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Fear and negativity are contagious, but so is courage!

All hail the time of the bunny!

That meeting sounds like a shotgun wedding between a shitshow and a clusterfuck.

“Jesus paying for the sins of everyone is an insult to those who paid for their own sins.”

The desire to stay informed is directly at odds with the need to not be constantly enraged.

Let me eat cake. The rest of you could stand to lose some weight, frankly.

The republican caucus is covering themselves with something, and it is not glory.

I’m more christian than these people and i’m an atheist.

’Where will you hide, Roberts, the laws all being flat?’

The snowflake in chief appeared visibly frustrated when questioned by a reporter about egg prices.

Their freedom requires your slavery.

White supremacy is terrorism.

Museums are not America’s attic for its racist shit.

How stupid are these people?

Today’s gop: why go just far enough when too far is right there?

SCOTUS: It’s not “bribery” unless it comes from the Bribery region of France. Otherwise, it’s merely “sparkling malfeasance”.

The next time the wall street journal editorial board speaks the truth will be the first.

Nothing worth doing is easy.

Dumb motherfuckers cannot understand a consequence that most 4 year olds have fully sorted out.

Sadly, media malpractice has become standard practice.

Peak wingnut was a lie.

Is it irresponsible to speculate? It is irresponsible not to.

Optimism opens the door to great things.

Many life forms that would benefit from greater intelligence, sadly, do not have it.

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You are here: Home / Archives for 2009

Archives for 2009

Krugman and Brooks

by John Cole|  April 3, 200910:13 am| 55 Comments

This post is in: Excellent Links, Politics

Paul Krugman and David Brooks are worth a read today. Let’s start with Krugman:

The best single encapsulation of the greed narrative is an essay called “The Quiet Coup,” by Simon Johnson in The Atlantic (available online now).

Johnson begins with a trend. Between 1973 and 1985, the U.S. financial sector accounted for about 16 percent of domestic corporate profits. In the 1990s, it ranged from 21 percent to 30 percent. This decade, it soared to 41 percent.

In other words, Wall Street got huge. As it got huge, its prestige grew. Its compensation packages grew. Its political power grew as well. Wall Street and Washington merged as a flow of investment bankers went down to the White House and the Treasury Department.

The result was a string of legislation designed to further enhance the freedom and power of finance. Regulations separating commercial and investment banking were repealed. There were major increases in the amount of leverage allowed to investment banks.

The U.S. economy got finance-heavy and finance-mad, and finally collapsed. When it did, the elites did what all elites do. They took care of their own: “Money was used to recapitalize banks, buying shares in them on terms that were grossly favorable to the banks themselves,” Johnson writes.

In short, he argues, the U.S. financial crisis is a bigger version of the crises that have afflicted emerging-market nations for decades. An oligarchy takes control of the nation. The oligarchs get carried away and build an empire on mountains of debt. The whole thing comes crashing down. Johnson’s remedy is clear. Smash the oligarchy. Nationalize the banks. Sell them off in medium-size pieces. Revise antitrust laws so they can’t get back together. Find ways to limit executive compensation. Permanently reduce the size and power of Wall Street.

Just kidding. That wasn’t Krugman, that was Brooks. I’m not sure what it says when David Brooks is even entertaining these notions of a corrupt oligarchy and not outright dismissing them, although Brooks does insist that the actual cause of this mess was incompetence, but I thought it was stunning to see this option displayed this clearly in a major newspaper. This sort of talk just a couple months ago would get you called a left-wing pinko commie America-hating traitor, and probably still is too blunt for the delicate flowers defending the status quo at Fred Hiatt’s editorial page.

Krugman is also worth a read.

Krugman and BrooksPost + Comments (55)

That Seemed Quick

by John Cole|  April 3, 20099:46 am| 53 Comments

This post is in: Politics

The budget passed already, apparently:

Congressional Democrats overwhelmingly embraced President Obama’s ambitious and expensive agenda for the nation yesterday, endorsing a $3.5 trillion spending plan that sets the stage for the president to pursue his most far-reaching priorities.

Voting along party lines, the House and Senate approved budget blueprints that would trim Obama’s spending proposals for the fiscal year that begins in October and curtail his plans to cut taxes. The blueprints, however, would permit work to begin on the central goals of Obama’s presidency: an expansion of health-care coverage for the uninsured, more money for college loans and a cap-and-trade system to reduce gases that contribute to global warming.

And the Senate:

The Senate easily passed a $3.55 trillion federal budget late Thursday night to kick off a two-week recess, giving President Obama most of what he wanted in his first spending plan in office.

Senators voted 55-43 for a plan that was championed by the White House and congressional Democrats as key to reviving the nation’s economy and panned by Republicans as too expensive to adopt.

Budget Committee Chairman Kent Conrad (D-N.D.) said he was “delighted” with the budget. “We’ve done a good job of preserving the president’s key priorities, reducing our dependence on foreign energy, focusing on excellence in education carrying out healthcare reform and all while reducing the deficit by two-thirds,” he said.

Democrats Ben Nelson of Nebraska and Evan Bayh of Indiana crossed the aisle to oppose the budget.

Is it just me, or was this faster than usual? Shouldn’t spending this much money be harder? And to turn the favorite idiotic talking point of late on its head, how many Republicans actually read the budget before voting against it?

