Skip to content

Month: October 2011

Death with Dignity by David Atkins

Death with Dignity
by David Atkins (“thereisnospoon”)

A friend sent along this deeply touching blog post by the husband of a woman with brain cancer who chose the time and manner of her own death. After losing control of one side of her body due to the terminal illness, she was allowed to take control of her own destiny in a painless fashion surrounded by family, friends and relatives because of Washington’s Death with Dignity law. In most other states across America, she would have been forced to linger increasingly painfully and helplessly without recourse despite her wishes.

Vermont and Massachusetts are working on their own versions of this law as well, and I am pushing legislators in California to get the ball rolling again on this as well.

The principle involved here is that people with terminal illnesses should be able to choose the time and place of their passing. They shouldn’t be forced to allow their illness choose it for them. Obviously, safeguards need to be put in place to prevent the terminally ill from being pushed into the decision. But those safeguards are written into any decent version of the law.

With the graying of the U.S. population, this is increasingly a major issue of social justice. The wealthy, as they do now, will have personal physicians who will “accidentally” allow their patients to administer morphine overdoses. But the poor will be forced to suffer needlessly. Nobody should be forced to extend their life wracked with pain because the State told them it was illegal to do otherwise.

Despite my young age, this is an important subject for me. I am very goal-oriented in my own life, and I don’t take well to incapacitation through illness or otherwise. I don’t drink alcohol or do drugs not because of moral concerns, but because I don’t like not being in control of my mental faculties. My priorities in life are 1) to make the world a better place; 2) to take care of my family and friends; 3) to see and experience as much of the world as possible during my brief stay on the planet; and 4) to do it all with as much autonomy as I can.

If I’m lucky enough to live a long life and die from a slow illness such as cancer, I would hope to be able to be in control of that process. If I’m mentally incapacitated, it will be difficult for me to help make the world a better place; my family and friends would be taking care of me, rather than the reverse; I wouldn’t be able to see or experience much while laid out in bed; and the illness itself will have removed much of my autonomy. A few more debilitating and painful weeks or months of life will not be valuable to me. What will be valuable is the ability to say goodbye to my family and my friends in a dignified and compassionate way as I prepare to take that final journey toward a destination unknown.

The idea that so-called “freedom-loving” conservatives would take that freedom from me is infuriating, and part of the struggle to which I have devoted my life includes stopping them from forcing their misguided authoritarian priorities on the rest of society.

.

Managing the #OTBR crisis

Managing the #OTBR “crisis”by digbyAccording to a trade publication called Corporate Secretary, it’s time for the banks to do a little crisis management of Occupy the Boardroom:

As the Occupy Wall Street (OWS) protesters are hitting the streets worldwide, another movement is quietly unfolding online: OccupyTheBoardroom.org (OTB).The new coalition surfaced on Saturday with the intention of delivering the messages of those who were hurt by the recession to the CEOs of top financial institutions such as Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley and Wells Fargo. There are currently over 200 CEOs listed on the website, including Lloyd Blankfein, chief executive of Goldman Sachs,Vikram Pandit, CEO of Citigroup, and Mukesh Ambani, a Bank of America board member.[…]
The anger, frustration and collective voice is too large to ignore,’ saysFay Feeney, a corporate board consultant who provides board chairs with advice on ways to improve boardroom performance. ‘This [OTB website] is personal and targeted to what you earn (along with power and influence) [and] banks are among the first businesses to be called out, occupied and disrupted.’

As the OWS protests continues to morph into a massive movement, Feeney suggests that board members and corporate counsels prepare themselves for a bumpy ride by future-proofing their companies:

i. Get your crisis communication plan ready – protect your reputation and brandii. Get OWS on your risk map and board agenda. Evaluate the business opportunity and assess the impact on your business strategy, competitors, clients, employees and on your CEO and directors.iii. Take action now! It is not too early to begin counteracting the impact this movement could have on your business.iv. Listen: By using social media, you can begin to gather business intelligence specific to your business.

Protests can spin out of control, and with real time data processing from Twitter, Facebook and other social networking sites, getting a message across is now faster than ever. Governance professionals, board chairs and CEOs should always remain one step ahead in protecting their boardroom, Feeney says.

Oh they should. They definitely should.

