TBIF Reads
Posted: May 6, 2011 Filed under: morning reads | Tags: Bradley Manning, Fox News, Gary Johnson, medicare, Osama Bin Laden Sea burial, Paul Ryan's Vouchers for Health Care, Rank Santorum, Republican Debate South Carolina, Tim Pawlenty 44 CommentsToday we’re thanking the Buddhas for Friday just ’cause I feel like it!! Well, not that any Buddhas had anything to do with naming today Friday or inventing the calendar or anything. Let’s just say I felt contrarian today.
So, some of the Republicans who want to be president had a debate last night and it was all about denial of the last few centuries or progress. Heck, it was denial of maybe 5 or so centuries. Here’s a blast from the past from one of the more “credible candidates”.
MR. BROKAW: In the vast scientific community, do you think that Creationism has the same weight as evolution, and at a time in American education when we are in a crisis when it comes to science, that there ought to be parallel tracks for Creationism versus evolution in the teaching?
GOV. PAWLENTY: In the scientific community, it seems like intelligent design is dismissed — not entirely, there are a lot of scientists who would make the case that it is appropriate to be taught and appropriate to be demonstrated, but in terms of the curriculum in the schools in Minnesota, we’ve taken the approach that that’s a local decision. I know Senator Palin — or Governor Palin — has said intelligent design is something that she thinks should be taught along with evolution in the schools, and I think that’s appropriate. My personal view is that’s a local decision —
MR. BROKAW: Given equal weight.
GOV. PAWLENTY: — of the local school board.
MR. BROKAW: And you would recommend it be given equal weight?
GOV. PAWLENTY: We’ve said in Minnesota, in my view, this is a local decision. Intelligent design is something that, in my view, is plausible and credible and something that I personally believe in but, more importantly, from an educational and scientific standpoint, it should be decided by local school boards at the local school district level.
I guess he doesn’t think stuff like science should be left up to scientists. School Boards know so much more. But that’s pretty funny, because last night, he couldn’t exit that question fast enough. He also said he was for cap-and-trade before he was against it.
10:07 p.m. “Do we have to?” Pawlenty’s candid comment before he’s asked to listen to an old interview where he backs the cap-and-trade approach to put a price on carbon. Afterwards, he reiterates he’s changed his mind. “I don’t try to duck it, bob it weave it. I’m just telling you I made a mistake.”
10:05 p.m. Pawlenty pivots off a question about creationism to burnish his blue collar credentials: “My family is a union family,” he said. “It’s not about bashing unions it’s about being pro-jobs…Pressed on to answer the creationism question: “I believe that should be left up to parents and local school districts.”
The shocker of the evening was that there is another pro-choice Republican politician still standing besides Rudy Guilliani. It’s Governor Gary Johnson of New Mexico. Former Senator Rick Santorum is as Spanish Inquisition as ever.
10:00 p.m. Santorum offers a robust defense of the party’s social conservative wing — and takes a direct shot at Indiana Gov. Mitch Daniels: “Anybody who would suggest we call a truce on the moral issues doesn’t understand what America is all about,” he says.
9:56 p.m. Johnson acknowledges he’s writing off the anti-abortion vote. “I support a woman’s right to choose up to the viability of the fetus,” he says.
9:54 p.m. Gays could get married if they want to under a President Paul: “The government should just be out of it,” the congressman says of the definition of marriage. “I have my standards, but I shouldn’t have the right to impose my standards on others… Just get the government out of it.”
If you haven’t noticed, Mittens and a few others were AWOL. The debate was carried by Fox News. This is interesting. Gingrich didn’t show up but his contract with Fox was ended as was Rick Santorum’s contract. How DO they tell the difference between dabblers and done thrown the hat in? Huckabee still has his program. Then, there’s the Donald on NBC. NBC isn’t talking one way or the other about canceling whatever reality show Trump’s cooked up at the moment.
Fox News has terminated its contracts with former House Speaker Newt Gingrich and former Sen. Rick Santorum after the deadline for them to decide on presidential bids passed on May 1, a source familiar with the move told POLITICO.
