Yearly Archives: 2015


Chris Hedges: Wages of Rebellion Part 1 And 2

This very powerful lecture by Chris Hedges is on YouTube in two parts. If you are a fan of Barack Obama, or Bill or Hillary Clinton. I advise you not to watch this lecture. You will either deny everything you hear, or it might be dangerous to your mental health.

Chris Hedges: Wages of Rebellion Part 1

Published on Mar 27, 2015

Revolutions come in waves and cycles. We are again riding the crest of a revolutionary epic, much like 1848 or 1917, from the Arab Spring to movements against austerity in Greece to the Occupy movement. In Wages of Rebellion, Chris Hedges—who has chronicled the malaise and sickness of a society in terminal moral decline in his books Empire of Illusion and Death of the Liberal Class—investigates what social and psychological factors cause revolution, rebellion, and resistance.

Chris Hedges: Wages of Rebellion Part 2


Bernie Sanders Tells Rachel Maddow Exactly How To Defeat Donald Trump

The Rachel Maddow Show has two segments with Bernie Sanders that are extremely important that as many people as possible see these two segments.

The first segment is Bernie Sanders Tells Rachel Maddow Exactly How To Defeat Donald Trump.

Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT) has Donald Trump’s number, and during an interview on MSNBC’s The Rachel Maddow Show, Sanders explained exactly how to defeat Trump.

The second segment is Sanders: hopeless poverty a threat to American democracy.

Senator Bernie Sanders, Democratic candidate for president, talks with Rachel Maddow about his trip to Baltimore where the extent of urban poverty is distressing, and explains the connection between the concentration of wealth at one end of the economic s …

Finally, Bernie Sanders fixes the flubs he made during Rachel Maddow’s candidates forum. I knew he knew what to say, but couldn’t figure out why he didn’t say it before. I think Rachel Maddow is coming to the realization that Bernie Sanders should be her candidate, not Hillary Clinton.


Airstrikes Against Syria are a Trap, Warns Former ISIS Hostage Nicolas Hénin

Democracy Now has an interview in two segments that make a very compelling case that our strategy for dealing with Syria and Isis is completely counter-productive. The segments are Airstrikes Against Syria are a Trap, Warns Former ISIS Hostage Nicolas Hénin and Former ISIS Hostage Nicolas Hénin: Welcoming Refugees is the Best Strategy Against ISIS.

Here are just a couple of snippets of what is in the transcripts of this interview.

I mean, one must be totally stupid to believe that we punished Osama bin Laden and al-Qaeda, invading Iraq and Afghanistan. And even the opposite: The real success on 9/11, this is not the collapse of the twin towers; the real success of 9/11, this is the invasion of Afghanistan and Iraq. And this was not made by the terrorists. This success is only due to the victim. The Americans were victims of the terrorists, but they offered to their aggressors their success. And this is something that we shall always keep in mind every time we are hit by a major terrorist attack: What want our aggressor us to do? What would you like me to do, and how shall I react to displease him?
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“Welcoming refugees is not a terror threat to our countries; it’s like a vaccine to protect us from terrorism, because the more interactions we have between societies, between communities, the less there will be tensions,” Hénin says.
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AMY GOODMAN: What would you say to young Europeans who want to join, who what to become jihadists?

NICOLAS HÉNIN: This is a very important message. Basically, ISIS will recruit you, telling you jihad is cool, because, yes, it’s cool, if you have no life, no girlfriend, no job, no money, nothing in your home country, and ISIS promises you, what, adventure, engagement, a girl, a car, a weapon, power, money, whatever. So, they all play like jihad is cool. And my answer is: ISIS is a scam, because ISIS does not really fight Assad, does not protect the Muslims in Syria, but kills, to wide extent, a number of Muslims in Syria. ISIS is a disaster for the Syrian people. So, for those who want to join ISIS, I tell them, “I understand the reason for your rage, because, yes, there are many reasons actually to be unhappy about both your life in the West or both the situation in Syria and these civilians being massacred in huge numbers. But ISIS will just make you make this crisis bigger.”

