12.31.2008
Roland's Race Card
Enemy Combatants
U.S. District Judge Richard J. Leon ruled on Tuesday that two Guantanam Bay detainees — nationals of Yemen and Tunisia — must remain prisoners of the U.S. military, finding that the government has proved that each is an “enemy combatant.” In the most significant of the two separate rulings, the judge concluded that the government does not have to prove that a detainee uses arms against U.S. forces or against forces of its coalition partners, in order to fit the judge’s definition of an enemy associated with Al Qaeda or Taliban.
12.30.2008
Bush Reads!
Maybe W. and Sarah Palin should have a reading contest.
Russian Bailouts
12.29.2008
State Cuts
Year in Review
How weird a year was it? Here's how weird:
O.J. actually got convicted of something.
Gasoline hit $4 a gallon -- and those were the good times.
On several occasions, "Saturday Night Live" was funny.
There were a few days there in October when you could not completely rule out the possibility that the next Treasury secretary would be Joe the Plumber.
12.27.2008
Jim Carrey's Philosphy
Carrey is the single performer at his level who seems as though he’d be as happy in a Samuel Beckett play as in a summer blockbuster. Beckett would have dug him, I think—the wintry Irishman liked his clowns, the more existential the better
12.19.2008
Ed Sec
On a side note - the only pick I'm not real happy about so far is Tom Vilsak at Agriculture. I'm a big fan of Ag and Food reform, and I don't think that's going to come from Iowa.
12.18.2008
De-Bunk Supply-Side
12.17.2008
Man of the Year
Time named Obama "Man of the Year" (no surprise) - but these pictures from a freshman year photo shoot he did for a student's portfolio are pretty cool.
The Other Fitz
Thoughts on Torture
But anyone who felt the way I felt after 9/11 has to reckon with the fact that what was done in our name was, in some sense, done for us - not with our knowledge, exactly, but arguably with our blessing. I didn't get what I wanted from this administration, but I think you could say with some justification that I got what I asked for. And that awareness undergirds - to return to where I began this rambling post - the mix of anger, uncertainty and guilt that I bring to the current debate over what the Bush Administration has done and failed to do, and how its members should be judged.Plus, it's the first time I've heard the term Jus In Bello since college.
12.16.2008
The Illinois Whipping Boy
(p.s. - did you know Blago calls his Paul Mitchell comb the "football" and it's with his handlers at all times? Also, he hired R. Kelly's defense lawyer). Ok, back to the NYT:
Our next president, like his predecessor, is promising “a new era of responsibility and accountability.” We must hope he means it. Meanwhile, we have the governor he leaves behind in Illinois to serve as our national whipping boy, the one betrayer of the public trust who could actually end up paying for his behavior. The surveillance tapes of Blagojevich are so fabulous it seems a tragedy we don’t have similar audio records of the bigger fish who have wrecked the country. But in these hard times we’ll take what we can get.
12.14.2008
Matthew, Mark, Luke .... and DUCK!
Are Bribes Tax-Deductable?
Otto Kerner, Jr., is usually remembered, if he is at all, as the leader of the Kerner Commission, in 1968, which evaluated the riots and other unrest that was then rocking American cities. He was governor of Illinois at the time, and went on to serve as a federal appeals court judge, but his later claim to fame may be of greater historical note. In 1969, he was charged in a corruption case where he and a subordinate received bribes from a racetrack owner in return for an expanded racing schedule. That particular scandal came to light because the owner tried to deduct the value of the bribes on her taxes. Paying bribes to the governor was, in her view, an ordinary business expense in Illinois in the late nineteen-sixties.
Endangered Species Axe
12.13.2008
The "Other" American Auto Industry
So - here are the real questions: is it important to have (1) an American name on the hood of a car (2) what constitutes a "good" job. First, as far as the economy goes, it doesn't really matter whether the plant is making Fords or KIA's as long as it's providing jobs and boosting the economy. Although the may make Nissans in Tennessee, I doubt you'll see George Strait driving a Pathfinder through Nashville. So I think we can agree that an American brand has mostly nastolgic value at this point. Second. if these southern plants are giving people "good jobs" then whether they're unionized shouldn't matter. This part is somewhat unexplored (or unknown to me). I thought the Big 3 paid $27/hr - while the transplants offered $23. Now, Barnes says it's upwards of $45/hr (which could still be partially b/c they have to out-do the UAW). Also, I wonder how the benefits are and how the working conditions are. I have heard that the transplants are better at making their workers happy, so maybe there's less of a need for the unions. Or maybe since they're in "right to work" states the problems are below the surface. But all told, the BIG reason Detroit is in a fix is because they gave good healthcare to their workers - and they have thousands of "legacy" retirees to pay for. Nissan's only been in the U.S. for 10 years, so they don't have any career employees retiring. So I wonder how good the transplant benefits are. Still - all told - this shows again how the lack of universal health care can place HUGE competititve burdens on some companies - to the extent that a famous brand like Ford could disappear.
