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You are here: Home / Archives for Politics / Poverty / Fuck The Poor

Fuck The Poor

Food Bubbles & Starvation by Broker

by Anne Laurie|  August 19, 20109:07 pm| 42 Comments

This post is in: C.R.E.A.M., Domestic Politics, Excellent Links, Food, Fuck The Poor

I never got around to finishing what was intended to be a thoughtful commentary on this Harper’s article, but since John posted about this earlier, I’m going to give you all the link, at least. Frederick Kaufman, “The Food Bubble: How Wall Street starved millions and got away with it”:

Agriculture, rooted as it is in the rhythms of reaping and sowing, had not traditionally engaged the attention of Wall Street bankers, whose riches did not come from the sale of real things like wheat or bread but from the manipulation of ethereal concepts like risk and collateralized debt. But in 1991 nearly everything else that could be recast as a financial abstraction had already been considered. Food was pretty much all that was left. And so with accustomed care and precision, Goldman’s analysts went about transforming food into a concept. They selected eighteen commodifiable ingredients and contrived a financial elixir that included cattle, coffee, cocoa, corn, hogs, and a variety or two of wheat. They weighted the investment value of each element, blended and commingled the parts into sums, then reduced what had been a complicated collection of real things into a mathematical formula that could be expressed as a single manifestation, to be known thenceforward as the Goldman Sachs Commodity Index. Then they began to offer shares.
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As was usually the case, Goldman’s product flourished. The prices of cattle, coffee, cocoa, corn, and wheat began to rise, slowly at first, and then rapidly. And as more people sank money into Goldman’s food index, other bankers took note and created their own food indexes for their own clients. Investors were delighted to see the value of their venture increase, but the rising price of breakfast, lunch, and dinner did not align with the interests of those of us who eat. And so the commodity index funds began to cause problems.
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Wheat was a case in point. North America, the Saudi Arabia of cereal, sends nearly half its wheat production overseas, and an obscure syndicate known as the Minneapolis Grain Exchange remains the supreme price-setter for the continent’s most widely exported wheat, a high-protein variety called hard red spring. Other varieties of wheat make cake and cookies, but only hard red spring makes bread. Its price informs the cost of virtually every loaf on earth.
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As far as most people who eat bread were concerned, the Minneapolis Grain Exchange had done a pretty good job: for more than a century the real price of wheat had steadily declined. Then, in 2005, that price began to rise, along with the prices of rice and corn and soy and oats and cooking oil. Hard red spring had long traded between $3 and $6 per sixty-pound bushel, but for three years Minneapolis wheat broke record after record as its price doubled and then doubled again. No one was surprised when in the first quarter of 2008 transnational wheat giant Cargill attributed its 86 percent jump in annual profits to commodity trading. And no one was surprised when packaged-food maker ConAgra sold its trading arm to a hedge fund for $2.8 billion. Nor when The Economist announced that the real price of food had reached its highest level since 1845, the year the magazine first calculated the number.
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Nothing had changed about the wheat, but something had changed about the wheat market. Since Goldman’s innovation, hundreds of billions of new dollars had overwhelmed the actual supply of and actual demand for wheat, and rumors began to emerge that someone, somewhere, had cornered the market. Robber barons, gold bugs, and financiers of every stripe had long dreamed of controlling all of something everybody needed or desired, then holding back the supply as demand drove up prices. But there was plenty of real wheat, and American farmers were delivering it as fast as they always had, if not even a bit faster. It was as if the price itself had begun to generate its own demand—the more hard red spring cost, the more investors wanted to pay for it…

By all means, read the whole thing (and if you can spare a few bucks, subscribe to Harpers). Goldman Sachs, and its imitators, are playing with real people’s lives and the global food supply as if those were the markers for their all-important Monopoly money “finance”.

Food Bubbles & Starvation by BrokerPost + Comments (42)

Good News for People Who Love Bad News

by $8 blue check mistermix|  August 17, 20108:05 am| 26 Comments

This post is in: Free Markets Solve Everything, Fuck The Poor, Bring on the Brawndo!, Good News For Conservatives, hoocoodanode

Break out the champagne, spending on healthcare is down:

The economic crisis in the United States has reduced the use of routine medical care, and the cutbacks here are much deeper than in countries with universal health care systems, researchers say in a new report.

Good News for People Who Love Bad NewsPost + Comments (26)

Wrong About Everything

by John Cole|  August 16, 20109:46 am| 63 Comments

This post is in: Free Markets Solve Everything, Fuck The Poor, Assholes, The Dirty F-ing Hippies Were Right

These guys are reaching Bill Kristol levels of prediction making:

As 2010 began, there was nearly unanimous agreement in financial circles on at least one thing: Interest rates were sure to rise during the year.

Quite to the contrary. As Labor Day approaches, interest rates have collapsed, plunging along with economic optimism.

That turn of events, which has shocked savers and stunned investors, appears to indicate that financial markets’ worries are turning in a very different direction from those of many governments.

The governments are seeking ways to bring down budget deficits, fearing that without austerity they could go so far into debt that they would never be able to borrow again. Investors in the financial markets seem to be much more concerned by the possibility of renewed recession and a general deflation that could send asset values and prices down.