If you’ve a mind to share your advice on how to handle the “crisis” you can click here to have it sent to the institution of your choice.

.

Religious Services

Religious Services

by digby

This takes some real chutzpah:

Cuomo said his opposition was a principled one, similar to his father Mario’s unwillingness to go along with the death penalty, a policy deeply rooted in the elder Cuomo’s Catholic faith.

“My father was governor of this state. He was against the death penalty. Everyone in the state wanted the death penalty — everyone. It was near 80 percent. And he was the governor of the state and he said he wasn’t going to sign it. Every year — go back and talk to some of the people who know the history — every year we had to scramble and make sure there wasn’t an override of the veto.
(snip)

“The point is, we don’t elect — the governor isn’t a big poll taking machine. And that’s what we do, we take a poll and do whatever the poll says and you wouldn’t need me … so the fact that everyone wants it, that doesn’t mean all that much. I respect the people, their opinion matters, but I’m not going to go back and forth with the political winds.”

A tax on those making $250,000 and more will expire at the end of this year. Cuomo disputed the idea that this is essentially a tax break for those earners.

Just in case anyone disputes the idea that protecting the wealthy is a religious commitment of certain politicians, think again. This man just compared a principled opposition to the death penalty to opposing taxes for the wealthiest among us.

Is Cuomo a lapsed Catholic who’s taken up Randian philosophy? She thought taxing the rich was immoral too.

Meanwhile:

New York’s surcharge was introduced in 2009 as a three-year emergency measure. The law raised the top personal income tax rate on New Yorkers making more than $200,000 a year by one percentage point to 7.85 per cent, while those making more than $500,000 saw their top tax rate go up 2.1 percentage points to 8.97 per cent.

Over the three years the law has been in place, it has generated $13.8bn in revenue, according to the state’s budget estimate.

Andrew Cuomo, governor, opposed renewing the measure. New York’s legislature passed a budget in April that cut spending by almost $10bn without raising new taxes or extending the surcharge. That means the top tax rates for all incomes more than $200,000 will reset to 6.85 per cent, the same rate for those making more than $20,000 a year.

Advocates of the surcharge argue that the additional revenue it raises is necessary to offset the cuts the state has made to close its budget gap. Next year’s deficit is estimated at $2.5bn.

“Some of that $5bn you would get if you extended the tax would significantly moderate further cuts in the budget and would allow some restoration of past cuts or make resources available for job creation investments and infrastructure,” said James Parrott, chief economist of the Fiscal Policy Institute.

Kathryn Wylde, president of the Partnership for New York City, a business advocacy group, countered that the revenue raised from such surcharges was not enough to solve the structural budget deficits facing state and local governments.

“It might numb the pain temporarily but that might be another reason for the politicians to kick the can down the road,” she said. “It won’t solve the fiscal problem the state faces and is liable to exacerbate it because people, even in that income category, feel very uncertain about their own future.”

Right. What the peasants need is a little “shock therapy.” There’s no use putting off the pain, rip that scab right off! There’s little to be gained by gettig desperate people through another year in the vain hope that the economy might improve and they might get some jobs. Sure, the state may be in debt and the only people in the whole country who are making any gains are the top 1%, many of whom live in NYC, but that’s no reason to expect them to kick in to solve the state’s budget crisis:

Income inequality – a core theme of the Occupy Wall Street movement – is higher in New York than any other major US city, with the top 1 per cent earning 44 per cent of total income in 2007, compared with 23.5 per cent nationally.

That had fuelled public anger, said Mr Parrott. “It’s clear that the concentration of income has translated into political power. People are seeing that and reacting to that,” he added.

“People” like Kathryn Wylde?

The NYT reports that the White House and the NY Fed are pressuring NYS Attorney General Eric T. Schneiderman.

Given the sadly misguided history of both the Obama administration and the NY Fed (led by the President Tim Geithneir, now Treasury Secretary) when it comes to Bailouts, this is not a huge surprise.

But what is surprising is the utterly inappropriate behavior of Kathryn S. Wylde. She is not only a member of the board of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, but occupies the seat supposedly reserved for the representing the public.

If the Times report is accurate, and the quote below represents Ms. Wylde’s comments, than that position is a laughable mockery, and Ms. Wylde should resign effective immediately.

