Yearly Archives: 2015


Chris Hedges on Bernie Sanders and the Corporate Democrats

Counterpunch has the article Chris Hedges on Bernie Sanders and the Corporate Democrats.

“Because the party is completely captive to corporate power,” Hedges said. “And Bernie has cut a Faustian deal with the Democrats. And that’s not even speculation. I did an event with him and Bill McKibben, Naomi Klein and Kshama Sawant in New York the day before the Climate March. And Kshama Sawant, the Socialist City Councilwoman from Seattle and I asked Sanders why he wanted to run as a Democrat. And he said — because I don’t want to end up like Nader.”

“He didn’t want to end up pushed out of the establishment,” Hedges said. “He wanted to keep his committee chairmanships, he wanted to keep his Senate seat. And he knew the forms of retribution, punishment that would be visited upon him if he applied his critique to the Democratic establishment. So he won’t.”

Giving Chris Hedges the benefit of the doubt, it is quite possible that Bernie Sanders did say to him “because I don’t want to end up like Nader.” The second paragraph above has Hedge’s inferences of what Sanders had in mind. I only mention that to raise the possibility that what Sanders said is not exactly how Hedges interpreted it.

Elsewhere in the article Hedges said the following:

“That’s why I was a strong supporter of your independent runs,” Hedges told Nader. “That’s why I voted for (Green Party Presidential candidate) Jill Stein in the last election. But they have to be outside the system. And we have to begin to build movements that are divorced from the Democratic and Republican parties. My fear is that by this time next year, Bernie Sanders is running around once again repeating this mantra of the least worst and stoking fears against whoever the Republican candidate is. And we’ve gone nowhere.”

I don’t understand the idea that voting for Nader or Jill Stein produced any results. I say that knowing full well that even I could end up voting for Stein in 2016.

At least at this stage of the game, supporting Bernie Sanders is the most plausible way to play the game. He could win the nomination. If he doesn’t, then we have to consider what to do next. Going to the next step before we know if he could have won doesn’t seem to be the best strategy available to us right now.

Considering the possibilities Hedges talks about, and being open about them right now is probably a good idea strategically. I think it is better strategy than pretending this doesn’t exist. It always pays to let your candidate know what the consequences might be if they betray your trust in them. Perhaps that is what was left out of the article – the consequences for Bernie Sanders if he turns out not to be the real deal.

Thanks to Cedric Flower for sharing this on his Facebook timeline.


Gary Hart: America’s Founding Principles Are in Danger of Corruption

Naked Capitalism has the article The Augean Stables – How Corruption Has Amended the Constitution. The article is a discussion of Gary Hart’s Time Magazine essay Gary Hart: America’s Founding Principles Are in Danger of Corruption and his new book The Republic of Conscience.

Here are some excerpts of quotes from Hart’s book.

[T]he largest [lobbying “predator” (his term)] by far is WPP (originally called Wire and Plastic Products; is there a metaphor here?), which has its headquarters in London and more than 150,000 employees in 2,500 offices spread around 107 countries.
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According to Mr. Edsall, WPP had billings last year of $72.3 billion, larger than the budgets of quite a number of countries.

This reveals the magnitude and concentration of lobbying on a scale that I could never have imagined. The fact that it is not centralized to one particular country is also shocking. The way this has changed the form of our government, if not shocking, may be more profound than I had imagined.


Chokeholds, Brain Injuries, Beatings: When School Cops Go Bad

Mother Jones has the article Chokeholds, Brain Injuries, Beatings: When School Cops Go Bad.

Last March, the US Department of Education reported that 92,000 students were subject to school-related arrests in the 2011-2012 academic year, the first time the agency collected and published such data. Black students comprised 16 percent of the total students enrolled but accounted for 31 percent of arrests. And a quarter of the total arrested were students with disabilities, despite that they comprised only 12 percent of the student population.

Let’s just hope that when Tantasqua Regional High School gets its school resource officer that he or she is well trained to not be one of the problems added to whatever ones the school already has.


Hillary Clinton’s Economic Story: Stuff Happens

Campaign For America’s Future has an excellent article Hillary Clinton’s Economic Story: Stuff Happens. Normally, I don’t like to quote too extensively from an article because I would rather you read the original to give the authors the clicks that they deserve. In this case, the message is so important, that I cannot take the chance you won’t read the original. There is still more to be read in the original than I am quoting here, as the ellipses indicate.

