The Ledes

Saturday, September 28, 2024

Washington Post: “Rescue teams raced to submerged homes, scoured collapsed buildings and steered thousands from overflowing dams as Helene carved a destructive path Friday, knocking out power and flooding a vast arc of communities across the southeastern United States. At least 40 people were confirmed killed in five states since the storm made landfall late Thursday as a Category 4 behemoth, unleashing record-breaking storm surge and tree-snapping gusts. 4 million homes and businesses have lost electricity across Florida, Georgia and the Carolinas, prompting concerns that outages could drag on for weeks. Mudslides closed highways. Water swept over roofs and snapped phone lines. Houses vanished from their foundations. Tornadoes added to the chaos. The mayor of hard-hit Canton, N.C., called the scene 'apocalyptic.'” An AP report is here.

The Wires
powered by Surfing Waves
The Ledes

Friday, September 27, 2024

New York Times: “Maggie Smith, one of the finest British stage and screen actors of her generation, whose award-winning roles ranged from a freethinking Scottish schoolteacher in 'The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie' to the acid-tongued dowager countess on 'Downton Abbey,' died on Friday in London. She was 89.”

The Washington Post's live updates of developments related to Hurricane Helene are here: “Hurricane Helene left one person dead in Florida and two in Georgia as it sped north. One of the biggest storms on record to hit the Gulf Coast, Helene slammed into Florida’s Big Bend area on Thursday night as a Category 4 colossus with winds of up to 140 mph before weakening to Category 1. Catastrophic winds and torrential rain from the storm — which the National Hurricane Center forecast would eventually slow over the Tennessee Valley — were expected to continue Friday across the Southeast and southern Appalachians.” ~~~

     ~~~ The New York Times' live updates are here.

Mediaite: “Fox Weather’s Bob Van Dillen was reporting live on Fox & Friends about flooding in Atlanta from Hurricane Helene when he was interrupted by the screams of a woman trapped in her car. During the 7 a.m. hour, Van Dillen was filing a live report on the massive flooding in the area. Fox News viewers could clearly hear the urgent screams for help emerging from a car stuck on a flooded road in the background of the live shot. Van Dillen ... told Fox & Friends that 911 had been called and that the local Fire Department was on its way. But as he continued to file the report, the screams did not stop, so Van Dillen cut the live shot short.... Some 10 minutes later, Fox & Friends aired live footage of Van Dillen carrying the woman to safety, waking through chest-deep water while the flooding engulfed her car in the background[.]”

Help!

To keep the Conversation going, please help me by linking news articles, opinion pieces and other political content in today's Comments section.

Link Code:   <a href="URL">text</a>

OR here's a link generator. The one I had posted died, then Akhilleus found one, but it too bit the dust. He found yet another, which I've linked here, and as of September 23, 2024, it's working.

OR you can always just block, copy and paste to your comment the URL (Web address) of the page you want to link.

Note for Readers. It is not possible for commenters to "throw" their highlighted links to another window. But you can do that yourself. Right-click on the link and a drop-down box will give you choices as to where you want to open the link: in a new tab, new window or new private window.

Thank you to everyone who has been contributing links to articles & other content in the Comments section of each day's "Conversation." If you're missing the comments, you're missing some vital links.

The New York Times lists Emmy winners. The AP has an overview story here.

New York Times: “Hvaldimir, a beluga whale who had captured the public’s imagination since 2019 after he was spotted wearing a harness seemingly designed for a camera, was found dead on Saturday in Norway, according to a nonprofit that worked to protect the whale.... [Hvaldimir] was wearing a harness that identified it as “equipment” from St. Petersburg. There also appeared to be a camera mount. Some wondered if the whale was on a Russian reconnaissance mission. Russia has never claimed ownership of the whale. If Hvaldimir was a spy, he was an exceptionally friendly one. The whale showed signs of domestication, and was comfortable around people. He remained in busier waters than are typical for belugas....” ~~~

     ~~~ Marie: Oh, Lord, do not let Bobby Kennedy, Jr., near that carcass. ~~~

     ~~~ AP Update: “There’s no evidence that a well-known beluga whale that lived off Norway’s coast and whose harness ignited speculation it was a Russian spy was shot to death last month as claimed by animal rights groups, Norwegian police said Monday.... Police said that the Norwegian Veterinary Institute conducted a preliminary autopsy on the animal, which was become known as 'Hvaldimir,' combining the Norwegian word for whale — hval — and the first name of Russian President Vladimir Putin. 'There are no findings from the autopsy that indicate that Hvaldimir has been shot,' police said in a statement.”

New York Times: Botswana's “President Mokgweetsi Masisi grinned as he lifted the diamond, a 2,492-carat stone that is the biggest diamond unearthed in more than a century and the second-largest ever found, according to the Vancouver-based mining operator Lucara, which owns the mine where it was found. This exceptional discovery could bring back the luster of the natural diamond mining industry, mining companies and experts say. The diamond was discovered in the same relatively small mine in northeastern Botswana that has produced several of the largest such stones in living memory. Such gemstones typically surface as a result of volcanic activity.... The diamond will likely sell in the range of tens of millions of dollars....”

