So, How threatening are 84 year old “Activists”?

Every time I look in the mirror or try on an old pair of jeans or check my crown for newly sprouted grey hairs, I try to recite the poem Warning, When I Am an Old Woman, I Shall Wear Purple’ .  I probably should just make a copy of it and paste it on my vanity mirror.  It’s hard to stay focused when your hips start to take up entire chair seats.

I’ve done my share of protests.  I’ve done them with now Dr. Daughter strapped to my chest in a baby carrier and with same daughter pushed across the streets around the Nebraska State Capitol in a baby carrier.  I ran for state office when baby daughter was still in Montessori pre-school. (She gets her B.S. in Finance from LSU in May.) Dr. Daughter  was in utero when I interviewed Maya Angelou and when I was out at the Rose and Crown with Kate Millet and Betty Friedan talking about rumors of holding an annual International Women’s Day.  Whenever I get down, I start singing “we will never give up, we will never give up, until justice is ours” which is my life’s theme song after I learned it from from Kristen Lems in the early 80s.  (I learned this with Dr. Daughter in utero and most of my friends hoping that I wasn’t going to give birth in the middle of being the executive director of an activists’ conference). One of these days I will transfer some of this off of a VHS tape to digital and share it with you.  People–including my children–can attest to its existence, however. I fought and worked like crazy for the ERA when I was in graduate school getting my first masters degree.  I go through periods where I can still find the strength to protest and other times when I just can’t believe we could be regressing so quickly.  These days, I am highly discouraged.

I would just like to bow deeply and say  “I’m not worthy” to Dorli T. Rainey.

Dorli T. Rainey described herself as “an old lady in combat boots” in a Wednesday interview with The Associated Press and said she’s a former school teacher. A Seattle police spokesman did not discuss her specifically, instead referring to a statement saying demonstrators sprayed were refusing a police order to disperse.

The department was working with Mayor Mike McGinn’s office Wednesday and a statement on the Tuesday night protest was expected later in the afternoon. Update: McGinn’s statement can be read here.

Rainey in 2007 (seattlepi.com file)

Rainey’s time in the 2009 mayoral race was brief, and Rainey told the AP she quit because she was too old. On Tuesday night, Rainey was on a bus when she heard helicopters and thought she should show her solidarity with New York, where protesters had rallied for Wall Street reform.

Rainey was near Fifth Avenue and Pine Street when she was pepper-sprayed Wednesday night – the most chaotic night of Occupy Seattle protests. An officer using a public-address system told demonstrators to leave.

“Pepper spray was deployed only against subjects who were either refusing a lawful order to disperse or engaging in assaultive behavior toward officers,” department spokesman Jeff Kappel said the earlier statement.

Rainey has been a longtime activist, and wrote several letters to the editor of the Seattle Post-Intelligencer print edition.

In April 2005 she called for Experience Music Project, which she called an “ugly monster,” to be imploded like the Kingdome. In January 2007, she wrote that there were “interesting parallels between what happened in 1944-45 in Germany and what is happening today in the United States.” She complained of former Seattle Mayor Greg Nickels’ influence on Seattle Public Schools and opposed the tunnel to replace the Alaskan Way Viaduct.

In June 2007, Rainey was outside the Westin Hotel in Seattle protesting a visit by Attorney General Alberto Gonzales. In November of that year, she wrote in a letter of an “eerie similarity” between a government crackdown on protestors in Pakistan and a crackdown by Olympia Police Department and others “on peaceful and unarmed protesters at the Port of Olympia.”

Ms. Rainey was pepper sprayed in Seattle along with a 19 year old pregnant woman and a priest.  I would certainly like to know how any of them threatened the riot police.

The Seattle mayor Mike McGinn has apologized and asked for a police review.

McGinn said in a Wednesday afternoon statement that he had spoken with Rainey, and had also directed police leadership to review the incident.

“To those engaged in peaceful protest, I am sorry that you were pepper sprayed,” he said. “I also called in Seattle Police Chief John Diaz and the command staff to review the actions of last night. They agreed that this was not their preferred outcome.”

The mayor said police officers are facing difficult circumstances trying to maintain order the many Occupy protests throughout the city. He said police are developing procedures to make sure there are enough commanders on the scene at future protests.

McGinn referenced the 1999 World Trade Organization protests in Seattle, at which there were mass arrests, a nighttime curfew in parts of the city and the deployment of National Guard troops to maintain order, as well as 2001 riot during Mardi Gras celebrations that left a young man dead.

“In both instances insufficient attention and preparation led to severe public safety issues,” McGinn said.

McGinn said “tensions appear to be getting higher” as the local Occupy movement stretches into its sixth week.

The police response to these protest really worries me.  Oh, and who would do such an inhumane thing as this?

Publicola reported that a short time after the pepper spray was fired, the protesters were lectured by a man in a suit who described himself as a “professional investor.” He told a group of protesters, including a young woman who said she has a job at Safeway but is underemployed, “I’m in the 1 percent; I’m not like you.”

The man also asked the woman, “Who is John Galt?” That question is the first line of Ayn Rand’s novel “Atlas Shrugged,” and the phrase is commonly used by devotees of the book to signal their allegiance to its free-market ideology.

The Publicola report continued, “A young man wearing a black ’99 Percent’ shirt responded: ‘Go take your tie somewhere else.’”


