UC Davis Professor Noha Radwan Beaten “Half to Death” by Mubarak’s Thugs

Yesterday, Professor Noha Radwan was interviewed by Sharif Abdel Kouddous of Democracy Now in Cairo. Here is the video:

Just after she completed the interview, Radwan was brutally beaten by thugs working for the Egyptian dictator. She told Amy Goodman of Democracy Now

“I got attacked by the mob and beaten half to death by the Mubarak thugs who were happy to snatch my necklaces off my neck and to rip my shirt open,”

There is a follow-up telephone interview with Radwan at the second link above. The call with Radwan begins around 37:19. She says that pro-Mubarak thugs asked her if she was pro- or anti-Mubarak. She didn’t want to answer and tried to walk past them. Then the thugs called to the rest of the “mob,” “She’s with them, she’s with them! Get her!”

Two large men held her by the arms while the mob ripped her shirt off, took a gold necklace that she wore during the interview, and beat her so badly that she had to get stitches in her head. She says that other people have been treated much worse than she was. Radwan says that the Egyptian government-controlled media has been “broadcasting nonstop” that “we are infiltrators, that we are foreign-paid…not actually real Eqyptians.”

Amy Goodman says that Democracy Now has been getting reports that the “pro-Mubarak” forces seem to be made up mostly of Egyptian police. The Guardian apparently reported that at least 100 police ID’s have been recovered. There is lots more in the video. If it becomes available on Youtube, I’ll post it here.

What will happen next?

At the Foreign Policy blog, Robert Springbord puts into words what I have been fearing for the past few days: Game over: The chance for democracy in Egypt is lost.

While much of American media has termed the events unfolding in Egypt today as “clashes between pro-government and opposition groups,” this is not in fact what’s happening on the street. The so-called “pro-government” forces are actually Mubarak’s cleverly orchestrated goon squads dressed up as pro-Mubarak demonstrators to attack the protesters in Midan Tahrir, with the Army appearing to be a neutral force. The opposition, largely cognizant of the dirty game being played against it, nevertheless has had little choice but to call for protection against the regime’s thugs by the regime itself, i.e., the military. And so Mubarak begins to show us just how clever and experienced he truly is. The game is, thus, more or less over.

The threat to the military’s control of the Egyptian political system is passing. Millions of demonstrators in the street have not broken the chain of command over which President Mubarak presides. Paradoxically the popular uprising has even ensured that the presidential succession will not only be engineered by the military, but that an officer will succeed Mubarak. The only possible civilian candidate, Gamal Mubarak, has been chased into exile, thereby clearing the path for the new vice president, Gen. Omar Suleiman. The military high command, which under no circumstances would submit to rule by civilians rooted in a representative system, can now breathe much more easily than a few days ago. It can neutralize any further political pressure from below by organizing Hosni Mubarak’s exile, but that may well be unnecessary.

The president and the military, have, in sum, outsmarted the opposition and, for that matter, the Obama administration. They skillfully retained the acceptability and even popularity of the Army, while instilling widespread fear and anxiety in the population and an accompanying longing for a return to normalcy.

Reactions?

This is an open thread to discuss the Egyptian protests.


Thursday Reads

The view from my front door

Good Morning!! Isn’t it fun to look out your window and see a coating of ice all over everything? Especially when you already have mountains of snow out there. I plan to spend much of the day throwing ice pellets around and trying to chip the pile of ice that a snowplow left at the end of my driveway. Oh joy!

So what’s in the news this morning? Let me see….. I thought I’d post some video of Noam Chomsky discussing the Egyptian protests on Democracy Now.

NOTE: There are more parts to the Chomsky interview that you can watch at Democracy Now.

That’s the view from a real leftist. Have you heard what Tony Blair had to say about the situation?

Former British Prime Minister Tony Blair explained Tuesday that the embattled Egyptian president was “immensely courageous and a force for good.”

Appearing on CNN, Blair praised Mubarak’s role in brokering peace between Israel and Palestine. The former prime minister is now an envoy to the peace process….

