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Month: July 2011

Frankenstein’s monster loves tea

Frankenstein’s monster loves tea

by digby

Regrets or kabuki?

“We believe it is vitally important for the U.S. government to make good on its financial obligations and to put its fiscal house in order,” wrote the Chamber of Commerce in a letter signed by nearly 500 American CEOs that was sent to the White House and all Capitol Hill offices. “Now is the time for our political leaders to put aside partisan differences and act in the nation’s best interests. We believe our nation’s economic future is reliant upon their actions and urge them to reach an agreement.”The high-profile signers included Tom Donahue, the influential chairman of the Chamber of Commerce; Robert Koch, CEO of Koch Enterprises; and James Gorman, president of Morgan Stanley.

Notice Robert Koch’s name there.

I don’t know if they are sincerely worried about the tea drinking monster they’ve created or it they are just playing their designated role. But if it’s the former, they have only themselves to blame for forgetting to tell the Tea party that it was all a game.

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Kicking the Grand Bargain down the road

Kicking the Grand Bargain down the road

by digby

Wouldn’t it just be something if after all this sturm und drang, the Republicans ended up agreeing to massive cuts in government after all? I for one will be shocked, shocked I tell you.

Even as President Obama and congressional leaders focus on a fallback plan to lift the nation’s debt ceiling, top Democrats and Republicans have begun to map a new way to craft the same sort of ambitious deficit-cutting plan they abandoned last week.

As part of the deal being discussed to raise the debt ceiling, leaders on Capitol Hill are forming an especially powerful congressional committee that would be charged with drawing up a new “grand bargain,” possibly by the end of the year.

Key elements for a big deal remain in place. Obama has been clear that he wants one and has started making the case to skeptical factions of his own party that getting the nation’s fiscal house in order is in their best interest. House Speaker John A. Boehner (R-Ohio) also remains committed to an ambitious plan, having told his troops that he didn’t become speaker to do small things. And, perhaps most critically, the markets are demanding it. The credit rating agency Standard & Poor’s says Washington must agree to reduce the debt by $4 trillion over 10 years to avert a downgrade.
[…]
But hopes for a grand resolution in coming months face the same question that hangs over the current crisis: whether tea-party-aligned conservatives in Congress who forced the debt-ceiling showdown will provide the necessary votes for an eventual major deal, even if it includes new taxes…

House Majority Leader Eric Cantor (R-Va.), who has emerged as the leader of this contingent, has argued against such a deal. But his views may be shifting along with those of some rank-and-file House Republicans whose imaginations have been captivated by the idea of slicing as much as $5 trillion out of the federal budget over the next decade.

You don’t say. And the most exciting thing about it will be that we can keep this argument going for many more months, which is so exciting. (Certainly the silly liberals will be kept distracted trying desperately to hang on to the last shreds of the safety net, so that’s good.)

Who knows whether this will go anywhere. And if it results in a clean debt ceiling vote, I guess we live to fight another day. But it does appear that we have a new starting point for bipartisan agreement: four trillion dollars in deficit reduction over the next ten years. That’s what President Obama proposed in his budget, although he spread it out over 12. Paul Ryan asked for 6.5. I think we’re seeing the outlines for an awesome “compromise.”

And the good news is that just as soon as we all this cutting out of the way we’ll be able to start on the progressive agenda. President Obama:

“If you care about making investments in our kids and making investments in our infrastructure and making investments in basic research,” he said, “then you should want our fiscal house in order so that every time we propose a new initiative somebody doesn’t just throw up their hands and say, ‘Ah, more big spending, more government.’ ”

Absolutely. I’m sure once we all agree that government is too bloated with all the current useless programs and ruthlessly cut or end them, “somebody” will be eager to sign on to “more big spending, more government.” Because they’re very fair-minded that way.