There is somewhat of a trick you have to play with the following videos to see the parts that correspond to the transcripts. When you get the video playing, you will see a little dot on the time lines. The first one has the dot about ⅔ of the way along the timeline -at about 31:04. If you hover over the dot, you will see the headline of this blog post. Drag the left big dot to the small dot to skip the part of the video unrelated to this post.

In the second segment the little dot is at 40:38 along the timeline. As the video starts to play, drag the big dot to the little dot.

The title of the book that Nicolas Hénin has written about his experiences is Jihad Academy.


Saving Capitalism For The Many, Not The Few

I have just finished reading Robert Reich’s new book Saving Capitalism For The Many, Not The Few.

I have come to a set of expectations for books of this type. The really good ones do a great job of identifying a problem, providing new ways to analyze the problem, and new ways to explain the problem clearly for the rest of us to understand. This book does all that, so I rate it really good.

These books always have a small part at the end that tell us what to do about the problem. These are universally the weakest part of the books. Most of the books do tell you what needs to be changed, which of course is pretty obvious from the excellent description of the problem. No book that I have read so far tells you any practical way to bring about the change.

Robert Reich’s book goes farther than many books because he doesn’t just tell us that people have to act differently from the way they have ever acted before. He does go through some specific rules of the market that need to change, and he does describe some ways of reorganizing the meaning of basic economic entities such as corporations. What he cannot do, and therefore does not do, is to explain how we wrest power from those who now wield it in such a way that we can never seriously contemplate how to make the changes that he says we need.

The robots of the future, along with other breakthrough technologies, will not exactly take away “common property” for which citizens deserve to be indemnified. But they will take away good good jobs that are already dwindling in number and replace opportunities already growing scarce. They will, in short, supplant the middle class that has been the centerpiece of our economy and society that is already shrinking. New market rules that cause wealth eventually to revert to the public domain rather than compound for future generations that had nothing to do with creating it, and be used instead to finance a minimum guaranteed income for all citizens, is one way to go.

This and some other ideas he discusses are starting to be tried in some places around the world, so it is not as if they are completely outside of the realm of possibility. I should give Reich more credit for bringing these ideas to the fore in a book that may be more widely read than other sources that discuss these ideas.

What strikes me is that there is a transition step that I think is more easily made, and I do not see even mentioned. The idea has been described and thoroughly researched by Franco Modigliani and Arun Muralidhar as described in several posts on this blog, but even they shied away from the deeper implications of their proposals. Possibly they downplayed these implications for fear that it would be too upsetting to the 0.01% if they were to understand what the implicatons were.

I am talking about changing the Social Security Trust Fund investment rules so that the trust fund could actually buy shares of corporations. The premise is that the trust found would have far better returns than the Treasury bonds they must buy now. With better returns, the trust fund could both do with less money being taken in from taxes, and it could safely pay higher benefits. This is the surface meaning of this idea.

The deeper implication is that an arm of our government, The Social Security Trust Fund, would own a very large part of the private corporations, given the size of the trust fund. Rather than be passive investors, the trust fund could be active in demanding that corporations pay more attention to the needs of the whole society. The trust fund as a major shareholder would do that because the trust fund has that basic responsibility to society as a whole. This is unlike private investors who have only their own best interests at heart.

Moreover, the fact that the Social Security Trust Fund was growing because of the growth of corporations would in itself be a sharing of the benefits of increasing productivity which sharing is not going on now.

This idea of starting to invest the trust fund in corporate shares is something that could start small, and grow over time. The transition could be so gradual, that people would hardly notice the impact until it had grown substantially. It would also have the benefit of changing its course if unforeseen side-effects started to appear.

