Friday Reads

Good Morning!

So, this first item I dug up is kind’ve bothersome. It’s a Pew Poll with a self quiz attached on economic and other news. You can go take it yourself if you’d like!

Nearly eight-in-ten (77%) say correctly that the federal budget  deficit is larger than it was in the 1990s and 64% know that in recent  years the United States has bought more foreign goods than it has sold  overseas. As in recent knowledge surveys, about half (53%) estimate the current unemployment rate at about 10%.But the public continues to struggle with questions about the Troubled Asset Relief Program known as TARP: Just 16% say, correctly, that more than half of the loans made to banks under TARP have been paid back; an identical percentage says that none has been paid back. In Pew Research’s previous knowledge survey in July, just 34% knew that the TARP was enacted under the Bush administration. (See “Well Known: Twitter; Little Known: John Roberts,” July 15, 2010

The new survey finds that an overwhelming percentage (88%) identify  BP as the company that operated the oil well that exploded in the Gulf  of Mexico earlier this year. But as in the past, the public shows little awareness of international developments: 41% say that relations between India and Pakistan are generally considered to be unfriendly; 12% say relations between the two long-time rivals are friendly, 20% say they are neutral and 27% do not know.

Steny Hoyer is promising congressional Dems that they will have a chance to vote to extend the middle class tax cuts. I wonder if he’s spoken to the President who is already indicating he’ll negotiate with the Republicans.

The move indicates that House Dems are growing more resolved to draw a hard line on the Bush tax cuts, forcing Republicans to choose between supporting Obama’s tax plan and opposing a tax cut for the middle class.  However, the way forward still remains murky. Even if such a measure were to pass in the House, it’s unclear whether the Senate will agree to such a vote, and the White House has not endorsed the approach.

What’s more, the vote could conceivably go down, or alternatively, Republicans might successfully mount a procedural response, known as a “motion to recommit,” that could also force a House vote on the high end cuts. I have not been able to determine how House Dems might respond to such a move.

For all these reasons, this House move does not preclude a deal being reached in the end on a temporary extension of all the cuts. And plans could still change: The House Dem leadership has yet to publicly endorse this plan

The House failed us on pay equity, extension of unemployment benefits, and the food bill that Sima wrote about yesterday.  One bright spot is that NPR will still get federal funding.

House Democrats on Thursday shot down a G.O.P. attempt to roll back federal funding to NPR, a move that many Republicans have called for since the public radio network fired the analyst Juan Williams last month.

Republicans in the House tried to advance the defunding measure as part of their “YouCut” initiative, which allows the public to vote on which spending cuts the G.O.P. should pursue. But their push was blocked, 239 to 171, with only three Democrats voting with a united bloc of Republicans.

Representative Eric Cantor of Virginia, the No. 2 House Republican who is set to become majority leader in the next Congress, said the vote showed Democrats had failed to learn the lessons of this month’s midterm elections.

“Today’s vote was just the latest common sense YouCut to cut spending and save taxpayer dollars, and again Democrats showed that they just don’t get it,” Mr. Cantor said in a statement.

It’s beginning to look like Congress may get rid of DADT.  Boxer and Feinstein will be pushing for the effort during the lame duck session.  Lisa Murkowski has indicated she will support the effort. Lieberman told The Advocate that the Senate has the required 60 votes for closure.

Sen. Joe Lieberman said Thursday that repealing “don’t ask, don’t tell” as part of the National Defense Authorization Act is no longer a question of votes; it’s a question of process.

“I am confident that we have more than 60 votes prepared to take up the defense authorization with the repeal of ‘don’t ask, don’t tell’ if only there will be a guarantee of a fair and open amendment process, in other words, whether we’ll take enough time to do it,” Lieberman told reporters at a press conference, naming GOP senators Susan Collins and Richard Lugar as yes votes. “Time is an inexcusable reason not to get this done.”

Lieberman, an independent, was flanked by 12 of his  Democratic colleagues — a core group that seemed intent on urging the  Democratic leadership to allow enough room in the Senate schedule for a  debate that would be acceptable to Republicans. The senators talked about working over the weekends, and Sen. Mark Udall offered to go straight through until Christmas Eve.

There is supposedly an Antimatter Breakthrough that could lead to Starships. All the Trekkers out there will sure to be excited.

