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Month: March 2009

Employee Free Choice Showdown Begins

by dday

The debate over “card check,” which is the name Republicans and Politico would like to use for the Employee Free Choice Act because it has some coded language that doesn’t poll well, I guess, begins tomorrow with the bill’s introduction in the House and Senate.

Tomorrow, Democrats in both houses of Congress plan to introduce a union-organizing bill that is labor’s top priority for the year, Democratic officials said.

The result could be a high-decibel, high-stakes brawl between business and labor, which strongly supported President Barack Obama. Unions have been getting impatient for attention to the issue, and the push to introduce legislation is a way to ratchet up pressure on Congress.

President Obama, who has said he recognizes that “the business community … considers this to be the devil incarnate,” said in January that he would like to bring the sides together.

The measure — widely known as card check and formally as the Employee Free Choice Act — would allow a union to form after enough workers in a shop sign cards, or petitions, rather than voting by secret ballot.

“The fact that the bill is being introduced so early in the session is an indication of it being a priority and of confidence in the vote count,” said a Democratic official involved in the negotiations.

Warren Buffett, an independent businessman who the Obama campaign for some reason exalted during the fall because of his endorsement, came out sharply against Employee Free Choice using the typical coded language of the right.

“I think the secret ballot’s pretty important in the country,” said the Oracle from Omaha. “I’m against card check to make a perfectly flat statement.”

The Employee Free Choice Act has nothing to do with the secret ballot. It has to do with real punishment for illegal worker intimidation and firings on the part of management, and the decision for who gets to set a union election process. Under current law, management gets to make that decision and then game the system through union-busting. Under the Employee Free Choice Act, workers make the decision either to use majority sign-up or a general election. And a minority of workers, as low as 30%, get to overrule the majority if they want a ballot. Buffett doesn’t want you to know that because it’s easier to demonize unions by saying “they want to take your secret ballot away.”

Of course, the real problem with passage of the bill is not Warren Buffett but a small sliver of Senators whose support is wavering.

Blanche Lincoln (D-AR). This conservative-leaning Dem is up for re-election in 2010, and she has signaled since December that she might not back EFCA this year, although she voted to break a GOP filibuster when it came up in 2007. The Arkansas News reported last week that Lincoln’s campaign staff was telling business donors “not to worry” about her vote on the bill.

Arlen Specter (R-PA). Perhaps the most closely watched vote on Employee Free Choice, he is reportedly facing a strong challenge from conservative former Rep. Pat Toomey, who has been rapping Specter’s past support for EFCA for months now. Will Toomey’s entry into the race be the EFCA “epiphany” that GOP leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) recently wished on Specter? Labor advocates have to hope not.

Mary Landrieu (D-LA). After co-sponsoring Employee Free Choice and voting with her party to break a filibuster in 2007, Landrieu is now up in the air on this year’s vote, according to the Shreveport Times in her state.

Mark Pryor (D-AR). In its report on Lincoln, the Arkansas News also quotes Pryor as declining to become a co-sponsor of the bill this year and pinning his hopes on a compromise between business and labor. For now, Pryor remains decidedly in the fence-sitters’ camp.

Any final vote is dependent on Al Franken reaching the Senate chamber, because Specter is probably the only gettable vote on the Republican side. But the above doesn’t really look good. Particularly when anti-worker groups are already putting up ads in vulnerable states.

Anyway, these are the crucial votes. Economic recovery is going to require a lot of factors, but certainly one of them is wage increases for a broader middle class. Inequality has led to a perverse and unsustainable economic structure. Historically rises in union membership are closely tied to rises in overall wages. The Employee Free Choice Act is not just a matter of basic fairness, but an economic imperative.

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Arrested Development

by digby

Dave Neiwert over at Crooks and Liars posts today about the conservative wunderkind at CPAC, calling him a “a startlingly poised young man.” He is.

When I saw him on TV I had no idea he was only 13. I thought it was Rich Lowry. Seriously, have they ever been seen in the same room?

