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Posts archived in Policy and Polity

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1:29 PM

The Reform Administration

Today was the first time in 4 decades that a mandatory minimum sentencing law was repealed. That repeal came along with a reform of the 100-to-1 powder cocaine to crack cocaine sentencing disparity that has been the target of drug reform advocates for years. This same disparity and mandatory minimum sentencing is what has landed countless poor, crack-addicted, urban minorities (mostly blacks) in jail – and was also touted by Reagan Revolutionaries as a major victory in the war against drugs. Turn that ideological clock forward 20 years and you’d find a policy with no discernible societal benefits that is reformed and repealed by a bipartisan majority in Congress.

The bill also eliminates the five-year mandatory minimum for first-time possession of crack, the first time since the Nixon administration that Congress has repealed a mandatory minimum sentence.

“For Congress to take a step toward saying ‘we have made a mistake’ and this sentence is too severe … is really remarkable,” said Virginia Sloan, president of the Constitution Project, which in studies of sentencing practices has referred to crack cocaine mandates as a “‘poster child’ for the injustices of mandatory sentencing.” (TPM 7/28)

So just to recap for everyone trying to pay attention at home, this administration has now embarked upon enacting major reform legislation in health care, Wall St/banking, student loan industry, and the war on drugs.

For some this must come as a surprise when the Republicans are still trumpeting their own non-existent records of reform as proof that Obama is ruining America. I’m of the persuasion that leading up to November, the Democrat’s main prerogative will be to force Republicans to espouse their policy preferences, and in doing so, to force debate over Obama/the Democrats record in the last 2 years and the Republican’s record over the last 10 years. Some say that this tactic will amount to nothing more than blaming Bush for all of America’s problems. But to the contrary, it will implicate Congressional Republicans as being complicit in poor governance under Bush and then expose their utter lack of serious policy initiatives in this most recent Congress.

One caveat though, and this one is quite significant. Smart Republicans should run against Obama’s actions in Afghanistan. In tight races, especially those with Democratic incumbents, a skillful Republican could co-opt a large portion of an otherwise dis-affected democratic base by positioning themselves as against reckless spending in foreign wars of occupation. It would tie perfectly into a traditional conservative platform of responsible governance, while simultaneously rejecting the inflammatory Islamo-phobia recently espoused by the likes of Newt Gingrich and Sarah Palin. The real question though, is can a Republican in the year 2010 oppose the escalation of the war in Afghanistan while not indulging themselves in the trite Libertarian focus on Federalism like that of the Pauls (Rand and Ron)?

In an era of fanciful bipartisan idolatry, this decade-long war in Afghanistan would provide a basis for a powerful foreign policy-oriented voting bloc in Congress. So far however, none have been so bold.

“Our party is going to be led by younger and more diverse elected officials,” crowed former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, who lent his support to a number of the candidates, in an e-mail. “They are united in embracing a rollback of government’s power, American entrepreneurial capitalism and a zeal for reform.”

In the short-term, a diverse group of GOP office holders next year would translate into a new set of potential surrogates for the party’s presidential candidate in 2012. Particularly in battleground states, having a woman or minority statewide official could help in those communities where Republican White House hopefuls have lagged. (Politico 6/11/10)

I’m just in awe of the raw pandering, the utterly non-subtle employment of false advertising in the Republican’s attempted re-branding of themselves.

I know folks who tend to the right also tend to decry identity politics, primarily because Democrats took advantage of it during the last 3 decades to widen their voter base and create a more sustainable platform with changing demographics. But let me be clear, this surface-deep diversification of the Republican party’s electoral repertoire is not identity politics, it is marketing.

That remains particularly so and is exposed by Jeb Bush’s admission that indeed nothing about the Republican platform is changing, nor is the substance of the GOP even up for consideration – “…a rollback of government’s power…capitalism and a zeal for reform,” says nothing as to why women, Indian Americans, African Americans or Hispanics should lend their support to the Republican candidates; rather, the shamelessness of this political strategy is such that the only upside seen by republican strategists is that new demographics may be tricked into voting Republican because there are politicians who look like them on the Republican ticket.

Despite the rampant contradictions in the mindset that allows republican strategists to believe that by merely showcasing some minority-background candidates they will enfranchise historically under-represented groups, these folks are doing so while championing a platform that falls in line with much despised Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer’s outwardly xenophobic immigration policy, a platform that continues to blame poor people for being poor and one that continues to uphold the mentality that the only proper role for government is protecting white, Christian males’ interests. Furthermore, extending past race a bit but plunging into gender, what in the world does a Republican platform offer to support women’s interests? They explicitly condone the restriction of reproductive choice (so a woman’s very fundamental choice whether to bear children or not, according to republicans, is to be decided by our federal government), republicans continue to wage war against Planned Parenthood (recently singling them out in the health care reform debate by attempting to remove all federal funding for the group that provides regular women health services to already under-served populations), and these are still the same folks whose war on poor, single mothers that had forced the hand of the federal government to inject moral qualifications for government support (a la welfare) continues to this day by shifting more and more resources away from social services (most of which are used by women).

None of that however, could stop Politico’s Jonathon Martin from inserting this massive load of bullshit into the above quoted article:

The congressional and gubernatorial primaries held so far this year have put the GOP on the verge of electing an array of diverse new faces to high office, which stands to upend the party’s country club image and perhaps even diminish one of the most enduring punch lines in American politics.