Scientists at CERN, the research facility that’s home to the Large Hadron Collider, claim to have successfully created and stored antimatter in greater quantities and for longer times than ever before.

Researchers created 38 atoms of antihydrogen – more than ever has  been produced at one time before and were able to keep the atoms stable  enough to last one tenth of a second before they annihilated themselves  (antimatter and matter destroy each other the moment they come into  contact with each other). Since those first experiments, the team claims to have held antiatoms for even longer, though they weren’t specific of the duration.

While scientists have been able to create particles of antimatter for decades, they had previously only been able to produce a few particles that would almost instantly destroy themselves.

“This is the first major step in a long journey,” Michio Kaku,  physicist and author of Physics of the Impossible, told PCMag.  “Eventually, we may go to the stars.”

For now, scientists are interested in producing antimatter in these relatively large quantities because it could lend insight into fundamental physical laws. It’s generally believed in the scientific community that at the universe’s creation, both matter and antimatter existed but not in the same quantity, so when the two annihilated each other, only matter remained. That could be because antimatter behaves differently than the regular variety.

“It’s a fundamental tenet of physics that antimatter and matter behave very similarly although not exactly,” said Lawrence Krauss, physicist and author of The Physics of Star Trek, in an interview. “And in order to really test that, you need anti-atoms. Being able to test the properties of antimatter at a whole new level of precision is obviously important.”

Further into the future, Kaku believes we may be able to use antimatter as the “ultimate rocket fuel,” since it’s 100 percent efficient – all of the mass is converted to energy. By contrast, thermonuclear bombs only use about 1 percent.

“One of the main uses of antimatter would be a starship,” said Kaku “Because you want concentrated energy. And you can’t get more concentrated than antimatter.”

Sarah Palin has fallen directly into the trap I spoke about yesterday in my thread on inflation.  I guess she thinks that a few home economics courses are enough to qualify someone to talk on the country’s economy.  TNR has a great article up about how conservative Republicans are going after the FED with fallacies and ideology instead of facts. If you read me yesterday, you will know how woefully wrong this is.

Last week, in between leading a graduate seminar on Proust and delivering a long-scheduled lecture on mass spectrometry, former Alaska Governor Sarah Palin ventured a few ticks beyond her acknowledged area of expertise and reflected on monetary policy at a convention in Phoenix. The occasion for her unexpected soliloquy—I’m actually serious about the economics speech—was the Fed’s decision to buy some $600 billion in long-term government securities, a practice known as quantitative easing. “We shouldn’t be playing around with inflation,” Palin said, in a typically Delphic pronouncement. She helpfully added  that “everyone who ever goes out shopping for groceries knows that  prices have risen significantly over the past year or so.”

There’s a great series called The Rules of the Game over on Project Syndicate by two superheroes of economics and finance –specifically corporate governance–Lucian Bebchuk and Luigi Zingales.   They leap out with a great series of questions and answers for reform for Wall Street and big public corporations.

Were over-compensated and unaccountable bosses to blame for the Great Recession? Are bankers and financial managers overpaid? Which reforms must be adopted to save capitalism – above all from its practitioners?

The series is updated ever-so-often and if you get a chance to read any of them, you should. One of my favorites is ‘How to Pay a Banker’ by Bebchuk.

Insulating executives from losses to stakeholders other than shareholders can be expected to encourage them to make investments and take on obligations that increase the likelihood and severity of losses that exceed the shareholders’ capital. In addition, such insulation discourages the raising of additional capital, inducing executives to run banks with a capital level that provides an inadequate cushion for bondholders and depositors. The more thinly capitalized banks are, the more severe these distortions – and the larger the expected costs rising from insulating executives from potential losses to non-shareholder stakeholders.

Compensation schemes for executives should provide disincentives to moral hazard.  What we have now is nothing but encouragement.   Here’s another quote from ‘Politics and Corporate Money’, from the same author and series.

In expanding corporations’ rights to spend money on politics, the US Supreme Court relied on “the processes of corporate democracy” to ensure that such spending does not deviate from shareholder interests.  Clearly, however, such processes can have little effect if political spending is not transparent to public investors.