How to make decisions in a democracy

I’ll say up front that I don’t know the answer. Everything that’s been tried up till now has real problems, so I’d like to throw some ideas out there. The current discussion about (the difficulty of) decision-making in the General Assemblies at #OccupyWallStreet is what jogged me to post.

Update, Nov. 16, 2011. Law enforcement is clearing out the encampments of . That’s dictatorial, but it suggests a broadening of tactics, which would have been a good idea in any case. Too few people have the financial freedom to camp. Winter is unfriendly to campers. The Occupations could move to shift work. Groups of hundreds or thousands, whatever can be mustered, occupy for four hours, and then their replacements move in. 24/7/365. Also, come up with other actions people can take. Refusal to pay taxes (for the very brave), door-to-door explanation of ideas and suggestions for action, continuing to move money away from Big Finance, start by boycotting of the Koch Empire (Did you know they make Quilted Northern toilet paper? I didn’t either.) move on the boycotting the next worst nasties, and so on through a hundred things we could all help with.

That takes organization and the ability to make relevant decisions in real time. Neither of those can be achieved by General Assemblies. So exploring better ways to organize is more relevant than ever, unless the movement is to fall right back into old ways that haven’t proven resistant to cooptation.

It’s important to remember that democracy has to work all the time. Failure is not an option. When it fails briefly, governance ratchets toward anti-democratic. Before you know it there’s an undemocratic elite at work and you’re struggling with monopolies, or corruption, or wars. The fact that a method sometimes, or even often, works is not good enough.

So, first, democratic decision-making methods that sometimes fail:

  • Direct popular majority vote. Sometimes called “tyranny of the majority” because it can be so anti-democratic in its treatment of large minorities.
  • Indirect popular vote, e.g. Electoral College. If it has no real power, it has the same problems as direct popular vote. If it does have power, it’s liable to ignoring the will of the people, i.e. being anti-democratic, at the least, and corrupt at the worst.
  • Super-majority vote. This is an attempt to prevent the exclusion of large minorities. In practice, it gives veto power to minorities, which is also anti-democratic. Decision-making becomes too slow and unwieldy to respond adequately to reality. (Look at California trying to deal with its budget mess.) Another effect in practice can be the formation of a much smaller group of real decision-makers who then use the official consensus process as window-dressing. (E.g. European Union in the current financial crisis, Spokes Councils in OWS General Assemblies.)
  • Decision-making by committee. Another way of trying to achieve consensus decisions. The problems are that responsibility becomes spread too thin, and social dynamics play a larger role than the merits of the case. Both of those factors make it easy to take bad decisions.

Whenever large numbers of people have to come to a decision together, structural factors work anti-democratically. It’s not bad outside influences that corrupt the process (although they can). It’s decision-making by large numbers of people that doesn’t work. Since the will of large numbers of people is the essence of democracy, we have a problem.

Right now, the idea is that voters steer government. But voters are proving terrible at governing. Who wants to do all the homework involved? You have to know the issues, study the background facts, and evaluate implications. It’s a full time job, and most voters already have a full time job.

It’s much easier to tell when something is wrong. And it’s much easier to mobilize voters to throw the bums out.

The problem of preserving democracy should be approached from the other end. Instead of trying to steer government, voters should be smashing messes into small enough pieces to cart away. Preventing the ratchet toward elitism can only be done by continual corrections. Without them, the inevitable imperfections in any system will ultimately lead to failure. Voters are well-positioned to provide corrections. It’s hard to suborn such a large group. And, practically by definition, most of them won’t be part of the elite, so they won’t be blinded by class loyalties.

As for how to implement it, votes could be held every so often (once a year?) to recall hopeless administrators or reverse decisions that people feel aren’t working out. (That and all the ideas here are more completely discussed in Re-imagining Democracy, Government, Decision-making.)

Voters might — I think would — be able to provide course corrections, but that still means somebody has to hold the actual steering wheel. Somebody has to do the business of government, so there is the question of how any decisions get made in this system.

To answer that it’s worth thinking about what government actually is. (When it’s not a pot for personal power and riches.) Government is a lot of tedious housekeeping for the social good, in other words for no direct benefit. It’s cleaning up other people’s messes and sorting out stupid fights and trying to come up with rules to keep the messes and fights to a minimum. It takes very skilled, knowledgeable, and fairly unselfish people to do that.

The bad news is that we’re terrible at finding those people. The good news is that I don’t think we have to.

What we’ve done so far is used a purely random system. The lottery may be genetic, as in hereditary monarchies, or it may be by self-selection, as it is in democracies. (There are no job-related qualifications to run for office. Anyone can play.) And even though the random systems produce plenty of charlatans and failures, we have survived. So randomness, by itself, need not be feared.

If we improved the pool from which random selections are made, we might improve the whole process. We could still have the democratic advantages of randomness for preventing elitism, and yet reduce the disadvantage of having complete amateurs running the show.

I think it’s actually easy to come up with an improved selection process.

Let people self-select to put themselves in the pool and list their background showing their administrative abilities. People would then review the pool to winnow it to those who actually have successfully administered something, whether it’s the yearly school fair or an aluminum smelter. It could work somewhat like rating schemes on the web. Readers would rate some limited number of resumes.

One big difference is essential, however. Other people’s ratings should not be visible. It’s important for the ratings to be independent, otherwise they immediately fall into confirmation of the earliest favorites. The ratings should be purely a pass-no pass based on whether the candidate has the experience they say they have. Candidates for positions requiring special knowledge would be reviewed by people with the relevant education or work experience.