…where you stand on him depends on whether you’ve worked with him from the outside or on the inside,” Blair replied. “And for those of us who worked with him over the — particularly now I worked with him on the Middle East peace process between the Israelis and the Palestinians, so this is somebody I’m constantly in contact with and working with.”

George Soros expressed his ideas about Egypt in today’s Washington Post.

President Obama personally and the United States as a country have much to gain by moving out in front and siding with the public demand for dignity and democracy. This would help rebuild America’s leadership and remove a lingering structural weakness in our alliances that comes from being associated with unpopular and repressive regimes. Most important, doing so would open the way to peaceful progress in the region. The Muslim Brotherhood’s cooperation with Mohamed ElBaradei, the Nobel laureate who is seeking to run for president, is a hopeful sign that it intends to play a constructive role in a democratic political system. As regards contagion, it is more likely to endanger the enemies of the United States – Syria and Iran – than our allies, provided that they are willing to move out ahead of the avalanche.

The main stumbling block is Israel. In reality, Israel has as much to gain from the spread of democracy in the Middle East as the United States has. But Israel is unlikely to recognize its own best interests because the change is too sudden and carries too many risks. And some U.S. supporters of Israel are more rigid and ideological than Israelis themselves. Fortunately, Obama is not beholden to the religious right, which has carried on a veritable vendetta against him. The American Israel Public Affairs Committee is no longer monolithic or the sole representative of the Jewish community. The main danger is that the Obama administration will not adjust its policies quickly enough to the suddenly changed reality.

I am, as a general rule, wary of revolutions. But in the case of Egypt, I see a good chance of success. As a committed advocate of democracy and open society, I cannot help but share in the enthusiasm that is sweeping across the Middle East. I hope President Obama will expeditiously support the people of Egypt.

Here’s an interesting article from the Wall Street Journal about why both the U.S. and Egyptian government were unprepared for the Egyptian uprising.

A close look at how Egypt’s seemingly stable surface cracked in so short a time shows how Egypt’s rulers and their Western allies were caught almost completely off guard as the revolution unfolded, despite deep concerns about where Egypt’s authoritarian government was leading the country.

From the moment demonstrators began pouring into the street, those leaders have been scrambling to keep up, often responding in ways that have accelerated the crisis.

[….]

…last week, tens of thousands of Egyptians began taking to the streets, flooding into the central Tahrir Square after pitched battles with thousands of riot police. It became the largest popular protest in Egypt since the so-called Bread Riots against rising prices in 1977.

Mr. Mubarak’s regime was stunned. “No one expected those numbers that showed up to Tahrir square,” said Ali Shamseddin, a senior official with the National Democratic Party in Cairo.

In faraway Washington, the demonstrations were only starting to register. Last Tuesday’s State of the Union address, delivered the day the protests started, had only a short section on foreign policy. President Barack Obama planned to nod to the democratic movement that swept away the ruler of Tunisia, a place “where the will of the people proved more powerful than the writ of a dictator,” the speech read.

After that, it’s kind of embarrassing that Obama is clearly more concerned about “stability” (oil?) in Egypt than the “will of the people.”

Trees uprooted by Cyclone Yasi

We had a gigantic storm here in the U.S., but the one in Australia might have been worse. From the Daily Telegraph: Cyclone Yasi: Queensland wakes to widespread devastation

As the winds dropped on the coast and locals emerged from cyclone bunkers and evacuation centres, they found widespread damage, especially in the coastal communities of Tully, Mission Beach and Cardwell.

Driving winds of 180mph had uprooted trees and torn roofs and walls from homes and businesses.

During the morning, dangerous storm surges were causing flooding in low-lying urban areas in the cities of Cairns and Townsville and the authorities urged residents to stay indoors.

[….]

In total, 170,000 properties were without power and thousands of people were likely to be left homeless after their homes were severely damaged by the worst cylone to hit Australia since 1918. Storm surges and flooding were also rolling into low-lying areas and inundating homes throughout the morning. Compounding the crisis, saltwater crocodiles had been spotted in floodwater.