That Seemed QuickPost + Comments (53)

Polarization and pony plans (makers and takers, part 3)

by DougJ|  April 3, 200912:14 am| 100 Comments

This post is in: Open Threads

I’m not a last wordist in general and I do appreciate that Sully replied to my comments on “makers and takers”, but I feel compelled to flesh out my objection to the notion of “makers and takers”. Andrew writes:

It’s about centering conservatism back on its individualist, free enterprise, small, transparent and effective government roots. Since I offered many details of the kinds of policies I’m against, it’s hard to see how this is “contentless.” I know it’s a very rough and ready framework. And I know too that many of us are both makers and takers. The point is to do all we can to encourage the making and minimize the taking.

I have two big problems with the idea of a “cultural divide” based on the division between “makers and takers.” First of all, such a divide is inevitably polarizing in a way that distracts from real issues. But for the grace of God, I or any of you could be a farmer receiving agricultural subsidies (one of the policies Sully courageously opposes). That’s too easy of course — I could also be working at a bank that received bail-out money. The reason to oppose agricultural subsidies or bank bail-outs is not that farmers and banksters are “takers” who are culturally inferior to the rest of us, it’s that giving money away is not a sound government policy. Mature people can vote to stop giving money away without mocking their political opponents as “takers” (the same way that mature people can support going to war without mocking those who oppose the war as “Fifth Columnists”).

The bigger problem is that doing “all we can to encourage the making and minimize the taking” has pony plan written all over it. Most real policy decisions have pluses and minuses (I support single-payer universal health care but recognize that it has drawbacks as well). The trouble with a lot of conservative thought is that it refuses to recognize this. Conservatives are so wedded to the idea of lower taxes that they claim lower taxes will actually increase tax revenue, just as they claimed that invading Iraq would so endear us to the Muslim world that we would soon see rose, cedar, and oak democratic revolutions all over the Muslim world. Christopher Hitchens may claim he is not a conservative but his notion of “a war to the finish between everything I love and everything I hate” is a perfect summation of the simple-mindedness that afflicts so much conservative thought. The same silliness plagues the Villagers who believe that opposing extramarital presidential blow jobs and supporting calls for sacrifice represent wise, brave political positions (this is why pundit thought so closely resembles conservative thought in many ways).

It’s very easy to be for makers and against takers, just as it is easy to be for freedom and against tyranny. But phrasing one’s positions with such child-like simplicity short-circuits the complex decision-making processes that result in sound policy. If conservatism is ever going to get its soul back, it’s going to have to spend more time on detailed policy prescriptions (no, saying you oppose farm subsidies and bank bail-outs does not qualify) and less time looking for new cultural divisions to exploit.

Polarization and pony plans (makers and takers, part 3)Post + Comments (100)

The Future of News?

by John Cole|  April 2, 20098:55 pm| 29 Comments

This post is in: Excellent Links

I got a link today in the email to a report about Bernie Sanders putting a hold on one of Obama’s nominees from a website that I can’t remember if I have heard of or linked to before, but one that I know I never really examined closely. At any rate, here is the link to the story at the American News Project, with a nice several minute youtube video with Chris Hayes and a brief write-up:

I note that they are funded by some foundations and non-profits, and the fellow I talked with, Lagan Sebert, responded really quickly to my questions. I can’t help but think that this may be the future of news, to some extent, as the old media/new media thing sorts itself out. I’m adding these guys to the blogroll to keep an eye on them, and I think many of you will find these guys right in your wheelhouse.

The Future of News?Post + Comments (29)

Open Thread

by John Cole|  April 2, 20098:08 pm| 89 Comments

This post is in: Open Threads

I think my favorite part of the President traveling to England is getting to see a lot of Richard Quest on CNN. The guy always cracks me up.

Now for some pet pics- I’ve really been slacking on this front:

A shiny new thread for a Thursday night. BTW- I have really grown to like the Stash line of tea. I like the caffeine free stuff because I really like having a hot drink at night, but the taste of coffee is too overbearing and too much (plus I think decaf coffee does not taste as good). I’ve been drinking a lot of the decaf mint tea, but tonight I am giving theChamomile a shot.

Open ThreadPost + Comments (89)

More Republican Fail

by John Cole|  April 2, 20097:07 pm| 66 Comments

This post is in: Republican Stupidity, Clown Shoes

Remember during the campaign when the Republicans collectively decided that the Obama Achilles heel was his wife, Michelle. Remember when we heard loads of nonsense about her “proud” remarks and the Neanderthals in the Tennessee GOP cut a couple ads going after her? And McCain trotted out his wife to tell us she has always been proud of her country? Remember all that?

Like everything else the last few years, this endeavor has turned out really well for the GOP:

Americans have very positive impressions of both President Barack Obama and first lady Michelle Obama. But in the latest Gallup Poll, Mrs. Obama receives a slightly better favorable rating, 72% to 69%.

These guys have the reverse Midas touch.

More Republican FailPost + Comments (66)

Ain’t No Molehill Small Enough

by John Cole|  April 2, 20096:49 pm| 74 Comments

This post is in: Blogospheric Navel-Gazing, Clown Shoes, I Read These Morons So You Don't Have To

Yesterday we were treated to endless pontificating about the appropriateness of the gift the Queen herself suggested and whether or not the President and the First Lady breached etiquette through inappropriate touch and an insufficient bow, today we are treated to the daily wingnut fauxtrage du jour, which centers around how inappropriate it is to bow before the Saudi King:

The text of that post kills me- “I am quite certain that this is not the protocol.” Obligatory Sadly, No! link..

So, to recap. Yesterday- the bow before the Queen was insufficient and his present that she requested sucked. Today, the bow before a King was too much and proof we are this close to a Muslim caliphate.

Personally, I remember the good old days:

Don’t ask, don’t tell.

Ain’t No Molehill Small EnoughPost + Comments (74)

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