Sorry for the ramble, I just wish we could discuss the real issues out in the open. Is it important for America to still build Ford's and Chevy's? And can you still get a good job with good benefits without a union. I think they way you answer these questions largely determines where you are on the bailout.
12.12.2008
Che
The trailer is here.
Also, I couldn't help but think while I was reading it that the Medeillan storyline in Entourage was knocking off "Che".
The Art of Distancing
"Obama saw this coming, and he was very cautious about not having dealings with the governor for quite some time," said Abner Mikva, a former congressman and appeals court judge who was Obama's political mentor in Chicago. "The governor was perhaps the only American public officeholder who didn't speak at the convention, and that wasn't by accident. He's politically poisonous. You don't get through Chicago like Barack Obama did unless you know how to avoid people like that."
More Detroit Problems
3 Came In - Only 2 Walked Out
Why don't we tell the current Big Three that $25 billion in capital is available—but only to two of them? The surviving two will be those that submit the best, and final, binding bids, supported by all the necessary constituencies: boards, managers, suppliers, vendors, creditors, and the UAW. The plans that are the best, as judged by a panel of private- and public-sector figures—Jack Welch, Warren Buffet, or Felix Rohatyn, plus Office of Management and Budget and Congressional Budget Office officials—are the plans that will get funded. The measures they will be judged by will be announced ahead of time and will be a combination of retained/gained market share, return on capital, jobs retained, and mileage and environmental efficiency gains. The company with the least impressive plan will be denied funding.
12.10.2008
New Cabinet Appointments
Ashcroft v. Iqbal
Unlikely. But a noble try. Here's SCOTUSblog and NPR's take.
Blago
On a related note, the Hill has a good wrap up on who Senate Candidates 1-6 most likely are.
Also, rumors that Rahm Emmanuel or someone else from the Obama camp snitched on Blago - which would look ideal for Obama ... but not sure that's what actually happened.
12.09.2008
Urban Re-Planning
Blago
How many is that 2 of the last 3 or 3 of the last 4 Governors? IL does politics the old fashion way.
Also - he doesn't have to resign, and can still make the appointment. So it will be interesting to see how the seat is filled.
12.08.2008
12 Days of "Holiday"
Via Instapundit comes the news that Amazon has now banned the term "Christmas" from one of its advertising campaigns. It is now, on Amazon, "12 Days of Holiday," rather than "12 Days of Christmas."
Well, this Jew objects. I mean, for Christ's sake, it's Christmas. Can't we call a thing by its name? Hannukah is a minor holiday of a minority religion. New Year's Day is merely a day on the calendar. It's a holiday season because it's Christmas. I love Christmas. I don't celebrate it, but I love it; I love the season, the lights, the chestnuts, the message of peace. I love the way our most Jewish city, New York, looks on Christmas. "Holiday" isn't a holiday. It's a way of avoiding offense. But who, exactly, is offended? This is what I don't understand. I'm perfectly happy living in a country that is populated mainly by Christians, particularly Christians who show nothing but acceptance for their fellow citizens who happen to follow other religions. So it doesn't sit well with me that Christians now feel constrained to offer the anodyne "Happy Holidays" rather than a greeting that touches directly on the reason for our seasonal merriment.
So, my Christian sisters and brothers, feel absolutely free to greet me with "Merry Christmas," and I'll greet you right back. You can say "Happy Hannukah" as well, or "Happy Kwanzaa." Say, in other words, what you feel. The important thing is to not be afraid.
Nazi Science
The reason no criticisms were offered was because the prisoners were viewed as no different than experimental animals. Of course, these days, we would not subject even experimental animals to such injuries without providing them analgesia. In any case, examined from a strictly scientific standpoint, if proper controls were used and experimental methods adhered to, even studies like the ones above could be considered "good" science. The reason is that science is amoral. It is a method, a tool, to discover answers about reality and to try to understand how nature works. As such it has no morality one way or the other. As a method or tool, it can be used for good or ill. The same scientific method whose fruits have produced antibiotics and vaccines; cured childhood leukemia; increased our lifespan enormously in the last 100 years; allowed us to launch space probes; and given us television, computers, and MP3 players has also been used to make ever more powerful weapons, including the nuclear bomb.