Click on photo to enlarge.

~~~ Guardian: "On a distant reef 16,000km from Paris, surfer Gabriel Medina has given Olympic viewers one of the most memorable images of the Games yet, with an airborne celebration so well poised it looked too good to be true. The Brazilian took off a thundering wave at Teahupo’o in Tahiti on Monday, emerging from a barrelling section before soaring into the air and appearing to settle on a Pacific cloud, pointing to the sky with biblical serenity, his movements mirrored precisely by his surfboard. The shot was taken by Agence France-Presse photographer Jérôme Brouillet, who said “the conditions were perfect, the waves were taller than we expected”. He took the photo while aboard a boat nearby, capturing the surreal image with such accuracy that at first some suspected Photoshop or AI." 

Washington Post: “'Mary Cassatt at Work' is a large and mostly satisfying exhibition devoted to the career of the great American artist beloved for her sensitive and often sentimental views of family life. The 'at work' in the title of the Philadelphia Museum of Art show references the curators’ interest in Cassatt’s pioneering effort to establish herself as a professional artist within a male-dominated field. Throughout the show, which includes some 130 paintings, pastels, prints and drawings, the wall text and the art on view stresses Cassatt’s fixation on art as a career rather than a pastime.... Mary Cassatt at Work is on view at the Philadelphia Museum of Art through Sept. 8. philamuseum.org

New York Times: “Bob Newhart, who died on Thursday at the age of 94, has been such a beloved giant of popular culture for so long that it’s easy to forget how unlikely it was that he became one of the founding fathers of stand-up comedy. Before basically inventing the hit stand-up special, with the 1960 Grammy-winning album 'The Button-Down Mind of Bob Newhart' — that doesn’t even count his pay-per-view event broadcast on Canadian television that some cite as the first filmed special — he was a soft-spoken accountant who had never done a set in a nightclub. That he made a classic with so little preparation is one of the great miracles in the history of comedy.... Bob Newhart holds up. In fact, it’s hard to think of a stand-up from that era who is a better argument against the commonplace idea that comedy does not age well.”

Washington Post: “An early Titian masterpiece — once looted by Napolean’s troops and a part of royal collections for centuries — caused a stir when it was stolen from the home of a British marquess in 1995. Seven years later, it was found inside an unassuming white and blue plastic bag at a bus stop in southwest London by an art detective, and returned. This week, the oil painting 'The Rest on the Flight into Egypt' sold for more than $22 million at Christie’s. It was a record for the Renaissance artist, whom museums describe as the greatest painter of 16th-century Venice. Ahead of the sale in April, the auction house billed it as 'the most important work by Titian to come to the auction market in more than a generation.'”

Washington Post: The Folger Shakespeare Library in Washington, D.C., which houses the world's largest collection of Shakespeare material, has undergone a major renovation. "The change to the building is pervasive, both subtle and transformational."

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A nation of sheep will beget a government of wolves. -- Edward R. Murrow

Publisher & Editor: Marie Burns


Thursday
Nov172011

The Commentariat -- November 18

Natasha Lennard, the New York Times stringer whom the NYPD arrested when she was covering the Brooklyn Bridge Occupy movement October 2, on why she has quit the mainstream media: "... if the mainstream media prides itself on reporting the facts, I have found too many problems with what does or does not get to be a fact — or what rises to the level of a fact they believe to be worth reporting — to be part of such a machine." ...

... In my column in today's New York Times eXaminer, I study David Brooks' sudden affinity for populism:

In his column in today’s New York Times, David Brooks lashes out at European elites.... It is for ... Wall Street moguls that Brooks has turned populist for a day. It is not for you.

... the New York Times eXaminer front page is here.

Harold Meyerson of the Washington Post: "Total up the systemic failures in law enforcement and public policy that led to the devolution of our once-vibrant middle-class democracy, and is it any wonder that people took to the streets and sparked a movement to remake our country? Occupy Wall Street’s challenge ... is to channel its rage and hopes into strategies that will alter the course of American capitalism. As the great organizer Bayard Rustin put it, from protest to politics." ...

... Juan Gonzalez in the New York Daily News: "They aren’t going anywhere. During a long and turbulent day of street protests, the ragtag rebels of Occupy Wall Street served notice that their two-month-old movement against the nation’s big banks and corporations is now stronger than ever."

... Greg Sargent: Quinnipiac’s polling director, Maurice Carroll, thinks the Occupy movement may be the reason support has grown for a millionaires' tax to help balance the New Jersey state budget. Quinnipiac reports that, "To balance the state budget, New Jersey voters support 64-28 percent the so-called Millionaire’s Tax, up from a high of 55-34 percent February 10." Sargent writes, "Readers, it’s time to start documenting little tells like this one from around the country. If you see anything in your states or districts that capture the ways the debate is shifting, please send them my way." ...

... BUT -- Here's a Surprise -- Matthew Goldstein & Jennifer Ablan of Reuters: "The cognitive disconnect between the protesters and the captains of finance is alive and well.... In conversations with nearly two dozen current and former bankers, finance professionals and money managers across the United States, the prevailing sentiment is that the anger at Wall Street's elite is misguided and misdirected. Blame the politicians and policymakers in Washington, many of them say...."

Steve Benen: Republicans are hammering President Obama because the national debt just exceeded $15 trillion. So let's see how we got here. Benen has a nifty timeline that begins with President Reagan. And there's this more recent history, expressed in a bar graph:

Much Ado about Nothing?

Paul Krugman: "So the supercommittee will fail — and that’s good. For one thing, history tells us that the Republican Party would renege on its side of any deal as soon as it got the chance.... Also, any deal reached now would almost surely end up worsening the economic slump." ...