Yikes! At least my power didn’t go out, and there aren’t any crocodiles out there.

That’s all I’ve got. What are you reading and blogging about this morning?


Total Information Awareness* is Here

Yesterday Joseph Cannon put up a disturbing post about the American company that made it possible for Hosni Mubarak’s authoritarian government to shut down the internet in Egypt, making it much more difficult for Egyptians to communicate over social media like Twitter and Facebook. Be sure to read Cannon’s post and watch the Democracy Now video that he included.

The company is Narus, located in Sunnyvale, CA. The company was purchased by Boeing last summer.

I was intrigued enough to do a little more reading about Narus, and thought I’d add a bit to what Cannon had to say.

According to Wikipedia, Narus (emphasis added)

is notable for being the creator of NarusInsight, a supercomputer system which is allegedly used by the NSA and other bodies to perform mass surveillance and monitoring of citizens’ and corporations’ Internet communications in real-time, and whose installation in AT&T’s San Francisco Internet backbone gave rise to a 2006 class action lawsuit by the Electronic Frontier Foundation against AT&T, Hepting v. AT&T.

That’s the NSA spying program that supposedly targeted only foreign communications, but actually spied on all of us.

At the Electronic Frontier Foundation site, I found this report by Brian Reid, who is described as a “telecommunications expert.” He is also a former electrical engineer professor at Stanford and computer science professor at Carnegie Mellon University West. Reid was asked by the EFF to examine the technology used by AT&T in the spying program. Here’s a bit of what he had to say:

NSA Headquarters, Fort Meade, MD

This infrastructure is capable of monitoring all traffic passing through the AT&T facility (some of it not even from AT&T customers), whether voice or data or fax, international or domestic. The most likely use of this infrastructure is wholesale, untargeted surveillance of ordinary Americans at the behest of the NSA. NSA involvement undermines arguments that the facility is intended for use by AT&T in protecting its own network operations.

This infrastructure is not limited to, nor would it be especially efficient for, targeted surveillance, or even untargeted surveillance aimed at communications where one of the ends is located outside the United States. It is also not reasonably aimed at supporting AT&T operations and security procedures.

Reid explains that the equipment he examined “is far more powerful and expensive than that needed to do targeted surveillance or surveillance aimed only at international or one-end foreign communications.” Furthermore:

The documents describe a secret, private backbone network separate from the public network where normal AT&T customer traffic is carried transmitted. A separate backbone network would not be required for transmission of the smaller amounts of data captured via targeted surveillance. You don’t need that magnitude of transport capacity if you are doing targeted surveillance.

The bottom line is that the equipment used to provide data to the NSA for Bush’s spying program was designed to spy on ordinary American citizens–not foreign terrorists.

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Dirty Little Secrets

The overall corporate income tax was featured during the President’s SOTU address and by Republican circles.  I have mentioned that this particular rate isn’t even relevant anymore in posts and down thread comments because corporations here really don’t pay any where near the effective rate.

There are several reasons for this.  First, many of them now set up real or pseudo headquarters in tax and off shore banking havens like the Bahamas or Qatar and place a lot of their operations out of the reach of the IRS.  The second is the efficiency of lobbying efforts in getting them so many loopholes that most corporate revenues become exempt.  Despite this, corporations use public services and create social costs.  Social costs are those costs that the society gets to foot when corporations create problems they or their consumers can pass to the public.  A big example is smoking that creates incredible public health issues or pollution.  BP is definitely not taking care of the tab for its destruction down here and will most likely escape prosecution for costs the spill will continue to wreck on the environment, livings, and health of people and wildlife in the area.  Meanwhile, as an oil business, they are the beneficiary of many, many tax loopholes and direct subsidies.