For such disclosure to be effective, it must include robust rules with respect to political spending via intermediaries. In the US, for  example, organizations that seek to speak for the business sector, or  for specific industries, raise funds from corporations and spend more  than $1 billion annually on efforts to influence politics and  policymaking. While the targets of these organizations’ spending are disclosed, there is no public disclosure that enables investors in any public corporation to know whether their corporation contributes to such organizations and how much. Investors deserve to know.

Moreover, a public company’s political spending decisions should not be solely the province of management, as they often are. Independent directors should have an important oversight role, as they do on other sensitive issues that may involve a divergence of interest between insiders and public investors. And these directors should provide an annual report explaining their choices during the preceding year.

Fed Chair Ben Bernanke criticized China’s currency manipulation in what seems to be a ramped up U.S. effort to stop trade deficits through rhetoric. He actually didn’t say China, but the implication is really there in his words.

While Bernanke didn’t identify China, he took aim at “large, systemically important countries with persistent current-account surpluses.” Bernanke’s comments come a week after leaders of the Group of 20 developed and emerging nations meeting in South Korea failed to agree on a remedy for trade and investment distortions. At the summit, President Barack Obama attacked China’s policy of undervaluing its currency.

Bernanke said that the “sense of common purpose has waned” after officials around the world united to fight the financial crisis. “Tensions among nations over economic policies have emerged and intensified, potentially threatening our ability to find global solutions to global problems,” he said.

China has tied the yuan to the dollar to promote exports that helped produce the fastest gains in gross domestic product of any major economy. China, which surpassed Japan’s GDP to become world No. 2 in the second quarter, recorded 9.6 percent annual growth in the three months through September. It holds about $2.6 trillion in foreign reserves, the most in the world.

So, it appears that the pending Thanksgiving weekend has slowed things down a bit.   I did want to share something with you concerning my University here in New Orleans and what Jindal the terrible has left to our students here. (You  know he was actually on Scarborough this week bragging how he’d cut taxes and balanced the state budget.)  This is a University with around 15,000 students and quite a good sized campus with many buildings.

Students at the University of New Orleans did their part on Thursday to help clean up what they believe is a broken funding system for higher education.

Before Hurricane Katrina, there were 87 members of the custodial staff at UNO. There are currently only 31 due to a combination of layoffs and positions that were never filled as people left or retired.

Students said they’re tired of the dirt, and they’re doing something about it.

“It means when we have trash in between classrooms, dust, even roaches, it becomes noticeable (and) very distracting,” said UNO Student Government President John Mineo. “To be honest, I don’t want to go to a classroom like that and sit down.”

Since 2009, UNO has lost $16 million in state support and 150 positions. The move has sparked protests schools across the state, like one at UNO in September, when what was supposed to be a peaceful rally turned violent.

Last week, hundreds of students from around the state rallied on the state capitol, and earlier this week at Louisiana State University, some questioned where the funding for higher education was going by throwing fake money with a picture of Gov. Bobby Jindal on it.

However, Thursday night was the first time that students literally cleaned up the mess they said state leaders have left behind by not prioritizing education.

About 50 students showed up at Thursday’s clean up at Milneberg Hall. They said they chose the building because it’s used for freshmen orientation, and they said dirty classrooms are an embarrassing way to introduce new students to the school.

Louisiana public colleges and universities have had about $300 million in budget cuts since 2008.

There are two janitors left in the 4 story CBA building.  It opened just after Katrina and now a good portion of it reminds me of a ghost town.  There are plenty of  students so that’s not the problem.  Our governor is really. really bad news.   He shouldn’t be in charge of anything that could impact any living, breathing being.  He’s ruthless and cruel and every decision he makes has to do with moving him up the next step on the ladder.

This is a picture of President Clinton that I took at UNO a few months after Hurricane Katrina. I was the only person teaching on the main campus at that time and had 5 students in my class. Clinton's listening to the first President Bush. They came to present the universities here with checks to help us get through the Hurricane damage. Who will help us overcome the damage wrought by Jindal the Terrible?

 

What’s on you reading and blogging list today?

50 Comments on “Friday Reads”

  1. Zaladonis's avatar Zaladonis says:

    Kat, you and BB and Sima do the best morning front pages.