Does it seem like Martin gives one iota of a shit about policy? Or about how politics effects real people’s lives? Does it seem like Martin thinks that what politicians and political parties say needs to be backed up by real actions? Or does it seem like Martin thinks republicans just needed some candidates that look a little different?

Same platform, same policies. Republicans continue to represent the “country club” image because their policies directly benefit the same group that they have for the last 40 years.

If a handful of minority ethnic / female candidates in one election cycle can change that historical fact, then I’m Martha Washington.

(or Transocean or Halliburton)

“Let’s wait and see,” said Sen. James Inhofe on the floor of the Senate today.

This liability cap is a big issue indeed, and one that is not as straightforward as it first seems. In discussing a maximum amount that a privately owned oil company can be held liable for in the event of a catastrophic environmental disaster, we are implicitly deciding how much the taxpayer burden for such disasters should be. I haven’t seen comprehensive enough of numbers to guess a total cost of this spill, nor have I seen many people guessing totals, but I have heard figures such as a cost to BP of 15 million dollars a day. That to me, sounds low. I would guess this number is the immediate cost to BP, but that it doesn’t account for governmental expenses or economic losses in surrounding regions.

Lets take that at face value though, maybe the 15 million covers every single cost associated.

That would mean that under the current 75 million dollar liability cap, BP’s capitol liability would have ceased after 5 days.

This spill has been going on, without much hope of stopping, for nearly a month. And now there are said to be giant plumes of oil floating under the surface of the sea, their locations unknown and magnitude only hypothesized.

From where I”m sitting, the existence of a liability cap for economic damages of catastrophic oil spills and other environmental damage caused by industry is a policy that serves one very small constituency, at the expense of another very large constituency. Sen. Inhofe seems to think this policy is necessary to keep the independents in the game. The independent oil barons that is – you know, those small business oil ventures.

Ultimately, anyone trying to turn a (gigantic) profit, especially by pillaging the earth’s oil reserves, should be liable for all risk and damages. Why should there be different rules for these folks, when other entrepreneurs, the truly small business independents, risk their homes and livelihoods taking relatively menial risks?

I think its time to turn this equation around, fuck the conversation of liability caps for oil companies and other resource-mongers capable of incurring catastrophic environmental damages – lets just get rid of the cap. How about some protections for the rest of us whose relative burdens of liability far exceed anything BP or James Inhofe could compain about? If our government should be doing anything in the realm of safety nets, how about restoring some of the social ones!

I guess the same logic applies about our country’s and globe’s neo-liberalization – we don’t really know what the ultimate cost will be, so lets not upset anyone with a vested interest in this system of producing wealth; rather, let’s wait and see!

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4:15 PM

Beyond Patronage (con’t)

Adorning my comments cue this afternoon:

What you fail to address is that the gov’t 86′d the request to skip some of the “standard” steps for the fix.  They wanted to go beyond the basic 1, 2, 3 fix and the gov’t denied them.

Also, these are Federal waters . . . why was the gov’t so slow in responding?  Whether you all want to believe it or not, Bush reacted to Hurricane Katrina 100 times faster than Obama’s response to this spill.

Also, please note that this is one, yes one, off-shore well out of thousands  . . . considering the numbers out there and the years inbetween “spills” . . .

…in Katrina thousands of Americans were trapped in their homes without water or food or any tangible hopes for rescue…the oil spill didn’t even reach American shores until nearly 2 weeks after it first began – so there isn’t much room to conflate these disasters as being comparably disastrous nor caused by the same factors and therefore part of the same policy debate.

I actually don’t find the fact that this Deepwater Rig is one out of hundreds or thousands other off-shore oil rigs to be very comforting…it merely implies that this is only a drop compared to how much oil could spill into the ocean, not exactly a comforting thought if this comparatively little spill can do so much damage, cause so many people to be out of work, and cost the government/private industry sooo much money.

Especially true when one considers the contemporary context of the sole government agency that oversees off-shore oil drilling, the Mineral Management Service (MMS), whose most egregious debacles occurred under the watch of our last administration (sex for oil…another scandal involving meth use at the MMS(?)…). Of greatest importance though, from the Wall St. Journal on May 7, 2010:

The small U.S. agency that oversees offshore drilling doesn’t write or implement most safety regulations, having gradually shifted such responsibilities to the oil industry itself for more than a decade. Instead, the Minerals Management Service—now caught up in the crisis of the Deepwater Horizon rig that for weeks has sent crude oil gushing into the Gulf of Mexico—sets broad performance goals for the industry. Oil producers and drilling companies are then free to decide for themselves how to meet those goals, industry executives and former regulators say.

Clearly something broke before this administration, allowing this spill to be gushing 3 weeks later and with our only real hope at this point of assuredly stopping this flow of oil into the Guld of Mexico still about 2 1/2 months away.  Unfortunately for that cause, most all of BPs tactics have been only used once – on this spill! And does shooting recycled rubber and golf balls into the pipe sound like a hair-brained scheme or what?

Considering that fact though, that thousands of other oil rigs inhabit our coastal waters, something must change in this relationship. Is it the government’s perogative to hold blind trust in the companies who operate these rigs? Or is it the government’s perogative to use its existing agencies to create a standard upon which we uphold a minimum standard of worker safety, environmental integrity, disaster response, and corporate accountability?