Fox suspended the two contributors in early March and stopped paying them as they mulled presidential runs, but left them the option of returning to the network. The contracts’ end marks another sign that Gingrich, who has repeatedly delayed his decision citing business obligations, is in the race — though he dropped out of tonight’s Fox debate.
For what it’s worth, the pundits and the focus groups liked former CEO Herman Cain’s debate performance. For some reason, Santorum came in second with the Fox News debate focus group. Most of them should just head to the ice floes now for the good of society.
In an interesting twist of fate, Paul Ryan Agrees That His Budget Includes An Individual Mandate for Health Insurance.
Q: If Medicare becomes a voucher program, would you require seniors to purchase private insurance and if so isn’t that an individual mandate? If you will not require them to purchase insurance how do you propose to prevent a situation where the costs of uninsured seniors is very expensive and gets passed on to me as a private policy holder? […]
RYAN: Its mandate works no different than how the current Medicare law works today, which is you just select from a wide range of different plans. It literally would be like Medicare Advantage…
So much for the faux outrage on “Obamacare”. This was the same kind of crap that went on back in the day when it was all called Dolecare. The centerpiece of all the Republican plans has been forcing people to buy stuff from private businesses. I still can’t figure out how Obama got the Democrats to go along with it after they’d been fighting it for like 15 years.
Radical Muslims are already calling the site of Osama bin Laden’s ocean burial the ‘Martyr’s Sea’, according to one of Britain’s leading Islamic scholars.
The US said the decision to drop bin Laden’s body into the North Arabian Sea was taken to avoid creating a shrine for the slain Al Qaeda chief.
But Abdal Hakim Murad, Muslim Chaplain at Cambridge University, claimed yesterday that the move could backfire on the Americans.
Speaking on Radio 4’s ‘Today’ programme, he said it was ‘disappointing’ that bin Laden wasn’t taken into custody.
‘By tipping him into the sea, the Americans may have created a kind of shrine. Some radicals are already calling the Arabian Sea the Martyr’s Sea,’ he said.
That’s according to Misao Fukuda at the M&K Health Institute in Hyogo, Japan, and colleagues, who found subtle differences in sex ratios of children depending on when a mother entered menarche.
Fukuda asked over 10,000 mothers the age at which they had begun their period and the sex of their baby. Forty six per cent of the children born to women who began their periods at age 10 were boys. This figure rose to 50 per cent when the woman began her period at 12, and 53 per cent when the women entered menarche at age 14 (Human Reproduction,DOI: 10.1093/humrep/der107).
Fukuda points to previous research demonstrating higher levels of the female sex hormone oestradiol in women who entered menarche before the age of 12. This may lead to spontaneous miscarriage of fertilised male eggs, he says. The theory is plausible, says Valerie Grant at the University of Auckland, New Zealand, as male embryos are known to be more vulnerable to hormone imbalances.
WAPO has a very interesting personal feature up on Bradley Manning: “Bradley Manning is at the center of the WikiLeaks controversy. But who is he?” It basically gives a brief biography of the young solider in the center of so much controversy and trouble.
Despite his struggles, Manning was excited about his future in Army intelligence, a field that suited his analytical mind. “It’s going to be a different crowd when I get through with basic,” he told the friend. “I’m going to be with people more like me.”
He enjoyed classes at the Fort Huachuca, Ariz., intelligence school, where he received a top-secret security clearance, graduated and joined the 2nd Brigade, 10th Mountain Division at Fort Drum, N.Y.
It was here, constrained by the military’s “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy, that he began speaking out anonymously about gay rights. He attended a rally in Syracuse and noted on Facebook that he had gotten an “anonymous mention” in an article. The reporter wrote of a gay soldier who complained he was “living a double life. … I can’t make a statement. I can’t be caught in an act.”
Manning now had a love interest: Tyler Watkins, a freshman interested in neuroscience at Brandeis University who was an active member of Triskelion, the Brandeis club for gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender students. Manning began to make weekend visits to Watkins’s dorm at the tranquil, wooded campus west of Boston. On his Facebook page, Watkins declared that he was “totally in love with Bradley Edward Manning!!!!!!!”