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Heckuva Job Randies

by digby

Years ago I used to argue deep into the night online with a real life Randian objectivist who truly believed that capitalism was not an economic system but rather a moral system. And following that belief he naturally considered the captains of industry and the Big Money Boyz on Wall Street to be the most moral people of all. Wealth was the reward, you see, for proper moral behavior. (He also applied a bastardized darwinism to inherited wealth insisting that passing on wealth was the equivalent of passing on superior genes, thus exposing his true belief in aristocracy rather than capitalist meritocracy.) It was an interesting exchange and went on for many months, educating me about Randism, which I hadn’t honestly thought much about since I was about 17 years old until that time.

In the course of those somewhat juvenile arguments, I belatedly realized what it meant that the most important banker in the world, Alan Greenspan, was a card carrying Randian — and that everyone in the political class on all sides worshipped him. It wasn’t just a few lonely libertarian cranks and some clever conservative movement propagandists who thought this adolescent screed actually meant something. It had found its way into the corridors of power. It still seems ridiculous that a very silly novel could become a bible for the ruling class (or at least provide biblical justification) but it did.

I’ve written quite a bit about this over the years, drawing particular attention to the fact that the Randians who provide this pernicious comic book to high schoold kids by the millions and rich patrons who are endowing chairs at universities to spread the gospel. I was reminded of all that today when I saw Atrios’ link to this Balloon Juice post:

What I think is more insidious, though, than wingnut dentists’ cutting back their hours or Mrs. Instapundit cutting back on whatever it is that she normally does, is the widespread belief among elites that they and their colleagues are indispensable men. Like one of JMM’s readers, I fear that Geithner thinks that our economy would be decimated if we forcibly Galted the geniuses who ran our financial industry into the ground. I fear that when Andrew Sullivan and Joe Klein gush about the greatness of David Brooks, it’s because they view themselves and each other as a d’Anconia-Danneskjöld-Galt punditocratic triumvirate that may yet save the world from unseriousness and blogofascism. I even fear that when Villagers praise Obama’s “political gifts”, they’re doing so for the same reason they praised George Bush’s cowboy gut instincts; that is, because they feel that the talents of leaders in Washington reflect upon its scribes. To put it simply, I fear that we are now ruled by incompetent egomaniacs who will never blow the whistle on each other, no matter how bad things get, because to do so would be to admit that none of them is indispensable or brilliant after all.
That’s exactly what they think.

The problem is that we are in a very bad situation now where these masters of the universe have created a problem even they don’t understand and which they don’t know how to solve. And their sycophants and toadies are left without a “moral” system to guide them.

Jane Hamsher is starting a campaign to demand that congress take action to ensure that at least we know where all this taxpayer money is going in the various bank bailouts. At the moment everything points to a massive looting by the real John Galts before they head to the hills while the rubes are distracted by nit-picking about “pork” in the budget. It would be nice to put all this in perspective so the American people actually know that the bulk of the money being spent by the government right now isn’t going for “useless” projects like volcano monitoring and rather being spent to further line the pockets of wealthy bankers who put us in this position in the first place.

In fact, more people should see just what those wealthy owners of America really think about our silly little processes:

Consider, for instance, this rant that Cohan [author of the new book “House of Cards: A Tale of Hubris and Wretched Excess On Wall Street”] describes from bridge-playing Bear Stearns CEO Jimmy Cayne describing his feelings on Geithner’s decision to sell Bear Stearns:

Asked about Geithner’s comments and his decision regarding opening the discount window to Wall Street after Bear had been sold for $2 a share and not earlier, Jimmy Cayne became spitting angry. “The audacity of that p—k in front of the American people announcing he was deciding whether or not a firm of this stature and this whatever was good enough to get a loan,” he said. “Like he was the determining factor, and it’s like a flea on his back, floating down underneath the Golden Gate Bridge, getting a h–d-on, saying, ‘Raise the bridge.’ This guy thinks he’s got a big d–k. He’s got nothing, except maybe a boyfriend. I’m not a good enemy. I’m a very bad enemy. But certain things really—that bothered me plenty. It’s just that for some clerk to make a decision based on what, your own personal feeling about whether or not they’re a good credit? Who the f–k asked you? You’re not an elected officer. You’re a clerk. Believe me, you’re a clerk. I want to open up on this f—-r, that’s all I can tell you.”