I was glad to see some hard data–albeit anecdotal–on this phenomenon today in David Leonhardt’s op ed column in the NYT called ‘The Paradox of Corporate Taxes‘.  The narrative begins with the example of Carnival Cruises that has a special, extreme loophole that leaves the majority of its revenues untaxed while  it uses a number of public resources like services of the Coast Guard.  Corporations are cost minimizing and profit maximizing things.  They will employ an army of lobbyists and lawyers to help them. They even produce commercials that tout their environmental friendliness and their patriotism.  I always shake my head at the commercials of companies like GE and Boeing for whom competitive markets are imaginary and no bid government grants are major sources of revenues.  Yet, they act like they are burdened by taxes.

This is so untrue.

Carnival’s biggest government benefit of all may be the price it pays for many of those services. Over the last five years, the company has paid total corporate taxes — federal, state, local and foreign — equal to only 1.1 percent of its cumulative $11.3 billion in profits. Thanks to an obscure loophole in the tax code, Carnival can legally avoid most taxes.

It is an extreme case, but it’s hardly the only company that pays far less than the much-quoted federal corporate tax rate of 35 percent. Of the 500 big companies in the well-known Standard & Poor’s stock index, 115 paid a total corporate tax rate — both federal and otherwise — of less than 20 percent over the last five years, according to an analysis of company reports done for The New York Times by Capital IQ, a research firm. Thirty-nine of those companies paid a rate less than 10 percent.

President Obama indicated that he was willing to simplify the Corporate Tax Code and lower the overall Tax Rate for corporations.  In exchange, he asked Congress to remove all the pork, breaks, and exclusions they’ve granted many businesses–including ones that really don’t need it like the Oil Industry–over the years.  I doubt we’ll see any moves on the latter.  My fear is that will only see movement on the former thus cementing the de-funding of government by the by the very people who benefit from government largess. Many study shows that far more rich and upper middle class Americans and American Businesses use public services and public assets than the poor and working class.  After all, who uses the roads, the airways, the universities, the grants and loans, and the many tax loopholes?

While the official corporate tax rate is among the highest of developing countries, the effective rate is among the lowest of the countries that actually have economies that don’t function as tax havens or off shoring banking centers.  Even Republican economists will pony up that data.

“A dirty little secret,” Richard Clarida, a Columbia University economist and former official in the Treasury Department under President George W. Bush, has said, “is that the corporate income tax used to raise a fair amount of revenue.”

Over the last five years, on the other hand, Boeing paid a total tax rate of just 4.5 percent, according to Capital IQ. Southwest Airlines paid 6.3 percent. And the list goes on: Yahoo paid 7 percent; Prudential Financial, 7.6 percent; General Electric, 14.3 percent.

Economists have long pleaded for an overhaul of the corporate tax code, and both President Obama and Republicans now say they favor one, too. But it won’t be easy.

Indeed, it won’t be easy.  First, it’s difficult for even neutral academics to get a good look at the workings of loopholes because because tax filings are confidential.  Loopholes are everywhere and folks that support simplifying the tax code can’t even get a handle on how widespread or huge the problem.  Publicly held corporations provide for public stockholder reports but even these things are of limited use over time when studying corporate tax avoidance.  My field specializations for my doctorate is International Finance and Trade and Corporate Finance so I lot of my class work and research work is based in corporate finance as well as economics.  I know the literature, models, and theories well.

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Where is the ‘supposed’ liberal media bias?

I’m getting tired of all the sturm and drang over that stupid HRC law.   The law’s been out there for some time–all 900ish pages of it–and yet, very few media outlets really tell people what’s in it and what’s not in it.  Don’t even get me started on where the damned thing came from.

It’s disingenuous to just call it ‘Obama care’ when it was developed by the Heritage Foundation and carried by John Chafee in 1993-1994 in response to “HillaryCare”. I know it well because I was working for UHC and we had a VP on Hillary’s Task Force.  Meetings were held at our HQ and many of us attended.   I was on the Pharmaceutical Benefits Management side of the House.  UHC wanted to make sure that forced insurance was in there to offset the cost savings from continual use of pre-existing conditions to deny coverage or make it so expensive that no one could afford it.  Cherry picking the healthy and huge pools of insured are what makes insurance profitable.