It still seems that TV is centered on OBL. I’m glad that we’ve been able to scrap up some alternatives around here. Well, that’s enough to get you started today! What’s on your reading and blogging list?
The Pundits Live Blog the Alternative Universe so I don’t have to
Posted: May 5, 2011 Filed under: 2012 presidential campaign, John Birch Society in Charge, religious extremists, Republican politics, Republican presidential politics | Tags: Republican Primary Debate South Carolina 46 CommentsThere’s a Republican debate going on right now sans Mittens Romney. There’s a lot of live blogs going on out there. I’m putting
this thread up but telling you that I really have no desire to watch a train wreck. It’s being held in Greenville, South Carolina.
Live blogs:
GREENVILLE, S.C. — The 2012 election season begins Thursday in earnest with the Republican Party’s first presidential primary debate here at 9 p.m. ET.
But only five GOP hopefuls are taking part, as some hang back and wait to fully engage (like former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney and former Utah Gov. Jon Huntsman) while others have yet to commit to a bid for the Oval Office (see former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee and current Indiana Gov. Mitch Daniels).
Former Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty is the biggest name taking part at Peace Center for the Performing Arts, though Rep. Ron Paul (Texas) certainly has the most enthusiastic fanbase. Others hitting the stage include former Sen. Rick Santorum (Pa.), former New Mexico Gov. Gary Johnson, and former Godfather’s Pizza CEO Herman Cain.
and if you really want to watch it, it’s on FOX surprise, surprise, surprise!!! NOT!!!
The twitter channel is #SCdebate.
Things you really want to know or not:
All of the hopefuls but Herman Cain would release OBL’s photo. (whew, they GOT the big one out of the way) and now they’re all singing the praises of ‘enhanced interrogation’.
Please, deliver us from EVIL!!!
Still no answers for the Jobs Crisis
Posted: May 5, 2011 Filed under: Domestic Policy, Economy, Equity Markets, Federal Budget, Federal Budget and Budget deficit, jobs, The Great Recession, U.S. Economy, unemployment | Tags: joblessness, unemployment 27 Comments
It’s difficult for me to watch the job market continue to dither knowing full well that nothing is being done about it. Just in case you’ve missed the other headlines today, U.S. jobless claims “unexpectedly” jumped. It wasn’t unexpected on my part.
Applications for jobless benefits jumped by 43,000 to 474,000 in the week ended April 30, the most since August, Labor Department figures showed today. A spring break holiday in New York, a new emergency benefits program in Oregon and auto shutdowns caused by the disaster in Japan were the main reasons for the surge, a Labor Department spokesman said as the data was released to the press.
Even before last week, claims had drifted up, raising concern the improvement in the labor market has stalled. Employers added 185,000 workers to payrolls in April, fewer than in the prior month, and the unemployment rate held at 8.8 percent, economists project a Labor Department report to show tomorrow.
“We’re seeing so many distortions in the claims numbers week to week that it’s hard to say, but I’m willing to be patient and wait and see,” said Stephen Stanley, chief economist at Pierpont Securities LLC in Stamford, Connecticut. “Other reports show an improvement in the labor market. It’s going to take a while to dig out of the hole we have in relation to the jobs the economy lost during the recession.”
Yes, it is a hole, and there’s very little being done to fill it. There are quite a few factors that contribute to the current appalling job market. The Fifth Fed District’s Macroblog looks at the contribution of offshoring. Offshoring basically means that part of a production process is moved to an overseas location. That can mean anything from a call center to manufacturing of a good. You can see that the impacted industries include both service and manufacturing sectors. The nifty table up there in the left hand corner will give you an idea of the impact of offshoring by industry. The numbers are tabulated from data during the years of 1999 – 2008. The changes and content of the ‘other’ category is further elucidated in the macroblog piece. It includes another table that you may review too.