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Saturday Night At The Movies — In search of the lost chord

Saturday Night At The Movies

In search of the lost chord

By Dennis Hartley


















Tuner sandwich: Pianomania

“It looks like you’re just poking around in there,” observes a young woman. “Yes,” replies Stefan Knupfer, with a shrug and a laugh, “…that’s exactly what I’m doing.” On one level, he is in fact just “poking around” the innards of an immense concert grand piano. However, as we come to learn from watching Pianomania, a new documentary from Robert Cibis and Lilian Franck, Herr Knupfer is being somewhat modest. He is actually engaging in a much more complex and esoteric endeavor: the art of piano tuning.

Cibis and Franck offer up a “year of the life” portrait of the affable Austrian piano technician, tagging along as he dashes around Europe in a company van (doggie in tow) to service Steinways for a bevy of world-class performers (including Pierre-Laurent Aimard, Lang Lang, Alfred Brendel and Richard Hyung-Ki Joo). I admit that I had doubts going in regarding the subject matter (“That note sounds flat-can he tweak it to A-440 in time for the big concert? I’m on the edge of my seat!”). However, as it turns out, this pursuit of tonal perfection holds the dramatic elements of a classic “quest” narrative.

The central Homeric challenge for Knupfer centers on preparation of two pianos (beginning nearly a year in advance) which will be used by Aimard for a recorded performance of Bach’s “The Art of Fugue”. The fastidious Aimard isn’t asking for much…only that Knupfer adjust his instruments in such a way that affords him the option to call up the tonality of a clavichord, an organ and a harpsichord at will. The two artists (for the film bears out that the tuner is just as much an ‘artist’ as the performer) ensconce themselves onto the stage of Vienna’s Konzerthaus and set to work like a pair of mad scientists sweating over a formula. Nothing fazes the ever-cheerful Knupfer-with the exception of a horrifying realization that a set of replacement hammerheads are off-size by 0.7 millimeter (prompting an uncharacteristic cry of “Shist!” from our intrepid hero). Knupfer is so empathetic with his client’s vision that when the performer makes a nebulous request like “less air!” he knows exactly what Aimard means (even if we don’t).

Knupfer’s infectious enthusiasm for his gig is a documentarian’s dream; especially when the camera is there for his frequent moments of creative inspiration. While helping Richard Hyung-Ki Joo and violinist Aleksey Igudesma brainstorm visual gags for one of their comedic performances, he comes up with an idea to replace a piano leg with a cheap yet still fully functional violin (in a very funny scene, Knupfer calls an instrument dealer and says he is looking for a violin that costs “like five Euros or something”, to which the dealer instinctively responds, “Do you want to smash it?”) Even the more serious work that he does inside the music box greatly benefits from his ability to constantly think outside the box, as it were (like bouncing tennis balls to temper the strings, for example).

I’m not a keyboard player, or frankly much of a classical piano fan (more of a guitar guy) yet I still found this film to be quite absorbing, entertaining and even revelatory. As the credits rolled, I realized that I previously had no clue as to what a piano tuner really does; like a lot of folks I’ve always assumed it to be more on the technical, rather than creative side of the music biz. I can relate to Knupfer’s obsessive attention to nuance; I’ve been known to “zone out” for two or three hours at a time “poking around” with pedal settings and amp adjustments in search of the “perfect” guitar tone. Some viewers may cry foul over the fact that the filmmakers seem to have made a conscious decision not to reveal too much about Knupfer’s personal life. However, the pursuit of excellence and perfection in any field is an admirable endeavor, and I think at the end of the day that’s really what the film is all about. Because sometimes, it not the music-it’s how you play it.

Previous posts with related themes:

It Might Get Loud

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Funny Foxies

Funny Foxies

by digby

For some reason, the public, the media, keep going over this, again, and again, and again” the guest said. “It’s too much,” he added, “We should move on.” Doocy agreed…

“We know it’s a hacking scandal, shouldn’t we get beyond it and deal with the issue of hacking? We have a serious hacking problem in this country.”