Sexism
First - why is the comment about Bill "messing around" sexist? It's not a generalization, it's a comment about Hillary in particular. It's just like saying W. is President because his dad was President, Al Gore was VP/Senator because his dad was a Senator, or that Caroline Kennedy is being considered for the NY Senate because her dad was JFK! Or that Jean Carnahan was elected Senator of Missouri because her husband died. These things don't disparage the individual or the sex (W. went to Harvard Business School, Caroline Kennedy is very smart and successful, HRC went to Yale, etc. - they're all incredible people) but these circumstances put people on the map despite their meritorious achievements. To assume that politicians get to where they are is simply because of merit, is rediculous. It's not diparaging to women to acknowledge the fact that when there are only 100 Senators in the country, you need something other than a good GPA to join the club - that goes for men and women. Now, there's a sexism problem if you only mention these external circumstances when it comes to women, and don't when you describe the Gore's, W.'s, etc.
Second - Matthews gets in trouble for complimenting pretty women (which is something that your mom taught you to do ... but forgot to mention that you can't do it in public). It's not surprising that good looking people tend to succeed in poilitics because, like Matthews gets pounced on for pointing out, there's a "cosmetic" side of success. Again, as long as you don't suggest that women are where they are simply because of their looks, I don't see why it's sexist to point out this aspect of the real world. I mean there are a lot of smart women on Fox, but the reason they're all on the same tv channel has nothing to do with their degrees. Additionally, has anyone noticed how gorgeous Jill Biden is? It's a fact. And she has TWO Ph.D's! Brains and beauty can co-exist, people. And when you get talking about the sex-appeal of men politicians you hear it alluded to variously from Cheney/Carl Levin all the way to Mark Udall. Politics is Imaging ... so we shouldn't pretend that a simple comment about someone's appearance means there's no substance underneath. That's its own case by case assessment: hot/smarties (Jill Biden) ... hot/dummies (Sarah Palin) ... ugly/smarties (Madaline Albright) ... ugly/dummies (no comment)
Third - along a similar line - the "grading" comment about Pelosi is the closest thing to a sexist comment, but also the most realistic hurdle for women in the public square - that is: women are easily strewn as "bitchy maternalists" or "empty bimbos." This is undoubtably a sexist interpretation because it's an overgeneralization of women from a male point of view. But it's a real image problem for women in power and - as long as it isn't reinforced - shouldn't be outside the scope of punditry.
No Job = No Health Care
As jobless numbers reach levels not seen in 25 years, another crisis is unfolding for millions of people who lost their health insurance along with their jobs, joining the ranks of the uninsured.
The crisis is on display here. Starla D. Darling, 27, was pregnant when she learned that her insurance coverage was about to end. She rushed to the hospital, took a medication to induce labor and then had an emergency Caesarean section, in the hope that her Blue Cross and Blue Shield plan would pay for the delivery.
Bailout $70/hr Union Workers?
Now, none of this helps the fact that the Big 3 are selling cars that nobody wants to buy ... which is a whole 'nother problem.
Feel free to draw any conclusions on employee-based health care, or corporate responsibility or unions from this as you will ... but the situation seems to be at least partially the product of the Big 3 traditionally offering a good job with good benefits and taking care of their workers PLUS the companies' 100+yr success PLUS the fact that these obligations can't be met in a recession.
12.07.2008
Erasing God From History
Separation of church and state is vital to our liberty. But trying to scrub from American history or public life every reference to God or faith isn't just silly. It's inaccurate and misleading.
New Frontier
Halberstam wrote that his favorite passage in his book was the one where Johnson, after his first Kennedy cabinet meeting, raved to his mentor, the speaker of the House, Sam Rayburn, about all the president’s brilliant men. “You may be right, and they may be every bit as intelligent as you say,” Rayburn responded, “but I’d feel a whole lot better about them if just one of them had run for sheriff once.”He thinks that Obama's economic team may potentially have the same problems as Kennedy's hubristic Nat'l Security team (and he really doesn't like Robert Rubin)
Well, nobody’s perfect. Given that John McCain’s economic team was headlined by Carly Fiorina and Joe the Plumber, the country would be dodging a fiscal bullet even if Obama had picked Suze Orman.
12.06.2008
Urban Chicken Coops
Two Christmas Trees in NOVA
Ayers Breaks Silence
12.05.2008
How to Save Detroit
Of course, nothing is guaranteed:
We can't be certain that the rescue will work. Even with the money, one or more of the automakers could end up in bankruptcy at some point in the future. But the timing makes the case for this kind of effort compelling. If GM stopped producing, a million people could easily lose their jobs, including employees at dealers and suppliers. (Note that "only" 1.2 million have lost their jobs so far in this already-severe recession.) Paying them $25,000 in unemployment compensation for a year would be an outright expenditure of $25 billion--to say nothing of the three-quarters of a million UAW retirees whose pensions the federal government would inherit, via the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation, or the tax revenue lost when workers become unemployed. A $25 billion loan, at least some of which is bound to be repaid, seems like a pretty cheap alternative.