That’s John Galt.

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Junk Journalism, NY Times Division

by tristero

Jeebus, the mainstream media is atrocious. Forget the obvious examples of bias and propaganda, like this, where a half-page in the print edition pimps a conference by global warming deniers and paints them as reasonable folks who disagree amongst themselves. Moderates, like one speaker, a spokesman for the insane Senator Inhofe. But ignore this, at least for now. This kind of junk journalism is too obviously propagandistic to be effective for many people. It’s just a waste of space.

But get a load of this. Here’s the lede:

While lifting the Bush administration’s restrictions on federally financed human embryonic stem cell research, President Obama intends to avoid the thorniest question in the debate: whether taxpayer dollars should be used to experiment on embryos themselves, two senior administration officials said Sunday.

That compromising coward Obama! What a wimp.

And that is as much as many busy people will trouble themselves with: Obama’s ducking the issue. But let’s read on. The issue at stake is lifting a Congressional ban, called the “Dickey-Wicker amendment,” on the creation of human embryos for stem-cell research. And you have to read halfway through an incredibly tedious piece for the punchline:

Mr. Obama has no power to overturn the Dickey-Wicker ban. Only Congress, which attaches the ban to appropriations bills, can overturn it.

That’s right, folks. According to the NY Times, Obama is avoiding doing something he has no power to do. The article continues:

Mr. Obama has not taken a position on the ban and does not intend to, Melody C. Barnes, his chief domestic policy adviser, said Sunday. The president believes stem cell research “should be done in compliance with federal law,” she said, adding that Mr. Obama recognizes the divisiveness of the issue.

“We are committed to pursuing stem cell research quite responsibly but we recognize there are a range of beliefs on this,” Ms. Barnes said.

Now, there are many ways to characterize this position, but the least accurate way – by far – is to say that Obama is avoiding the issue. If anything, it is certainly more likely to assume that by “lifting the Bush administration’s restrictions on federally financed human embryonic stem cell research,” Obama is signaling his support for overturning Dickey-Wicker. Rather than avoiding the issue, Obama is refusing to waste valuable political capital directly opining on a highly contentious piece of legislation which he has no power to overturn. That sounds like shrewd politicking, not cowardice, to me.

But no, that won’t fly, because the meme the press is toying with right now, surely abetted by Republican operatives, is that Obama always avoids the hard decisions. A nice guy, the president, but just not tough.

Whether Obama will have a successful presidency, especially by liberal standards, is an open question (cue the inevitable comments that Obama has already and irretrievably failed liberalism). But a press corps that mistakes political intelligence for avoiding the issue is uniquely unqualified to provide us realtime coverage of this president’s behavior. And they wonder why newspapers are hurting right now.

Perhaps you disagree. Perhaps you think Obama could be more forceful. All I can say is that I, too, wish Obama was a liberal, but he’s not, he’s a moderate. That said, his position, and his actions here are clear as a bell, even if the Times can’t, or won’t, report them in an objective manner.

Can Someone Please Explain This To Me?

by digby

I’m an Godless non-believer and so I have trouble with morality. From Oliver Willis:

The Catholic church once again demonstrates the follies of organized religion.

A senior Vatican cleric has defended the excommunication of the mother and doctors of a nine-year-old girl who had an abortion in Brazil after being raped. Cardinal Giovanni Battista Re, head of the Catholic church’s Congregation for Bishops, told the daily La Stampa on Saturday that the twins the girl had been carrying had a right to live. ‘It is a sad case but the real problem is that the twins conceived were two innocent persons, who had the right to live and could not be eliminated,’ he said. … The regional archbishop, Jose Cardoso Sobrinho, pronounced excommunication for the mother for authorising the operation and doctors who carried it out for fear that the slim girl would not survive carrying the foetuses to term. “God’s law is above any human law. So when a human law … is contrary to God’s law, this human law has no value,” Cardoso had said. He also said the accused stepfather would not be expelled from the church. Although the man allegedly committed “a heinous crime … the abortion – the elimination of an innocent life – was more serious”.