... CW: Krugman does not explain, however, the automatic or "sequestered" cuts that are to take effect when the supercommittee fails. For that, Isabel Sawhill of the Brookings Institution has the short answer, which I also linked in yesterday's Commentariat:

... the law calls for a sequester that ... would cut spending $1.2 trillion, half from defense and half from nondefense.... CBO estimates that the proportion borne by discretionary programs would be 71 percent and the proportion borne by nonexempted mandatories would be 13 percent (with the remainder taking the form of debt service savings).... Those who are willing to accept such cuts should worry about the likely effects on our competitiveness, on the disadvantaged, on public safety, on veterans, and on the ability of the federal government to responsibly administer a wide variety of laws and programs in a way that does not lead to greater fraud and abuse. ...

      ... CW Update: it turns out the future may not be nearly as bad as Sawhill suggests. Rather, as Jay Newton-Small of Times lays out, if the SuperCommittee fails to reach agreement, as is more than likely, Congress could take any number of paths. Newton-Small finds the following the path most likely to be taken:

On Monday night, after U.S. markets close and after both sides hold outraged press conferences blaming each other for failure, supercommittee members slink out of town, joining their colleagues for Thanksgiving break.... The committee hopes no one, especially Wall Street and the ratings agencies, notices. Some time in 2012, lawmakers find a way to avoid the sequestration either by enacting tax reform or repealing the sequestration or some combination. ...

... AND Lori Montgomery & Rosalind Helderman of the Washington Post: "If the congressional 'supercommittee' cannot agree on a plan to tame the federal debt by next week’s deadline, as now appears likely, here’s what will happen: nothing. The automatic spending cuts that were supposed to force the panel to deliver more palatable options would not take effect until January 2013. That leaves lawmakers a full year to devise alternatives." ...

... Michael Tomasky in the Daily Beast on the GOP "deficit reduction" plan: "The actual Republican position as of this writing submits to $250 billion in semi-phony revenues but seeks to add $3.7 trillion to the 10-year deficit. And the supercommittee is a panel that, remember, is charged with reducing the deficit. This is more politics by hostage-taking, just like during the debt-ceiling fiasco.... They want to make the Bush tax cuts permanent.... They’ve said to the Democrats, in other words, that they will agree to minor revenue increases now, but only on the firm condition that the Democrats accept depleting the Treasury by 15 times as much over the next decade." ...

... MEANWHILE, Most Americans Don't Care. Chris Cillizza of the Washington Post: "In a Politico/George Washington University national poll, 50 percent — yes, half the country! — said they were 'not at all familiar' with the supercommittee while 38 percent said they were only 'somewhat familiar' with it. That means that almost nine out of every ten Americans lack even the vaguest notion of what the supercommittee is — much less what its tasked with doing.

It's not democracy. It's Di Giorno. -- Jon Stewart, on how pizza became a vegetable ...

... Mary Clare Jalonick of the AP: "... Congress wants pizza and french fries to stay on school lunch lines and is fighting the Obama administration's efforts to take unhealthy foods out of schools. The final version of a spending bill released late Monday would unravel school lunch standards the Agriculture Department proposed earlier this year.... Food companies that produce frozen pizzas for schools, the salt industry and potato growers requested the changes and lobbied Congress.... The bill also would allow tomato paste on pizzas to be counted as a vegetable, as it is now."

Monday. I’m going to be in Portland in the morning. I’m going to be visiting some of our labs in California in the afternoon. That’s two. I can’t remember what the third thing is. -- Nancy Pelosi, in response to Rick Perry's request to debate her Monday

Justin Gillis of the New York Times: "At least some of the weather extremes being seen around the world are consequences of human-induced climate change and can be expected to worsen in coming decades, a United Nations panel reported on Friday."

Right Wing World

The Double Life of an Historian/Opinion Writing Salamander. Jim Rutenberg of the New York Times: gee, it turns out Newt Gingrich was "advising" quite a few corporate clients, even though this very same Newt Gingrich is running for president as the "Washington outsider" former Speaker of the House. Speaking of "history," the history of his relationship with the Gundersen Lutheran Health System provides a nice insight: First Newt takes their money; then he writes a pro-Gundersen op-ed (without revealing his financial relationship with them); then -- a whole few weeks later -- when his op-ed position became unpopular with the GOP base, he just reversed his position. Somehow, I don't think he returned Gundersen's money. Advice to Gundersen: do not trust a creature who slithers out from under rocks. ...

... Dan Eggen of the Washington Post has a startling lede & more hilarious details: "A think tank founded by GOP presidential candidate Newt Gingrich collected at least $37 million over the past eight years from major health-care companies and industry groups, offering special access to the former House speaker and other perks, according to records and interviews.... The health center advocated, among other things, requiring that 'anyone who earns more than $50,000 a year must purchase health insurance or post a bond,' a type of insurance mandate that has since become anathema to conservatives. The group also pushed proposals to build centralized electronic medical records and use such data to research treatment effectiveness, both central features of President Obama’s health-care reforms." In other words,NewtCare looks a lot like RomneyCare looks a lot like ObamaCare.

Just Joking. Again. Maybe. Rachel Weiner of the Washington Post: "Herman Cain says he was kidding when he said he had asked Henry Kissinger to serve as his secretary of state in a hypothetical Cain administration. 'Dr. Kissinger turned my offer down to be secretary of state,' Cain told the Milwaulkee-Journal Sentinel’s editorial board in a video clip published Monday.... Cain spokesman J.D. Gordon earlier told reporters that Cain was joking and had not asked Kissinger to serve in his administration. On the campaign trail in Iowa on Tuesday, Cain avoided questions about Kissinger on Tuesday; that is, until he was told that his campaign had said he was joking...." With video. ...

