequently been the beneficiaries of special government programs. The same cannot be said of many hard--working white Americans…” Predictably, Webb’s article infuriated many liberals, including the head of the Virginia branch of the NAACP, who attacked the author for denying the existence of white privilege. But in our interview, Webb insisted that he is arguing only for simple equity. “When I met the president at a birthday lunch?at the White House in August, we discussed this. I told him, ‘Mr. President, people need to know you are fair.’?”

Affirmative action is only one of the Democratic orthodoxies Webb would like to dispense with. He opposes cap-and-trade and wrote a letter to the president on the eve of the Copenhagen climate summit warning him that he lacked the constitutional authority to bind the United States to an agreement; he thinks the detainees in Guantánamo ought to stay put and be given military trials; he doesn’t necessarily support the abolition of “don’t ask, don’t tell,” preferring to wait for the recommendation of the Joint Chiefs; he wants a narrow path to citizenship for illegal immigrants already here and $3 billion in emergency funds to build a serious border fence; and he is not enthusiastic about “Obamacare.” “I voted with the Republicans 17 times against provisions of the bill before I voted for it,” he said, unconsciously echoing John Kerry’s famous line in the 2004 campaign.

Webb not only advocates moving away from the more liberal aspects of the Obama legislative agenda, he thinks the party needs a change in attitude. In Born Fighting he scorned “the upper crust of academia and the pampered salons of Hollywood”—among the Democrats’ most important sources of money and policy advice—as an elite unable to comprehend, much less appeal to, working-class whites. He warns against the influence of these “cultural Marxists” and people on “the Activist Left” who want to create a “collectivist” America.

These are fighting words—Tea Party talk. The problem for endangered Senate Democrats is that it resonates loudly in the states they hope to carry in two years. Webb thinks these candidates would be wise to readjust their outlook, their voting, and their rhetoric. “I’m optimistic that people will see the logic of these positions and realize that it is in their self-interest to adopt them,” he said.

I asked Webb who among his fellow senators he considers potential Jacksonians. “People can describe themselves,” he said. But when I read him a list of endangered Democrats and asked if he saw them as potential allies in moving the Senate to the center, he nodded at nearly every name. If he is right, Majority Leader Harry Reid could find himself going into the 112th Congress up against not merely an energized Republican opposition, but a band of rebel Democrats led by the new Old Hickory.

Endangered List

The Democrats kept control of the Senate in the midterms. But James Webb and these other Dems, who face reelection in 2012, will likely need to emphasize (or find) their conservative side in upcoming campaigns if the current mood prevails.

Sen. Ben Nelson, Nebraska

A conservative pro-lifer in a state that voted heavily against Obama.

Sen. Bill Nelson, Florida

A center-left figure in a state with increasingly center-right views.

Sen. Kent Conrad, North Dakota

Will his role on the Senate Budget Committee clash with a cost-cutting mood?

Sen. John Tester, Montana

He narrowly won in 2006, in a state that voted for McCain two years later.

Sen. Joe Manchin, West Virginia

He often sounded like a Tea Partier when he won a vacant seat this year.

Sen. Sherrod brown, Ohio

Ohio elected a GOP governor and senator this year. Can this liberal survive?

Sen. Robert P. Casey Jr., Pennsylvania

Pennsylvania went for Obama in ’08. This year the state veered right.

Sen. Debbie Stabenow, Michigan

She barely won in 2006; one recent poll showed a 38 percent approval rating.

Sen. Claire McCaskill, Missouri

The Republicans scored big midterm wins in the Show Me State.

Sen. Herb Kohl, Wisconsin

You can’t assume Wisconsin voters are as progressive as they used to be. http://www.newsweek.com/2010/11/19/the-new-calculus-for-conservative-democrats.html


The Real Obama: His Books Tell Us Who He Is, Newsweek, Nov 29, 2010, James T. Kloppenberg, Historian, Harvard

… Obama is doing exactly what he said he would do. Perhaps the critics should read—or reread—the president’s own books. Dreams From My Father (1995) and The Audacity of Hope (2006) are the most substantial works written by anyone elected president since Woodrow Wilson (who wrote several books before he won election in 1912). In laying out his philosophy, Obama contrasts the GOP’s excessive individualism with the ideal of “ordered liberty” and the rich traditions of civic engagement typical of America in the 18th and 19th centuries. He also criticizes orthodox Democrats for too quickly dismissing market solutions and too often defending failed government programs. Above all, he criticizes the hyperpartisan atmosphere of contemporary public life.

Almost everything you need to know about Obama is there on the printed page. In contrast to the charges coming now from right and left, Obama is neither a rigid ideologue nor a spineless wimp. The Obama who wrote Dreams and Audacity stands in a long tradition of American reform, wary of absolutes and universals, and committed to a Christian tradition that prizes humility and social service over dogmatic statements of unbending principle. A child of the philosophical pragmatists William James and John Dewey, Obama distrusts pat formulas and prefers experimentation.