Dots

by digby

Following up on numerous posts around the blogosphere this week-end about the banking crisis, here’s a couple of other interesting tidbits to fill some gaps. There are far too many dots for my meager mind to connect at this point, but the picture is starting to get a little bit clearer. We be screwed.

Josh Marshall discusses the fact that apparently the already outrageous bankruptcy bill of 2005 was even more outrageous than we knew and has contributed greatly to this current crisis.

And here’s Dan Froomkin talking about what we still don’t know about the billions that were already spent on the TARP I.

Masaccio at FDL on AIG.

Marshall again, on the utterly braindead Richard Shelby’s idea that we should just “close” the banks rather than “nationalize” them. I guess he thinks the banks are like GM and should just go bankrupt. Maybe we should close the FDIC too. This is why financial lobbyists are able to run rings around the congress and set themselves up years ahead of time, as they did in the bankruptcy bill.

And if you missed dday’s post yesterday about the media financial complex and the greedhead pigs at CNBC who made millions lying to the public for their own gain, do it. I honestly knew nothing about this and it’s a shocker.

I just saw Erin Burnett on Bill Maher and I honestly think Britney Spears could do as well. She said that nobody on the left and nobody on the right wants nationalization. And then she said,”At the end, the taxpayers will probably get a check and it will be used to save social security.”

Oy …

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In Case It Wasn’t Obvious

by tristero

Modern conservatism is a vacuous pseudo-politics suitable only for those with the intellectual maturity of a 14-year old boy. Literally.

Money quote: “ ‘Barack Obama is the most left-wing president in my lifetime,” he said.’

Torture Talk

by digby

Greenwald notes that the British inexplicably believe that allegations of torture should be officially investigated. I just don’t know what’s wrong with those people:

From the BBC:

MPs have demanded a judicial inquiry into a Guantanamo Bay prisoner’s claims that MI5 was complicit in his torture. . . . [Mohamed’s] allegations are being investigated by the government, but the Foreign Office said it did not condone torture. Shadow justice secretary Dominic Grieve said the “extremely serious” claims should also be referred to the police. . . . Daniel Sandford, BBC Home Affairs correspondent, said Mr Mohamed’s claims would be relatively simple to substantiate. “As time progresses it will probably become quite apparent whether indeed these are true telegrams and I think it’s unlikely they’d be put into the public domain if they couldn’t eventually be checked back.” The Conservatives have called for a police inquiry into his allegations of British collusion. Mr Grieve called for a judicial inquiry into the allegations. “And if the evidence is sufficient to bring a prosecution then the police ought to investigate it,” he added. Liberal Democrat foreign affairs spokesman Ed Davey said there was a “rock solid” case for an independent judicial inquiry. . . . Shami Chakrabati, director of campaign group Liberty said: “These are more than allegations – these are pieces of a puzzle that are being put together. “It makes an immediate criminal investigation absolutely inescapable.”

The Guardian adds:

New revelations by Guantánamo Bay detainee Binyam Mohamed, claiming that British intelligence played a central role in his torture and interrogation, must be answered by the government, the former shadow home secretary David Davis said last night. . . . [Mohamed’s] allegations appear to contradict assertions by foreign secretary David Miliband and home secretary Jacqui Smith that the British government would never “authorise or condone” torture. Davis said Mohamed’s testimony demanded a response from these ministers. “His revelations show that the government’s claims about its involvement in the interrogation of Mohamed are completely untenable,” Davis said. “Either Miliband or Smith should come to the House of Commons and reveal exactly what the government knew.” Last night other public figures said there should be wider efforts to look into the allegations that the British government had colluded in Mohamed’s torture.

Notice what is missing from these accounts. There is nobody arguing that the dreary past should simply be forgotten in order to focus on the important and challenging future. There’s no snide suggestion that demands to investigate serious allegations of criminality are driven by petty vengeance or partisan score-settling. Nobody suggests that it’s perfectly permissible for government officials to commit serious crimes — including war crimes — as long as they had nice motives or were told that it was OK to do these things by their underlings, or that the financial crisis (which Britain has, too) precludes any investigations, or that whether to torture is a mere “policy dispute.” Also missing is any claim that these crimes are State Secrets that must be kept concealed in order to protect British national security.