So the question becomes, what is Obama’s next step? Fix that broken government!

Interior Secretary Ken Salazar has named two high-level officials to oversee a restructuring of an agency that oversees offshore drilling.

Salazar said this week he wants to split the Minerals Management Service in two. One agency would be charged with inspecting oil rigs, investigating oil companies and enforcing safety regulations, while the other would oversee leases for drilling and collection of billions of dollars in royalties.

Rhea Suh, assistant Interior Secretary for policy, management and budget, and Chris Henderson, a senior adviser to Salazar, will oversee the MMS restructuring. Salazar has said the plan will ensure there is no conflict, “real or perceived,” regarding the agency’s functions. (WaPo 5/13/10)

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11:59 AM

Beyond Patronage

As if news of an increasingly threatening oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico isn’t bad enough on its own, we now get to revel in the inane plans to stop the spill conjured up by BP:

“British firm BP will make a second attempt this week to seal the oil well.

An attempt to drop a huge box on to the leak failed at the weekend and BP will now try to cap it with a smaller box.

The energy giant is also expected to try to plug the well using rubbish like tyres and golf balls,” (BBC 5/11/10)

And, for our added delight, we can also observe the child-like bickering of each responsible party (BP, Halliburton, Transocean), as they appeared before the Senate this morning, each of which apparently figures that their best course of action is to shift blame to someone else:

“The Deepwater Horizon rig that blew up in the Gulf of Mexico on 20 April was owned and operated by drilling firm Transocean, but leased by BP.

The head of BP America told the Senate hearing he had reason to believe a critical safety device called a blowout protector had been modified, reports news agency Reuters.

Lamar McKay also noted the 450-tonne device was owned by Transocean.

But Transocean’s boss said there was no reason to believe its blowout protector had been at fault, as he pointed the finger at BP.

“Offshore oil and gas production projects begin and end with the operator, in this case BP,” said chief executive Steven Newman.

He also pinned blame on the failure of a cement oil-well casing, built by BP contractor Halliburton.

But Halliburton executive Tim Probert argued his firm had followed all requirements set out by BP and industry practices.”

What amazes me is not the unique nature of this oil spill, or the originality of these executive’s techniques in front of a pissed-off Congress, rather, I’m amazed by the fact that Halliburton continues to get jobs while millions of Americans and thousands of other American businesses languish – I mean, if a group of scoundrels (KBR) that were oh so willing to defraud the government during a war are still being hired to do “honest” work, what hope is there for the American economy? Well, to refine that, what hope is there for the integrity of the American economy? And furthermore, why aren’t the tea partiers jumping down these bastard’s throats? For all of their outrage in the past year, they seem to blankly stare at the face of corporate corruption.

This example of the oil executive’s willingness to game the system, cover their asses and cut their losses shows how predominant laissez-faire remains within our country’s and government’s consciousness. It isn’t even a risk for these cats to put on a straight face and tell whatever version of the facts they wish, because they have extremely-well paid lawyers on their side who coach them in precisely how to best pull the blanket over Congress’ head. Its just like with Goldman Sachs recently. Where even though it was painfully obvious that the corporation’s lawyer had instructed their clients to stall, meander, play dumb and otherwise waste Congress’ (and the taxpayer’s) time, they stayed within the legal bounds of how one can lie under oath.

Congress and the American people know this to be the case. Sen. Susan Collins asserted during the Goldman Sachs hearing that she was certain the bank execs strategy was one of running out the clock. Today, Sen. John Barrasso reacts to BP, Halliburton and Transocean’s Congressional testimony as such, “”I hear one message – don’t blame me. Shifting the blame game doesn’t get us very far.”

We know these tactics to be tried and true for Corporate America, but we continue to give them a platform upon which to be upheld as honest and truthful, and our media continues to disseminate the corporate talking points impartially and under the guise that each news story has to have fair and balanced view points represented. This is not only frustrating as an observer and quasi-participant in the system, but as a human being. Corporations are not people and should receive no special treatment or deference, nor should the people who run corporations be upheld as inherently valuable or irreplaceable for that matter. Privilege should not beget priority in our system, but it often does.

The critical question in examining how our country can move beyond patronage is one that focuses on Congress: will they punish those whose transgressions befell enormous consequences for the larger population, or will they just as soon yield their own power to those with privilege?

This past week, it has become a looming reality that the oil rig which exploded and sank into the Gulf of Mexico, spilling thousands of gallons of oil a day, is not under control and poses vast environmental risks for the area.

Similarly becoming clear is that this newly acknowledged national disaster will re-shape the national discourse on energy policy concerning domestic and off-shore drilling specifically. As the world watched the oil slick grow to the now epic expanse of 130 miles long, an off-shore wind farm was approved in Cape Cod, Massachusetts after 9 years of mucking around in the legal system. Leaving the almost ironic contrast of these two pieces of energy news aside, a more fundamental question resounds in my brain: Is the Government ultimately responsible for the direction of and oversight of our national energy pursuits, and is this reality only tacitly acknowledged in situations where massive catastrophes occur and the private sector that profits from our energy pursuits proves to be incapable of dealing with the consequences?