Throughout his career, Obama has refused to demonize his opponents. Instead, he has sought them out and listened to them. He has tried to understand how they think and why they see the world as they do. His mother encouraged this sense of empathy, and it’s a lesson Obama learned well. Since January 2009, Obama has watched his efforts at reconciliation, experimentation, and -consensus--building bounce off the hard surfaces of political self-interest and entrenched partisanship, but there is no reason to think he will abandon that strategy now. He knows that disagreement is a vital part of the American fabric, and that our differences are neither shallow nor trivial.

Although Obama’s reform agenda echoes aspects of those advanced by many Democrats over the last century, he has admitted—and this is the decisive point in understanding his outlook—that his opponents hold principles rooted as deeply in American history as his own. “I am obligated to try to see the world through George Bush’s eyes, no matter how much I may disagree with him,” he wrote in Audacity. “That’s what empathy does—it calls us all to task, the conservative and the liberal … We are all shaken out of our complacency.” Obama rejects dogma, embraces uncertainty, and dismisses the fables that often pass for history among partisans on both sides who need heroes and villains, and who resist more-nuanced understandings of the past and the present. …

The shrill tone of Obama’s critics makes reading his books especially illuminating today. In Audacity, Obama explained why, because of our national traditions, the United States would never have a single-payer health-care system and would have to find a distinctively American hybrid relying on existing insurance plans. That’s what we have now. He explained why, although he favors regulation to protect against abuses, he rules out socialism and remains firmly committed to a market economy. His financial reforms follow that pattern. Finally, he explained why, although he opposed the war in Iraq, he supported war in Afghanistan for -different—and legitimate—reasons. Now that he must bring that war to a conclusion, he has made clear that the decision will be based on evidence, not blind adherence to a predetermined course of action.

After almost two years as president, Obama has failed to satisfy the left for the same reason that he has antagonized the right. He does not share their self-righteous certainty. Neither his personal restraint nor the achievements of his administration should surprise anyone who has read his books. In the domains of health care and economic regulation, and in his approach to Afghanistan, Obama has followed his script: substantial but incremental reforms growing organically from American experience rather than hewing to party orthodoxy. In November 2010, President Obama remains the man who wrote Dreams and Audacity, a resolute champion of moderation, experimentation, and deliberative, nondogmatic democracy. It’s just that the distorting mirrors of political commentary in America’s fun house can make it hard to recognize him.

Kloppenberg is the Charles Warren Professor of American history at Harvard University and author of Reading Obama: Dreams, Hope, and the American Political Tradition. http://www.newsweek.com/2010/11/17/obama-is-doing-just-what-he-said-he-would-do.html

Limbaugh Rush Attacked Motor Trend’s Call of Year Volt Editor Trashes Rush

Tags: Limbaugh Rush Trashed Motor Trend's Car of the Year, Chevy Volt Editor Great Response

Finally, the Establishment trashes Rush Limbaugh. Delicious!

Jim Kawakami, Nov 24, 2010, http://jimboguy.blogspot.com

Rush Limbaugh may have met his match.

Originally from www.thinkprogress.org http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2010/11/motor-trend-editor-shreds-limbaugh-attack-chevy-volt-drinking-oxycontin-mix/ An editor from Motor Trend magazine has taken the radio talk show juggernaut to task, shredding Limbaugh after he attacked the magazine's credibility and GM's new electic car, the Chevy Volt.

The attack was fueled by comments Limbaugh made after the magazine named the Volt "Car of the Year." In a fit of Limbaughesque rancor, the editor, Todd Lassa, slammed Limbaugh personally, even going so far as to raise Limbaugh's onetime addiction to the painkiller Oxycontin.

Limbaugh attacked the car in little-noticed comments last week. "The Chevrolet Volt is the Car of the Year?" he asked. "Motor Trend magazine, that’s the end of them. How in the world do they have any credibility? Not one has been sold [and] the Volt is the Car of the Year."

Soon after, Motor Trend editor Todd Lassa went on the attack, in a blog post titled, "Rush to Judgment."



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"Our credibility, Mr. Limbaugh, comes from actually driving and testing the car, and understanding its advanced technology," Lassa wrote in a blog post on the magazine's website. "It comes from driving and testing virtually every new car sold, and from doing this once a year with all the all-new or significantly improved models all at the same time. We test, make judgments and write about things we understand."

"Assuming you’ve been anywhere near the biggest automotive technological breakthrough since … I don’t know, maybe the self-starter, could you even find your way to the front seat?" he continued. "Or are you happy attacking a car that you’ve never even seen in person?