Sen. Matthews
Btw - he'd be a great Senator.
Barney Frank Quote:
"At a time of great crisis with mortgage foreclosures and autos, [Obama] says we only have one president at a time," Frank said. "I'm afraid that overstates the number of presidents we have. He's got to remedy that situation."
Peoria
A Change in Ag Policy
What do you think, Carmi?
Hawaii 5 -(c)O(2)
FOR SALE: Rocky Mountain News
Bailout anyone?
12.04.2008
Take Advantage of the Bad Economy, Obama
Obama's luxury is that the economic demands of the moment almost perfectly coincide with his political interests. With even conservative economists urging Obama not only to cut taxes but also to spend and spend and spend some more, he has an opportunity to keep a whole raft of political promises all at once.
Middle-class tax cuts? Practically a done deal. New investments in green technologies? No problem. "Smart" meters to help households save on energy costs, plus a new electricity grid? A natural. Universal broadband? It's about future growth. Investments in medical information technologies? Good for jobs now; good later for cost containment, better treatment and health insurance reform.
Repeal Day
... as in "of Prohibition" is Tomorrow (Dec. 5th). Booze is a Constitutional right - exercise it. Also - you'd think this poster would be an argument in favor of booze! (via JB)
Scoff at a Prescient Man
Isn't Less Competition Good for the Survivor?
Nat'l Mall Open for Inaguration
12.03.2008
Gregory to Host MTP
Now On to Afghanistan
...it’s worth observing that absolutely integral to starting to achieve success in Iraq was the rolling strategic decision to abandon our main war aims. In particular, we’re now neither trying to create a strong Iraqi state, nor trying to create an Iraqi state that isn’t dominated by pro-Iranian forces, nor trying to create an Iraqi state that’s a base for American military power, nor especially trying to create a stable Iraqi democracy. I think all of those decisions were the right decisions, based in smart pragmatic thinking about Iraqi realities and American interests. But if we didn’t want to do that stuff, that we could have just not invaded in the first place. Which is exactly what we should have done!
12.02.2008
Reform Bankrupcty Law
Homeowners are the only ones who cannot modify the terms of their secured debts in bankruptcy. Corporate America flocks to bankruptcy courts to do precisely this – to restructure and reamortize loans whose conditions they find onerous or can no longer meet. Airlines are still flying and auto-partsmakers still operating because they have used this powerful tool of the bankruptcy process. But when the bankruptcy code was adopted in 1979, the mortgage industry persuaded Congress that its market was so tightly regulated and conservatively run that it should be exempted from the general bankruptcy rules permitting modification.
The Unconstitutional Bailout
Money's Flying Out the Door
"Hey Hank, Somebody Just Called and Said His Company Needs a Billion Dollars. I Wired It. Sorry, I Forgot to Write Down the Company's Name." On Nov. 24, the Washington Post calculated the total cost of the bailout-a-rama may rise to $2.8 trillion, though the figure includes guarantees for loans that may end up being repaid, thus reducing the final tab. Just two days later, the Post recalculated to $4.7 trillion, after the Treasury Department ("Hey Hank, should this say billion or trillion?") made huge additional commitments to cover bad loans, again some of which may not fail. The $4.7 trillion figure equals the entire national debt on the day George W. Bush took office. One day after that, the New York Times calculated that so far this year the United States has actually spent $1.4 trillion on the bailout, while committing to as much as $7.8 trillion, if all loans default. The $7.8 trillion figure equals the entire national debt just three years ago.
The speed with which government is giving away money is breathtaking. In less than a year, the United States has casually added to the deficit -- with virtually no public accountability and in most cases without a vote of Congress -- at least $1.4 trillion, an amount equal to almost three times annual Social Security benefits. Anyone who a year ago had proposed doubling Social Security benefits would have been hooted down as fiscally irresponsible, even by senior citizen advocates. Last week, White House officials casually announced that an extra $800 billion -- more than the fiscal 2009 defense budget -- was being spent, without a congressional vote, without public accountability, sometimes without even knowing what the money is being spent on! (Treasury officials have said they do not know what AIG is doing with its billions in tax funds.) In 2007, Bush vetoed an additional $7 billion for health care for the poor, saying the country could not afford that much. Now taxpayers are on the hook for up to 671 times the figure Bush said was too high. Our children and their children will be paying for this mess in Washington for a long, long time.