Wordy, yes, but goddamn important to raise. As in the case of the oil rig, whose consequences in terms of area and volume effected have tripled in just the last day, it is overwhelmingly clear that the Federal Government (DoHS, DoD, Coast Guard) needed to act to control the spill. I say this because even Louisiana’s Republican Gov. Bobby Jindal has asserted that oil giant BP, whose rig it was that initiated this disaster, cannot handle the clean up and mitigation efforts: “I do have concerns that BP’s resources are not adequate,” (BBC 5/1/10).

Despite these mounting concerns that big oil cannot handle the consequences of their endeavors, the company has repeatedly downplayed any suggestions of such, with their COO Doug Suttles saying “[it had mounted] the largest response effort ever done in the world,” (BBC 5/1/10)

Continuing along that vein though, the COO’s admissions as to the stark reality of tampering with such dangerous, uncertain oil exploration leaves much to be wanting in terms of clean energy in this country:

Officials from BP and the federal government have repeatedly said they had prepared for the worst, even though a plan filed last year with the government said it was highly unlikely that a spill or leak would ever result from the Deep Horizon rig.

“There are not much additional available resources in the world to fight this thing offshore,” said Doug Suttles, BP’s chief operating officer for exploration and production, in an interview. “We’ve basically thrown everything we have at it.”

Mr. Suttles said BP’s efforts did not change after it was disclosed Wednesday night that the leak was estimated at 5,000 barrels a day, five times larger than initial estimates had suggested. He said BP, which is spending roughly $6 million a day and will likely spend far more when oil reaches land, had already been mobilizing for a far larger spill. However, he did not deny that BP initially thought the slick could be stopped before it reached the coastline.

“In the early days, the belief was that we probably could have contained it offshore,” Mr. Suttles said. “Unfortunately, since the event began we haven’t had that much good weather.” (NYTimes 5/1/10)

Veiled in the sympathized PR magic that any oil company must possess is the inability to ignore the fact that even when risk is assumed to be minimal, that risk is relative to the forces at play. BP, for all their planning, resources, and expertise in these deep-ocean drilling operations, now owns the fallout from this spill. 6$ million a day is a lot to spend on attempting to clean an ocean of oil, but this shit is just now reaching land and that land happens to be protected wildlife reserves. On top of that, there have been nearly 24 hr relief efforts underway for the last 9 days, with the Coast Guard at the helm, Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano issuing statements and dedicating time to the relief efforts by setting up a second command station in Mobile, Alabama, the Department of Defense now dedicating resources and time, and fianlly President Obama will be heading to Louisiana tomorrow to see the fallout firsthand and issue another public response.

Whoever bears the final costs seems negligible at this point, even though it is likely that BP’s shareholders will suffer more than BP’s executives, because the damage caused by BP’s work will be irreversible. Burning layers of oil off the surface of the ocean, an unfettered well 5,000 feet below the surface of the ocean gushing 210,000 gallons of oil a day, and now thousands more gallons of sub-surface dispersant (whose environmental effects are unknown) are being deployed to attempt to prevent oil from reaching the surface of the ocean.

Of course, the question politicians of all stripes are rushing to answer is: what does this spill, this imminent environmental disaster, imply for future off-shore oil exploration?

At the heart of that question, and ultimately the un-spoken truth revolving around this issue, is that the Federal Government must own their energy policy and its consequences.

If Sarah Palin is to get her way and we “drill here, drill now”, the risks of future catastrophes such as this one becomes multiplied by some unknown factor (even if rigs are determined safe, anything can happen because the forces at play are larger than BP’s pursuit of drilling permits). The proponents of this approach seem, however, to label epic environmental catastrophe as a consequence they are willing to accept in pursuit of a Federal energy policy that favors any and all available forms of resource extraction. I find this distasteful at the least and reckless at the most. Sarah Palin’s habitat will not be the ones covered in rusty, sweet crude oil because of that decision, nor will it be our energy future that is secured by such a move – it is merely a stop-gap, a band-aid that gives the appearance of proactive government intervention while disguising its inherent risks as weighing less than the benefits.

But what should not get lost in this conversation is our nationally accepted perceptions that the Federal Government needs to direct our nation’s and our economy’s use of natural resources.

So my question becomes, why drive a train down dead end tracks? Why should we invest our country in a short-term, low-benefit, high-cost solution?

Is it for the wind-fall profit taxes that we can use to reduce our debt? Or is it for the sake of garnering the good graces of extremely moneyed, well-connected special interests for the next 2 decades or so – to provide in campaign donations and non-adversarial policy campaigns?

And if either of these are the case, no one has yet to prove that any humble citizen’s life will improve because BP gets access to formerly protected areas. To be sure, there are negative consequences inherent in any energy policy decision made at this point, but what has been fundamentally ignored in many’s consideration of expanding domestic drilling is how marginally, if at all, the positives outweigh the negatives.

As such, I will be following the ensuing debate over how to realign our energy policy in recognition of these consequences, and whether anyone will be so bold as to offer viable alternatives that don’t amount to appeasement of special interests.

And damnit, our country doesn’t need any more stock photos of little helpless animals or shorelines coated in oil. What are we going to do about that?

In the midst of the Gulf of Mexico, 52 miles southeast of the Louisiana port of Venice on Tuesday, a semi-submersible oil rig carrying out exploratory drilling exploded and sank into the sea.

Concerns are floating amongst the coastguard with the possibility that the rig could be leaking 8,000  barrels of oil into the sea each day.