    It’s like the way I used to read my favorite newspapers, one piece after another I start reading and get drawn in, savor it and learn something.

    Just, thanks.

    And good morning everybody. Bright and sunny here in the Northeast.

    • bostonboomer's avatar bostonboomer says:

      Zaladonis,

      I hope you enjoy the sunshine. It’s cold and gray out here this morning, but we’re supposed to get some more days in the 60’s soon.

      • Zaladonis's avatar Zaladonis says:

        Now it’s cold and gray here with snow flurries. Fast turnaround! But enjoyed the sunshine and now I’m enjoyng this. I love New England weather.

  2. fiscalliberal's avatar fiscalliberal says:

    Dak – in a way, the Republican house is going to be a boon to your blog as you will be able to point out the falicies of Republicans with facts. In a way you may have a dual opportunity in showing how some liberal programs have to be paid for to be fore they can be sustained.

    In a way, the cat food commission has gotten ideas on the table and it is up to the liberals to knock down the bad idea’s. My favorite is they want to lump Social Security and Medicare together. The problem is not Social Security but Medicare and I truely believe the recent health care changes will not fix that. With a health care cost problem as big as it is, we have to change the funding structure radically.

    • NW Luna's avatar NW Luna says:

      Medicare could easily be fixed by getting rid of the 3rd-party leeches who suck up 30% of the costs and get between providers and patients.

      Oh, wait, that would mean going to single-payer. /s

  3. Pat Johnson's avatar Pat Johnson says:

    Watching this band of pirates turn down the extension of unemployment benefits to those who are unable to find work, while at the same time listening to them fight for the extension of the Bush tax cuts to further enrich the wealthy is stomach turning.

    What is wrong with this nation that we are able to forget the plight of those who are indeed suffering, where many of their jobs have gone overseas and will not return anytime soon, and where the battle to further enrich those who do not need the help becomes a political battle?

    It seems that those willing to listen to the idiotic blathering of people like Palin who have no idea what they are talking about has become the norm. America is facing some very harsh realities due to the economic policies of the Bush administration, and followed by a “leader’ who himself does not have a clue, and we are in the grip of a meltdown that will not cease anytime soon.

    Especially in the hands of the current crop of greedy pigs and those waiting in the wings to get their share of whatever is left. Insane.

    • dakinikat's avatar dakinikat says:

      I don’t see much of an end to it either. Every one’s mad but they don’t seem to connect it with those policies that are doing so much harm and the people that seem to know least of what that speak are the ones that get all the press. It’s truly disgusting!!!

  4. NW Luna's avatar NW Luna says:

    Oooh! Ooh! I scored better than 96% of the other polltakers! No small thanks to Dak here, I’m sure.

      • Rikke's avatar Sima says:

        Better than 99% here, and it’s all directly attributable to Dak. I’d not have been interested enough to read the economic news without her posts over the last couple years.

        I admit, I had to think about the prime minister of England, since it’s a coalition government.

  5. Dario's avatar Dario says:

    TARP is misleading. But Americans intuitively understand that there was a huge bailout and are very angry about it. We all know it was the Fed that bailed out the banks, and though Obama is not directly responsible for that bailout, he is indirectly.

  6. NW Luna's avatar NW Luna says:

    From the Dept. of WhoWhuddaThunkIt:

    Raising retirement age would hurt the poor, GAO says
    The Associated Press
    / WASHINGTON — Raising the retirement age for Social Security would disproportionately hurt low-income workers and minorities, and increase disability claims by older people unable to work, government auditors told Congress.

    http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/text/2013470434.html

    • NW Luna's avatar NW Luna says:

      U.S. body-scan technology used by Dutch is better than ours
      McClatchy Newspapers

      WASHINGTON — After a Nigerian terrorist boarded a flight from the Netherlands to Detroit last Christmas with enough explosives to bring down the plane, officials at Amsterdam’s Schiphol Airport decided to build a better mousetrap.

      So they installed more than a dozen full-body scanners capable of detecting metallic and nonmetallic materials, including explosives, gels, powders and liquids.

      In the 11 months since then, Schiphol largely has avoided the privacy and safety uproar that surrounds passenger screening at U.S. airports.

      Ironically, the Dutch can credit their relative success to good ol’ American ingenuity: the kind that the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) is now considering.