The process would be most convenient if computerized, but even without computers, all you’d need is central locations for the lists, like public libraries or meeting places, to make it work. If it turns out people can’t be bothered with ratings voluntarily, it could be a jury duty type of obligation.

The administrator would then be randomly selected, i.e. by lottery, from the candidates still in the pool after that. The pool could be refreshed on an ongoing basis, and numerous administrators could be drawn from each relevant pool. In other words, you wouldn’t go through the whole process every time the community needs a municipal dogcatcher.

The administrator would stay in as long as they kept doing a good job by various metrics, or until the voters chucked them out. Administrators at higher levels, such as state, province, or nation, could be chosen from the pool of those who’d done a good job (as evidenced by no recalls or few complaints) at a lower level.

There are several advantages to that system. Anyone can play, and yet there are some job-related qualifications. There are no unrelated job qualifications, such as being rich or looking good on television. People who prove incompetent can be ousted on a regular basis. There are no obvious points at which an elite group of insiders could develop. And it could even be easy to ensure that administrators reflect the composition of the general population by limiting the lottery to candidates who meet gender or racial criteria.

Of course, there are bound to be disadvantages, too. They’d become evident if the system was tried.

Ideally, it would be a method that allows competent administrators to do the tedious work of government without at the same time hijacking it for themselves.

Or, in an OWS context, it could identify order-keepers and finance officers and media relations experts who could approach their work with experience and professionalism. But their actions would be subject to public scrutiny. They’d operate in the open, not in a clique, and they’d be subject to recall if they did their jobs badly. I see a system of randomly selected, knowledgeable, responsible individuals who are answerable to the group as a much more democratic solution to the problem of unwieldy General Assemblies than the formation of inner Spokes Councils who have power because they took it.

What the system doesn’t do is decide overall policy. People still have to agree on the social contract, the constitution, on some statement of principles. In an OWS context, people still need to decide whether they care about non-financial inequalities, like sexism. Or whether they care about the use of violence. Or meetings held at times when the people who are the point of the meetings can’t attend.

Once there is a statement of principles, however, the function-or-be-fired system does show the way toward finding people to actually carry out those principles in practice, and to getting rid of them if they don’t.


Did the Feds Coordinate the Recent Occupy Crackdowns?

This isn’t confirmed by any other sources so far, but Rick Ellis at The Examiner claims to have spoken to a Homeland Security official “on background,” and received confirmation that federal agencies coordinated the recent crackdowns on Occupy groups in multiple cities.

Over the past ten days, more than a dozen cities have moved to evict “Occupy” protesters from city parks and other public spaces. As was the case in last night’s move in New York City, each of the police actions shares a number of characteristics. And according to one Justice official, each of those actions was coordinated with help from Homeland Security, the FBI and other federal police agencies.

The official, who spoke on background to me late Monday evening, said that while local police agencies had received tactical and planning advice from national agencies, the ultimate decision on how each jurisdiction handles the Occupy protests ultimately rests with local law enforcement.

According to this official, in several recent conference calls and briefings, local police agencies were advised to seek a legal reason to evict residents of tent cities, focusing on zoning laws and existing curfew rules. Agencies were also advised to demonstrate a massive show of police force, including large numbers in riot gear. In particular, the FBI reportedly advised on press relations, with one presentation suggesting that any moves to evict protesters be coordinated for a time when the press was the least likely to be present.

This morning RalphB linked to a post at FDL about the Mayor Quan of Oakland admitting to taking part in a conference call with officials in 18 other cities.

And here’s an AP story that confirms cooperation among local officials, but not with the feds.

Don’t set a midnight deadline to evict Occupy Wall Street protesters _ it will only give a crowd of demonstrators time to form. Don’t set ultimatums because it will encourage violent protesters to break it. Fence off the parks after an eviction so protesters can’t reoccupy it.

As concerns over safety and sanitation grew at the encampments over the last month, officials from nearly 40 cities turned to each other on conference calls, sharing what worked and what hasn’t as they grappled with the leaderless movement.

In one case, the calls became group therapy sessions.

While riot police sweeping through tent cities in Portland, Ore., Oakland, Calif. and New York City over the last several days may suggest a coordinated effort, authorities and a group that organized the calls say they were a coincidence.

“It was completely spontaneous,” said Chuck Wexler, director of the Police Executive Research Forum, a national police group that organized calls on Oct. 11 and Nov. 4. Among the issues discussed: safety, traffic and the fierceness of demonstrations in each city.

“This was an attempt to get insight on what other departments were doing,” he said.

Oh sure. It was all a coincidence. These people must think we’re really stupid.

David Dayen has a post on the “disturbing silencing of the press in last night’s OWS raid.” He links to this NYT article:

As New York City police cleared the Occupy Wall Street campsite in Zuccotti Park early Tuesday morning, many journalists were blocked from observing and interviewing protesters. Some called it a “media blackout” and said in interviews that they believed that the police efforts were a deliberate attempt to tamp down coverage of the operation….

As a result, much of the early video of the police operation was from the vantage point of the protesters. Videos that were live-streamed on the Web and uploaded to YouTube were picked up by television networks and broadcast on Tuesday morning.

At a news conference after the park was cleared Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg defended the police behavior, saying that the media was kept away “to prevent a situation from getting worse and to protect members of the press.”