Never fear though – dealing with the oil rig disaster is Obama’s #1 priority!

Pardon my sarcastic tone, but disasters such as this are apparently the collateral Obama is willing to pay in order to advance some sort of Buy American, Drill American campaign for oil. The sad truth though, is that even though we may be less prone to catastrophic spills and accidents on oil rigs, there are many other examples of how shit still happens that we can’t control. If ever there was something that trickles-down in this country, its pollution.

But I shouldn’t look at Obama’s energy policy proposals through such a narrow lens, as being limited to the least common denominator, should I?

There was actually some good stuff in there, not to mention the bargaining chip this presents when Obama’s climate bill (Kerry, Graham and Lieberman’s climate bill now) comes back to the table.

Take for example Obama’s tacit acknowledgment of what a self-defeating game we all play in this country when it comes to politics and (environmental) activism:

…Today we’re announcing the expansion of offshore oil and gas exploration, but in ways that balance the need to harness domestic energy resources and the need to protect America’s natural resources.  Under the leadership of Secretary Salazar, we’ll employ new technologies that reduce the impact of oil exploration.  We’ll protect areas that are vital to tourism, the environment, and our national security.  And we’ll be guided not by political ideology, but by scientific evidence…

…there will be those who strongly disagree with this decision, including those who say we should not open any new areas to drilling.  But what I want to emphasize is that this announcement is part of a broader strategy that will move us from an economy that runs on fossil fuels and foreign oil to one that relies more on homegrown fuels and clean energy.  And the only way this transition will succeed is if it strengthens our economy in the short term and the long run.  To fail to recognize this reality would be a mistake.

On the other side, there are going to be some who argue that we don’t go nearly far enough; who suggest we should open all our waters to energy exploration without any restriction or regard for the broader environmental and economic impact.  And to those folks I’ve got to say this:  We have less than 2 percent of the world’s oil reserves; we consume more than 20 percent of the world’s oil.  And what that means is that drilling alone can’t come close to meeting our long-term energy needs.  And for the sake of our planet and our energy independence, we need to begin the transition to cleaner fuels now.

So the answer is not drilling everywhere all the time.  But the answer is not, also, for us to ignore the fact that we are going to need vital energy sources to maintain our economic growth and our security.  Ultimately, we need to move beyond the tired debates of the left and the right, between business leaders and environmentalists, between those who would claim drilling is a cure all and those who would claim it has no place.  Because this issue is just too important to allow our progress to languish while we fight the same old battles over and over again.

For decades we’ve talked about how our dependence on foreign oil threatens our economy -– yet our will to act rises and falls with the price of a barrel of oil.  When gas gets expensive at the pump, suddenly everybody is an energy expert.  And when it goes back down, everybody is back to their old habits.

For decades we’ve talked about the threat to future generations posed by our current system of energy –- even as we can see the mounting evidence of climate change from the Arctic Circle to the Gulf Coast.  And this is particularly relevant to all of you who are serving in uniform:  For decades, we’ve talked about the risks to our security created by dependence on foreign oil, but that dependence has actually grown year after year after year after year.

And while our politics has remained entrenched along these worn divides, the ground has shifted beneath our feet.  Around the world, countries are seeking an edge in the global marketplace by investing in new ways of producing and saving energy.  From China to Germany, these nations recognize that the nation that leads the clean energy economy will be the country that leads the global economy.  And meanwhile, here at home, as politicians in Washington debate endlessly about whether to act, our own military has determined that we can no longer afford not to…(3/31/10 BHO) [emphasis added]

When it comes to bringing this clean energy economy full circle, and not just focusing on the politically vibrant issues of today, we have to begin to earnestly tackle the way we build our homes, workplaces, parking lots, suburbs and cities. I say this because immediately before the lead-in to that quote, Obama was waxing on about how he is doubling the number of hybrid vehicles in the federal fleet – which sounds great for its outwardly eco-friendly, economically stimulating image, but nevertheless acts as an admission of how much of this conversation is perversely focused on the automobile.

Energy consumption from transportation reflects only 15% of overall consumption. If we want to save energy in a meaningful way, we have to focus on the larger, harder to resolve aspects of energy consumption. Specifically our building/construction industry accounts for (at a conservative estimate, and trust me, this is the conservative estimate of those that exist) 40% of overall energy consumption including energy use associated with operating a building (heating, cooling, ventilation, etc).

So lets keep our eyes and ear open for when the administration begins to administer the hard truth to much of the ingrained-in-the-old-ways builders/developers. I’d be willing to wager that the issue I’ve raised of how the built environment has been left out of the national energy dialog is not new to anyone significant in the administration, but that they will patiently wait until after the construction industry recovers a bit from the banking/housing crash. How long will that take though?

1 comments

2:01 PM

Obama’s Veto

In the fiery storm engulfing Congress that is Financial Reform (aka Wall St. Reform), we’ve seen 41 GOP Senators callously side with big banks and threaten to filibuster debate of reform (well, that’s the media’s binary coded version of events). In a letter written to Sen. Majority Leader Harry Reid, Mitch McConnell writes:

“We understand that you intend to bring financial regulation reform legislation to the Senate floor this work period. We encourage you to take a bipartisan and inclusive approach, rather than the partisan path you chose on health care…
…We are united in our opposition to the partisan legislation reported by the Senate Banking Committee. As currently constructed, this bill allows for endless taxpayer bailouts of Wall Street and establishes new and unlimited regulatory powers that will stifle small businesses and community banks.”