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A framing speech can’t and shouldn’t go into policy details, and Clinton pledged a series of speeches would fill in the missing text. But a framing speech should tell a clear story: about how we got in the hole we are in, who drove us there, how do we get out, and what leaders and movements will lead the way.

Here, Clinton’s speech was disappointing. The problem, she argued, is most Americans see “an economy that still isn’t delivering for them… It still seems, to most Americans that I have spoken with, that it is stacked for those at the top.” The “basic bargain” – work hard and get ahead – “has been eroded.” Note the passive voice.
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We have been victimized by inexorable economic forces – technology, global trade. Better ideas and policy can fix it. Completely absent from the frame is any sense of the systematic war waged by corporations and the right wing to win the battle of ideas, flood money into our politics and rig the rules of the economy to their benefit. They rigged monetary policy and fiscal policy, global trade rules, labor and wage laws, government investment, deregulation, privatization, global policing – all reinforcing the effort to weaken workers, drive down wages, and capture more of the profits at the top. And then they invested a minute portion of those profits to buy both parties and corrupt our democracy.
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Omitting the reality that our policies have been systematically and purposefully rigged to favor the few – and that our politics have been corrupted in that pursuit – both misleads Americans, and weakens that agenda’s appeal.
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Progressives are winning the economic argument among Democrats. As Clinton shows, the era of small government is over. Every Democratic candidate summons us to a new era of activist government. But the question of this populist moment is who will speak truth not to power, but to the American people. Clinton is calling people to a policy discussion. Sanders is rousing them for a political revolution. She’s one of the best qualified candidates in the history of the Republic and an overwhelming favorite to win the nomination. But he is telling a far clearer story of why working people are struggling in this wealthy country and what they must do to take it back.

This article does a much better job of explaining exactly what is missing from Clinton’s speech than my previous post about the article Clinton’s Speech on “The Economy”: Where’s the Beef?. The two articles identify many of the same issues. The current article has more details where they are needed and fewer details where they are not needed.


Clinton’s Speech on “The Economy”: Where’s the Beef?

Naked Capitalism has the article Clinton’s Speech on “The Economy”: Where’s the Beef? For me, it was more analysis than I had the patience to read. Feel free to read as much as you have the time and patience for. I single out two issues from the article that I find most striking.

Democrats must abandon the view that balanced budgets and surpluses are a sign of virtue; they are not. And until they do, they will be in the policy straitjacket that they helpfully donned after people like the Peterson Institute helpfully held it for them; always a grand bargain of one sort or another; always “pay for.” How did FDR help win World War II, after all? By cutting domestic spending? With a balanced budget? Fiscal policy matters only for the effects it produces in the real economy.
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Also pervasive is lack of agency: There is a “crisis.” Why? For whom? But it “recedes.” Why? For everybody?

The first point is one that I often make on this blog. That’s not a coincidence as Naked Capitalism frequently makes this point. New Economic Perspectives also makes this point frequently. Both Naked Capitalism and I read the New Economic Perspectives blog.

The lack of agency issue is a trick that many Democrats and Neoliberals (meaning not liberals at all) use to hide the fact that someone must have done these awful things. They didn’t just happen. There is someone who has to be held accountable for the outcome of their evil actions. Could the deregulation king himself, Bill Clinton, be blamed for any of these problems?


What You Need to Know About Backdoor Encryption

PC Magazine has the WebCast What You Need to Know About Backdoor Encryption.

FBI Director James Comey wants a backdoor into every encrypted communication in America, but most security experts think that is a really bad idea. PCMag’s Editor-in-Chief Dan Costa talk to Security Analyst Fahmida Rashid about the logical, ethical, and technical problems with creating back doors in security products.

What’s New Now is PCMag’s daily report where we cover the most talked about technology story of the day. Check back every day as we suggest why the story is important to you and provide expert analysis and opinion on the topic.

The two most damaging arguments against the back door are that the bad guys will eventually get the keys, and that other countries will want the keys or they will insist on their own back doors. Some countries might ban back doors. What happens to international trade when some countries insist on something while others forbid it? If you exempt international communications, then that is a back door for avoiding our back door. Supposedly the international communications are the ones the FBI most wants to read.