Of course the reason governments are focused on deficits and austerity is that the Galtian geniuses spent the last two years screaming about the budget deficit and austerity or the bond masters would kill us all in our sleep. The entire time, of course, Krugman’s hair was on fire and he was screaming bloody murder, but since he is a dirty hippy, he doesn’t count.

So now, because the assholes who created our financial mess were then wrong about the way to handle that mess, we can look forward to even more economic pain. Another round of bonuses for everyone!

Wrong About EverythingPost + Comments (63)

Whose “Anchor” Baby?

by Anne Laurie|  August 15, 201010:31 am| 53 Comments

This post is in: Activist Judges!, Domestic Politics, Fuck The Poor, World's Best Healthcare (If You Can Afford It)

The SPLC continues its marathon efforts to give a voice to the silenced:

Mississippi officials conspired to take the infant of an illegal immigrant from Mexico so the girl could be adopted by a white couple, a civil rights group charged Thursday in a federal lawsuit. The Southern Poverty Law Center said Cirila Baltazar Cruz was separated from her daughter, Ruby, for a year before her child was returned to her in 2009 after the intervention of the group.
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Cruz had the baby at Singing River Hospital in Pascagoula in November 2008. Two days after the child was born she was taken from her mother when the Mississippi Department of Human Services deemed Cruz unfit, according to the lawsuit. Cruz – who spoke no English and little Spanish and could not read or write – was interviewed by a hospital interpreter. The interpreter spoke Spanish, not Chatino, a dialect indigenous to Cruz’s native Oaxaca in rural Mexico, the group’s lawsuit alleges.
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After talking with Cruz, the interpreter told one of the immigrant’s relatives that Cruz was trading sex for housing and wanted to give the child up for adoption, according to the lawsuit. Cruz said in the court filing that she tried to explain to the interpreter she worked in a Chinese restaurant and lived in an apartment.
[…] __
The child was placed in the home of Wendy and Douglas Tynes, two attorneys who lived in Ocean Springs and were foster parents. The complaint said the Tynes were seeking to adopt. The suit alleges MDHS officials conspired with a youth court judge and the Tynes to keep Cruz from her daughter so she could be adopted by the couple. Messages left at the Tynes’ offices weren’t immediately returned.

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Even before the lawsuit, the case had drawn national and international attention, prompting a federal review and an agreement that requires Mississippi to notify the Mexican consulate when similar situations occur.
[…] __
Joseph J. Bock, acting associate commissioner for the Administration on Children, Youth and Families, cited a lack of reasonable efforts to prevent the child’s removal and that the agency used Spanish interpreters when it was known Cruz spoke Chatino. Bock also said state officials didn’t do enough to locate Cruz’s relatives to place the child with them.
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“The MDHS staff interviewed did not see these issues as problematic. This leads us to conclude that this may be how business is conducted and that this is not an isolated incident,” Bock wrote.

It’s one solution to the Graham/Goehmert paranoia about ‘illegals dropping terror babies, to jump the citizenship queue’, but I don’t think anyone outside the far right wing would consider it a workable one. Let it be specified that the Tynes are no doubt wonderful people seeking only to give a birthright American infant (their idea of) the best possible start in life. But the tradition of removing “minority” children from their “inadequate” birth parents, stretching back to prehistoric tribal raids where underage and female survivors from the losing clan were considered valuable booty on the same level as any other livestock, has never had a good reputation. There’s even a rather famous story in the Old Testament about a certain at-risk infant adopted by the local aristocracy… and it could be argued that particular saga didn’t work out well for the adoptive parents, either.

From an earlier Time report about this case, “Can a Mother Lose Her Child Because She Doesn’t Speak English?”

… [D]espite DHS statements to the contrary, language seems a central issue in the state’s case against Baltazar Cruz. It wouldn’t be the first time this has happened in the U.S. In 2004 a Tennessee judge ordered into foster care the child of a Mexican migrant mother who spoke only an indigenous tongue. (Another judge later returned the child to her family.) Last year, a California court took custody of the U.S.-born twin babies of another indigenous, undocumented migrant from Oaxaca. After she was deported, the Oaxaca state government’s Institute for Attention to Migrants fought successfully to have the twins repatriated to her in Mexico this summer. In such cases, says the SPLC’s Bauer, a lack of interpreters is a key factor. When a mother can’t follow the proceedings, “she looks unresponsive, and that conveys to a judge a lack of interest in the child, which is clearly not the case,” she says…
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One of DHS’s apparent fears is that an infant isn’t safe in a home where the mother can articulate a 911 call solely in a language spoken only by some 50,000 Oaxacan Indians. Bauer points out that children have been raised safely in the U.S. by non-English-speaking parents for well over a century. Had they not, thousands of Italians and Russians would have had to leave their kids with foster care on Ellis Island. “Raising your child is one of the most fundamental liberties, and it can only be taken from you for the most serious concerns of endangerment,” says Bauer. “Not speaking English hardly meets that standard.”

Whose “Anchor” Baby?Post + Comments (53)

Shell Game

by $8 blue check mistermix|  August 6, 20107:57 am| 32 Comments

This post is in: Fuck The Poor

With a record number of people on food stamps, it just makes good fiscal sense that Congress keeps cutting that program to pay for other aid programs.

For some reason, this little snippet from a Lindsey Graham interview seems relevant:

We have been in Korea for, you know, since the end of the Korean War. We’ve been in Europe since World War II, nobody cares.

Shell GamePost + Comments (32)

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