... AND Cain advocates for the dumbing-down of the presidency:

We need a leader, not a reader. -- Herman Cain, Anti-Intellectual-in-Chief

 ... Via Adam Sorensen of Time

... Mark Preston & John King of CNN: "Presidential candidate Herman Cain will receive protection from the United States Secret Service, the agency confirms to CNN. Cain will be the first [2012 GOP presidential] candidate ... to be placed under the protection of this federal law enforcement agency.... Secret Service spokesman Ed Donovan ... told CNN that the Cain campaign requested coverage, and the review found that it met the criteria. It is not yet clear why Cain is getting Secret Service protection." ...

... CW: Oh, I don't know. Maybe this is why: Amy Gardner of the Washington Post: "Lately..., physical skirmishes involving the press ... [have] emerged from the fever-pitch of the Cain road show."

Local News

United Republic, a campaign-finance-reform coalition, on how SuperPacs are about to take Wisconsin. as both sides gear up for a recall of Gov. Scott Walker. Walker spent $300K for ads in the first week alone.

Howard Fischer of the Arizona Daily Star: "The Arizona Supreme Court ruled late Thursday that Gov. Jan Brewer illegally fired Colleen Mathis from the Independent Redistricting Commission.... They said Brewer can oust a commissioner only for substantial neglect of duty or gross misconduct, and nothing the governor alleged in her letter firing Mathis rises to that level. Commission spokesman Stuart Robinson said the order means Mathis is once again chairing the five-member panel. Thus, she can call a meeting to decide what to do next with the draft congressional and legislative maps the commission had approved before her firing -- maps that Brewer and Republicans want changed." Thanks to Fred D. for the link.

News Ledes

AP: "Days after losing the job he held for nearly a half century, former Penn State coach Joe Paterno was diagnosed with a treatable form of lung cancer." ...

... ABC News: "The lawyer for accused Penn State child molester Jerry Sandusky said today he can defeat a potential prosecution by attacking the credibility of key witness Mike McQueary and the accounts of two alleged victims."

Al Jazeera: "Tens of thousands of Islamist and secular protesters have gathered in Cairo's Tahrir Square and in Alexandria for a mass rally to press the ruling military to hand power to a civilian government." With video.

AP: "The House is voting on a constitutional amendment requiring a balanced budget, a step some see as the only way to fix a Congress deeply divided over how to put its fiscal affairs in order." ...

     ... Reuters Update: "A measure that would amend the Constitution to require the government to balance its books each year fell short in the Republican-controlled House of Representatives on Thursday. By a vote of 261 to 165, largely along party lines, the bill fell short of the two-thirds majority that constitutional amendments need to pass the House and Senate."

New York Times: "Hours before Daw Aung San Suu Kyi, Myanmar’s most prominent democracy campaigner, announced her return to formal politics on Friday, President Obama disclosed that he was sending Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton on a visit there next month, the first by a secretary of state in more than 50 years."

AFP: "President Barack Obama Friday seized on Boeing's biggest-ever deal for commercial jets as a multi-billion dollar vindication of his bid to mine booming Asia for American jobs. Obama officiated as the US aviation giant signed a deal to build at least 230 medium-range 737s worth $21.7 billion for Lion Air, a regional carrier based in Indonesia, where he is attending an East Asia summit."

AP: "Pope Benedict XVI is making his second trip to Africa, where he plans to outline the church's future for the continent with the fastest growing number of faithful. Even in Benin, the heartland of the voodoo tradition, the number of Catholics has grown by nearly half in the past decade, adding more than half-a-million converts."

Los Angeles Times: "Thirty years after Natalie Wood died off Santa Catalina Island, the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department announced Thursday that it was reopening the investigation into one of Hollywood's most enduring mysteries. Wood, 43, was boating off the island on Thanksgiving weekend 1981 with her husband, Robert Wagner, fellow actor Christopher Walken and others when she somehow went overboard and died. Officials at the time ruled her death an accident, but there has been much speculation since over whether there was more to the story." ...

     ... AP Update: "Actor Robert Wagner is not a suspect in the 30-year-old drowning of his actress wife, Natalie Wood, and there is nothing to indicate a crime, even though the investigation has been reopened, a sheriff's detective said Friday.... Officials would not say why they were taking another look at the case, although the captain of the boat where the couple had stayed blamed Wagner for Wood's death."

Occupy around the U.S. in yesterday's Day of Action:

     ... Occupy Wall Street Journal: "Tens of thousands took action Thursday, November 17 to demand that our political system serve all of us — not just the wealthy and powerful. The NYPD estimated [Thursday] night’s crowd at 32,500 people, at the culmination of the day of action. Thousands more also mobilized in at least 30 cities across the United States. Demonstrations were also held in cities around the world."

Wednesday
Nov162011

The Commentariat -- November 17

My column in today's New York Times eXaminer looks at the Times editor's embrace of Sen. Tom Coburn's (R-Okla.) report titled "Subsidies of the Rich & Famous." Here's an excerpt:

... The editors had a duty to tell us that Coburn’s agenda doesn’t stop with closing loopholes, loopholes that can be reopened at the whim of Congress or the ingenuity of a tax lawyer. The premise that underlies Coburn’s plan is anything but populist.... Tom Coburn intends – via a flat tax – to raise taxes on those less fortunate Americans. At the same time he would cut programs designed to help them through hard times. Coburn says so right in that letter the Times editors so glowingly cited. They just left out the part where Coburn reveals his real scheme.

... AND for you Tom Friedman fans, Jason Linkins has a fairly hilarious take on Friedman's latest:

Would it be too much to ask for someone — perhaps one of his New York Times colleagues — to give famously airheaded columnist Thomas Friedman a bit of an explanation of what is actually going on in the world of politics? Or just provide him with some sort of real world mooring point to which his precious barnacles of thought could cling?