Note 1: When all this started last winter -- back when Henry Paulson said that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac would "never" be bailed out -- economic columnist and 2008 Nobel Prize for Economics winner Paul Krugman calculated that converting to present dollars and adjusting for GDP size, the 1990s Japanese financial restructuring had cost that country $3 trillion. Krugman predicted our meltdown would eventually cost America about the same. Krugman said this at a time when Paulson ("Hey Hank, five minutes have passed, what's your policy now?") was asserting in public that the damage would always be limited to the $29 billion given to Bear Stearns. Based on recent numbers, Krugman's prediction may prove eerily close.
Note 2: AIG, which has been shoveled $152 billion of your children's money without accountability, announced last week that new CEO Edward Liddy will work for $1 a year and receive no bonus. Sounds good, and media reports were favorable. But buried in the announcement is that Liddy is also receiving stock ("equity grants"). The announcement mysteriously does not say how much. With AIG selling for $2 a share -- the strike price of the grant would be the price when awarded -- even if the shares rose only to $5, a large block of stock acquired at $2 could be quite valuable. So how come AIG doesn't disclose how much taxpayer-subsidized stock its CEO is pocketing?
Also buried: Liddy "may be eligible for a special bonus for extraordinary performance." Have you ever read anything more transparently phony? A good guess is that no matter how the current CEO does, the board will find he deserves a "special bonus" that won't be announced until media attention has shifted to whatever the next scandal is. Sadly, reader Melanie Cleten of Providence, R.I., notes, "AIG's management has tricked taxpayers into handing the company $152 billion. What other corporate executives in history have brought in so much cash so quickly? Maybe they do deserve bonuses, unless we are fools." She leaves it there.
I Bet He Is!
I'm reading an interesting article at the Journal about the second-try presentations the big three are planning to make to Congress. A very interesting read. But as much as we hear about executive compensation I was still a little struck by this line: Ford CEO Alan Mullaly "has earned close to $50 million in total compensation since taking the helm of Ford in 2006."
It was Mullaly who, when asked at that hearing whether he'd be willing to take a $1 salary in exchange for federal aid said: "I think I'm OK where I am."
12.01.2008
The Bush Doctrine You Never Heard Of
What About the Toothpick in the Door?
Prairie State Solidarity
11.30.2008
Good News re: Nat'l Security Team
Yet all three of his choices — Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton as the rival turned secretary of state; Gen. James L. Jones, the former NATO commander, as national security adviser, and Robert M. Gates, the current and future defense secretary — have embraced a sweeping shift of priorities and resources in the national security arena.
The shift would create a greatly expanded corps of diplomats and aid workers that, in the vision of the incoming Obama administration, would be engaged in projects around the world aimed at preventing conflicts and rebuilding failed states. However, it is unclear whether the financing would be shifted from the Pentagon; Mr. Obama has also committed to increasing the number of American combat troops.Whether they can make the change — one that Mr. Obama started talking about in the summer of 2007, when his candidacy was a long shot at best — “will be the great foreign policy experiment of the Obama presidency,” one of his senior advisers said recently.
The adviser, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak publicly, said the three have all embraced “a rebalancing of America’s national security portfolio” after a huge investment in new combat capabilities during the Bush years.
Chomsky on Obama
I always love hearing his point of view but I think he's operating from a few false presumptions: Namely that Obama has a mandate from the liberals. Obama won w/ a coalition and wasn't elected by Chomsky's brand of Boston Bubble liberalism - so there's not the same sort of mandate as there was in Bolivia when the government threatened to cut off indigenous drinking water supplies. Similarly, there's not a mandate to fill his administration with anti-war types because there simply weren't too many origninal Iraq war critics in the first place. Does Noam expect Obama, Feingold, Chris Matthews, and Phil Donahue to run the whole country by themselves?
Aside from that, his critique of Commercial Advertising-Run campaigns and of his Economic advisor's complicity in the financial crisis are well taken.
Good News From Iraq
Outsourcing Local News
Then, you wonder how a "reporter" who writes emails like this can write for a local newspaper:
“I try to do my best, which need not necessarily be correct always,” she wrote back. “Regarding Rose Bowl, my first thought was it was related to some food event but then found that is related to Sports field.”
A Busy 11th Hour
Some of the rules benefit key industries that have long had the administration's ear, such as oil and gas companies, banks and farms. Others impose counterterrorism security requirements on importers and private aircraft owners.Administrative rule making is a long and painful process, so changing these regs is a tall order. Unfortunately, W. is damaging even as a "lame duck."
In the environmental area, the latest rules indicate that the Bush administration wants to lend a final assist to industries that feel burdened by looming pollution controls or wilderness-protection laws. A rule approved by the White House three days after the presidential election, for example, would ease constraints on environmentally damaging oil shale development throughout the West, despite objections from Colorado Gov. Bill Ritter (D) and a majority of the state's congressional delegation.