Sixty-nine percent of the foreign employment growth by U.S. multinationals from 1999 to 2008 was in the “other industries” category, and 87 percent of that growth was in three types of industries: retail trade; administration, support, and waste management; and accommodation of food services. Some fraction of these jobs, no doubt, reflect “offshoring” in the usual sense. But it is also true that these are types of industries that are more likely than many others to represent production for local (or domestic) demand as opposed to production for export to the United States.
This is a bit interesting. There are two main types of Foreign Direct Investment that involve ‘offshoring’. One is called vertical and the other is horizontal. Horizontal FDI means that one segment of the process is moved to another country but the final good or service still goes to the consumer in the company’s home country. The last analysis from macroblog implies that a substantial part of that offshoring is actually Vertical FDI. This means that the company is moving itself over to the country to take advantage of end consumers in the other country.
This finding isn’t surprising if you consider the number of countries that are experiencing booms in the number of middle class citizens. There are more middle class Chinese than there are US citizens, as an example. There is also the fact that the middle class in the US has been losing income and purchasing power for nearly 30 years. It only figures that these companies would look for greener pastures elsewhere. Why expand here when your customer base is unlikely to be expanding and unable to afford your products in any meaningful way?
Macroblog points out that this is unlikely to explain all the doldrums in the US job market, but it does provide one factor and and interesting one at that. I would say that this analysis basically says that US businesses are much more bullish on foreign markets than they are on their own. (Capital flows for investment suggest this too.) This should give all of us pause.
Interestingly enough, another FED President also suggested that the economy and the US job markets weren’t as stable as they could be and suggested more stimulus. Three Fed Presidents rotate in and out of the Open Market Committee–that’s the monetary policy decision body–and each district is a world unto itself in many ways. Fed Boston is not in the current rotation.
Federal Reserve Bank of Boston President Eric Rosengren yesterday said record stimulus is necessary to spur the “anemic” economy and that raising interest rates to combat increasing food and fuel prices would impede growth.
“With significant slack in labor markets, stable inflation expectations, and core inflation well below our longer run target, there is currently no reason to slow the economy down with tighter monetary policy,” Rosengren said during a speech in Boston.
Not surprisingly, equity markets seemed to be caught a bit off guard with this news. Right now, I think the market seems to be in one of those periods where it’s not paying much attention to fundamentals. Bloomberg.com notes that Futures Fell on the news. Some times Wall Street thinks as long as their churning out fees and capital gains, all is right with the world. This is definitely not the case. It does explain why their economists tend to get caught off guard though. Hello? Real World anyone?
Stock-index futures dropped after the report. The contract on the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index maturing in June fell 0.6 percent to 1,334.8 at 8:58 a.m. in New York. Treasury securities rose, sending the yield on the benchmark 10-year note down to 3.18 percent from 3.22 percent late yesterday.
Dean Baker from CEPR is pretty pessimistic about the entire thing.
Weekly unemployment claims jumped to 474,000 last week, an increase of 43,000 from the level reported the previous week. This is seriously bad news about the state of the labor market. It seems that the numbers were inflated by unusual factors, most importantly the addition of 25,000 spring break related layoffs in New York to the rolls due to a changing vacation pattern, however even after adjusting for such factors, claims would still be above 400,000 for the fourth consecutive week.
This puts weekly claims well above the 380,000 level that we had been seeing in February and March. This suggests that job growth is slowing from an already weak level. This is news that should be reported prominently.
Unfortunately, the lackadaisical job market is off the front pages. Much of the political focus on the economy remains honed in on the federal debt. Again, this is the silly because one of the best ways of increasing tax revenues and closing the debt is for people to be employed. It’s an uphill battle to expect the deficit to close with this unacceptable level of unemployment. I still can’t figure out where they’ve placed their heads back their in Washington, D.C. Oh, well, look over there … it’s a dead Osama Bin Laden and we’ve not got any pictures yet!