The quote in question, which was reported to have occurred at Governor Hugh Carey’s funeral (!?!) was as follows:

“It is of concern to the industry that instead of trying to facilitate resolving these issues, you seem to be throwing a wrench into it. Wall Street is our Main Street — love ’em or hate ’em. They are important and we have to make sure we are doing everything we can to support them unless they are doing something indefensible.”

I do not know if Ms. Wylde understands what her proper role should be, but clearly she is somewhat confused. She appears to be far more interested in representing the banks than the public.

That seems to be a very popular religion among many of New York’s elites. It’s a barbaric creed, however. It appears to demand human sacrifice to appease millionaires.

.

Movement jokes

Movement Jokes

by digby

I wonder if it would be possible for Jon Stewart not to concern troll about dirty hippies allegedly defecating on police cars on his show?

“Of course it hasn’t been all good news for the movement. For all their popularity, for all the participants with thoughtful critiques of our power structure, there’s also this: A guy taking a shit [bleeped] on a police car.

“You know what? Guy shitting [bleeped] on a police car? Meet me at camera three.

“NO! NO! BAD! [mimes spraying with water bottle, whacking with rolled up newspaper] NO! NAUGHTY! NAUGHTY!

” ‘Cause here’s the problem. Unfortunately, protests are often as much about optics as they are about substance. And you do not want this [photoshopped photo of Chinese democracy protester shitting on row of tanks] to be your Tiananmen Square. You have tapped into a real injustice that people feel about the global financial markets. Nothing can derail your movement faster than someone who is unable to derail their movements.”

Does Jon Stewart think that this was a planned act by the protesters? Does he believe that this is a common mode of OWS protest? If not, and it was a single, random act of social anarchy by this middle aged man (whom the photographer assumes was a protester) doing an act of extreme civil disobedience, what does he think the occupiers should have done about it?

I get that this is mostly just the typically silly potty joke that kids of all ages seem to love and wouldn’t normally even comment on it. But the reason it is becoming an iconic image is because it falls neatly into a long standing tactic of dehumanizing protesters with charges of uncontrolled animalistic behavior. I’m sure Stewart isn’t trying to do that. But it would be nice if he had a little bit more consciousness of how he is helping to spread that word by implying that the protesters are sanctioning this and have some authority to put a stop to it.

Nobody knows the motives of this man who did this thing. It could have been a radical political act or it could have been the act of someone with loose screws who’s just hanging around the protest area. But to impute that act to Occupy Wall Street is cheap, even if it’s in service of a cheap joke.

Not that it matters, really. This is already an iconic image of the protests among the wing nuts, passed along with the same sick prurient glee that the neighbors had when they passed that little book of civil rights protesters alleged beastly behavior to my parents in the deep south in 1964. I guess that stuff never gets old.

.

Hey, a bit of good news

Hey, a bit of good news

by digby

Police used excessive force when they fired Tasers at a pregnant woman in Seattle and a victim of domestic abuse in Maui, a federal appeals court ruled Monday in a case that could influence how police handle those resisting arrest across the West.

The ruling by the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals, sitting in a full 11-judge forum used to decide important questions of law, could prompt police forces to reexamine their rules and practices for the temporarily debilitating stun guns.

In the Seattle case, a seven-months pregnant Malaika Brooks was driving her son to school when she was stopped by police, ticketed for driving 12 miles over the 20-mph speed limit and blasted with a stun gun three times after refusing to sign the citation.

Two years later and thousands of miles away in Maui, Jayzel Mattos was trying to defuse a brewing clash between her drunk husband and four police officers called to a domestic disturbance when one of the officers suddenly dropped her to the floor with two jolts from his Taser, which was set in dart mode.

The federal appeals court ruled that in both instances, police used excessive force and that their actions violated the Constitution’s protection from unreasonable force.

[…]

Barry McDonald, a constitutional law professor at Pepperdine University, said the 9th Circuit ruling wouldn’t be unduly restrictive for law enforcement because the circumstances in the two cases it reviewed were unusual and unlikely to be relevant in most instances when police decide to use stun guns.

“They took some pretty sympathetic factual scenarios to establish this law,” said Laurie Levenson, a criminal law professor at Loyola Law School, noting Brooks’ advanced pregnancy and the allegedly unprovoked stunning of Mattos.