Charles Pierce of Esquire on the future of Occupy. And a history lesson. Read his whole post, please. Here's the history part:

Generally, people tend to love goals in the abstract, but resent the inconvenience that accomplishing those goals may cause them in their daily lives.... In 1954, for example, a Gallup Poll showed that 55 percent of the people supported the Supreme Court's decision in Brown v. Board of Education. Five years later, after the stirrings of a larger movement, and the violent backlash against it, had become increasingly obvious, Gallup found that 59 percent of the people it polled thought the decision had 'caused more trouble than it was worth.' In May of 1961, Gallup found that 57 percent of its respondents thought that the sit-ins at lunch counters and various other forms of direct action against segregation 'hurt the cause' of black people around the country.

... AND this, from David Atkins in Hullabaloo: "It's perhaps most important to note that advocacy for social justice has never really been publicly popular at the time. It's hard to believe today, but at the time, the public overwhelmingly blamed the students for the Kent State Massacre." ...

... Beth Fouhy of the AP: "Polling shows the public supports the message of the Occupy Wall Street movement even if people have reservations about the encampments themselves. And political observers say Democrats may be missing a chance to reinvigorate their base."

Gail Collins: "This week, the House of Representatives took time out of its busy schedule of going home for vacation to ... approve a bill requiring states with strict gun regulations to honor concealed weapon carry permits issued in [all other] states.... The bill passed 272 to 154. It’s a law-enforcement nightmare for states that take gun regulation seriously. There’s no national database cops can check if they stop someone who’s carrying a gun with an out-of-state permit. Some state records aren’t available at all."

Prof. Lawrence Lessig, in a New York Times op-ed, opposes the Constitutional amendment proposed by nine U.S. senators as "just the latest verse in a very tired song.... So long as elections cost money, we won’t end Congress’s dependence on its funders. But we can change it. We can make 'the funders' 'the people.' Following Arizona, Maine and Connecticut, we could adopt a system of small-dollar public funding for Congress." Lessig would give a $50 rebate -- a/k/a "democracy voucher" -- to every taxpayer, who would use the $50 to contribute to congressional candidates who would not accept big-check financing. ...

... Here's Lessig, speaking a few weeks ago in Seattle. Fascinating:

... A Congress of the One Percent. We've said it before, but just in case your forgot, Michael Beckel of Open Secrets is here to remind you: "About 47 percent of Congress, or 250 current members of Congress, are millionaires, according to a new study by the Center for Responsive Politics of lawmakers' personal financial disclosure forms covering calendar year 2010. The Center's analysis is based on the median values of lawmakers' disclosed assets and liabilities. That lofty financial status is enjoyed by only about one percent of Americans." CW: I expect that if the CRP ran the numbers for MOCs in leadership positions, the percentage would be even higher. After all, junior members haven't had as much time to cash in. Also, if you wondered why GE got so many tax breaks that the company not only paid no taxes in 2010, the taxpayers paid GE. Here's a partial explanation (this does not speak at all, of course, to GE's campaign contributions & other lobbying efforts):

What happens if the deficit reduction Super Committee fails to make a deal? Isabel Sawhill of the Brookings Institution has the short answer, and it isn't pretty.

"Concierge Care." Dr. Ezekiel Emanuel, in a New York Times op-ed: "Half the population — mostly young people and healthy adults — consumes just 3 percent of [healthcare] costs, while the sickest 10 percent consumes 64 percent. Real cost control requires changing the way we care for these high-cost patients with multiple chronic conditions.... Controlling costs can do more than simply save money, it can also improve the quality of medical care and these patients’ lives.... 'High touch medicine' or 'concierge medicine' [is] not for rich people who can afford it, but for chronically ill patients who need it." Emanuel explains how concierge care would work, and how some physician groups are making it working right now.

This was the worst thing a Democratic president had ever done on our issues. Period. -- Gene Karpinski, President of the League of Conservation Voters

Betrayal. John Broder of the New York Times takes a hard look at President Obama's cold decision, engineered by Chief-of-Staff Bill Daley & regulatory czar Cass Sunstein, to nix the EPA's new ozone regulations. ...

... "Ignorance, Green & Ideology Are ... Hurting Democracy." Julian Brooks of Rolling Stone interviews science writer Shawn Lawrence Otto about his new book Fool Me Twice, Fighting the Assault on Science in America. "... too many Americans are either plain ignorant of science or actively hostile to it, or both. And that's as true of political leaders and journalists as it is of ordinary citizens (to say nothing of corporate leaders who see action on climate change, say, as a threat to the bottom line)."

Where Did I Put that $600 Million? Ben Protess & Azam Ahmed of the New York Times: "Nearly three weeks after $600 million in customer money went missing from MF Global, the search for the cash has been hampered by the bankrupt brokerage firm’s sloppy record-keeping, an increasingly worrisome situation that has left regulators frustrated and customers in the lurch.... As authorities comb through some 38,000 customer accounts, they are growing more suspicious about what went wrong at MF Global, the commodities powerhouse once run by Jon S. Corzine, the former Democratic governor of New Jersey." ...

... NEW! Karen Garcia sees the cruel, ironic contrast between the official treatment of multimillionaire (at least $600 million?) Jon Corzine & the Occupy Protesters: "Regulators and investigators are literally living at their desks trying to avoid actually having to charge Corzine with anything. Meanwhile, the people who actually had their life savings, pensions and futures stolen by the Global Financial Cabal are being arrested as they protest near the NYSE."

Joe Nocera: why didn't Joe Paterno "go to the police or do more than he was minimally required to do under the law"? Maybe it was because, after two losing seasons & questions about the then-75 year-old coach's fitness, he was trying to save his job.