Those of us at certain levels were well aware of the contents of both plans and the issues.  I’ve linked to  Paul Starr, “What Happened to Health Care Reform?” The American Prospect no. 20 (Winter 1995): 20-31 above and I’m going to quote some things that should sound familiar.  The only difference is the current Republican complaints about the HCR were the Republican talking points back then until Bob Dole got interested in running for President.  William Kristol--definitely not the liberal press–carried a lot of water and eventually help to tank both plans.  It was a part of the narrative to remove Bill Clinton from office.  The Heritage Foundation has changed its tune and conveniently remembers only the later part of the Republican Debate when it was decided this would be a good issue to skewer Clinton.

What’s really disingenuous is the hoopla over the individual mandate.  This was originally the cornerstone of the Chaffee Republican plan because that was the insurance industry’s bribe to stop its cherry picking.  It’s also part and parcel of the only state that adopted the Heritage Institute’s plan handed originally to John Chafee.  Current disingenuous Republican Presidential candidate Mitt Romney made the infamous Dole Care a state level Romney Care.  We’ve got plenty of people here that live in MA that can tell you there’s an individual/employer mandate in there and it wasn’t a Democratic Party idea.

In 1993, 23 Republican senators, including then-Minority Leader Robert Dole, cosponsored a bill introduced by Senator John Chafee that sought to achieve universal coverage through a mandate that is, a mandate on individuals to buy insurance. Nearly every major health care interest group had endorsed substantial reforms–grandiose ones, in fact. The American Medical Association (AMA) and Health Insurance Association of America (HIAA), the two great, historic bastions of opposition to compulsory health insurance, both went on record in support of an employer mandate and universal coverage. Even the U.S. Chamber of Commerce endorsed an employer mandate, as did many large corporations. Other groups came out variously for reform options that ran along a spectrum from Canadian-style, single-payer programs on the left to managed competition and medical savings accounts and radical changes in tax policy on the right. Under the circumstances, it was easy to believe the country was ready for substantial reform and that a market-oriented, consumer-choice approach to universal coverage, positioned in the center, could become a platform for consensus.

The fight over the mandate was well known at the time.  It became a point of nitpicking late in the debate.  The Republicans begin to look for ways to find exceptions for different business interests whose support they desired in upcoming elections.  If this sounds familiar, it’s because it’s the same thing that went on last summer and a lot of the same disingenuous players played the game.  Only then, the discussion was not happening in Democratic circles or being blamed on Democrats because it was not part of the Democratic proposal.  The bickering became part and parcel of a strategy undermining the Clintons and the Clinton presidency which was going full throttle via the infamous White Water snipe hunt.  Basically, in 1994, health care reform became a political football to destroy Democratic Presidents.  Dole saw this as a way to further weaken the President and weasel his way into the office.  They’re just replaying that same game plan now.  Here’s the narrative on 1994.

The opponents of reform were organizing their forces, concentrating first on groups with ideological affinities. After an internal insurrection, the Chamber of Commerce reversed its endorsement of a mandate; other business organizations likewise “defected,” as one business representative put it to me at the time. The AMA qualified its endorsement of a mandate limiting it to firms with over 100 employees and thereby excluding most private doctors, the majority of whom do not cover their own employees. Senator Dole and other Republicans abandoned the Chafee bill and the individual mandate. Dole then cosponsored a bill with Packwood and within weeks abandoned that, too, saying that this the second bill he offered had “too much government.”

If you want to actually look at the 1993 Republican Health Reform plan, there’s a summary of it at Kaiser Health News. You may not remember, but there were two democratic a co-sponsors of the Chaffe Bill:  Senators Bob Kerrey (NE) and David Boren (AZ).  The House equivalent had no Democratic co-sponsors.   The site states: “It bears similarity to the Democratic bill passed by the Senate Dec. 24, 2009, the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act”.  Kaiser is THAT Kaiser of the health care industry.  I dare you to read those points and not walk away fully knowing that the current HCR is that old Republican bill.