Man, those Brits are weird. Don’t they understand how this is done? I’m especially confused by their odd way of speaking about torture. Their Foreign Office used the term “we don’t condone torture” instead of the all-purpose “we don’t torture” as Obama once again awkwardly insisted on using in his interview with the NY Times:

I think we will have to think about how do we deal with that scenario in a way that comports with international law and abides by my very clear edict that we don’t torture, and that we ultimately provide anybody that we’re detaining an opportunity through habeas corpus. to answer to charges.

It’s obvious that he’s using this lawyerly construction, just as George W. Bush did, to give the impression somehow that the US has never tortured. We’re not idiots. It doesn’t really work and he should just stop doing it at this point. It becoming his own special “it depends on what the meaning of is, is,” except it isn’t being said to cover up a blow job but rather — torture. It’s beneath him.
It’s also beneath him to give props to Michael McConnell, the man who lied outright to congress about very, very serious matters in order to keep the phone companies from having to divulge who they spied on. Not to mention that he was half nuts. If Obama can’t bear to investigate his crimes, the .least he can do is stop referring to him as a good public servant.

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“Is There Anything Wrong With Saying Yes?”

by dday

New York Times reporters had a conversation with Barack Obama on his plane, where they actually asked him if he were a socialist. Obama answered no, explained the thought process behind his budget, and later, after pondering it, actually called the reporters back and said, “It was hard for me to believe that you were entirely serious about that socialist question.”

As a statement of empirical reality, this is true. As Daniel Gross pretty expertly explained, the Bush tax cuts that Obama is allowing to expire would result in about 3-4 percentage-point increases in the two top marginal tax rates, which is about $4 a day for someone making $300,000 a year. And despite the media insanity around the issue, the other 98% that doesn’t make over $250,000 would see a tax cut, making it hard to understand how you can call this an overall increase. People in that top 2% can whine about how they are being persecuted for their genius and talk about going Galt all they want – and I hope they do instead of just talking about it, we need elites that don’t have a track record of breaking the global economy – but the kind of “burden” placed on the wealthy, who have it better in America than any other country on Earth, isn’t even the burden their patron saint placed upon them in the 1980s, which they also whined about incessantly.

According to a recent Treasury Department study, Ronald Reagan proposed the largest peacetime tax increase in American history as part of a budget deal to get the federal deficit under control. The Tax Equity and Fiscal Responsibility Act (TEFRA) of 1982 was signed into law on Sept. 3, and most of its provisions took effect on Jan. 1, 1983.

During debate on TEFRA, many conservatives predicted economic disaster. They argued that raising taxes in the midst of a severe recession was exactly the wrong thing to do. “Every school child knows you don’t raise taxes in a recession unless you want to make it worse,” The Wall Street Journal’s editorial page warned. Said Rep. Newt Gingrich, “I think it will make the economy sicker.” The Chamber of Commerce of the U.S. said it had “no doubt that it will curb the economic recovery everyone wants.”

Looking at the data, however, it is very hard to see any evidence that TEFRA had a negative effect on growth. Indeed, one could easily make a case that its enactment stimulated growth. As one can see, the economy’s growth rates after TEFRA took effect were among the fastest in history.

I know that Paul Volcker’s monetary policy at the Fed, a luxury we pretty much don’t have right now, had a lot more to do with this, but the point is that the same defenders of the rich and powerful made the same statements about taxes then that they are making now.

But beyond the debates over opinions which are obviously ridiculous, there’s a larger point that was touched upon in the follow-up question about socialism by the Times.