The Motor Trend editor also slammed Limbaugh for making false statements about the car.

"Last time you ranted about the Volt, you got confused about the 'range,' and said on the air that the car could be driven no more than 40 miles at a time, period," Lassa said. (In fact, the Volt can go 40 miles on its electric engine and then travel longer distances using gasoline.) "At least you stayed away from that issue this time, but you continue to attack it as the car only a tree hugging, Obama-supporting Government Motors customer would want. As radio loudmouths like you would note, none of those potential customers were to be found after November 2."

"Chevrolet has not sold one Volt because it’s not on sale yet," Lassa added. "It will not sell 10,000 this first model year (although GE plans to buy truckloads for its fleet), because it takes time to ramp up production. See, Rush, because we’re the World’s Automotive Authority, we get access to many cars before they go on sale.

Then Lassa went for the jugular.

"If you can stop shilling for your favorite political party long enough to go for a drive, you might really enjoy the Chevy Volt," Lassa concluded. "I’m sure GM would be happy to lend you one for the weekend. Just remember: driving and Oxycontin don’t mix."

Limbaugh admitted a drug addiction to the prescription painkiller Oxycontin in 2003. He confessed his addiction on his program that year and entered a 30-day rehab program.

Limbaugh has long been a critic of the Volt, which he's described as an "overpriced lemon." He's also derided the "supposed superiority complex of people who would buy electric or hybrid cars.” He once said he refused a lucrative advertising deal for the Volt's parent company, GM, because he couldn't in good conscience recommend the car.

Lassa hasn't been Limbaugh's only critic on the issue. Earlier this year, Michigan Gov. Jennifer Granholm (D-MI) lambasted Limbaugh when asked by a reporter about the talk show host's attacks.

"It’s just un-American," Granholm said. "I can’t believe that somebody would say this about this American product. He hasn’t even driven it. He hasn’t sat in it. You know, why wouldn’t you be supportive of American manufacturers building American vehicles with American workers, who now have jobs as a result of this."

Lassa's comments were first picked up on by the liberal blog ThinkProgress.

True ThanksGiving from The Rachel Maddow Show: Don't Miss!

Tags: True Thanksgiving by Chris Hayes, Don't Miss

History is invariably written by those in power or by their elite implementers. They can't write the whole history so they delete what they don't like which is a lot of the core of our true history. Howard Zinn, a fearless historian at Boston University, demonstrated against the policies of Boston University when he was up for TENURE!

It took him 20 years to accumulate the original records from archival newspapers describing events at that time. The book has sold over two million copies and has 801 reviews by readers at www.amazon.com books.

Now high school students will learn history from the Texans who deleted what has not already been deleted about our true history with all its laudable and not so laudable history.

Jim Kawakami, Nov 24, 2010, http://jimboguy.blogspot.com


Thanks from The Rachel Maddow Show

Chris Hayes lists what he and viewers of the Rachel Maddow Show are thankful for this Thanksgiving. Don't Miss Video.

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/26315908/vp/40347057#40347057 or http://maddowblog.msnbc.com

I am always thankful for Thanksgiving Greetings not mentioning the murderous Mayflower Pilgrims who wiped out the native Americans who save their lives by feeding them and teaching them how to grow and hunt for food. Highly recommended by Matt Damon (Harvard) in Good Will Hunting. Jim

Must read History Book A People's History of the United States from Columbus through Clinton.

From Publishers Weekly

According to this classic of revisionist American history, narratives of national unity and progress are a smoke screen disguising the ceaseless conflict between elites and the masses whom they oppress and exploit.
Historian Zinn sides with the latter group in chronicling Indians' struggle against Europeans, blacks' struggle against racism, women's struggle against patriarchy, and workers' struggle against capitalists. First published in 1980, the volume sums up decades of post-war scholarship into a definitive statement of leftist, multicultural, anti-imperialist historiography. This edition updates that project with new chapters on the Clinton and Bush presidencies, which deplore Clinton's pro-business agenda, celebrate the 1999 Seattle anti-globalization protests and apologize for previous editions' slighting of the struggles of Latinos and gays.
Zinn's work is an vital corrective to triumphalist accounts, but his uncompromising radicalism shades, at times, into cynicism. Zinn views the Bill of Rights, universal suffrage, affirmative action and collective bargaining not as fundamental (albeit imperfect) extensions of freedom, but as tactical concessions by monied elites to defuse and contain more revolutionary impulses; voting, in fact, is but the most insidious of the "controls." It's too bad that Zinn dismisses two centuries of talk about "patriotism, democracy, national interest" as mere "slogans" and "pretense," because the history he recounts is in large part the effort of downtrodden people to claim these ideals for their own.
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.