Yeah, right.

Some members of the media said they were shoved by the police. As the police approached the park they did not distinguish between protesters and members of the press, said Lindsey Christ, a reporter for NY1, a local cable news channel. “Those 20 minutes were some of the scariest of my life,” she said.

Ms. Christ said that police officers took a New York Post reporter standing near her and “threw him in a choke-hold.”

This is from Dayen’s post:

I’ll go one better than shoves and choke holds. Josh Harkinson of Mother Jones was forcibly dragged out of the ecampment, after sneaking in to witness the proceedings. He was one of the lucky few journalists to witness the batons and pepper spray that characterized the eviction of Zuccotti Park.

Other journalists were arrested in the exercise of doing their job. And by the way, there was violence coming from the police…

Please go read the rest at the FDL link. There also a lengthy article at the WSJ speculating on what could happen if the NYPD keeps the protesters from gathering in one place and instead they spread out over the city.

Protesters have aired plans to occupy subway stations and to march on the Brooklyn Bridge on Thursday, and several people in contact with the movement say organizers expect them to be their biggest events yet.

Christopher Dunn, executive legal associate of the New York Civil Liberties Union, said a truce has been in place between police and protesters over the last few weeks, easing tensions that arose after a pepper-spraying incident in September. Also sparking outrage was a threat by city officials last month to clear the park, but they reversed course.

“Since then,” Mr. Dunn said, “the police had not really been a big issue with the Zuccotti Park protesters. But now they are the issue.”

He said Tuesday’s eviction “is going to make police officers’ jobs much more difficult…Whatever benevolent attitude the protesters had about the police is gone.”

Wow, so much is happening! Please share links to anything you read or hear about this.


Monday Reads

Good Morning!!

It’s hard to believe that it’s nearing the end of the year 2011.  Time sure does fly when you’re running out of money.

So, I posted a link down thread on a post of mine yesterday that I thought I would share with you over coffee this morning.  I’m not sure if you’ve ever heard of George Monbiot but his writing is a taste you should acquire. This is his latest from the UK Guardian and I really love it!  It’s called ‘The 1% are the very best destroyers of wealth the world has ever seen’.  The lead in description reads: “Our common treasury in the last 30 years has been captured by industrial psychopaths. That’s why we’re nearly bankrupt”.  He even quotes one of my favorite behavioral economics/finance researchers, a psychologist named Daniel Kahneman who won the Nobel Prize in Economics a year ago.

If wealth was the inevitable result of hard work and enterprise, every woman in Africa would be a millionaire. The claims that the ultra-rich 1% make for themselves – that they are possessed of unique intelligence or creativity or drive – are examples of the self-attribution fallacy. This means crediting yourself with outcomes for which you weren’t responsible. Many of those who are rich today got there because they were able to capture certain jobs. This capture owes less to talent and intelligence than to a combination of the ruthless exploitation of others and accidents of birth, as such jobs are taken disproportionately by people born in certain places and into certain classes.

The findings of the psychologist Daniel Kahneman, winner of a Nobel economics prize, are devastating to the beliefs that financial high-fliers entertain about themselves. He discovered that their apparent success is a cognitive illusion. For example, he studied the results achieved by 25 wealth advisers across eight years. He found that the consistency of their performance was zero. “The results resembled what you would expect from a dice-rolling contest, not a game of skill.” Those who received the biggest bonuses had simply got lucky.

Such results have been widely replicated. They show that traders and fund managers throughout Wall Street receive their massive remuneration for doing no better than would a chimpanzee flipping a coin. When Kahneman tried to point this out, they blanked him. “The illusion of skill … is deeply ingrained in their culture.”

So much for the financial sector and its super-educated analysts. As for other kinds of business, you tell me. Is your boss possessed of judgment, vision and management skills superior to those of anyone else in the firm, or did he or she get there through bluff, bullshit and bullying?

We’ll have to see if BostonBoomer can read all the links he has to studies that show that the best traits in senior management these days are basically the same traits displayed by psychopaths.  It’s a very interesting set of reads.  Go check his site out too.

Jeffrey Sachs thinks that the Occupy movement will usher in a New Progressive Movement.  Hopefully, this one doesn’t get co-opted by the twits we all have come to know and be appalled by.  I can think of a few stale politicians who call themselves progressives that seemed completely detached from the word.  I think the word does not mean what they think it does.  Taking money from entrenched interests while talking a good game does not a progressive make.

Following our recent financial calamity, a third progressive era is likely to be in the making. This one should aim for three things. The first is a revival of crucial public services, especially education, training, public investment and environmental protection. The second is the end of a climate of impunity that encouraged nearly every Wall Street firm to commit financial fraud. The third is to re-establish the supremacy of people votes over dollar votes in Washington.

None of this will be easy. Vested interests are deeply entrenched, even as Wall Street titans are jailed and their firms pay megafines for fraud. The progressive era took 20 years to correct abuses of the Gilded Age. The New Deal struggled for a decade to overcome the Great Depression, and the expansion of economic justice lasted through the 1960s. The new wave of reform is but a few months old.

The young people in Zuccotti Park and more than 1,000 cities have started America on a path to renewal. The movement, still in its first days,  will have to expand in several strategic ways. Activists are needed among shareholders, consumers and students to hold corporations and politicians to account. Shareholders, for example, should pressure companies to get out of politics. Consumers should take their money and purchasing power away from companies that confuse business and political power. The whole range of other actions — shareholder and consumer activism, policy formulation, and running of candidates — will not happen in the park.