We will do whatever it takes," said Sen. Barbara Boxer (D-Calif.), the Environment and Public Works Committee chairman. "We're all over this. We've been waiting to pass on the information" to Obama's transition team.But hey - the good news is that not all of the regs good the green light:
Not every draft regulation got approved. On Nov. 19, the OMB ordered the Energy Department to kill new regulations that would have forced the federal government to buy more-energy-efficient lights, appliances, and heating and cooling systems.
[...] The White House also ordered the Environmental Protection Agency to withdraw a new regulation mandating that truck manufacturers install equipment to monitor vehicle pollution.
11.29.2008
Why Johnny Won't Hunt
Hunting's vital signs continue the steady decline that began in the 1970s, according to a wave of research released this year. A new U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service survey shows that our total numbers are down: just 12.5 million, dropping half a million in the last five years alone. Our average age is up: 24 percent of us are over 55, whereas only 12 percent of us are under 25. Recruitment is failing: 38 percent fewer newcomers joined our ranks in the last 15 years. And the proportion of Americans who hunt has dropped to 3 percent, a figure guaranteed to shrink as the general population continues to expand.The article goes on to argue that this is really harmful to the conservation movement. I don't think that's quite right - although hunters and other sportsmen are great supporters of public lands conservation, there is a growing number of non-hunters who are also supporters. I get the feeling that even if the hunting numbers decline there may still be an increased interest in conservation and environmental issues due to increasing non-hunter outdoorsmen and outdoor enthusiasts. Now, that's reassuring for our public lands - but it's still not reassuring for the future of the hunting tradition and I think their diagnosis of where the problems are is spot on. So - take a kid hunting.
The Economist reports on the same.
Newsweek makes fun of all the new hunting gadgets.
The First Black First Lady
Where to Put the Stimulus
(via VH1) Here is a chart from the Economic Policy Institute on where you can get the most bang-for-your-buck with an economic stimulus package.
11.27.2008
That's a Big Chunk of Change
If you add up just the funds that have already been committed, you get a figure, according to Jim Bianco of Bianco Research, that is larger in today’s dollars than the costs of the Marshall Plan, the Louisiana Purchase, the New Deal, the Korean War, Vietnam and the S.&L. crisis combined.Wow. Think about that.
11.26.2008
Brooks Swoons
Believe me, I’m trying not to join in the vast, heaving O-phoria now sweeping the coastal haute bourgeoisie. But the personnel decisions have been superb. The events of the past two weeks should be reassuring to anybody who feared that Obama would veer to the left or would suffer self-inflicted wounds because of his inexperience. He’s off to a start that nearly justifies the hype.
If It's Not April Fools ....
11.25.2008
Take the HOV
AUTOS: Big Three CEOs may carpool to D.C. (Tuesday, November 25, 2008)
The CEOs of Detroit's Big Three automakers may return to Washington, D.C., via carpool, after being skewered for taking separate corporate jets last week to Capitol Hill to ask for a $25 billion government bailout.
The three CEOs, General Motors Corp.'s Rick Wagoner, Chrysler LLC's Robert Nardelli and Ford Motor Co.'s Alan Mulally, spent the weekend e-mailing and discussing setting up a giant caravan for the Washington trip after the CEO of Dura Automotive Systems, a parts maker, suggested it so that Congress can see the many people who depend on the auto industry for their livelihoods.
The automakers have been lobbying Congress for the loan to help them survive the worst auto industry sales in a quarter century. But after their first hearing, Congress abandoned the vote and criticized the CEOS for lavish corporate travel and poor business plans.
The automakers will submit restructuring plans that Congress demanded by Dec. 2 (Tom Krisher, AP/Houston Chronicle, Nov. 25). -- HDM
11.24.2008
Smoke Rings
Note the pink "smoke ring". The smoke doesn't actually turn the meat pink. The ring is the result of the meat being cooked at a low temp in a closed environment. The fire emits gasses that dissolve in the moisture on the surface of the meat. New compounds are created which are similar to the nitrates that are added to deli meat to keep them pink.
Colmes Leaves Hannity
Summers AND Geithner
The Quality of Obama's Picks
Does anyone even know that the Bush National Economic Council is run by a guy named Keith Hennessey? And if ever there was a time for an administration’s key economic advisers to become known by the general public, you’d think this would be it. But instead, he’s an unknown. And he’s an unknown in part because he’s a nobody. Before he ran the NEC, he was the deputy. Before that, he was on Trent Lott’s staff. He has a master’s degree and it’s not in economics. The stature gap with a Lawrence Summers is enormous.