Another good source for a discussion of the players and motivations can be found in a pdf version  the articleCongress and Healthcare Reform: Divisions and Alliances published by Health Progress. The Love Boat’s purser Gopher turned Iowa Congressman, Fred Grandy, was a part of that effort. Also part of the effort was Big Pharma Whore Congressman John Breaux (D-LA).

A group of conservative Democrats and moderate Republicans supports the Managed Competition Act of 1993 (HR 3222, S 1579). This legislation was originally put forward by the Conservative Democratic Forum, which boasts  60-plus members.  Bill cosponsors are Rep. Jim Cooper, DTX, and Rep. Fred Grandy, R-IA, in the House and Sen. John Breaux, D-LA, and Sen. Dave Durenberger, R-MN, in the Senate, giving this legislation bipartisan clout. The House version is supported by 31 Democrats and 26 Republicans. Cooper is the member of Congress whose name is most closely linked to this bill. A relative newcomer to health policymaking, this 39-yearold junior member of Congress is not the chairperson on any subcommittees, yet has become a major power broker in the health reform debate. Cooper is running for the Tennessee Senate seat vacated by Vice President AJ Gore. His cosponsor, Grandy, another newcomer, is widely praised by Capitol Hill staff for his intellectual ability to pick up the nuances of health policy.  The Cooper-Grandy legislation closely models the managed competition plan espoused by the Jackson Hole Group. It differs from the Clinton plan in several key ways. First, it does not mandate universal coverage but rather establishes a voluntary system of health alliances to improve the access to healthcare for the small business employee and individuals in particular. Only employers with 100 or fewer workers are required to provide insurance through the alliance. To control costs, the plan relies more on competition and insurance market reform than on price controls, and employers’ tax deductions for health insurance premiums would be capped at the level of the lowest-cost insurance plan in the region.
While both the president’s proposal and the Cooper-Grandy proposal build on the managed competition model, their fundamental differences must be negotiated if the president hopes to attract support from this bipartisan, centrist  group in Congress. Clinton has clearly stated that improving access is not enough; healthcare coverage must be universal. Yet the Cooper-Grandy group is not comfortable with President Clinton’s mandate on employers, much larger mandatory alliances, and premium limits.

This particular article has a really good narrative of all the competing interests and issues. Later, that same Heritage Foundation plan was resurrected by Republican Governor Romney and morphed into so-called Romneycare in MA. The stupid thing was written by a libertarian/conservative think tank and was later enacted in MA by a Republican Governor before Senator Max Baucus got a hold of another rewrite from an Insurance Lobbyist.   File this under WakeTF up. I know.   O just wanted his name on some “big f’ing deal” that enriched the FIRE lobby who are major investors in his presidency.

So, why am I rehashing all of this now besides wanting to see that people realize the astounding parallels and hypocrisy?   First,  news outlets are reporting the Mitt Romney is not offering any apologies for the Individual Mandate he supported in the MA law. Remember, this man is a Republican and plans to challenge Obama for the presidency in 2012.  He’s basically running on the same damn health care platform that Obama will run on.  Why is there no direct statement of this in major media outlets?  Romney is even on a “No Apology” tour right now with a campaign that hearkens back to those silly “No Apology” Jeans from the worst of the CDS days.  Some one should point out the hypocrisy of the statements given on ABC’s Sunday News show.

On the kick off to his “No Apology” book tour Mitt Romney is on message – refusing to apologize for the Massachusetts health care law that, like President Obama’s federal legislation, requires citizens to buy health insurance.

“I’m not apologizing for it, I’m indicating that we went in one direction and there are other possible directions. I’d like to see states pursue their own ideas, see which ideas work best,” Romney told me.

That stand seems to reject the advice of Karl Rove and others who say that Romney can’t get the GOP nomination in 2012 unless he finds a way to distance himself from “Romneycare”, but Romney did concede that his Massachusetts plan is imperfect.

As for “Obamacare”? It’s a “very bad piece of legislation,” Romney said, siding with the federal judge who ruled it unconstitutional and wrote in his decision that “it is difficult to imagine that a nation which began…as the result of opposition to a British mandate giving the East India Company a monopoly and imposing a nominal tax on all tea sold in America would have set out to create a government with the power to force people to buy tea in the first place.”