COLUMBUS, THE INDIANS, AND HUMAN PROGRESS

Arawak men and women, naked, tawny, and full of wonder, emerged from their villages onto the island's beaches and swam out to get a closer look at the strange big boat. When Columbus and his sailors came ashore, carrying swords, speaking oddly, the Arawaks ran to greet them, brought them food, water, gifts. He later wrote of this in his log:

They ... brought us parrots and balls of cotton and spears and many other things, which they exchanged for the glass beads and hawks' bells. They willingly traded everything they owned.... They were well-built, with good bodies and handsome features.... They do not bear arms, and do not know them, for I showed them a sword, they took it by the edge and cut themselves out of ignorance. They have no iron. Their spears are made of cane.... They would make fine servants.... With fifty men we could subjugate them all and make them do whatever we want.

These Arawaks of the Bahama Islands were much like Indians on the mainland, who were remarkable (European observers were to say again and again) for their hospitality, their belief in sharing. These traits did not stand out in the Europe of the Renaissance, dominated as it was by the religion of popes, the government of kings, the frenzy for money that marked Western civilization and its first messenger to the Americas, Christopher Columbus.

Columbus wrote:

As soon as I arrived in the Indies, on the first Island which I found, I tooksome of the natives by force in order that they might learn and might giveme information of whatever there is in these parts.

The information that Columbus wanted most was: Where is the gold? He had persuaded the king and queen of Spain to finance an expedition to the lands, the wealth, he expected would be on the other side of the Atlantic-the Indies and Asia, gold and spices. For, like other informed people of his time, he knew the world was round and he could sail west in order to get to the Far East.

Spain was recently unified, one of the new modern nation-states, like France, England, and Portugal. Its population, mostly poor peasants, worked for the nobility, who were 2 percent of the population and owned 95 percent of the land. Spain had tied itself to the Catholic Church, expelled all the Jews, driven out the Moors. Like other states of the modern world, Spain sought gold, which was becoming the new mark of wealth, more useful than land because it could buy anything.

There was gold in Asia, it was thought, and certainly silks and spices, for Marco Polo and others had brought back marvelous things from their overland expeditions centuries before. Now that the Turks had conquered Constantinople and the eastern Mediterranean, and controlled the land routes to Asia, a sea route was needed. Portuguese sailors were working their way around the southern tip of Africa. Spain decided to gamble on a long sail across an unknown ocean.

In return for bringing back gold and spices, they promisedColumbus 10 percent of the profits, governorship over new-foundlands, and the fame that would go with a new title: Admiral of the OceanSea. He was a merchant's clerk from the Italian city of Genoa, part-timeweaver (the son of a skilled weaver), and expert sailor. He set out withthree sailing ships, the largest of which was the Santa Maria, perhaps100 feet long, and thirty-nine crew members.

Columbus would never have made it to Asia, which was thousands of miles farther away than he had calculated, imagining a smaller world. He would have been doomed by that great expanse of sea. But he was lucky. One-fourth of the way there he came upon an unknown, uncharted land that lay between Europe and Asia--the Americas. It was early October 1492, and thirty-three days since he and his crew had left the Canary Islands, off the Atlantic coast of Africa. Now they saw branches and sticks floating in the water. They saw flocks of birds.

These were signs of land. Then, on October 12, a sailor called Rodrigo saw the early morning moon shining on white sands, and cried out. It was an island in the Bahamas, the Caribbean sea. The first man to sight land was supposed to get a yearly pension of 10,000 maravedis for life, but Rodrigo never got it. Columbus claimed he had seen a light the evening before. He got the reward.

So, approaching land, they were met by, the Arawak Indians, who swam out to greet them. The Arawaks lived in village communes, had a developed agriculture of corn, yams, cassava. They could spin and weave, but they had no horses or work animals. They had no iron, but they wore tiny gold ornaments in their ears.

This was to have enormous consequences: it led Columbus to take some of them aboard ship as prisoners because he insisted that they guide him to the source of the gold. He then sailed to what is now Cuba, then to Hispaniola (the island which today consists of Haiti and the Dominican Republic). There, bits of visible gold in the rivers, and a gold mask presented to Columbus by a local Indian chief, led to wild visions of gold fields.

On Hispaniola, out of timbers from the Santa Maria, which had run aground, Columbus built a fort, the first European military base in the Western Hemisphere. He called it Navidad (Christmas) and left thirtynine crewmembers there, with instructions to find and store the gold. He took more Indian prisoners and put them aboard his two remaining ships. At one part of the island he got into a fight with Indians who refused to trade as many bows and arrows as he and his men wanted. Two were run through with swords and bled to death. Then the Nina and the Pinta set sail for the Azores and Spain. When the weather turned cold, the Indian prisoners began to die.

--This text refers to the Hardcover edition.