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misty water-colored memories: of bare cupboards and demagogues

Of bare cupboards and demagogues

by digby

Here’s a little trip down memory lane. It’s six and a half years ago:

QUESTION: You’ve made Social Security reform the top of your domestic agenda for a second term. You’ve been talking extensively about the benefits of private accounts. But by most estimations, private accounts may leave something for young workers at the end, but wouldn’t do much to solve the overall financial problem with Social Security.

And I’m just wondering, as you’re promoting these private accounts, why aren’t you talking about some of the tough measures that may have to be taken to preserve the solvency of Social Security, such as increasing the retirement age, cutting benefits or means testing for Social Security?

I don’t think I have to note the Villager assumptions there, do I?

BUSH: I appreciate that question.

First of all, let me put the Social Security issue in proper perspective. It is a very important issue. But it’s not the only issue — very important issue we’ll be dealing with.

I expect the Congress to bring forth meaningful tort reform. I want the legal system reformed in such a way that we’re competitive in the world.

I’ll be talking about the budget, of course. There’s a lot of concern in the financial markets about our deficit, short-term and long-term deficits. The long-term deficit, of course, is caused by some of the entitlement programs — the unfunded liabilities inherent in our entitlement programs.

I will continue to push on an education agenda. There is no doubt in my mind that the No Child Left Behind Act is meaningful, real reform that is having real results. And I look forward to strengthening No Child Left Behind.

Immigration reform is a very important agenda item as we move forward.

But Social Security, as well, is a big item. And I campaigned on it, as you’re painfully aware, since you had to suffer through many of my speeches. I didn’t duck the issue like others have done in the past. I said, “This is a vital issue and we need to work together to solve it.”

Now, the temptation is going to be, by well-meaning people such as yourself and others here, as we run up to the issue, to get me to negotiate with myself in public. To say, you know, “What’s this mean, Mr. President? What’s that mean?”

I’m not going to do that. I don’t get to write the law.

I’ll propose a solution at the appropriate time.

But the law will be written in the halls of Congress. And I will negotiate with them, with the members of Congress. And they will want me to start playing my hand. “Will you accept this? Will you not accept that? Why don’t you do this hard thing? Why don’t you do that?”

I fully recognize this is going to be a decision that requires difficult choices. Inherent in your question is do I recognize that? You bet I do. Otherwise it would have been done.

And so, I just want to try to condition you. I’m not doing a very good job, because the other day in the Oval, when the press pool came in, I was asked about this — the — a series of questions — a question on Social Security with these different aspects to it. And I said, “I’m not going to negotiate with myself. And I will negotiate at the appropriate time with the law writers.”

And so, thank you for trying.

The principles I laid out in the course of the campaign, and the principles we laid out at the recent economic summit are still the principles I believe in. And that is: nothing will change for those near or on Social Security, payroll tax — I believe you’re the one who asked me about the payroll taxes, if I’m not mistaken — will not go up.

The — and I know there’s a big definition about what that means.

Well, again, I will repeat, don’t bother to ask me.

Oh, you can ask me, I can’t tell you what to ask. It’s not the holiday spirit.

(LAUGHTER)

It is all part of trying to get me to set the parameters, you know, apart from the Congress, which is not a good way to get substantive reform done.

As to personal accounts, it is a judgment essential to make the system viable in the out-years to allow younger workers to earn an interest rate more significant than that which is being earned with their own money now inside the Social Security trust.

But the first step in this process is for members of Congress to realize we have a problem. And so for a while, I think it’s important for me to continue to work with members of both parties to explain the problem. Because if people don’t think there’s a problem, we can, you know, talk about this issue until we’re blue in the face and nothing will get done.

And there is a problem. There is a problem because now it requires three workers per retiree to keep Social Security promises. In 2040 it will require two workers per employee to meet the promises. And when the system was set up and designed I think it was like 15 or more workers per employee.

That is a problem. The system goes into the red.

In other words, there’s more money going out than coming in in 2018. There is an unfunded liability of $11 trillion.

And I understand how this works. You know, many times legislative bodies will not react unless the crisis is apparent, crisis is upon them. I believe the crisis is. And so, for a period of time, we’re going to have to explain to members of Congress the crisis is here.