Black Wednesday
11.23.2008
The End of Wall Street
In Defense of "Card Check"
On a related note - with a bailout of the Big 3 looming, the debate about the utility of unions is once again a sub-plot. A lot of Big Business pundits blame the unions for destroying Detroit by pointing to the sucess of foreign car makers in Right To Work (aka: non-union) states like Mississippi.
Another Reason to Drink Kombucha
11.21.2008
A Food Policy I Disagree With
I'm with Michael Pollan on this whole issue.
Madame Secretary
The Palin Turkey Massacre
11.20.2008
Health Care is Coming Together
The health insurance industry said Wednesday that it would support a health care overhaul requiring insurers to accept all customers, regardless of illness or disability. But in return, the industry said, Congress should require all Americans to have coverage.Matt comments:
The proposals, put forward by the insurers’ two main trade associations, have the potential to reshape and advance the debate over universal health insurance just as President-elect Barack Obama prepares to take office.
Of course this does raise the question of whether Team Obama had a cunningly brilliant plan or sort of just happened to stumble into a tactically beneficial situation. The latter seems most likely, but really nobody ever accomplished anything major without benefiting from a lot of good luck along the way.
God Bless the 3rd Branch
Waxman Wins
Waxman takes the chair of the Energy and Commerce committee. I'm happy about this. Not that Dingell was evil - just that he was beholden to Detroit. Here's what the Congress Daily has to say:
Rep. Henry Waxman, D-Calif., has ousted Rep. John Dingell, D-Mich., as chairman of the Energy and Commerce Committee. The House Democratic Caucus ousted Dingell on a secret-ballot vote, following a tight Steering Committee vote Wednesday. The unofficial tally was 137-122. The vote weakens the seniority system and signals the rise of California liberals who backed Waxman. It also strengthens House Speaker Pelosi, who stayed neutral but whose allies supported Waxman's bid. The result gives Waxman, an environmentalist, a key role in shaping legislation on climate change, energy, healthcare and other priorities of President-elect Obama. Dingell will stay on as chairman emeritus.
11.19.2008
After the Imperial Presidency
Obama: Heretic
I've thought for some time that Obama - as a kid with a mixed identity (see Dreams of My Father), who looked black, and admired the civil rights movement - was drawn to the black church as a source of identity - by focusing on the social gospel - fit nicely with his political views. This isn't to disparage his choice, I just think it explains where his religious focus is: he doesn't focus too much on theology, but instead on justice, community, and the tolerant aspects of the faith.
Notwithstanding his theology (at least the theology depicted in the interview), I think Obama speaks about his faith better than most politicians - inclusive, uplifting, authoritatively, etc. Also, he is honest about his doubts and where he wrestles with faith. In fact, the "heretical" views in the interview all hit on the genuinally difficult theological questions of Christianity. So, in that regard, it's better to struggle with these connundra than pretend that they're easy questions all should adopt (like some politicians we know).
The Streak Ends
House Leadership Update
Also, John Boehner won re-election as the GOP Majority Leader. This is surprising. Since losing seats in '06 and '08 I expected the GOP to at least put a different face on their caucus. Not to mention the fact that Boehner's not that impressive of a leader (see: financial meltdown), nor is he the sort of person you'd expect to spearhead a GOP comeback.
UPDATE: TNR has a good post on why Boehner is actually the most clever politician in Washington. Really interesting.
Also - Eric Cantor took over as GOP Whip (after Blunt stepped down).One by one, he masterfully co-opted or defused his rivals in the conservative faction. Rising star Eric Cantor, the guy who could have most easily toppled Boehner this year, was given the number-two job of whip, currently held by Roy Blunt, who's graciously giving way to Cantor. ("Blunt fell on his sword for Boehner," says one GOP aide.) Right-wing power broker Mike Pence, who ran against Boehner for leader in 2006, was gently lured into the fold when Boehner let him take the lead on the House GOP's big August pro-drilling push and then effusively praised him for it. ("I'm starting to understand why [the House GOP conference] went with John Boehner," Pence gushed in return after the episode.)
And then, using the newly loyal Pence, Boehner outmaneuvered one more potential enemy, conservative upstart Jeb Hensarling of Texas. After the November 4 bloodbath, Boehner called Pence and asked him to run for conference chair, a leadership role that one of Boehner's allies had suddenly and mysteriously vacated - the very post Hensarling had been planning to run for. Pence and Hensarling have the same power base, and with Pence in the ring, Hensarling had to give up his bid. Checkmate!
11.18.2008
Do You BBQ?