Q. Is there anything wrong with saying yes?

Only in a country where the balance of acceptable discourse has been so tainted and distorted that reasonable social democratic policies are completely forbidden from the conversation. And so you have Obama’s advisers running to David Brooks to prove that they aren’t crazy socialist radicals, but pragmatists. Which makes a certain political sense, but isn’t actually true. In fact, the debate over the stimulus package was quite instructive in this regard. Obama released an initial bill that was too small for the task, perhaps assuming that the package would get bigger, as most spending bills do, as it made its way through Congress. Therefore they would not be saddled with the impression that they were expanding government as much as Congressional Democrats would. That’s not what happened, and as a result, the stimulus is looking too small for the task.

Analysts increasingly view the administration’s actions so far as insufficient given the scope of the problem. The stimulus package was designed to “save or create” 3.5 million jobs, according to the administration. But the nation has already lost 4.4 million jobs since the start of the recession. Many banks and other financial institutions, whose health is critical to the economy, are teetering, and the Treasury Department has yet to finalize the details of its plans to remove from their balance sheets the toxic assets dragging them down.

“It’s premature to say we need another stimulus, but the economy is performing much worse than when [the law] was signed, and the odds are increasing that we’ll need a bigger policy response,” said Mark Zandi of Moody’s Economy.com, who has advised Democratic lawmakers. “What we’ve learned is policy has been a step behind this whole downturn. It’s important to get a step ahead.”

It was well-known among economists that the size of the stimulus may have been too small, but that perspective was kept off the news. It was surely known to the Administration, however, which preferred a more cautious route.

The subsequent release of the budget, along with moving forward on long-sought initiatives on health care and energy, does seem bolder, and there are signs that Obama is learning from what may have been an initial negotiating mistake. But even this
“boldness” is being carried out along narrow technocratic liberal lines that becomes very clear from a look at the past:

Barack Obama’s bold, ambitious budget plan proves that he is the true heir of Franklin Roosevelt and the New Deal. Consider Obama’s Rooseveltian energy plan. In 1939, President Roosevelt decided to mobilize Americans to create a new source of energy: atomic power. Although he was urged to focus on government-funded R&D, FDR chose a different route. He wisely encouraged private capital to invest in atomic energy research by a variety of tax incentives. To make atomic power investment more palatable to private capital, FDR boldly chose to make all other forms of energy in the U.S. uneconomical, by slapping high taxes on kerosene and coal. With the money from the new federal Kerosene Cap and Trade system, President Roosevelt and Congress funded a small-scale federal research program, in the hope of attracting much greater private investment …

Wait. What’s that you say? FDR didn’t do that? He poured federal money into the all-public Manhattan Project and created the first atomic bomb in a couple of years? He didn’t tax kerosene to make it uneconomical and to encourage private investment in atomic power? […]

All right, then, forget FDR. He was a socialist, anyway. Let Dwight Eisenhower serve as a model for the Obama administration. President Eisenhower authorized the biggest infrastructure program in American history, when he signed the National Interstate and Defense Highways Act of 1956. The interstate highway act created an elaborate system of private tax incentives and public-private partnerships (PPPs) to encourage private corporations to build national highways. To begin with, all U.S. highways were leased to domestic and foreign corporations for a period of decades. Second, all U.S. highways were set up with toll booths, so that American drivers would be forced to repay the corporate owners of the national highways every few dozen miles. Finally, a system of high-speed lanes with higher tolls was created, so that the rich could whiz down the road while middle-class and poor Americans were stuck in traffic jams …

All right, what now, wise guy? So that’s wrong, too? Eisenhower’s national highway system wasn’t based on tolls, leases to foreign companies, income-based pricing, and tax credits for private corporations? It used gasoline taxes to fund free public highways?

Free highways without toll booths, owned by the public, paid for out of taxes? My God. So the John Birch Society was right after all. Dwight Eisenhower was as much of a socialist as Franklin Delano Roosevelt!

The point here is that conservatives have so demonized the concept of the public commons, particularly inside the Beltway, that what is now considered a bold and socialistic policy shift – raising the top marginal tax rates 3-4%, investing in infrastructure with a mix of public and private money, using an individual mandate to keep insurance companies in the health care game, cap and trade – is actually a pre-compromised, market-friendly, neoliberal jumble that fits squarely in the center of the ideological divide. And this is essentially why the Army of Galts screams about socialism, to force the debate further to the right from the center where it is now situated.