The new movement also needs to build a public policy platform. The American people have it absolutely right on the three main points of a new agenda. To put it simply: tax the rich, end the wars and restore honest and effective government for all.

Now, if we can only find some people that  could run for office and do the right thing for a change.

Evelyn Lauder–yes, of Estee Lauder–has died of ovarian cancer.  She was an early leader to seeking recognition and research money for breast cancer and survived the disease herself. She’s the creator of the Pink Ribbon Campaign.  She has a very compelling personal story as a member of one of the lucky Jewish families who made it out of Europe before the final solution took hold as NAZI policy.

Evelyn Hausner was born on Aug. 12, 1936, in Vienna, the only child of Ernest and Mimi Hausner. Her father, a dapper man who lived in Poland and Berlin before marrying the daughter of a Viennese lumber supplier, owned a lingerie shop. In 1938, with Hitler’s annexation of Austria, the family left Vienna, taking a few belongings, including household silver, which Ernest Hausner used to obtain visas to Belgium.

The family eventually reached England, where Evelyn’s mother was immediately sent to an internment camp on the Isle of Man. “The separation was very traumatic for me,” Mrs. Lauder said. Her father placed her in a nursery until her mother could be released and he could raise money. In 1940, the family set sail for New York, where her father worked as a diamond cutter during the war.

In 1947, he and his wife bought a dress shop in Manhattan called Lamay. Over time they expanded it to a chain of five shops.

Mrs. Lauder grew up on West 86th Street and attended Public School 9. During her freshman year at Hunter College, she met Leonard Lauder on a blind date. Already graduated from college and training to be a naval officer, Mr. Lauder had grown up on West 76th Street, though in a sense it was a world apart. “He was the first person who took me out to dinner in a restaurant,” she recalled. They married four years later at the Plaza Hotel.

Dean Baker has a great blog thread with some terrific analysis that suggests that we don’t have to balance the budget on the backs of the American middle class. As usual, he beats the press and another meme that says we just can’t tax those wealthy ‘job creators’.  He suggests we cut the Pentagon budget and focus on taxing the wealthiest Americans.

First, the piece too quickly dismisses the possibility of getting substantial additional tax revenue from the wealthy. It presents the income share for those earning more than $1 million as $700 billion, saying that if we increase the tax rate on this group by 10 percentage points (from roughly 30 percent to 40 percent), then this yields just $70 billion a year.

However, if we lower our bar slightly and look to the top 1 percent of households, with adjusted gross incomes of more than $400,000, and update the data to 2012 (from 2009), then we get adjusted gross income for this group of more than $1.4 trillion. Increasing the tax take on this group by 10 percentage points nets us $140 billion a year. If the income of the top 1 percent keeps pace with the projected growth of the economy over the decade, this scenario would get us more than $1.7 trillion over the course of the decade, before counting interest savings. Of course there would be some supply response, so we would collect less revenue than these straight line calculations imply, but it is possible to get a very long way towards whatever budget target we have by increasing taxes on the wealthy.

There are also other ways to address much of the shortfall. In the case of defense, the baseline projects that military spending will average 4 percent of GDP over the next decade. We had been spending 3 percent of GDP on defense in 2000, and the share had been projected to drop further over the course of the decade. If military spending averaged 3 percent of GDP over the next decade, that would save us $2 trillion before interest savings. There are reasons that people may not want to go that low (also reasons to go lower, CATO used to advocate a budget about half this size), and it may take time to reduce Defense Department budgets, but it should not be absurd to imagine that we could get by with the same sort of military budget (relative to our economy) that we actually had a decade ago.

Another way in which we could have substantial savings that would be relatively painless is to have the Fed simply keep the bonds that it has purchased as part of its various quantitative easing operations. It currently holds around $3 trillion in bonds. The interest on these bonds is paid to the Fed and then refunded to the Treasury. Last year it refunded close to $80 billion in interest. The projections show that the Fed will sell off these bonds over the next few years so that these interest earnings will fall sharply. However, if it continued to hold the assets, over the course of a decade it could save the government around $800 billion in interest payments. The Fed might have to take other measures to contain inflation (the immediate reason for selling the assets would ostensibly be to raise interest rates and slow the economy), but it has other tools to accomplish this goal, most obviously raising reserve requirements. (The Chinese central bank uses reserve requirements as a main tool for controlling inflation.)

Can we please get a nice panel of doctors to commit Michelle Bachmann to a long vacation in a place that understands her mental condition?  She’s been on TV the last few days demonstrating her need for a padded cell.  She just seems to completely make up things and appears to have created a well spring of jobs in the journalistic fact checking area.

Bachmann concedes that President Barack Obama achieved a “tactical” success in bringing down al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden and in taking out some of his cohorts in drone attacks.

But she tells NBC’s “Meet the Press” that Obama “is allowing the ACLU to run the CIA,” complaining that it was wrong to ban waterboarding.

Bachmann argued in Saturday night’s foreign policy debate for reinstituting waterboarding. She said the intelligence community has been deprived of the ability it once had to get vital information from detainees in the war against terrorism. The Minnesota congresswoman said Gauntanamo isn’t a long-term solution and that “we have no jails for terrorists.”