Right Wing World

He isn't a human being. He's a gaseous state.... He's a whirling dervish of dishonesty. -- Chris Matthews, on Newt Gingrich

     ... Here's the updated Bloomberg story; we linked the original two days ago. Clea Benson & John McCormick: "Newt Gingrich made between $1.6 million and $1.8 million in consulting fees from two contracts with mortgage company Freddie Mac, according to two people familiar with the arrangement. The total amount is significantly larger than the $300,000 payment from Freddie Mac that Gingrich was asked about during a Republican presidential debate on Nov. 9 sponsored by CNBC, and more than was disclosed in the middle of congressional investigations into the housing industry collapse." ...

     ... In the segment, David Corn refers to a Mother Jones story that runs down Newt's lies and contradictory statements. I couldn't find it. But for a fine partial list, see Akhilleus' comment in Tuesday's Off Times Square. A full list would require a whole book. Since Newt is fond of writing books, as soon as his presidential candidacy fails, maybe that would be a good project for him. ...

     ... Tim Egan: "This is not just another Gingrich laugher, up there with his revolving Tiffany’s account or his multiple personal hypocrisies. This story encapsulates why Washington is broken and how the powerful protect and enrich themselves, unanchored to basic principles.At the same time, it’s a case study in the Gingrich method: denounce something as outrageous, while doing that very outrageous thing himself. (Politicians with ties to Freddie Mac came in for scathing Gingrich criticism in 2010.)"

How do you say 'delicious' in Cuban? -- Herman Cain, in Miami's Little Havana. CW Answer: "Delicioso," similar to the way you say it in American ...

      ... AND other displays of ignorance.

Mark Murray of NBC News: "It has become the new Republican attack on President Obama: He thinks Americans are lazy. GOP presidential candidate Mitt Romney leveled that charge [Tuesday].... [Wednesday], Rick Perry uses the line of attack in a new TV ad. 'Can you believe that?" Perry says to the camera. "That's what our president thinks is wrong with America? That Americans are lazy?' ... But when you examine what Obama said on Saturday..., it's pretty clear ... he wasn't calling Americans lazy; rather, he was calling U.S. business practices to attract foreign investors lazy. In fact, you could interpret his full remarks as a call to arms to improve on that front." CW: Where's Obama's rapid response team?

News Ledes

New York Times: "Federal authorities charged a 21-year-old Idaho man on Thursday with trying to assassinate President Obama. They said he had told friends that he believed the president was 'the Antichrist' and that he 'needed to kill him,' according to a complaint filed in federal court." Here's the arrest warrant.

New York Times: "Hundreds of protesters from Zuccotti Park clashed with the police as they tried to reach the New York Stock Exchange Thursday morning, and many were arrested. Protesters had vowed to prevent traders from reaching the Stock Exchange on Wall Street and some traders did appear to have a hard time reaching the building. But the Stock Exchange opened for trading as usual at 9:30 a.m."

     ... The New York Daily News has a liveblog here. "Wall Street under siege! Protesters clog streets, at least 50 arrested." With video. Update: "More than 175 protesters have been arrested today -- among the most recent was Councilman Jumaane Williams and dozens of union members after they sat on the ground on Centre Street." ...

AP: "Tightening ties with Asian nations as China's might rises, President Barack Obama prepared Thursday to be the first U.S. president to take part in a summit of East Asian nations. Ahead of his diplomatic efforts here, the White House announced trade deals to show progress on the jobs front back home." ...

... New York Times: "Fresh from having announced plans for an expanded American military presence in Australia, President Obama came to this remote northern town [of Darwin, Australia] that will be the base of operations and told American and Australian troops ... 'We are deepening our alliance and this is the perfect place to do it.... This region has some of the busiest sea lanes in the world.' Mr. Obama arrived in Bali, Indonesia, Thursday evening for the East Asia Summit on regional security and economic issues." ...

National Journal: "Three members of Herman Cain’s campaign team apologized on Wednesday after a local police officer [in Coral Springs, Florida] who said he was there to protect the Republican presidential candidate manhandled a reporter.... As ... journalists trailed Cain, the officer, who was in plain clothes, blindsided National Journal/CBS News reporter Lindsey Boerma into the side of the campaign bus. Moments later, as journalists circled around the bus toward Cain, the same man stuck his arm out and clotheslined Boerma." CW: "Clothesline" (v.) Def: "To knock (a person) over by striking his or her upper body or neck with one's arm, as if he or she had run into a low clothesline."

... Al Jazeera: "China has reacted angrily to remarks by Barack Obama signalling a significant shift in US policy vis-a-vis Asia.... The People's Daily, the Chinese newspaper that is the organ of the ruling Communist Party, was clear in its opposition to reinforced US-Australia security ties.... 'Australia surely cannot play China for a fool. It is impossible for China to remain detached no matter what Australia does to undermine its security,' the paper said."

Tuesday
Nov152011

The Commentariat -- November 16

Some politicians may physically remove us from public spaces -- our spaces. You cannot evict an idea whose time has come. -- Occupy Wall Street, via Bloomberg News!

The Occupy Wall Street movement has been committed to peaceful, nonviolent action from its inception. And it will keep spreading no matter what elected officials tell police to do. But that doesn’t mean these raids are acceptable. In fact, they are inexcusable. -- Richard Trumka, President, AFL-CIO

Cara Buckley of the New York Times: "In New York, where the police temporarily evicted Occupy Wall Street protesters from Zuccotti Park early Tuesday, and in other cities, dozens of organizers maintained that the movement had already reshaped the public debate. They said it no longer needed to rely solely on seizing parks, demonstrating in front of the homes of billionaires or performing other acts of street theater.... Even before the police descended on Zuccotti Park overnight, some early proponents of Occupy Wall Street had begun suggesting that it was time to move on. On Monday, Adbusters, the Canadian anti-corporate magazine that conceived of the movement, indicated that the protesters should “declare victory” and head indoors to strategize." ...