      Unlike the backscatter-imaging devices that provide revealing body images and which have stoked concerns about radiation, the system at Schiphol uses radio waves to detect contraband. Woburn, Mass.-based L-3 Communications Security & Detection Systems claims on its website that the radio waves are “10,000 times lower than other commonly used radio-frequency devices.”

      If the software identifies a passenger carrying explosives, an outline of the problem body area is displayed on a generic mannequin figure instead of on the actual image of the passenger’s body. The mannequin image, which appears on the operator’s control panel, “can then be used by security personnel to direct a focused discussion or search,” the company website reads.

      http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/text/2013470008.html

      Knew there had to be a better way.

      • Rikke's avatar Sima says:

        Wow. Now that’s ingenious and not nearly as invasive. I love the idea of putting the results of the scan on a mannequin figure.

        • dakinikat's avatar dakinikat says:

          you know the weird thing is that dogs can sniff out this stuff … why don’t we just have more dogs employed at airports instead of those machines?

          • dakinikat's avatar dakinikat says:

            Oh, I forgot dogs don’t bribe politicians!

          • Rikke's avatar Sima says:

            I think it would be great to get greeted by dogs at the airport. I know they are doing a job, but you could pet them, reduce the stress a bit before the flight. It would rock. And they are better at detection, and far less threatening to a child or someone who’s been abused.

    • grayslady's avatar grayslady says:

      Maybe *I* should put up a page on the internet about some project I’m working on and ask people to bankroll me. Maybe we all should. What is it with people that makes them think we all want to support them? Sorry if that sounds unkind, but people who are a lot more noteworthy than Joseph Cannon write free blogs and don’t ask readers for money for something totally apart from their writing.

      • Dario's avatar Dario says:

        Maybe *I* should put up a page on the internet about some project I’m working on and ask people to bankroll me.

        I see no harm in you asking for someone to “bankroll” you. How many donate, will depend on how many people want to give you help. From your comment, I get the feeling that not many would want to help you. I don’t like charities, but gladly give to someone who I enjoy reading. I also like to give to street musicians and artists. They make my life more enjoyable. Maybe I’m aware how difficult it is for talented artists. It used to be that the rich, including the Catholic Church supported artists like da Vinci, Michelangelo and composers like Mozart and others. Now days many depend on grants, but they are not easy to come by. I take no offense when Cannonfire asks for help.

        • grayslady's avatar grayslady says:

          If he were asking for help to keep a blog going, that’s one thing. But he isn’t.

          My comment certainly had nothing to do with me. I was merely reflecting that many people are having a rough time financially right now. I give to food pantries myself, not street artists, but to each his own.

          • Dario's avatar Dario says:

            Joseph Cannon, I think, agrees with you. Though he linked Kickstarter to his blog, he’s asking through Kickstarter, an artist support website. I love the arts. Most artists live from hand to mouth, even though they work very hard to create against great odds. When I read about the money trouble great artists/composers (Van Gogh, Bizet, Mozart) endured, I think it’s sad they were not supported. Humanity would be poorer without the arts.

  7. NW Luna's avatar NW Luna says:

    And from the Dept of DoubleTalk:

    Jobless claims rise but broader trend offers hope
    AP Economics Writer

    The number of people applying for unemployment benefits barely rose last week, offering some hope that the job market may be improving. (sic)

    “The data on jobless claims continues to look encouraging as initial claims held at a relatively low level,” said Daniel Silver, an economist at JPMorgan Chase.

    http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/text/2013462479.html

    So if this is a “relatively low level” to Mr. Chase Economist, I’d really hate to see a “high level.” These people lack any sense of reality.

  8. minkoffminx's avatar Minkoff Minx says:

    “The people who grope you and your children in a way that would get anyone else arrested and charged with a felony. With your President’s blessings.”

    TSA Groper arrested for Statutory Rape of 14 YO, Enticement of a Child and Indecent Assault and Battery

    This is making me sick…

    I am sure that there are many “wanna be cops” who got jobs at the TSA when they could not measure up to police force standards. These TSA agents can get away with stuff like this, it is so disturbing:

    TSA Patdowns Have No Limits and Are Dangerous for Women
    http://thenewagenda.net/2010/11/19/tsa-patdowns-have-no-limits-and-are-dangerous-for-women/

  9. Dee's avatar Dee says:

    This is totally OT but Adele finally has a new single coming out.