The ruling should encourage police to better assess the threat level they confront and the severity of the offense for which a citizen is resisting arrest, said Levenson, describing the decision as “certainly not a case where the court says police can’t use Tasers.”

I don’t think Levinson has been following this issue very closely. There are legions of cases in which the “stunning” is completely unprovoked.

This will just apply across the west, but it’s a start.

.

The limitations of the nation-state by David Atkins

The limitations of the nation-state
by David Atkins (“thereisnospoon”)

The most popular article on the Washington Post website at the moment of this writing is a depressingly poorly written bit of fluff on the Occupy movement by Anne Applebaum. The article, entitled What the Occupy Protests Tell Us About the Limits of Democracy, is so full of holes that a point-by-point rebuttal of all its false assumptions is scarcely worth the time.

But the kernel of truth Ms. Applebaum was trying to get at is an issue that is an increasingly troubling and complicated part of the political landscape. The reality is that the nation-state as an institution is increasingly limited in its ability to resolve problems that are truly global in scale. Obviously, national policies can still have considerable effect, and national politicians–contra Ms. Applebaum’s thesis–do have significant power to tame international problems and render life better for their citizens. Even so, a few examples of the problems facing nation-states are readily apparent:

1) Global Finance. Part of the reason that financial regulation isn’t as simple as putting Glass-Steagall back in place is that Goldman Sachs and Citigroup are global congolomerates now. A new Glass-Steagall would stop their American divisions from playing casino games with their banking operations, but not their foreign divisions without such rules. Keep in mind that German banks were a big buyer on on the long side of the credit default swap market. And conservatives are sadly right that any moves to ban high-frequency trades in the U.S. wouldn’t prevent those trades from being made, but would simply push those trades off Wall St. and into London or any other exchange that allowed them, with concomitant benefits for financial sectors abroad at the expense of the domestic financial sector.

The international financial elite wrecked the entire world’s economy, and the effect of that destruction are still rocking the globe from America to Europe to China. Each nation can and should attempt to regulate their financial sectors, but ultimately the big banks will play nations off of one another in a race to the regulatory bottom unless some sort of supra-national architecture is established to regulate them.

2) Climate Change. The impossibility of nation-states alone to deal effectively with climate change is evidenced at nearly every turn. Attempts to create global protocols for dealing with the issue in a serious way are regularly scuttled by intra-national gamesmanship, as each nation plays a game of chicken with the others to make the first commitment. China and the U.S., meanwhile, show little in the way of willingness to deal with their massive emissions. Nowhere is the dark comedy of national vs. international climate change regulation more evident than in the airline emission regulatory scuffle between the U.S. and Canada on one side, and the E.U. on the other. To make a long story short, the E.U. wants American and Canadian airlines that travel to E.U. nations to abide by its emissions regulations. Washington and Ottawa claim that the regulations should only apply to air miles traveled directly over the E.U. nations–which would make sense if the issue were regular pollution. But carbon emissions are international pollutants. It doesn’t matter if carbon produced by an American Airlines jet is emitted in Cleveland, over the Atlantic, or in Madrid. It contributes to climate change just the same in any case. And yet nation-states are playing semantic games with one another as the world burns.

3) Terrorism and WMD proliferation. Both the Bush and Obama Administrations have been plagued with difficult choices concerning what to do about international terrorism. In a world where a loosely affiliated group of individuals not wearing a nation-state’s uniform can be capable of massive destruction, traditional rules of engagement and policing must change with the times. Terrorism does not always or even usually rise to the level of a military problem, but it is also a significantly greater problem than a simple national law enforcement issue. It’s an in-between zone. The Bush and Obama Administrations have reacted by simply declaring a global war on terrorism that largely ignores national boundaries–or even, as with the recent case of Al-Awlaki, national citizenship. As a matter of legal precedent, the assassination of Al-Awlaki is terrifying in that we’ve essentially given carte blanche to the President of the United States to murder American citizens at will. But from a practical standpoint, it’s hard to argue that Anwar Al-Awlaki was acting as a citizen of any particular country, any more than one can argue that Mr. Obama was acting as the “American” president. Mr. Al-Awlaki was affiliated with a global terrorist movement, and Mr. Obama acted as head of an international military organization with an undeclared yet official war against that terrorist movement. The identity of each man as “American” is almost–and terrifyingly–quaint in this context.