... So here's the Washington Post's take on the Occupy movement: Eli Saslow & Colum Lynch: "... lately the most divisive issue has become the protests themselves. The Occupy Wall Street encampments that formed across the country to spotlight crimes committed on Wall Street have become rife with problems of their own. There are sanitation hazards and drug overdoses, even occasional deaths and sexual assaults. On Tuesday, New York and other cities across the country continued the chaotic, disruptive process of picking sides. Police made arrests in at least six states; three civil rights groups filed lawsuits on behalf of protesters. Mayors and city officials from coast to coast held emergency meetings...." ...

... The Official Presidential Waffle is here. ...

... CW: my response to Tom Friedman's column appears in today's editon of the New York Times eXaminer. Take a look at the eXaminer's front page, as there's quite a lot of interest. You can find my column here. Here's the lede graph:

The news of the day was that Mayor Michael Bloomberg shut down Zuccotti Park where protesters were advocating for the 99 Percent. But Tom Friedman, America’s No. 1 Very Serious Person, is in India, so he was not in a New York state of mind when he wrote his column for today’s New York Times. Friedman is a multimillionaire, and as Belén Fernández noted in a recent New York Times eXaminer interview, he has boasted that he has 'total freedom, and an almost unlimited budget, to explore.' We assume that his current sojourn in India is a similarly extravagant exploration. Really, contemplating America’s 99 Percent would not be on his itinerary.

... New York Times Editors: "We suspect there was a better, less-disruptive way to get demonstrators to deal with problems cited by the city and the park’s owner, Brookfield Office Properties." CW: if you read the whole editorial, you'll find plenty of waffle -- with syrup -- here, too. The Times editors clearly want to stay on Bloomberg's team. ...

... Meanwhile, Alex Pareene of Salon has the goods on the New York Daily News in the title to his blogpost: "Daily News cheers Occupy Wall Street raid, until Daily News reporter is arrested." Pareene writes, "They [the Daily News] seem totally uninterested in the NYPD’s excessively violent tactics, including the harassment, abuse and arrest of various reporters, which doesn’t get a mention in the editorial. Then a Daily News reporter was arrested, along with at least two other reporters. Now, according to the Daily News Twitter feed, at least, the NYPD’s behavior is 'alarming.' The newspaper has alerted its attorney. The Daily News is owned and published by billionaire real estate mogul Mort Zuckerman."

... In is not just radical lefties who are complaining about Baron von Bloomberg's secretive, militaristic midnight raid on Zuccotti Park. Here are Brian Stelter & Al Baker of the ever-so MSM New York Times on "police suppression of the press.... At a news conference ... Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg defended the police behavior, saying that the media was kept away 'to prevent a situation from getting worse and to protect members of the press.'" So the press can go into war zones with bullets flying, but they can't go to downtown Manhattan. Seems reasonable. ...

... Paul Krugman: "By acting so badly, Bloomberg has made it easy to see who won’t be truthful and can’t handle open discourse. He’s also saved OWS from what was probably its greatest problem, the prospect that it would just fade away as time went on and the days grew colder. Quite a night’s work." ...

... Felix Salmon of Reuters: when Paul Krugman debated Larry Summers. An interesting read. ...

     ... Krugman responds: "... my pessimism has been selective; I’ve been pessimistic about unemployment and growth, but optimistic about interest rates and inflation. So it’s not just about crying doom, doom. I think that counts for something — especially since I’ve been right."

Brian Beutler of TPM: "CBO Director Doug Elmendorf’s testimony before the Senate Budget Committee Tuesday was full of bad news for the unemployed, and thus for President Obama. This is the stuff Republicans blasted out to reporters: Unemployment will likely be sky high through next year, GDP growth has been and will continue to be anemic. But his prepared remarks confirm this is in part a product of the GOP’s unwillingness to pass the big-ticket items in Obama’s jobs bill. And they also imply that the GOP’s economic counter-proposals would do almost nothing to actually improve things." Read Beutler's whole post, which includes the money (literally) quote of Elmendorf's testimony.

CNN: "Americans are skeptical that a congressional super committee will reach a deficit reduction agreement by next week's deadline, according to a new national survey. And a CNN/ORC International Poll released Wednesday, one week before the panel's November 23 deadline, also indicates that a plurality of the overall public, as well as crucial independent voters, would blame the Republicans more than the Democrats if no agreement's reached." CW: good. Some people are paying attention. ...

... Alexander Bolton of The Hill: "Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) said Tuesday that Democrats will block Republican efforts to torpedo cuts to the Pentagon should the supercommittee on deficit reduction fail. Reid’s threat is yet another signal that Democrats are preparing for a supercommittee flop, and are largely comfortable with the cuts that would be triggered if there is no bipartisan agreement." ...

... ** Steve Benen writes a short post that tells you pretty much all you need to know about the impending Super Committee fail: "When this panel fails next week, major news organizations will tell the public that “both sides” chose not to reach an agreement. Those reports will be wrong." Read the whole post. ...

... Here's a contrary view from Jay Newton-Small of Time, who looks at the up- and downsides -- for Democrats -- of a Super Committee washout.