That claim is not true, FactCheck.org points out in an analysis of Saturday night’s debate: “There are currently more than 1,700 men being held without trial at the Bagram Air Base in Afghanistan.”

National Journal also calls into question Bachmann’s claim:

Under Obama’s watch, the U.S. has maintained — and expanded — the size of its secretive prisons in Afghanistan; opened up new detention facilities on the island of Diego Garcia; and opened up new facilities in the African nation of Somalia. In addition, the Guantanamo Bay detention facility remains open, and terror suspects held there continue to be interrogated.

Bachmann was not the only GOP candidate to call for the renewed use of torture Saturday night.

She also evidently thinks that it’s not shameful enough that we unnecessarily invaded a sovereign nation and killed millions of its people.  She thinks Iraq should pay us for every soldier killed there.

In an interview this morning with Meet the Press’ David Gregory, Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-MN) repeated her claim that the Iraq should pay America for the privilegeof their nation invaded and occupied for most of the last decade — and then doubled down by calling for Iraq to pay millions of dollars for each American killed in that country:

“It’s over 800 billion dollars that we have expended [in Iraq]. I believe that Iraq should pay us back for the money that we spent, and I believe that Iraq should pay the families that lost a loved one several million dollars per life, I think at minimum.”

One more and then I think we can shout STOP THE INSANITY together!  Yes, Virginia, due process is a waste of time says she of dubious law school degree.

“The lens that I look at this through is as a mother. I’m a mother of five biological children and 23 foster children, and my heart is, I think is reflective of that of the American people. This is so horrific on the level of a parent. I think about my children, if that was my child, and I think my automatic reaction would be, even though I’m a small woman, I’d want to go find that guy and beat him to a pulp.”

You know Michelle, there a guys in prison that will be a lot more effective at that than you.  Let’s just let the legal system work, okay?  Oh, and wtf is a “biological child?”  Is that some term I haven’t heard yet?  Is there ever something called a nonbiological child?

So, that’s it from this morning.  What’s on your reading and blogging list today?


The Hypocrisy and Failure of Ideology

I have been fascinated by the 1920s and 1930s for as long as I can remember.  This was the period of the ‘modern age’ in which scientists like Einstein were cultural icons. U.S. presidents included the two Roosevelts, who spent much of their time trying to rein in the excesses of too much power in the hands of too few people.  There was a very good reason that the big huge corporate CEOS of their day were called robber barons.

It was a culturally rich period also.  Cultural and religious conservatives who tried to put alcohol consumption in a lock box actually ushered in a period of backlash that brought us jazz, the rights of women, and advances in art and architecture. The oppression of the many by the uptight actually brought on a cultural renaissance from the ranks of the fed up.  My grandparents’ generation were probably the first of American’s youth who decided that the game was rigged against them.

It seems like we would be ripe for similar changes today.  We have both the robber barons and the nastiness of culture/religionist warriors.  What we don’t have is a healthy respect for science, discovery, data, and the geology of our country and a leadership class that has a significant number of people that aren’t completely wound up in either baseless ideology and/or religious narrowness.  You may have read that Einstein was a popular figure back in the day.  Can you imagine any scientist or professor reaching pop status in this day and age–let alone a theoretical physicist?  The only person that may have rivaled him in popularity at the time was Charlie Chaplin. Both were immigrants.  Both escaped an oppressive class system and in Einstein’s case, violent, hateful anti-antisemitism.  Our country is supposed to not have a ruling class and it’s supposed to respect all religions as part of its heritage.  All that seems lost on today’s ideologues.

Let’s just say my heroes have never been reactionaries but visionaries.

It makes no sense to me to continue to support and push failed hypotheses. However, the folks who have taken over the Republican Party–as well as some Democrats these days–do just that.  They have no respect for science, professionals in most fields, researchers, data, or modernity. They just keep spinning yarns and making villans out of the US intelligentsia. Frankly I find it quite scary.  Many of our modern immigrants–like Albert Einstein–came here from fascist states or states that persecuted minorities and would not let them pursue research agendas that flew in the face of fascist governments or oppressive religious institutions.  Because of our openness to rational thought and constitutional protection of minority opinions, researchers in the United States made important discoveries.  Just think how the sequencing of the human genome has validated the theory of evolution beyond anything we thought possible as well as opened the door to new therapies for old diseases.  Yet, we have a series of cretins in charge or running for office who consider those brilliant discoveries on the same level as a creation myth.  We have made many discoveries in climate science, and yet full scale denial of reality is a going business.  Fomenting hate and ignorance is an industry in this country right now.

The same is the case with my field of economics.  We continue to see the rise of thoroughly wrong concepts because denying reality serves the the interests of a few rich and powerful but ignorant people.  The arguments never turn on the research. Like religion, they turn on what people want to believe is true. Easy answers do not necessarily represent the truth.  We  badly need a Renaissance of scientific thought in this country. We will never capture any more “firsts” in anything until we reach for the stars and stop grabbing at easy, unsupported answers.  Many of our politicians should be placed in the category of flat earthers.

The NYT had an interesting commentary up today by economist Tyler Cowen that both raises the flag on the reliance of “conservatives” and “libertarians” on failed memes rather than evidence, yet paradoxically pushes its own set of really stupid canards.  Even the title is disturbing.  “Whatever Happened to Discipline and Hard Work?”  implies that the kids in the Occupy movement and disgruntled others in this country are lazy basement dwellers who hate wealthy people.  Cowen wants to turn the conversation away from wealth to values. This is an extremely slippery slope that rests on some really bad assumptions. He also has a rather limited definition of “values”.