It’s a lot less painful to act now than if we wait.

Deja vu vu?

And yes, it does make me appreciate the fact that Barack Obama doesn’t speak in tongues as Bush did,(good God!!) but quite a few of the arguments Bush tries to burble out sound painfully similar. Privatization is off the table, but that’s only because that’s the argument they trot out when the economy is doing well. (Clinton was open to it, you’ll recall.) “Sacrifice” is the mantra they all use when the economy’s in the ditch. Other than that, we’re dealing with the same assumptions the Republicans have asserted for as long as I can remember.

Here’s a speech that was given 47 years ago:

Yet anytime you and I question the schemes of the do-gooders, we are denounced as being against their humanitarian goals. They say we are always “against” things, never “for” anything. Well, the trouble with our liberal friends is not that they are ignorant, but that they know so much that isn’t so. We are for a provision that destitution should not follow unemployment by reason of old age, and to that end we have accepted Social Security as a step toward meeting the problem.

But we are against those entrusted with this program when they practice deception regarding its fiscal shortcomings, when they charge that any criticism of the program means that we want to end payments to those who depend on them for livelihood. They have called it insurance to us in a hundred million pieces of literature. But then they appeared before the Supreme Court and they testified that it was a welfare program. They only use the term “insurance” to sell it to the people. And they said Social Security dues are a tax for the general use of the government, and the government has used that tax. There is no fund, because Robert Byers, the actuarial head, appeared before a congressional committee and admitted that Social Security as of this moment is $298 billion in the hole. But he said there should be no cause for worry because as long as they have the power to tax, they could always take away from the people whatever they needed to bail them out of trouble! And they are doing just that.

A young man, 21 years of age, working at an average salary…his Social Security contribution would, in the open market, buy him an insurance policy that would guarantee $220* a month at age 65. The government promises $127*. He could live it up until he is 31 and then take out a policy that would pay more than Social Security. Now, are we so lacking in business sense that we can’t put this program on a sound basis so that people who do require those payments will find that they can get them when they are due…that the cupboard isn’t bare?

yeah, that cupboards always going bare.

Speaking of which, here’s Gaius Publius at Americablog with another trip down memory lane:

Credit A Tiny Revolution for this great find. Larry Summers profiled and quoted in a January 2009 (hmm, what was happening around that time?) article in Time magazine titled “Can Larry Summers Save the Economy?” The key graph, safety net–wise (clearly my emphasis):

And then, perhaps as early as March, they’ll launch their biggest lift with the beginnings of a plan to reform Social Security and Medicare, the two entitlement programs that, even before the economy collapsed, were threatening the Treasury with bankruptcy. By any standard, it is a massive three-month agenda fraught with political risk. The key to getting it all done, Summers says, is entering into a “compact” with the country “that this isn’t just government as usual throwing money at things.” When Obama unveils his annual budget in late February or March, Summers promises that the President “is going to describe the kinds of approaches he wants to take to the entitlement problems that have been ignored for a long time.” Some options might include delaying retirement, stretching benefits and lifting the cap on taxable earnings. Could one of these prevail? “Remains to be seen,” Summers says.

The real difference between the days of Reagan and Goldwater demagoguery and today is that the Democrats used to scoff at them.

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Systemic degradation

Systemic degradation

by digby

Many people’s alarm bells went off when Murdoch bought Dow Jones and the Wall Street Journal. You had to be skeptical that he wouldn’t degrade the paper (the reporting anyway, the editorial page had long been a cesspool.)But I wondered how the world would fare when one of its most important sources of financial news became corrupted by a player with both a political and financial interest in slanting the news. Joe Nocera has a good column today about what happened:

Along with the transformation of a great paper into a mediocre one came a change that was both more subtle and more insidious. The political articles grew more and more slanted toward the Republican party line. The Journal sometimes took to using the word “Democrat” as an adjective instead of a noun, a usage favored by the right wing. In her book, “War at The Wall Street Journal,” Sarah Ellison recounts how editors inserted the phrase “assault on business” in an article about corporate taxes under President Obama. The Journal was turned into a propaganda vehicle for its owner’s conservative views. That’s half the definition of Fox-ification.