Were Democrats phased, though?

Not at all.

The President is now throwing his entire weight behind the regulatory reform movement, as evidenced by his threat to veto any legislation that doesn’t “bring the derivatives market under control.” Whether this threat comes as a motivating factor for Republicans to back up the majority’s legislation, or rather as motivation for Democrats to look more critically at their prevailing legislation is yet to be seen.

From TPM:

“I want to see what emerges, but I will veto legislation that does not bring the derivatives market under control and some sort of regulatory framework that assures that we don’t have the same kind of crises that we’ve seen in the past,” he said before meeting with the President’s Economic Recovery Advisory Board.

“We can’t allow history to repeat itself. Never again should American taxpayers be forced to step in and pay the price for the responsibility of speculators on Wall Street who made risky bets with the expectation that taxpayers would be there to break their fall,” he said. (4/16/10)

Republicans ultimately have the cards in their hands by which this discussion can turn into something that will produce fruitful results, but so do the Democrat to an extent (whether they change Dodd’s bill to balance partisan concerns or adopt another committee’s bill). It seems so often that this is an issue around which both party’s values coalesce, but then some political skirmish emerges and it gets painted as some big war in Congress.

Any party that stops financial regulatory reform (Wall St. reform) from happening will surely pay a dire price at the voting booth in November. In all honesty though, I don’t see much of a benefit for either party to be the ones to possess this bill.

If Democrats pass Dodd’s bill, with all of its flaws now becoming amplified after the news of Goldman Sach’s federal fraud charges, Republicans will obviously paint Democrats as allowing “Too Big too Fail” to persist. If Republicans filibuster the Democrat’s current bill, the talking points for November are easy to foresee – that Republicans are in bed with Wall St.

Basically a political dead end. Another route becomes the obvious choice for the conscientious Congress.

In a surprising turn of events though, the conservative tending Blanche Lincoln has taken a hard-line approach to financial regulatory reform and seems to be taking the important role of pushing the Congress to create better legislation. Her bill, as emerged from the Agriculture Committee, may become a bargaining chip from which to carve more effective, meaningful reform out of Dodd’s bill.

Again, if ownership of the legislation subsides, progress will more likely be made. What the fuck do Democrats care if the bill is Dodd’s or Lincoln’s? And for that matter, why should Republicans care if the bill is Dodd’s? This comes down to dispelling the political fantasy that a one-sided legislative victory on Wall St. reform is good for either party in November and realizing that Congress has a much better chance of closing in on the perfect than it did with Health Care reform.

And I think we’d all be better off with a more sincere legislating effort here. Both side’s constituents agree that this reform effort needs to be made. So the question becomes, who will be responsible for creating the loopholes that will cause this bill to fail?

1 comments

8:39 AM

Beck’s Tea Party

A poll coming out of the NYTimes today shows some interesting characteristics and caricatures of the Tea Party movement. One such caricature, widely perceived as true and explored in this poll, is the intimate connection between Glenn Beck’s opinionated musings and said Tea Party movement. Similarly, the demographic info emerging about this movement shows that its proponents are largely wealthier and more educated than the average American, which as Nate Silver relates, “The tea-partiers skew older and college-educated: that’s basically the cable news demographic.”

I don’t think this poll implies any sort of causation – Tea Party to Beck or vice versa, but rather a relationship based upon mutual interests: Glenn Beck is scared shitless of the Federal Government when it is run by Democrats, and so is the Tea Party movement. The most apparent effect of this relationship is that both entities appear frequently willing to disregard the factual basis for a policy argument in favor of an emotionally driven argument (of the sort that frequently result in Beck sobbing like a spoiled child who doesn’t get their way).

Offered up as support for this relationship between the Tea Party and Beck, Nate Silver points to the conspicuous timing of Beck’s cable opinion show debut: the day before President Obama was inaugurated.

This begins to point to a certain opportunist impulse in one, Glenn Beck. Especially when one considers that Beck released 7 books, 3 dvds, 26 cds, and multiple subscriber-only media venues since 2007, his role as a media siphon and capitalist extraordinaire is all the more clear.

So what though? Who cares if someone on cable (news) happens to be continually expanding the franchise that is their name? It surely is within all of their legal rights and freedoms to do so.

And that is the point here. I guess that within the ever-expanding web of Beck’s media empire, he was able to instill a sense of seriousness within his pursuits. He capitalized not only on resources that were just waiting to be thrown at the next conservative darling, but also upon the lingering political self-consciousness of the conservative movement. His conspiracies, images of communist takeovers, out-of-control government, and the framing of the government versus the people do much to exploit the foibles of the modern conservative base.

So in context, does Beck matter to politics at large?

I would say no, unless people outside of the base to whom he directly speaks start to take him seriously. He obviously has no policy savvy. He has no credentials upon which to espouse one paradigm or policy over another, but he surely has the credentials to be the voice inside the base’s head.