In the absence of coherent international regulations and protocols for dealing proactively with terrorism and WMD proliferation, American presidents have now taken it upon themselves to act instead. Those actions have often been greedy, rash, bloodthirsty and ultimately counterproductive, but they have been enabled by a vacuum of international power to deal with a legitimately significant global problem that lies outside the power of any individual nation-state to deal with effectively, even linked by treaties.

4) Global labor arbitrage. It’s a traditional refrain among progressive politicians that American jobs are being outsourced to India and China. It’s become a national joke in the U.S. that technical support calls are now answered by people in India. But now the outsourcing plague has hit India because of high wages. Yes, that’s right: India is increasingly seen as too expensive a country to do call center business in, so Indian call centers are themselves outsourcing to Malaysia and the Philippines. The power of multinational corporations to place global downward pressure on wages by shifting operations sequentially to next cheapest labor pool is an international problem by definition. No one nation can solve it without those same corporations taking punitive action by stripping jobs from that nation. The international community is left either with acquiescence to the phenomenon, or some sort of international regulatory framework to deal with it.

There are no easy answers to any of these issues. But it’s time the world’s citizens realized the truth: our planet is economically dominated by organizations with global reach, largely run by a new global elite. The Bilderberg conspiracy theorists have predicated much of their beliefs on the implications of this David Rockefeller quote in 1991:

“It would have been impossible for us to develop our plan for the world if we had been subjected to the lights of publicity during those years. But, the world is more sophisticated and prepared to march towards a world government. The supranational sovereignty of an intellectual elite and world bankers is surely preferable to the national autodetermination practiced in past centuries.”

To the ears of many (especially those who listen to politicians wax eloquent about their own nations), this sounds treasonous and earth-shakingly conspiratorial. But to those paying attention, this reality has been out in the open for some time now. It’s Thomas Friedman’s Golden Arches theory writ large. It doesn’t take a conspiracy theorist to know that this supranational sovereignty is an open reality.

Rockefeller was right about one thing: in the modern world, the ability of nation-states alone to tackle global challenges is limited. Tea Partiers and anti-globalization protesters alike seek a return to a simpler time when nations controlled their own destinies. But that’s not really possible anymore. Global elites, particularly in the financial sector, have stepped in to direct the world’s traffic largely for their own benefit. The question now is whether they will continue to be allowed to do so, or whether a more democratic and more transparent set of international institutions will step forward to rein them in. As young people around the world see themselves increasingly as global citizens more than citizens of their nations, hopefully many of those who are protesting the global financial elite today, will step forward to lead a movement of global citizens to tackle global problems democratically in a global way tomorrow.

.

Citigroup’s “Earnings” by David Atkins

Citigroup’s “Earnings”
by David Atkins (“thereisnospoon”)

Citigroup is apparently doing well just a few years after being bailed out not once but twice, and while continuing to benefit from no-interest loans from the government:

With a big push from a one-time accounting gain, Citigroup on Monday squeezed out its seventh consecutive quarterly profit, but it faces significant challenges to growth.

Citigroup announced a third-quarter profit of $3.8 billion, or $1.23 a share, beating analyst consensus estimates of 81 cents a share. That represented a 74 percent increase from a year ago, when the bank announced a quarterly profit of $2.2 billion, or 72 cents a share.

Or maybe not. Maybe it’s all bullshit:

But a big portion of that increase came from gains that will be difficult to repeat. Citigroup benefited from a paper gain of $1.9 billion, reflecting a sharp increase in the perceived riskiness of its debt — an accounting adjustment that gave JPMorgan Chase a similar earnings increase last week. Citigroup also delivered another $1.4 billion to its bottom line from money it had previously set aside to cover losses on credit cards and other loans. Together, those items accounted for more than 85 percent of the company’s earnings…

Excluding the accounting adjustment on its debt, revenue dropped 8 percent to $18.9 billion as the bank contended with the global economic slowdown and some of the most turbulent markets in decades. Like the rest of the banking industry, Citigroup has come under pressure from rising expenses, slim lending margins and the evaporation of many of the lucrative fees that kept its consumer businesses afloat.