The other half is that Murdoch’s media outlets must shill for his business interests. With the News of the World scandal, The Journal has now shown itself willing to do that, too.

I think this may be the best sign yet of just how crippled our institutions have become. If there is one group in the world who should demand unadulterated facts and data it is the financial community. Sure, they’ll play it to their advantage, and care not a whit about how it affects our democracy. That’s not their job (although it is their duty as citizens.) But they simply cannot function properly if their information is tainted.

On the other hand, the system will work fine for a while if they all buy into the same delusions. (See: Enron, CDS’s) But at some point, reality bites and then the whole thing falls apart. I guess that fully illuminates the logic of Too Big To Fail, doesn’t it?

Update: This piece by Carl Bernstein on the Murdoch scandal is also worth reading.

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e Coli Conservatism Part XX

e Coli Conservatism Part XX

by digby

Just in case you thought this Shock Doctrine assault on government was confined to economics, women’s rights and anti-unionization, think again:

The Sierra Club has long had activists in Washington, DC, working to enact laws and policies that will protect our air, land, and water. So while I had been thinking that the Republicans (and some Democrats) in the House of Representatives seemed particularly aggressive about attacking the Environmental Protection Agency and other agencies and policies to repeal environmental laws, this quote from a colleague from one of those long-time activists cemented it:

“This is by far the most concerted, aggressive attack on public health and environmental protections since Congress enacted modern environmental laws in the 1970s.”

While battles are being waged over the Endangered Species Act, wild lands policies, the Clean Air Act and more, I’m taking this column to focus on this week’s assault on the Clean Water Act.

It would appear that these people truly believe that life will be better if your assurance of clean drinking water is in the hands of profit making companies. It would be comforting to think they believe that these companies will do a good job because otherwise they’ll kill a lot of people and that would be immoral. But that’s not it. Or perhaps they think they would do a good job because of the threat of lawsuits. Well, of course not. They want to get rid of those too.

No, the reasoning is that competition will make them do a good job. You see, if a person gets sick from their water they’ll be “free” to take their water cleaning business to another company. The fear of losing business will be enough to ensure your that your water isn’t riddled with cholera.

Oh, and among those who are behind this are agri-business and coal who are terribly inconvenienced by the requirement that they keep their poisons out of our drinking water.

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Bizarroworld economics

Bizarroworld economics

by digby

So I’m reading this James Pethokoukis blog post at Reuters about Goldman Sachs’ grim new outlook on unemployment. This is the wrap up:

Goldman Sachs doesn’t have to tell you things are bad. I don’t have to tell you things are bad. Everybody knows things are bad. Unemployment is at 9.2 percent (11.4 percent if the official labor force hadn’t collapsed since 2008 and 16.2 percent if you include discouraged and underemployed workers.) Moreover, the economy grew at just 1.9 percent in the first quarter of this year and may have grown less than 2 percent in the second. Wages and income are going nowhere fast.

So what’s the recommendation?

When will the White House signal a change of economic direction? Will cutting tax rates and regulation ever make it on the agenda? That may be the only way Obama can win another term. And time is running short.

He’s also for slashing spending, but the real answer to our prayers is tax cuts. Seriously.

Here’s Krugman discussing the same Goldman Sachs analysis (along with some other data):

… terrible growth prospects; low inflation; oh, and low interest rates, with no sign of the bond vigilantes. Ordinary macroeconomic analysis tells you very clearly what we should be doing: fiscal expansion and monetary expansion by any means we can manage; in fact, the case for a higher inflation target pops right out of just about any model capable of producing the kind of mess we’re in.

And what are we talking about in policy terms? Spending cuts and an end to monetary expansion.

I know the arguments — fear of invisible bond vigilantes, fear that 70s-style stagflation is just around the corner despite the absence of any evidence to that effect. But why do such arguments have so much traction, while everything economists have spent the last three generations learning is brushed aside?