I am comfortable discussing Beck within a context of media alone. The second that reputable or otherwise credible people begin to discuss him within a context of policy they should be rightly viewed as failing their audience. With or without Beck, I doubt the GOP base would ever have supported Health Care Reform under Obama. With or without Beck, I doubt that base would tacitly acknowledge Obama’s role in lowering their taxes. And I sincerely hope that no public officials are taking cues on policy from Beck or Beck’s audiences’ rantings, but no more than I hope that extreme right wing policies stop being perceived as so ethereally appropriate in this day and age.

Indeed, maybe Beck’s role in our politics today is just an indicator of to whom right wing politicians will have to pander when their poll numbers are down. But it isn’t like those politicians would have done anything differently with or without the presence of Beck.

Again, Beck just capitalizes upon those foibles of modern conservatism: government bad, taxes bad, guns good, and so on.

So whats new?

Eclipsing Sarah Palin as the GOP’s go-to media figure, even securing himself a seat at the much coveted bi-partisan health reform summit, Rep. Paul Ryan of Wisconsin has outdone his party this time.

The budget of legend, released shortly after Obama’s State of the Union address, promised to eliminate deficits, lower the national debt and “rescue and strengthen Medicare, Medicaid, and Social Security,”. It even came with a cool interactive graphic showing just how wonderfully awesome this shadow budget is and just how miserable the Obama administration’s budget is.

The problem though, as was alluded to a month ago by a host of news sources and bloggers, is that Ryan himself provided the numbers upon which the CBO estimate of the long term effects of the budget was be scored and these numbers were just assumed to be 100% correct by the CBO. It is worth noting that the whole composition of this budget basically exists as a manifestation of all the extremely unpopular conservative pet policies of the past decade including, but not limited to privatizing social security, privatizing and raising the eligibility age and premiums of Medicare, all while simultaneously freezing discretionary spending for a decade. Oh, and don’t forget that in tackling this tough problem of debt and deficit, Ryan elected to eliminate the Childrens Health Insurance Program and Medicaid in favor of “vouchers” and “credits” to force low-income people buy the same private insurance that these children and families aren’t being offered.  So despite Ryan’s valiant effort to take radical GOP policy projects and implant them into the mainstream of 2010, we find now that indeed Ryan’s budget proposal wouldn’t even fulfill the outlandish promises it holds so dear – not raising taxes and decreasing deficits and debt.

[The Tax Policy Center] estimates that even with its middle-class tax increases, the plan would reduce federal revenues to 16 percent of GDP in 2014. Because the tax cuts for the wealthy would dwarf the tax increases for the middle class, the Ryan plan would allow the federal debt to continue growing for a number of decades to come, despite its steep cuts in Medicare, Medicaid, and Social Security. (Center on Budget and Policy Priorities)

Compare these deviously disparate charts showing (1) projected government spending as a percentage of GDP (as crafted by Ryan after blindly assuming what revenues would be) and (2) projected debt as a share of GDP (as crafted by the Tax Policy Center after actually trying to calculate what revenues would be under the changed tax structures).

(1)

(2)

I’m all for trying to rectify our federal government’s long-term fiscal outlooks, but not at the cost of dishonesty in the way we consider our government’s responsibility to govern. As such, Ryan’s proposal undermines every substantial policy achievement in the last 100 years without just cause. Social security, Medicare, Medicaid and other entitlements need reform, that is without doubt, but the Republican supposition that reform in 2010 means elimination (think about what their health reform plans are…) is completely absurd. On top of that, the Ryan proposal seems to ignore the immense fiscal problems still facing most of our 50 states, problems that threaten to even further undermine the structures upon which our nation has grown in the past, including unprecedented cuts to public education. When looking at the graph created by Ryan, it seems so wonderful to see that red line just magically drop away from the rampant spending of the Democrats as represented by the blue line, but you can’t have that magic diversion without completely ignoring the fact that we haven’t fixed the problems that led to or resolved the consequences that ensued from this, the largest depression since the one we call “Great”.

As just one example of precisely how cavalier the Ryan budget’s attitude toward pragmatic governance in the face of economic realities is, take the potential consequences of his Social Security privatization:

Under the Ryan plan, individuals who divert a portion of their payroll tax contributions to private
accounts would be guaranteed that they would receive back in retirement at least as much as they
contributed, plus an adjustment for inflation.  In essence, they would be given a federal guarantee against
stock-market losses.
The chief actuary of the Social Security system has estimated that, on average and
adjusting for market risk, an earlier version of the Ryan plan’s guarantee would cost the government
$2.9 trillion in present-value terms (although the actual cost could turn out to be higher or lower,
depending on actual bond and stock returns).25

This guarantee could require a major federal bailout of private accounts during periods when the stock market
performs poorly.
The cost of this guarantee, unlike that of traditional Social Security, could escalate
rapidly and add suddenly and unpredictably to the federal deficit.  Providing a federal guarantee for
stock-market investments also could encourage risky investment decisions by individuals, as well as
misguided attempts by policymakers to shore up weak or falling stock prices in response to pressures
from constituents who are relying on these accounts to support them in old age.  [emphasis original]

Yet, Ryan claims in his response to the TPC’s rebuke of his budget’s infallibility that he is not privatizing social security:

The Roadmap makes no change for those 55 and older. It provides future retirees with the option to either stay in the traditional government-run system or to enter a system of guaranteed personal accounts. Neither option is privatized. In the personal-accounts system, the accounts are owned by the individual, and managed and overseen by a government board — not a stockbroker or private investment firm.” (3/11/10)

But he chooses to not answer the concerns of guaranteeing the personal accounts which are encouraged with high incentives in Ryan’s budget, specifically for those with the most to lose from allowing their Social Security contributions to be taxed (the rich), which are the overriding issue of concern. It isn’t a question of correct terminology, “privatization” or “guaranteeing of personal accounts” result in the same forlorn conclusion about the solvency of Social Security and its effect on future governance.