In fact, I’ve heard it argued that, absent some slippage in management, a barbecue restaurant can only get better over time: many Texas barbecue fanatics have a strong belief in the beneficial properties of accumulated grease.
As a longtime editor, though, he knew a Cinderella story when he saw one. It wasn’t just that Snow’s had been unknown to a Texas barbecue fancy that is notably mobile. Snow’s proprietor, Kerry Bexley, was a former rodeo clown who worked as a blending-facility operator at a coal mine. Snow’s pit master, Tootsie Tomanetz, was a woman in her early seventies who worked as the custodian of the middle school in Giddings, Texas—the Lee County seat, eighteen miles to the south. After five years of operating Snow’s, both of them still had their day jobs. Also, Snow’s was open only on Saturday mornings, from eight until the meat ran out.
What Is A Liberal Foreign Policy?
You Don't Need a Weather Man To Know Which Way the Wind Blows
UPDATE: James Fallows thinks this is an excellent example of what a fantastic interviewer Terri Gross is.
Eric Holder as Obama's AG
Real Men Get Hot Flashes
The Ex-Middle Class
In this recession, maybe even more than other ones, the last ones to join the middle class will be the first ones out. And it won’t only be material deprivations that bites. It will be the loss of a social identity, the loss of social networks, the loss of the little status symbols that suggest an elevated place in the social order. These reversals are bound to produce alienation and a political response. If you want to know where the next big social movements will come from, I’d say the formerly middle class.
I Never Picked Cotton ...
... but I did pick a President. (via JBigglesworth) Here's a cool map, showing all the heaviest cotton producing counties in the South in 1860 went for Obama in 2008. Yes, the correlation has to do with slaves and the black vote.
11.14.2008
Clock is Ticking
Shows What I Know
The down side? 1) Obama thinks she was wrong on the biggest foreign policy decision she had to make (Iraq) and asked "what 'foreign policy experience' she [was] talking about" 2) she's better at HHS, education, etc., and 3) what's Biden going to do? 4) will she get to pick her deputies 5) if you want a Team of Rivals, why not Hagel, Powell, etc....
Well, I Just Ruined My Chances
The questionnaire includes 63 requests for personal and professional records, some covering applicants’ spouses and grown children as well, that are forcing job-seekers to rummage from basements to attics, in shoe boxes, diaries and computer archives to document both their achievements and missteps.
Only the smallest details are excluded; traffic tickets carrying fines of less than $50 need not be reported, the application says. Applicants are asked whether they or anyone in their family owns a gun. They must include any e-mail that might embarrass the president-elect, along with any blog posts and links to their Facebook pages.
The application also asks applicants to “please list all aliases or ‘handles’ you have used to communicate on the Internet.”
The Economy, The Bailout, TNR and the NYT
If ever the market has rendered a just verdict, it is the one rendered on G.M. and Chrysler. These companies are not innocent victims of this crisis. To read the expert literature on these companies is to read a long litany of miscalculation. Some experts mention the management blunders, some the union contracts and the legacy costs, some the years of poor car design and some the entrenched corporate cultures.Paul Krugman makes the case for bold economic spending by the Obama Administration - desperate times make for desperate measures. Once we get through this we can go back to balancing the books.
UPDATE: Ok, so now I read Jonathan Cohn's TNR argument in favor of the Big 3 bailout. Essentially he claims that Detroit was already modernizing their business model and making great improvements until the economic crisis occured - therefore, Detroit's reputation is worse than they're actual operations. Furthermore, because they can't cut off creditors (who supply autoparts) they couldn't file for Chapter 11 and continue working - instead they'd end up in Chapter 7 Bankruptcy: liquidation ... causing, at worse, a 1/2 million jobs to disappear (which is the total unemployment as of today). Also, GM is pushing the Volt plug-in car ... something that Japan doesn't even offer, so we'd push that technology back even further.
HRC for SecSt?
11.13.2008
A New Liberal Order
Is it Religion? Free Speech?
Chief Justice John G. Roberts, Jr., told [counsel]: “You’re really just picking your poison, aren’t you? I mean, the more you say that the monument is Government speech, to get out of the Free Speech Clause, the more it seems to me you’re walking into a trap under the Establishment Clause.”
Sell It Off to Raise Money?
That's the provoking thought Ross Douthat brings up. Look at how much land the Feds own out west. Provoking - but stupid.
The Federal Government owns more than half of Oregon, Utah, Nevada, Idaho and Alaska and it owns nearly half of California, Arizona, New Mexico and Wyoming. See the map for more. It is time for a sale. Selling even some western land could raise hundreds of billions of dollars - perhaps trillions of dollars - for the Federal government at a time when the funds are badly needed and no one want to raise taxes.