    Hope this works –

    “Someone Like You”

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OHciwrfQQpU

    I’m a big fan.

  10. dakinikat's avatar dakinikat says:

    Matter Stoller’s got a great post up at New Deal 2.0

    Today, we are in the midst of creating a second sharecropper society. I first heard the term “slaves to the bank” from a constituent fighting a fraudulent foreclosure. The details aren’t so important — this couple had been illegally placed in a predatory loan — but at one point, the wife explained that she and her husband were so scared they would have “given their first born to the bank to keep their home”. That was fear speaking, total unadulterated panic. And as we watch debt-holders use the ornaments of fear, such a loan sharking company that set up fake courts to convince debtors they were losing cases, we should recognize that what the creditor class wants is what they’ve always wanted: total dominance of our culture.

    • Rikke's avatar Sima says:

      This is insane (from the Stoller article):

      A student loan debt is literally a claim against a life — you cannot discharge it in bankruptcy, and if you die, your parents are obligated to pay it.

      I knew student loans were becoming impossible, but this is just insane. I swear, education is becoming a bubble. And yet look at what Dak writes about her university. That’s shameful, that it’s that dirty and unkempt.

      So where’s the blood loan money going?

      • dakinikat's avatar dakinikat says:

        Bankers!! They should’ve never privatized it. They did that during the Clinton years; big mistake. Thankfully, that was undone recently. One of the real victories of the last couple of years.

  11. CinSC's avatar CinSC says:

    I really enjoyed reading the CERN news. (engineering geek here) Thanks for including it.

  12. minkoffminx's avatar Minkoff Minx says:

    Did you all see this? President Obama pushes START, missile defense, at NATO Summit
    http://blogs.abcnews.com/politicalpunch/2010/11/president-obama-pushes-start-missile-defense-at-nato-summit.html
    “In remarks to the press pool in Lisbon, where he’s attending the NATO summit, President Obama announced a new development with missile defense strategy and continued to push for the Senate to ratify the New START nuclear disarmament treaty with Russia.”

    I realize that Obama is in Portugal, and that he is dealing with the NATO summit, but am I the only one who thinks that this START treaty is going to be the next thing he concentrates on? I mean, what about JOBS? I don’t know, maybe I am just a bit tired of Obama and his “hope and change” but it seems that this treaty negotiation should be left up to Clinton as SoS and Bobama should put more attention on the crappy economy and the lack of jobs we are experiencing here in USA.

    Oh geez, did I sound like one of those tea people?

    • bostonboomer's avatar bostonboomer says:

      Sadly, Obama simply doesn’t care about jobs–at least here in the U.S. He can’t even get Congress to extend unemployment benefits right before the holidays.

    • dakinikat's avatar dakinikat says:

      Nope, I think the tea people are busy hyperventilating over imaginary taxes.

  13. ABG's avatar ABG says:

    I post this not just because they are accusing me of being two different people (I have no idea who “Returning Guest” is. But also because the entire comment thread is about Palin’s greatness.

    We don’t agree on Obama or the primaries, but you got out at the right time.

    Link removed

    • bostonboomer's avatar bostonboomer says:

      You’ll get no sympathy here.

    • dakinikat's avatar dakinikat says:

      We’re trying to nurture a place to discuss issues here without personal attacks and not focus so much on personalities and we really don’t want to complain about other blogs either unless it’s issue oriented and disagreement on an issue. So, living within those guidelines is important to those of us that carry the power of the eject button. Just so you know this time, that comes under the heading of not being particularly issues related and it’s also not taking issue with a post on another blog because you take issue with the issue. Are you catching my drift here at all?

  14. bostonboomer's avatar bostonboomer says:

    Joe Scarborough has been suspended from MSNBC for campaign donations.

    http://www.politico.com/news/stories/1110/45411.html

  15. Rikke's avatar Sima says:

    Read this on the Beeb yesterday and my reaction was, WTF????

    Billionaire Donald Trump May Run for Presidency

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-11790558

    Really? Wow, that’ll be.. interesting. GAG.

  16. seo thai's avatar seo thai says:

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