Indeed, Citi shares have fallen sharply since the bank completed a reverse stock split in early May that brought its price to around $45 from $4.50. After a bit of a lift in early trading Monday, Citi shares were trading down around 1 percent to about $28.15.

New York Times commenter K. McCoy sums it up:

Thank you Dealbook for giving a few paragraphs to the smoke and mirrors going on in this report. 85% of their earnings are booked on accounting games. And unlike JPMorgan, they have the guts to play both ends at the same time. Here’s how: like JPM they book a big profit on the perceived deteriorioration of their debt ( it’s called Debt Valuation Adjustment). It’s like taking out default insurance on yourself and calling it a profit as it rises. This suggests things are looking bad for Citi. On the other hand, they release money they had set aside to cover bad mortgages. It now has 5% reserves against outstanding third-party mortgages. This suggests things are looking up for them, right? Their mortgage default risk must have declined. So good or bad they make money both ways.
Of course if you look at the core bank functions — managing deposits and allocating capital through investments you get a very very different, and much lower number.
The headline: another quarterly profit! And the bonuses will reflect that accordingly.

That about sums it up. Of course, anyone who gets upset about all of this fraud to perpetuate the lifestyles of the top 1% clearly hates capitalism and freedom.

.

Feelin’ some deja vu vu

Feelin’ some deja vu vu

by digby

I’m feeling like a Cassandra again, just as I did in 2008 when Obamamania was at its height and everyone was insisting that politics had been transformed for all time. I’m sure I’ll be just as unpopular now as I was then, but here goes:

While I love Matt Taibbi and I think this piece is right on in many ways, I hope that people involved in Occupy Wall Street don’t start to bullshit themselves into believing that there is not going to be a reaction to all this and that the reaction is likely to be powerful — and polarizing. The people in power know very well how to push the buttons that need pushing.

This is a beautiful moment full of promise. And we should do everything we can to maximize the numbers and create solidarity while the reaction is gathering its forces. But the idea that it is so transformative that the laws of politics, power and human nature don’t apply is a familiar form of self-delusion that’s frankly reminiscent of the Obama campaign … and the Tea Party. I thought we’d learned our lesson.
The likelihood of this going unanswered is virtually nil. It doesn’t mean the people can’t win. But it’s rarely a cakewalk.
I urge everyone to read Corey Robin’s The Reactionary Mind to remind yourself about who and what it is we are really fighting here. It’s not about political parties but it is about opposing worldviews. And the one that has all the money and power has a centuries-long, successful track record of activating certain lizard brain reactions in people.
.

Pulling out the good pieces

Pulling out the good pieces

by digby

This is where the rubber is really going to meet the road for members of the US Senate. No more confusion about what they care about or who they are protecting:

With the full $447 billion jobs bill suffering defeat in the Senate, Obama and his aides are moving to a second phase, publicly pushing for passage of the bill piece by piece.

The first piece Obama wants is $35 billion in aid for states to prevent the laying off of or support increased hiring of teachers, police officers and fire fighters, Earnest said.

I think that’s politically smart. The big jobs bill went down to defeat without anyone really knowing what was in it. If the administration and Reid now pull out the most populist pieces of the bill and leave out the hideous giveaways to Big Business it becomes a useful political exercise. And who knows? Maybe a good piece of it might even pass. (Not likely, but elections have a way of focusing the minds of politicians.)

The administration got its sellout free trade deals done and that really should be enough of a ransom for the time being. The billionaires are whining anyway and supposedly giving all their money to Mitt. But that’s a good bet for them in any case. If President Obama does what they demand — offer a full throated defense of their pillaging and portray them as the Godlike job creators who must be worshipped regardless of their greed and ineptitude — well, he won’t be re-elected. He’s already put himself in danger of losing his coalition and has to count on the other side being so noxious to a majority of the public that they lose by default. And the Republicans just naturally make that argument more credibly — their worldview supports it.

I’m afraid the Third Wayers are in a real bind. They have done all they can on the QT to help out the Big Money Boyz and did quite a fine job of it under the circumstances. But the BMBs want to be publicly worshiped and that’s going to make it hard for the Third Wayers to walk their usual phony line. I’m afraid the zeitgeist calls for picking a side in this one.

.