As the size of the investment grew, the incentives for corporations would change. The income inequality between top executives and average workers would start to get controlled in a way that no group of small investors can cause. The funding by corporations of buying elections and elected officials to rig the system for their benefit could be brought under control. This change in wealth and income distribution, and diminishing of political power and influence would make it easier to make Reich’s more far reaching changes possible.

If the public understood these changes this way, they might be far more apt to strongly support them. Of course the people with the power now would also understand, and they would fight these ideas more fiercely. It is then a question of whether or not the power of an idea could overcome the power of the money. I think history shows that sometimes this can happen.


The Big Difference Between Organizing and Mobilizing

Alternet has this great article The Big Difference Between Organizing and Mobilizing: How Unions Can Win in the Future, A discussion on what ails the labor movement and why we need to stop ignoring the rank-and-file.

This is an interview with Jane McAlevey, a labor organizer known for her work with SEIU in the 2000s. One of McAlevey’s answers only begins to show you the good stuff to learn by reading the whole article.

Our assumptions about who’s going to think what are so often wrong. That’s why it’s so fun do an organizing conversation with just a worker on the door. You can pull up to a door, see a conservative bumper sticker or something else and start making assumptions. But then you go in there, and through the process of a good, long, face-to-face conversation, almost every time, the individual comes out pissed off at their boss, understands that their boss is connected to a bigger system, and starts for the first time to think, “I can do something about this if we act collectively.”

I can attest to the fact that I have learned a number of lessons from this article about what I, as a grassroots organizer for Bernie Sanders, can do better to further the cause of the revolution that Bernie Sanders says we need.


How Did Einstein Think?

The History Channel has this great Albert Einstein Documentary.


A large part of this documentary revolves around measuring the deviation of where a star is from where it is seems to be observed to be when the light from the star passes close by to the sun. In order to see a star close to the sun, you need to take a photograph at a total solar eclipse. That is the only time when the light from the sun doesn’t drown out the light from a nearby star.

What has bothered me for years about this experiment, and the documentary never touches on in an hour and a half, is how do you know where the star is compared to where it seems to be?

It just dawned on me how you know. You take pictures of the stars when the sun isn’t positioned between you and the stars. You then compare that picture to the one you took at the solar eclipse. The stars that are in your picture but farthest away from the sun in the eclipse picture will be least affected by the sun’s gravity. The stars closest to the sun in the eclipse picture will be the most affected. So if you align the stars far from the sun in the the eclipse picture with the ones in the non-eclipse picture, then the deviation of the stars close to the sun in the overlay of the two pictures is what you are trying to measure.


Take Back Your Money

Why not get explicit about what we mean by fixing income and wealth inequality? Why leave it up to people’s imagination?

Poster: Take Back Your Money

It is not taking the rich people’s money and giving it to the poor. It is taking the money the rich people stole from the middle-class and the poor and giving it back to them.

Even the people to whom the money rightfully belongs don’t think they can get it back. Some middle-class people echo the rich people’s meme that if we taxed the rich at 100% and added all the programs that Bernie Sanders wants, that it would leave a deficit.

Apparently nobody is thinking deeply enough or wants to take the effort to explain that this idea of the rich is a fallacy. The rich aren’t taking the money they stole from us as income. They manage to take it as unrealized capital gains. In other words, their wealth is going up because of the stock they own in the companies that are stealing the money. Since the wealthy have so much wealth that they cannot possibly spend all of it, they leave it invested in stocks. Not only is this increase in wealth not taxed, it isn’t even counted as income until the stock is sold. So it looks to the rest of us that there isn’t enough income to tax.

If we unrig the system, those gains go back to the people who earned it. The middle-class and the poor take a much larger fraction of their gain in wealth as income that gets taxed. The middle-class and poor still end up with a lot more money in their pockets to spend even after taxes are collected, because the tax money comes from a fraction of the money they never would have received had we not fixed the system.