One answer is that macroeconomics is hard; the idea that if families are tightening their belts, the government should do the same, is as deeply intuitive as it is deeply wrong.

But the susceptibility of politicians — including, alas, the president — and pundits to these wrong ideas demands a deeper explanation.

Mike Konczal ratchets up my rentier argument, arguing that what we’re seeing is

a wide refocusing of the mechanisms of our society towards the crucial obsession of oligarchs: wealth and income defense.

That has to be right. It doesn’t necessarily take the form of pure cynicism; it’s more a matter of the wealthy gravitating toward views of economic policy that make immediate sense in terms of their own interests, and politicians believing that only these views count as Serious because they’re the views of wealthy people.

But the upshot is terrible: more and more, this really does look like the Lesser Depression, a prolonged era of disastrous economic performance. And it’s entirely gratuitous.

Well that’s bracing. And it perfectly illustrates the problem.

Again, this is so reminiscent of the run up to the Iraq war when quite suddenly it was a completely mainstream opinion to endorse invading a country that hadn’t attacked us — and would likely make the real threat even worse. On the left you had people saying it was insane and counter-productive and on the right you had the neo-cons saying “real men go to Iran.” In Goldilocks land that made Iraq the “serious” position.

Now we have Krugman and other voices of sanity saying that spending cuts are counterproductive and that we need stimulus and on the right we have fiscal hawks like Pethokoukis saying that the answer is to slash taxes and regulations. That makes deficit reduction the “serious” position.

Up is down, black is white.

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Catapulting the propaganda

Catapulting the propaganda

by digby

I’ll never forget my shock one day during a long drive time in our daily commuter Carmageddon, when I heard a Rush Limbaugh caller say that he supported tax cuts for millionaires because it meant that his boss might give him a raise someday. Some people just love being wage slaves, I guess.

Here’s Mitt Romney saying, don’t worry your pretty little heads about jobs. If corporations get a tax cut it will fix everything:

QUESTIONER: We obviously need cuts to the budget…but many of the recipients of those programs are Americans whose jobs have gone places where labor is cheap. So corporate profits remain high and in some cases higher than ever. Is it fair to ask those Americans to shoulder reductions in favor of businesses and corporations who have sent those jobs overseas?

ROMNEY: […] We need to make ourselves the most attractive place in the world for entrepreneurs and pioneers and businesses, just like it was when the Founders created this country. How do you do that? One,you make sure our employer tax rates aren’t the highest in the world. Right now they’re tied with Japan as the highest in the world. They’re about 10 points higher than the corporate tax rates in many of the countries in Europe.

Yeah, that’s the problem:

Unfortunately, there seems to be a Village consensus that rates must come down. But they are throwing in the fatuous notion that if we close all the loopholes in exchange for that the corporations won’t notice that they are actually paying more in taxes. (Or, more likely, that nobody else will notice that they are paying much less.) And then everything will be perfect.

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Worm turning

Worm turning

by digby

Looks like Rupert Murdoch’s cleaning house. Will it keep it from burning down?

Les Hinton, the chief executive of Dow Jones & Co., has resigned, becoming the latest News Corp. executive casualty in the phone-hacking and bribery scandal in Britain.

Hinton served as executive chairman of the British unit that oversaw News Corp.’s U.K. tabloid newspapers at the heart of the scandal for 12 years. A member of the board of The Associated Press, Hinton became head of Dow Jones in December 2007.

Hinton’s resignation Friday comes on the same day that News International chief executive Rebekah Brooks quit, following the phone hacking scandal that has rocked Rupert Murdoch’s news empire.

Hinton said in a statement that he was “ignorant of what apparently happened” but felt it was proper to resign. He apologized for the hurt caused by the actions of journalists who worked for the now-shuttered tabloid, News of the World.

I like that: “hurt caused by journalists who worked for News of the World.” I guess they’re going with the Sgt. Shultz “I know nothing” defense.

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