I’m not totally blaming Obama for this. As a pragmatist, he is more interested in what is politically possible, and 50 years of conservative demonization has battered the ability to make anything that’s not “market-friendly.” In addition, members of his own party are even more cautious than he is and thus even more unwilling to do anything truly paradigm-shifting. But we have to understand the historical reality.

But a lot has changed since Wall Street imploded last fall. The great investment banks are gone, the U.S. has nationalized much of the financial system, and appears to be on the way to effectively nationalizing the automobile and housing sectors as well. In this environment, we need to consider some heresies, like the idea that the best way to provide a public good is not necessarily to pour subsidies on middlemen, and then bail them out with more subsidies when they fail at their public function.

The fundamental barrier today is the way that the issues are framed, by Democrats and Republicans alike. Thus the problem is defined not as making credit available for individuals and businesses, but as saving the banks and the shadow banking system. The goal is not to provide healthcare to all citizens, but to enable all citizens to purchase private health insurance. The objective is not to ensure universal access to higher education; it is to insure universal access to colleges and universities. In these and other cases, the means is confused with the end. The ultimate goal — providing credit, healthcare or education — is identified with the interests of non-governmental for-profit or nonprofit providers of that service. If these private institutions fail to provide the public service in a low-cost, effective and equitable way, then they must be subsidized even more. The idea of achieving the same public goals through simpler, more direct and efficient means that would cut out the middleman appears to be heresy to the Obama administration.

By the way, this is a centrist, Michael Lind, writing this. But one who is mindful of the past.

I grow fairly tired of the defense that “the President isn’t a socialist; he isn’t even doing anything that radical” used as a defense, when we’re in a position with unemployment and the overall economic meltdown where we actually, um, NEED something radical done. And I think the country is prepared for that more than Beltway insiders think. So while I agree with the empirical assessment that Obama’s positions are squarely in the center, and that the cult of Galtism is absurd, I don’t believe that Obama’s team is made up of pragmatists. Because pragmatists would look at reality and do exactly what’s necessary, regardless of ideological concerns.

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Misdirection

by digby

I’m sure you all recall congressman Alan Grayson’s tough questioning of Fed officials a couple of months ago in which he asked if they would be kind enough to provide taxpayers with a list of the specific institutions to whom the Fed was handing out money. You’ll also recall that Fed Vice President Donald Kohn said he didn’t think that would be a good idea at all.

Here’s the Youtube in case you missed it.

Grayson was early on this. The senate took it up last week and got the same response which was basically, “don’t worry your pretty little heads about who’s getting the money.” Apparently, these institutions will be too embarrassed to borrow what they need and then everything will be ruined.

Now why on earth would any institution be too embarrassed to take needed money from the Fed if their names were made public? Does that make sense to you?

Here’s Barry Ritholz:

My recent tirade against bailing out the hedge fund half of AIG makes much more sense when you consider who is actually getting all of the taxpayer largesse: Counter-parties of AIG, especially one Goldman Sachs. Some estimates have been in excess of $25 billion to GS. As AIG ran into the arms of the Fed for the first of 4 bailouts, Bloomberg reported:

“As much as $37 billion from federal bailout loans to American International Group Inc. has gone to investment banks including Goldman Sachs Group Inc., the firm Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson used to run. Without the government money, Goldman, Merrill Lynch & Co., Morgan Stanley, Deutsche Bank AG and other firms could have become some of the biggest creditors in a bankruptcy filing by AIG, the world’s largest insurer, because of its billions in losses on subprime bonds and corporate debt. The firms received cash as AIG borrowed from a Federal Reserve credit line endorsed by Paulson, Goldman’s former chief executive. The insurer had borrowed $44.6 billion from the credit line as of Sept. 25, the Federal Reserve reported that day.”