Prof. Wolff on The Street: Bernie Sanders’ Brand of Socialism — More Karl Marx or FDR? 1

Richard Wolff has posted on his website, the article Prof. Wolff on The Street: Bernie Sanders’ Brand of Socialism — More Karl Marx or FDR?

Prof. Wolff is an expert on Socialism, so he does a good job explaining many things about Bernie Sanders and Socialism. The excerpt below isn’t necessarily his best words, but they are an introduction.

To see just how big the disconnect is on the surface, consider this: Although nearly half of Americans say they wouldn’t vote for a socialist, Sanders not only gained campaign contributions after the first Democratic primary debate, some online polls and focus groups declared him the winner.

In other words, plenty of people like Sanders’ ideas, if not the “socialist” label.

In a purely socialist economy, the public (read: the government) controls the means of production, and revenue is shared with everyone. In a capitalist system, individuals control the means of production and can, if they choose, keep all of the income.

Most governments, regardless of how they describe their countries, fall somewhere in between.

There are two statements in the article that I think are way off the mark however.

3. — Social Programs. While the U.S. already offers programs like Medicare and Social Security that fall outside a purely capitalist system, Sanders said he would push for more, like child-care and pre-kindergarten programs, and expand Social Security. Admittedly, the only way such programs would be approved by a Republican-controlled Congress is if Americans insisted on them, he said.

The drawback: “Congress has no resources of its very own,” said Williams. “That money coming out of Washington to pay for health care, food, housing, does not represent Congress reaching into their own pockets to send that money out.”

The last paragraph in the excerpt above quotes Dr. Walter Williams, an economist at George Mason University. There are several other ignorant statements in the article by Williams prior to this one. Dr. Williams fails to mention that money coming out of Washington to pay for health care, food, housing is created by the independent government entity known as the Federal Reserve Bank. Don’t argue with me over whether or not the FED is a part of the government. I have the evidence to prove you wrong.

The second item I take issue with Prof. Wolf is the following:

Socialism, on the other hand, attempts to create equal opportunities. It redistributes money from the wealthy to the poor and middle classes to bridge the income gap, largely by taxing the rich at a higher rate.

Under the current circumstances the redistribution of wealth is from the wealthy, who stole it from the middle-class and poor, back to the people from whom it never should have been allowed to be stolen in the first place. In other words the money being redistributed is money that rightfully belongs to the middle-class and the poor because it was taken from them by fraudulent means. Hey, middle-class and poor people, it’s your money, do you want it back, or should we let the rich keep it?


Exclusive Interview with Ron Paul

Stansberry Research LLC has the typical Wall Street con job in 12-Term Congressman Ron Paul’s Warning to Americans about the Coming Currency Crisis. Read the small fine print below that interview if you are actually naive enough to look at the interview. This guy is such a good con artist, you might come away believing what he says despite my warnings here.

Legal Notices: Ron Paul is a spokesman for Stansberry Research, LLC.

In looking for a good way to convey the magnitude of this con job, I started a Google search which led me to the WikiPedia article Stansberry Research.

In 2014, Snopes.com investigated the firm’s claim that United States currency will “collapse”, and found such claims to be false

Here is the Snopes article Collapsing Currency.

Claim:   The U.S. dollar will officially collapse after 1 July 2014 due to the implementation of H.R. 2847.


FALSE

To be certain, there are some things that Ron Paul says that are true, but the conclusions he draws from them are somewhat insane. After all, he is selling you something and he has to make a good, plausible story. I couldn’t actually last through the whole presentation to see what it was he was actually selling. They weren’t going to put a time line at the bottom of the video to give you any clue as to how long you would have to wait to hear the money proposition. There was a brief mention of gold in the part I listened to.