Right wingers seem to think that  the Occupy movement hates people because they are rich or wealthy. I even saw some one on MSNBC ask why OccupyLA doesn’t focus on the richies in the movie industry.  Aren’t Hollywood stars worthy of contempt also? ( I do admit to disliking Tom Cruise and Julia Roberts, but it is because they waste perfectly good screen time and take up roles that could go to talented actors.  It isn’t because of their money.)  This is the false identification of the movement as ‘class war.’

The Occupy movement does not hate the wealthy or have it in for anyone who makes money in a creative or legitimate way.  Ben Roethlisberger may be a perfectly loathsome human being, but he got his money by developing a talent that’s in high demand.  No one hates him for his money. The Occupy movement is against people that get wealthy through ‘crony capitalism,’ which means they set up a system through buying political influence that allows them to draw wealth away from others.  One of Cowen’s first paragraphs absolutely made me cringe.  Does he really think that all CEOs are Hank Reardon?  (Yes, I read that corny book in high school.)

The United States has always had a culture with a high regard for those able to rise from poverty to riches. It has had a strong work ethic and entrepreneurial spirit and has attracted ambitious immigrants, many of whom were drawn here by the possibility of acquiring wealth. Furthermore, the best approach for fighting poverty is often precisely not to make fighting poverty the highest priority. Instead, it’s better to stress achievement and the pursuit of excellence, like a hero from an Ayn Rand novel. These are still at least the ideals of many conservatives and libertarians.

The egalitarian ideals of the left, which were manifest in a wide variety of 20th-century movements, have been wonderful for driving social and civil rights advances, and in these areas liberals have often made much greater contributions than conservatives have. Still, the left-wing vision does not sufficiently appreciate the power — both as reality and useful mythology — of the meritocratic, virtuous production of wealth through business. Rather, academics on the left, like the Columbia University economists Joseph E. Stiglitz and Jeffrey D. Sachs among many others, seem more comfortable focusing on the very real offenses of plutocrats and selfish elites.

Yes, the United States still has a regard for the rags to riches story. However, Bernie Maddoff and Raj Rajaratnam are more typical these days of the kinds of wealth amassed in this country than that amassed by a Thomas Edison.  Back in Teddy Roosevelt’s time, there was just as much outcry against the slash and burn capitalism practiced by John D Rockefellar and J.P Morgan as there is today in the multigenerational Occupy movement.  It is one thing to gain wealth by inventing something worthwhile and bringing it to market,  it is completely another to use practices that lead to monopoly power.  Sachs and Stiglitz do not begrudge Warren Buffet his success.  They rightly point out how trust fund babies like the Koch brothers use their funds to produce bad science and fund flat earth politicians simply to get more rich and more powerful.  No one hates the wealthy.  Americans hate crooks and there are plenty of them in the finance industry these days.  They should be put in jail just like any one who steals.

So, then Cowen comes down to some brass tacks that recognize that Hank Reardon is a fictional character that came from the mind of one woman with a challenging personal history that made her do and write some really odd things.  He makes the argument that I have; nevertheless, he still believes that those of us that eschew his labels are doing anything other than attacking the wealthy.  For some reason, he’s the only one able to see the subtleties.

The first problem is that higher status for the wealthy can easily lead to crony capitalism. In public discourse social status judgments are often crude. Critical differences are lost, like the distinction between earning money through production for consumers, as Apple has done, and earning money through the manipulation of government, which heavily subsidized agribusinesses have done. The relevant question, in my view, is not about how much you have earned but about how you have earned it. To further confuse matters, many right-wing Republican politicians supported corporate bailouts and corporate welfare far beyond what was necessary to stabilize the economy, in doing so further muddying the difference between productive and predatory capitalism.

If you want to talk values, then you have to talk about the number of businesses that have been able to buy political power and create laws that allow them to extract benefits that are not available to anyone else.  In contrast, you’ve got a ton of kids in Occupy that have student loans, degrees, and no jobs.  This doesn’t exactly fit the stereotype of lazy, hippie basement dweller that the right loves to push on Fox News.  Oh, and we even have Republican Congress Critterz saying that it’s some lack of moral fiber to not hold three jobs down while going to get a degree.  I’ll hold my own personal experience up here.  I put myself through two degrees working full time, selling my football tickets, and not taking student loans in the 70s and 80s with my then husband who had a four year scholarship for a perfect SAT score.  I could not do that now. My kids both worked to pay their overhead nearly full time with their tuition paid by us.  If we hadn’t saved for that back in the day, they’d have student loans too.  Actually, Doctor Daughter now has huge student loans.  We just saved for normal degrees, not the cost of med school.   My expenses just have increased more than my salary has the last 10 years.  So, I worked full time to get all of my degrees.  I still could not swing the last ones without student loans.  Then there’s the fact that the unemployment rate is so bad, you’re lucky if you can even get a job in a restaurant in most college towns.  Some of these memes just don’t stand up to hard, cold reality.  That, however, does not count for the spinmeisters of the right.  It’s still some personal shortcoming to get any kind of help from some one else.