Rep. Ryan’s plan would provide a further incentive for upper-income beneficiaries to divert their
Social Security contributions into private accounts.  Most of their traditional Social Security benefits
would continue to be counted as part of their taxable income, as they are today.  But benefits
generated from their personal accounts would be entirely exempt from the income tax.

The result would be a system in which Social Security is very unattractive to affluent people. (CBPP 3/10/10)

The result would also be a system in which all the radical changes to tax structures (which pass burden from producers to the consumers),  and social benefits such as Social Security and Medicare (ie their outright disenfranchisement from government responsibility in favor of private, tax-exempt, guaranteed account and “vouchers” for some other service respectively) that ends up continuing to cost the tax-payer and government more than it promised and in return the tax-payer gets hit with heavier taxes and diminished social returns. That is, the disenfranchisement of the tax-payer from the incentive to encourage good governance.

This budget, if enacted, would prove to the taxpayer and average American that our country in ungovernable. Unrest would ensue from the slashing of Medicare benefits and rising of premiums, from the uncertainty involved in upending the Social Security system with no potential benefits for those who pay into the system, and future administrations would be bound by arbitrary “spending freezes” while dealing with the consequences of a permanently diminished tax revenue.

It is a Republican ideologue’s dream though, is it not? I mean, they’ve been saying all along that the government simply can’t solve the country’s problems, so why not just let everyone fend for themselves in an even more embattled century?

In the latest update to the fate of HR 3221, The Student Aid and Fiscal Responsibility Act, we see the Senate is toeing the inertia line.

While plans to include a version of HR 3221 as part of a reconciliation package alongside health care reform are indeed being discussed among Senate leaders, 6 Democratic senators seem willing to continue allowing private lenders suckle at the tit of the federal government and have expressed their intent to do so in a letter to Majority Leader Harry Reid. These 6 include: Jim Webb (D-VA), Mark Warner (D-VA), Bill Nelson (D-FL), Ben Nelson (D-NE), Blanche Lincoln (D-AR), and Thomas Carper (D-DE). Many of these jobs that the 6 senators claim to be concerned about as a product of this bill’s passage would actually be untouched, as many of these lender’s employees do work for the federal government originating and servicing loans from the Direct Loan program. So the concern for jobs as elucidated by the senators of 6 should be read as concern for the profits of those big lenders.

With the House bill slated at reducing federal direct spending by more than 13$ billion in 2014, it is somewhat understandable that the private student lending industry has spent so many millions of dollars lobbying the Senate to protect their profits. But they still are a source of government waste. They are middlemen profiting off of the government’s investment in higher education, middlemen which rationally and demonstrably have no reason to be a part of the investment.

Those 6 senators acquiescing to the desires of bank executives aren’t the end of this bill though. They leave 53 more Democrats and Independents who can hopefully think for themselves and do whats right for the future of higher education in this country.

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11:56 PM

McCain ’08 Nightmares

‘‘Enemy Belligerent Interrogation, Detention, and Prosecution Act of 2010’’.

Brr…I think a cold chill just swept through the room. Can you hear the war drums beating towards Iran?

Back to reality in year 2 of the Obama administration though.

McCain unveiled this radical piece of legislation while providing the wisdom that only a Senator as old and as wise as he can provide:

“Mr. President, I rise to introduce legislation that sets forth a clear, comprehensive policy for the detention, interrogation and trial of enemy belligerents who are suspected of engaging in hostilities against the United States.  This legislation seeks to ensure that the mistakes made during the apprehension of the Christmas Day bomber, such as reading him a Miranda warning, will never happen again and put Americans’ security at risk…

..A key provision of this bill is that it would prohibit a suspected enemy belligerent from being provided with a Miranda warning and being told he has a right to a lawyer and a right to refuse to cooperate.  I believe that an overwhelming majority of Americans agree that when we capture a terrorist who is suspected of carrying out or planning an attack intended to kill hundreds if not thousands of innocent civilians, our focus must be on gaining all the information possible to prevent that attack or any that may follow from occurring.  Under these circumstances, actionable intelligence must be our highest priority and criminal prosecution must be secondary…

…Mr. President, deliberate mass attacks that intentionally target hundreds of innocent civilians are an act of war and should not be dealt with in the same manner as a robbery.  We must recognize the difference.  If we don’t, our response will be hopelessly inadequate.  We should not be providing suspected terrorists with Miranda warnings and defense lawyers.  Instead, the priority and focus must be on isolating and neutralizing the immediate threat and collecting intelligence to prevent another attack…I believe the handling of the Christmas Day bomber – including the law enforcement focus and the decision to read a Miranda warning after only 50 minutes of interrogation– demand that Congress and the Administration first address the issue which is most crucial to our national security. ” (Mar. 4th, 2010)

For a taste of what exactly Senator McCain prescribes to lessen the burden of those pesky civil liberties, continue past the jump or read it for yourself in its entirety here. Keep Reading »