Law Prof. Einer Elhauge, in a New York Times op-ed: "For decades, Americans have been subject to a mandate to buy a health insurance plan — Medicare.... Many opponents dismiss this argument because Medicare (unlike the new mandate) requires the purchase of health insurance as a condition of entering into a voluntary commercial relationship, namely employment, which Congress can regulate under the commerce clause.... Even if you accept this distinction, it means that Congress can mandate the purchase of health insurance as long as it conditions that mandate on engagement in some commercial activity." And guess what? We all "engage in commercial activity." The Court has decided in the past, for instance, that even producing your own food can be regulated under the commerce clause. CW: in other words, the individual mandate is a slam-dunk, unless you take a look at yesterday's Commentariat & see what Justices Scalia & Thomas are up to -- in which case, all objective arguments are moot.

Two Three "Big Picture" Think Pieces

     Prof. Andrew Bachevich in Common Dreams: "... the most disturbing aspect of contemporary American politics, worse even than rampant dysfunction borne of petty partisanship or corruption expressed in the buying and selling of influence.  Confronted with evidence of a radically changing environment, those holding (or aspiring to) positions of influence simply turn a blind eye, refusing even to begin to adjust to a new reality." P.S. Read the comments, too, especially the one by "Siouxrose." Thanks to reader Lisa for all three links.

      Prof. Juan Cole: though you wouldn't know it from listening to or reading American media, the protests movements in the U.S., Europe & the Middle East, including Israel, are all about the same thing: the concentration of wealth in a corrupt, connected elite that deprives ordinary citizens of a decent standard of living.

     Tom Engelhardt in Al Jazeera on the "other" American dream: imperialism a/k/a the imaginary Pax Americana. Um, it's a nightmare.


The DOJ Loves Banksters. Catherine Rampell of the New York Times: "Federal prosecutions for financial institution fraud have tumbled over the last decade, despite the recent troubles in the banking sector.... Federal prosecutions for other crimes have grown tremendously, with the number of total new prosecutions filed for all federal crimes nearly doubling over the last decade." With charts to prove it. CW: if you don't think this is a reflection of Wall Street control of Washington, call me; I've got a bundle of swell mortgage derivatives to sell you.

Carol Leonnig & Joe Stephens of the Washington Post: "The Obama administration, which gave the solar company Solyndra a half-billion-dollar loan to help create jobs, asked the company to delay announcing it would lay off workers until after the hotly contested November 2010 midterm elections..., newly released e-mails show.... The announcement [of layoffs] ultimately was made on Nov. 3, 2010 — immediately following the Nov. 2 vote."

Scott Brown, Overnight Populist. Pat Garofalo of Think Progress: "In an attempt to burnish his Wall Street reformer credentials ahead of his race against Harvard Law Professor and consumer advocate Elizabeth Warren, Sen. Scott Brown (R-MA) today plans to introduce the Stop Trading on Congressional Knowledge (STOCK) Act of 2011, which would apply laws against insider trading to members of Congress.... Brown’s move comes after a 60 Minutes report [featured in yesterday's Commentariat].... [Brown] earlier endorse[d] President Obama’s nominee to head the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. But these positions don’t change the fact that Brown worked to water down key provisions of the Dodd-Frank financial reform law before granting the law his support, actions which earned him the appreciative donations of the financial services industry."

Right Wing World

President Newt. Steve Thomma of McClatchey News: "Newt Gingrich is the strongest Republican candidate when matched head to head against Democratic President Barack Obama, according to a McClatchy-Marist Poll released Tuesday. The former speaker of the House of Representatives is neck and neck with the incumbent president, back just 2 percentage points among registered voters. Obama leads 47 percent to 45 percent."

Gingrich is definitionally what conservatism, properly speaking, opposes. Conservatism was born in the eighteenth century against the grand pronouncements of the French philosophes; it roots itself in practice not theory; it distrusts massive, profound reorganization of anything. In all of this, Gingrich is, in fact, conservatism's nemesis: an autodidact megalomaniac, contemptuous of existing institutions, and bent on dragging an entire culture, country and, yes, civilization into a fantastic pocket of his own small mind. -- Andrew Sullivan, putting the Newt into historical perspective

 News Ledes

Public Opinion has some of the latest developments in the Occupy movement, via the AP. A very good synopsis. ...

... ABC News: "President Obama and Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard on Wednesday announced that the US military will begin a permanent presence Down Under — part of a greater Obama administration strategy to contain the rise of China in the Pacific. By mid-2012, a company-sized rotation of Marines, between 200-250, will be stationed at an Australian military base in the Northern territory. That will ramp up to a full force of 2,500 Marine personnel as part of a Marine, Air, Ground Task Force In addition, the US Air Force will be able to use Australian Air Force facilities significantly more than it does now."

ABC News: "... authorities are increasingly concerned that a man sought in connection with a bizarre shooting incident on the Washington Mall last week may pose a threat to President Obama. The Secret Service now suspects that a bullet fired in this incident may have hit the White House after a bullet round was found in a White House window, though the round had not yet been conclusively linked to the incident.  The round was stopped by ballistic glass behind the historic exterior glass, while an additional round has been found on the exterior of the White House. Police believe the suspect, 21-year-old Oscar Ramiro Ortega of Idaho, is mentally ill." With video.

New York Times: "As a steady drizzle began early Wednesday morning, only a few dozen protesters remained in Zuccotti Park.... There were no tarps or sleeping bags — just a few dozen people clustered together or slumped on granite benches, shielding themselves with whatever they had: umbrellas, rain coats, pieces of cardboard and garbage bags."

Al Jazeera: "Syrian activists say that army defectors have attacked an intelligence complex in the Damascus suburbs in what appears to be one of their boldest assaults so far against government security forces. Members of the Free Syrian Army fired heavy weaponry and machine guns at a large air force intelligence complex situated in Harasta on the northern edge of the capital along the Damascus-Aleppo highway early on Wednesday, a spokesperson for the Syrian Revolution General Commission told Al Jazeera."