There is another meme mentioned here that I totally hate.  The idea that there’s this bunch of people that are “tax weary” out there when we have some of the lowest taxes on the books in modern history.   Thank goodness Cowen at least mentioned that all those tax cuts we’ve had recently have not done a damn thing to create jobs or “spur” the economy.  They’ve just created a deficit debacle that’s put the country’s public goods and assets in jeopardy.

Conservatives’ own culture, and the sheer desire to validate wealth, discipline and reward through law and the tax code, may have convinced them that the tax cuts have been beneficial. Measuring the actual effects of a tax cut isn’t always their main concern, even if they sometimes cite such numbers for rhetorical purposes. They feel in their bones that antagonism toward the rich is a dead end and so don’t favor highly progressive taxes.

That rhetorical line appeals to tax-weary voters, and seems part of a core conservative vision, but it is treading on dangerous ground because it moves away from testable theory: those tax cuts have already been in place for many years, yet it remains to be seen when or if they will spur the economy.

So, we get a short bit on how that entire canard doesn’t stand up to testing, data, or scientific inquiry.  However, when Cowen switches to beating up on the poor, we have paragraph after paragraph of data free statements.  How can you go on and on about personal responsibility when right now our issue is the lack of jobs and the loss of real income by the majority of the public?  Are those stylized facts lost to him?  Why is it that being down and out always has something to do with personal shortcomings and not something like incredibly high hospital bills or a mortgage that you got based on a rigged game?

Conservatives often believe that much of the poverty in the United States is an issue of insufficient discipline and conscientiousness. In this view, not all children grow up inculcated with a strong enough devotion to education and career. Yet how can such a culture of discipline be spread? At least as far back as John Bright, a classical liberal in Victorian England, it has been argued that society should grant respect to business creators and to stern parents who instill discipline. And today, conservatives often say that supportive economic policy, including lighter taxation and greater freedom from regulation, will support this vision.

BUT are such moves, when carried out, actually shifting popular culture in a properly disciplined and conscientious direction? Not really. In fact, in the United States, the red states, where conservatives are more powerful, tend to have higher divorce rates and weaker educational systems than do blue states. Many Americans have not been personally persuaded by all the talk about pro-wealth and pro-discipline norms, least of all in the geographic strongholds of conservatism.

The counterintuitive tragedy is this: modern conservative thought is relying increasingly on social engineering through economic policy, by hoping that a weaker social welfare state will somehow promote individual responsibility. Maybe it won’t.

So what’s the real problem according to this economist?

It seems it’s divorce and lax child rearing.  Again, with the cultural crap and not with the fact that for about 30 years our country has passed laws that go out of their way to promote the interests of the wealthiest at the expense of the weak.  It’s not explicitly stated in the op ed, but I have these visions of of Cowen thinking everything would be easily solved if women would just be forced to stay slaves in a marriage, stay home and forget work, and beat their children into submission.  Is this really the best way to tackle income inequality or lack of jobs for the jobless? Dr. Cowen seems to believe in libertarianism in certain circumstances.  He’s just okee dokee about having government tell us what’s culturally or morally correct by shoving his old time religion–with its designed slavery paradigm–down our throats.

What about the “values” of paying a living wage for a hard day’s work?  What about the “values” of not stealing from people? What about the “values” of not lying to people about what low taxes have actually done to our government and to our economy?  And, if you’re such a great Christian, what about all those values listed in the Beatitudes in the new testament?  You know the ones about being your brother’s keeper, and practicing charity, and helping the poor?  That’s the one thing I’ve really noticed about all these  folks espousing “values”.  They want to deny abortions to poor women and everyone else, but they’ll be the first ones to the clinic with their daughters should they become pregnant.  (That’s a true story, btw, told to me by one of the abortion providers in Omaha.  Big anti-choice activist had him do an abortion on her daughter on an early Sunday morning and was back on the picket line by Monday.)

Here’s Cowen’s ending.

Nonetheless, higher income inequality will increase the appeal of traditional mores — of discipline and hard work — because they bolster one’s chances of advancing economically. That means more people and especially more parents will yearn for a tough, pro-discipline and pro-wealth cultural revolution. And so they should.

What this man needs to do is get off his high horse and spent more time looking at the job market numbers. If he truly believes in rational thought, then he should be able to do better than give a sermon in the NYT.

Just for an added thought, here’s what Mark Thoma had to say:

I am not a sure as he is that as inequality continues to increase, people will adopt conservative values rather than wondering why the playing field needed for those conservative values to express themselves has become increasingly unfair. And if they do conclude it’s unfairness rather than values that is at the root of the growth in inequality, their reaction may be different.

(Also, my view of what is behind society’s problems is also quite different from Tyler’s. I suppose this makes me one of the “academics on the left” who “seem more comfortable focusing on the very real offenses of plutocrats and selfish elites,” but I’ll note that Tyler seems quite comfortable focusing on the problems posed by “today’s elites” himself, i.e. the impediment they pose to the cultural values he’d like to see take hold. The comments on wealth and crony capitalism are also not far from complaints about plutocracy. We on the left have values that we believe in every bit as much as conservatives, but those values differ from those held by conservatives in important ways and that will naturally lead us to focus on different aspects of these problems. The fact that we talk about issues such as crony capitalism and powerful elites does not mean we have abandoned those values any more than it means Tyler has abandoned his values when he raises these issues himself. All it says is that the path to reach these values differs from the path preferred by conservatives.)

Sorry, this ran on so long; but I think, therefore, I occasionally have to rant.