Other rumored recipients of taxpayer dole include Morgan Stanley, Merrill Lynch, and Deutsche Bank. Why rumored? Because of the infuriating refusal to turn over any information as to who these counter-parties are by the Fed and Treasury:

“The Fed refused yesterday to disclose the names of the borrowers and the loans, alleging that it would cast “a stigma” on recipients of more than $1.9 trillion of emergency credit from U.S. taxpayers and the assets the central bank is accepting as collateral. Fed secrecy was the focus of a Senate Banking Committee hearing today in which the panel’s top two members said the central bank’s reluctance to identify companies benefiting from the American International Group bailout risks undermining public confidence in the government. “If the American taxpayer’s money is at stake, and it is, big time, I believe the American taxpayers, the people, and this committee, we need to know who benefited, where this money went,” said Senator Richard Shelby of Alabama, the committee’s top Republican. “There is no transparency.” (emphasis added)

Who is being made whole at the taxpayer expense? The taxpayer isn’t merely getting screwed here, we are taking the royal shaft up the patootie in previously unimaginable ways.

Oh yeah. And it turns out Ritholz was right about the AIG money:

“The beneficiaries of the government’s bailout of American International Group Inc. include at least two dozen U.S. and foreign financial institutions that have been paid roughly $50 billion since the Federal Reserve first extended aid to the insurance giant. Among those institutions are Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and Germany’s Deutsche Bank AG, each of which received roughly $6 billion in payments between mid-September and December 2008, according to a confidential document and people familiar with the matter. Other banks that received large payouts from AIG late last year include Merrill Lynch, now part of Bank of America Corp., and French bank Société Générale SA. More than a dozen firms with smaller exposures to AIG also received payouts, including Morgan Stanley, Royal Bank of Scotland Group PLC and HSBC Holdings PLC, according to the confidential document.”

Nouriel Roubini explains:

“In the meantime, the massacre in financial markets and among financial firms is continuing. The debate on “bank nationalization” is borderline surreal, with the U.S. government having already committed–between guarantees, investment, recapitalization and liquidity provision–about $9 trillion of government financial resources to the financial system (and having already spent $2 trillion of this staggering $9 trillion figure). Thus, the U.S. financial system is de facto nationalized, as the Federal Reserve has become the lender of first and only resort rather than the lender of last resort, and the U.S. Treasury is the spender and guarantor of first and only resort. The only issue is whether banks and financial institutions should also be nationalized de jure. . . . AIG, which lost $62 billion in the fourth quarter and $99 billion in all of 2008 and is already 80% government-owned. With such staggering losses, it should be formally 100% government-owned. And now the Fed and Treasury commitments of public resources to the bailout of the shareholders and creditors of AIG have gone from $80 billion to $162 billion.

Krugman argues for formal nationalization:

The benefits from nationalization come from (a) giving taxpayers a share of the upside rather than just a share of the downside, which is where we are now (b) ending the gaming of the system, even looting, that is encouraged by the current system of implicit guarantees (Simon Johnson has been very good on that) (c) making it politically and fiscally feasible to put in enough capital to revitalize the system. These advantages are there whatever you decide to do with junior bank debt.

We are talking about staggering sums here and the complexity of what they are trying to do is far beyond the average citizens’ economic knowledge, including mine. But what I do know is that I don’t want to hear another word from anyone about deficits and pork and earmarks and how we can’t afford unemployment insurance until every last penny of these trillions are accounted for.

This is all taxpayer money that’s being spent, it all comes from the same pot — and as far as I know it may even be necessary spending. But they are hiding the names of the recipients of potentially 9 trillion dollars and when it does slip out who some of them are, it turns out — again — that it’s same people who perpetrated this crisis. Meanwhile, all day long, I’m watching simpleminded “fleecing of America” stories with some gasbag busybodies looking down their noses at some schmuck who was told that he should lie on the mortgage application for his monstrous tract home in Riverside and has lost everything. Everybody’s lecturing everybody else about responsibility. And yet we have trillions going unaccounted for at the Fed and they seem to believe there’s absolutely nothing wrong with that.

Something is rotten at the Fed and treasury — or, at least, it sure smells that way. Maybe nobody would notice the rather shocking lack of transparency if what they were doing was actually working. But it isn’t. The system is still in crisis and it’s not getting any better.

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