For full disclosure, I should mention that in the 1970s I did buy the book You Can Profit From A Monetary Crisis by Harry Browne © 1977. The crisis didn’t come, but I sure lost money buying gold in the way that the book recommended. In inflation adjusted dollars, I don’t think that gold has ever risen to what I bought it for in the 1970s. I bought gold back then for $700 to $800 per ounce. Today’s price is $1,074. What I invested in since the 1970s has returned far, far more than the continued loss I would have endured if I hadn’t sold off the gold.

What is true about Paul’s presentation, is that the current stock market bubble is a product of the massive amounts of liquidity that the FED has introduced into the economy to keep it afloat. At some point the chickens will come home to roost. The collapse of the stock market in 1929 brought on a huge period of deflation, not inflation. So there is no telling what is actually going to happen when it bursts. The price of gold has been falling for years while these guys have been predicting it will rise. No doubt the price of gold will rise some day, but you have no way of telling how much it will fall before then. No doubt the stock market will fall some day, but you have no way of telling how much it will rise before then.

Ron Paul is right, that massive introduction of liquidity by the FED is not the way to solve our current economic crisis. What he doesn’t tell you about the FED’s use of this ineffective FED tool for solving the current crisis, is that this is the only tool they have. What we really need is for the massive infrastructure investment that Bernie Sanders is calling for instead of what the FED has done. The only reason the FED has to do what they have tried to do is the realization that the Congress is not going to approve the stimulus that they should have done during the Reagan, Bush, and Bush years. Instead, what Congress, Reagan, Bush, and Bush did was to give us a massive transfer of wealth from the middle class to the rich. The FED did what it could to offset this wrong policy by the legislative and executive branches. Instead of bailing out the banks, they should have nationalized them. We put far more FED money into the banks than they were worth, so there should not be any problem with a little Democratic Socialism of taking ownership of what we bought at more than fair market value.

So Ron Paul is right that recent policy has been a disaster, but he has not even a clue as to what the right policy would have been. He has not a clue about basic economics. The solution to our problems would have been the classical Keynesian prescription that eventually got us out of the last depression after every other bad policy was tried and failed. What Keynes said was that there has to be direct government intervention to get people employed. He didn’t say that the way to do it had to be a World War, but that is what the politicians chose. Think of the massive destruction of Europe and its recovery thanks in part to the USA’s Marshall Plan. Did we do some massive destruction in Japan, too? There was that atomic bomb think that we can’t have forgotten about already. Does Ron Paul have an explanation of how our government didn’t produce any wealth back then? Where does he think the recovery of Europe and Japan came from?

Bernie Sanders is saying the way to do it is with a massive government employment project that includes a rebuilding of our infrastructure. Fat chance anybody will allow that to happen. If the electorate comes to the conclusion that Ron Paul does know his ass from his elbow, we will be merrily cutting the budget, trying to run a surplus, and driving the world to the deepest depression we have ever seen. So Ron Paul is right about the possible collapse and depression, but it is not for the reasons he says. The reason for the collapse will be exactly the following of what he prescribes to prevent it or the following of our current trajectory of taking money from the middle class and giving it to the rich. The current trajectory will keep making the rich richer until the revolution comes, as history seems to say must be the inevitable outcome.


The S Word: A Short History of an American Tradition…Socialism

I have referred to the book The S Word: A Short History of an American Tradition…Socialism before on this blog.

A few months before the 2010 midterms, Newt Gingrich described the socialist infiltration of American government and media as “even more disturbing than the threats from foreign terrorists.” John Nichols offers an unapologetic retort to the return of red-baiting in American political life—arguing that socialism has a long, proud, American history. Tom Paine was enamored of early socialists, Horace Greeley employed Karl Marx as a correspondent, and Helen Keller was an avowed socialist. The “S” Word gives Americans back a crucial aspect of their past and makes a forthright case for socialist ideas today.

I don’t think enough people are taking up my challenge to read this book to see what startling evidence there is for this viewpoint of our history. I am afraid that the only way I can convey to you what is in the book is to show an occasional image of a page from the book.

Page from The S Word: A Short History of an American Tradition...Socialism