“That was the whole idea of our federal democracy, we’d have people be able to try different ideas state to state but what we did not do was say that the federal government can make its choice and impose it on all of the states. That is one of the reasons why this bill is unconstitutional,” Romney said.

“The right thing for the president to do now with these decisions saying this bill is unconstitutional, with the house taking action to repeal it, with the senate considering doing so, he should press the pause button and say ‘You know what, let’s hold back on this ‘Obamacare,’” he said.

I know we have multiple commenters and two front pagers that are either currently in MA or have lived in MA so they can regale you with more of the details on that plan.  I can only speak to the 1993-1994  federal attempts because both my husband and I–as health insurance executives for two separate companies–had front row seats to the conversation.

The absolute amnesia feigned by the press, Republican Politicians, and the Heritage Foundation is immoral.  You also have to know that I am no fan of the current law precisely because it is part and parcel that early Heritage Foundation plan handed to John Chafee. Also, I was registered in Minneapolis at the time as an Independent Republican.  Shortly thereafter, I registered as a Democrat in Louisiana.  I saw Hillary’s Task Force in action and I saw the Republican misdirect that was clearly aimed at unseating President Clinton.

I’m watching Republicans gain steam over that Judge in Florida whose written decision that is weirdly propaganda-like as if it was the be all and end all of decisions.  The level of misinformation to the public is deplorable.   So far, there have been FOUR rulings on the HCR. Two have upheld HCR completely.  One found the individual mandate to be unconstitutional but upheld the rest of the bill.  The last one was the only one that ruled the entire law was unconstitutional.  This is also part of the short memory of the American press and a lot of the American People. Remember, the individual mandate came from the Republican side of the aisle and was enacted into law in MA as part of state health care there.

What finally set me off was reading the analysis done at The Washington Monthly by Steven Benen cited above.  He did an analysis of which papers dedicated ink to each of the four rulings.  He concludes that the media largely ignored the two rulings that completely upheld the HCRA while making a very big deal of the writings of the activist conservative judges.   You know me.  I’m a complete fan of data based analysis.  He has actually gone through WAPO, NYT, AP, and Politco headlines on the rulings and counted the number of words dedicated to each decision.

Now, I will explain why I found the focus on Vinson’s ruling to be particularly spurious.  The focus should be on the oddity of the ruling and not the end finding. It is worrisome that it is not.  Republicans should be howling about judicial overreach.    Kevin Drum of Mojo points to an Orin Kerr at the Volkoh conspiracy has covered the idea of a political jurist and Vinson–in this decision–is clearly out on a political limb with his h/t to the libertarian propaganda channel Reason TV.

The Orin Kerr post he links to makes this point explicitly: district court judges aren’t supposed to decide cases on first principles, as Judge Vinson appears to have done. They’re required to obey precedent from higher courts. And unless the Supreme Court changes its mind, precedent is pretty clearly on the side of PPACA’s individual mandate being constitutional, whether you like it or not:

So, is this what the entire Health Care Debate–starting in 1993–has come down to?  Is it simply cheering and posturing for Team Red or Team Blue?  Is this why the press doesn’t seem able to cover this ruling in context of the other rulings and in terms of the bigger issue?  Vinson has clearly overstepped his boundaries.  Where are the cries of judicial activism?  Where is the respect for the process designed and protected by The Constitution?

This seems like the same thing we see over and over.  The folks that scream loudest on the TV news about the constitution and judicial activism only appear to care about it in the context of abortion and the second amendment.  The corporate press now engages their political fantasy leagues rather than dealing with the contents of the law and the merits of the case.  Is it a matter of just having cut their costs to the point where they can only cover one thing at a time? Or, is it deeper than that?

If there every was a liberal bias in media, I would argue that Benen’s evidence (Team Blue) and Kerr’s critique (Team Red) clearly show that a fair and competent press has completely gone the way of the DoDo bird.  Please follow the links.  I think you’ll find the reads interesting.