SCOTUS: Cheerleader Must Pay Damages for Refusing to Cheer Rapist
Posted: May 5, 2011 Filed under: Psychopaths in charge, Violence against women, We are so F'd, Women's Rights | Tags: cheerleading, high school athletics, rape, rights of students, sexual assault, Texas injustice, U.S. Supreme Court 26 CommentsI’m sure you all remember this story. A 16-year-old cheerleader (known in court papers as HS) at Silsbee High, in Silsbee, Texas, was raped by local basketball star Rakheem Bolton, football player Christian Rountree, and another unnamed juvenile male at a post-game party in 2008. The young men:
forced her into a room, locked the door, held her down and sexually assaulted her. When other party-goers tried to get into the room, two of the men fled through an open window, including Bolton, who left clothing behind. Bolton allegedly threatened to shoot the occupants of the house when the homeowner refused to return his clothes.
Sounds pretty cut and dried, doesn’t it? Bolton even admitted guilt took a plea bargain:
In September 2010, Bolton pled guilty to a lesser charge of Class A Assault and was sentenced to one year in prison, a sentence that was suspended by the judge in lieu of two years probation, a $2,500 fine, community service and an anger management course.
The school reacted by telling HS to “keep a low profile,” e.g., don’t eat in the cafeteria or get involved in plans for homecoming. Meanwhile Bolton was allowed to go on playing for the basketball team. From The Independent UK:
Four months later, in January 2009, HS travelled to one of Silsbee High School’s basketball games in Huntsville. She joined in with the business of leading cheers throughout the match. But when Bolton was about to take a free throw, the girl decided to stand silently with her arms folded.
“I didn’t want to have to say his name and I didn’t want to cheer for him,” she later told reporters. “I just didn’t want to encourage anything he was doing.”
Richard Bain, the school superintendent in the sport-obsessed small town, saw things differently. He told HS to leave the gymnasium. Outside, he told her she was required to cheer for Bolton. When the girl said she was unwilling to endorse a man who had sexually assaulted her, she was expelled from the cheerleading squad.
HS’s parents sued school officials and the school district, but the upshot was a federal court said she had to cheer for her rapist no matter what.
A federal district court dismissed the family’s claims against the school district and school officials, as well as additional claims filed against the local prosecutor. In a unanimous ruling last September, a three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit, in New Orleans, affirmed the dismissal.
“In her capacity as a cheerleader, H.S. served as a mouthpiece through which [the school district] could disseminate speech—namely, support for its athletic teams,” the 5th Circuit panel said. “Insofar as the First Amendment does not require schools to promote particular student speech, [the district] had no duty to promote H.S.’s message by allowing her to cheer or not cheer, as she saw fit. Moreover, this act constituted substantial interference with the work of the school because, as a cheerleader, H.S. was at the basketball game for the purpose of cheering, a position she undertook voluntarily.”
To add insult to injury, the court called the case a “frivolous lawsuit” and ordered HS to pay $45,000 to cover court costs. You can read the decision here (PDF).
So HS and her family took the case to the court of last resort–The U.S. Supreme Court–which on Monday refused to hear the case without even making any comment!
And the final insult: A couple of months ago, the case against the football player who assaulted HS was dropped “in the interests of justice,” and the case against the unnamed juvenile rapist was dropped because “the evidence was insufficient for prosecution.”
I don’t even know where to begin in addressing this outrageous miscarriage of justice. Apparently if you’re a female high school cheerleader, you have absolutely zero free speech rights. HS didn’t even make any overt protest–she simply chose to remain silent when her rapist name was chanted by the other cheerleaders and the crowd.
It took a lot of courage for HS to stay on the cheerleading squad and refuse to disappear silently into the ether so that her rapists could continue their careers in high school athletics–and most likely go on to sexually assault other women. Not only is this horrifying outcome for all rape victims, but also it’s a dramatic setback for the rights of students to fight back against the often stupid and insensitive decisions of school administrators and school districts.
The fact that SCOTUS has refused to review this case is disgusting, and at least on of the justices should have objected. Where were Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Sonia Sotomayor, and Elena Kagen? The future for women in the U.S. is looking more and more like The Handmaid’s Tale with every passing day.








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