Why I’m Leaving the South

The Daily Kos has the post Why I’m Leaving the South. Before I get any questions, let me make it clear that this is not my post, so the “I” in the headline does not refer to “me”, Steve Greenberg. Sharon and I have already decided that we cannot move to Florida, even if the climate is appealing in the winter.

Anyway, back to a quote from the post.

I have a master’s degree in counseling, and I’m particularly good with teenagers. For ten years I had a decent career, although counselors aren’t paid much. Then the economy tanked and social services were cut. I lost my job. Then another job. Nobody was hiring counselors; I got an hourly wage job. Lost my health insurance, lost my car, lost everything. I went into default on my student loans.

Things began to pick up for counselors, but there was a new question on applications: are you in default on your student loans? South Carolina and a few other red states passed a law saying that such persons cannot be hired by any agency receiving state funding, which for me and my degree, is nearly all the jobs here. Getting out of default would be feasible if I had a professional job, but on $8 an hour? No way. As a single person with no family, meager survival is nearly possible on that low of a wage.

I can just imagine the response from the legislators who thought that punishing people for defaulting on their loans would get them to pay up. As we always used to say in the Army when caught doing something stupid and being asked why we did it, usually by a sergeant, “Gee, Sarge, it sounded like a good idea at the time.”


Hillary Clinton Focuses On Middle-Class Wages In Sweeping Economic Policy Speech 1

The Huffington Post has the story Hillary Clinton Focuses On Middle-Class Wages In Sweeping Economic Policy Speech.

WASHINGTON — Hillary Clinton focused on the problem of stagnant middle-class wages on Monday in the first major economic policy speech of her presidential campaign.

In sweeping remarks at the progressive New School in New York City, the Democratic candidate said that higher wages are driven by strong, fair and long-term growth, offering policy proposals that fit into each of those three categories. Clinton praised the policies pursued by President Barack Obama, but suggested that more needs to be done to help middle-class families. Her message echoed themes espoused by Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), who has made her mark on the Democratic Party by arguing that the economy is rigged against the middle class.


Missing Video Issue
If the above video is missing go to the Huffington Post web site Hillary Clinton Focuses On Middle-Class Wages In Sweeping Economic Policy Speech to see many textual excerpts from the speech. However, they probably can’t show the video either.
The story she told at the beginning about the history of this country over the last 35 years is almost exactly the story that Elizabeth Warren tells. The main difference is that Elizabeth Warren talks about the 50 years between the depression and the last 40 years when it all began to unravel. Warren also doesn’t tout the flawed policies of the Clinton administration which seemed so good at the time, but sowed the seeds of destruction that led up to the collapse of 2008-2009.

I don’t like Hillary’s message as much as I like Warren’s message, but if Hillary is able to sell it better than her rival candidates, then less power to her. It would be a shame if she were able to convince us that her husband’s policies weren’t a big part of the problem.

If only she felt that she could be completely honest about the whole story, she might be a candidate that I could eventually support. The fact that she has to gloss over certain facts (some would call it lying), makes me suspicious that she would be able to do all that needs to be done if she were ever to become President.

You can tell in the paragraphs above how my take on Clinton’s remarks changed even as I wrote the words.

Thanks go to Wesley Chrabasz for posting this on his Facebook page.


Pavlina Tchernerva Has Insights On Fixing The Eurozone and Greece 1

Not only does economist Pavlina Tchernerva analyze what is going on with the Eurozone/Greece economic crisis, she identifies what the fix to the situation is. We have this solution available to us in our own system, but we just refuse to use it.

The interview segment starts at 17:09 minutes into the video. To go directly to the interview, use the link YouTube Video starting at 17:09 minutes.


This is the time to cite Greenberg’s Law of Counterproductive Behavior.

If you see a behavior that seems to you to be counterproductive, perhaps you have misunderstood what the actor’s real goal was.

In both cases, the Eurozone and the USA, the behavior is actually accomplishing the divestiture by the governments of public resources so that the greedy oligarchs can purchase them at fire-sale prices. We call it privatization rather than admit that it is the equivalent of rape and pillage by the rich perpetrated on the rest of us.