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Month: August 2012

Questioning the merit of the lucky, lucky rich, by @DavidOAtkins

Questioning the merit of the lucky, lucky rich

by David Atkins

I’m increasingly convinced that talking about luck is the key to destroying the right-wing rhetorical enterprise. Digby touched on this significantly several days ago, but I think it’s important to reiterate the point. Regular readers may recall my review of Chris Hayes’ extraordinary book Twilight of the Elites back in June:

Through Hayes’ lens, liberalism for much of the last half century has been about opening the meritocracy up to all segments of the population without discrimination based on intrinsic ephemera such as race, religion, gender or sexual orientation. This has meant a full embrace of the same pseudo-meritocratic impulse that has led to the renaissance of Objectivism on the right and the dominance of neoliberalism on the left.

If Hayes is right, what has been missing from much of leftist discourse isn’t just economic inequality or the struggles of working families. What’s missing is discussion of luck.

After all, what could be more iconoclastic to the edifice of the neoliberal and conservative systems? Declaring the Masters of the Universe incompetent is a given. Calling them evil is commonplace and mostly worth a chuckle. Using words such as heartless, bumbling, uncaring, greedy, inept, callous, and self-serving barely makes a dent.

But to call Lloyd Blankfein “lucky”, or to say that Bill Gates and Mark Zuckerberg were simply “fortunate”–that’s something altogether different. That’s revolutionary. It cuts against the dominant discourse of the institutional left and right to reorient the entire social contract. It challenges not only the ethic of equality of opportunity, but also the legitimacy of much of the inequality of outcomes.

Hard work is still a key to success, of course. But what has been lost in modern culture is that many fail to achieve traditional measures of success despite high intelligence and hard work, while many “succeed” despite constant failure. Social connections are a huge factor. Most of our governing elites come from Ivy League universities, despite the fact that a huge number of very bright and highly competent people never attended an Ivy League institution. And then there’s just being in the right place at the right time: how many Internet millionaires would have succeeded just as well had they been born in a pre-Internet world? How successful would Michael Jordan have been, had he been born in a country where soccer was the dominant sport?

Hard work is one factor in success, but it pales in comparison to good connections, family privilege, and dumb luck.

That idea is extremely threatening to the meritocratic status quo.

And again, here’s David Frum on what he calls with admiration the destabilizing idea in Barack Obama’s much discussed “you didn’t build that” speech:

Obama’s second idea is that success is to a great extent random, a matter of luck. You think you succeeded because you were smart or hard-working? Listen—a lot of smart and hard-working people don’t succeed.

This second idea is not original to the president, obviously. In fact, Friedrich Hayek often made a similar point, suggesting that a big part of capitalism’s PR problems originated in the fact that markets did not distribute their rewards according to ordinary ideas of moral deservingness. Yet it’s also true that we badly want to believe that success is earned and is deserved. A universe that distributes its rewards randomly is a frightening place—and even worse is the suspicion that success is often seized precisely by the undeserving…

President Obama’s stray sentences however point to a bolder conclusion. If it’s not brains or work that account for success, what is it? The answer must be … luck. Not maybe entirely luck, but luck to a great degree. By definition, however, luck is amoral. Nobody can deserve luck, otherwise he wouldn’t be lucky. To the extent success is due to luck, success is undeserved—and to the extend that success is undeserved, the successful have no very strong claim to the proceeds of their success. Whereas Warren suggests that the wealthy should be taxed to repay tangible benefits they have personally received, Obama is indicating a possibility that the wealthy should be taxed … because their wealth is to a great extent an accident of fate.

Indeed. While some will shudder that the Republicans have managed to call into question the very idea of the social contract, I think it’s a wonderful thing that the Left is no longer simply arguing for equitable access to the meritocracy. Many of our leaders have begun questioning the very premise of the system that has given such outsized rewards to the lucky, lucky few.

It’s about time.

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Darrell Issa insults the Greatest Generation

Darrell Issa insults the Greatest Generation

by digby

I guess the depression kids and WWII vets are all a bunch of morons,commies or criminals:

Politicians of all stripes genuflect before the Greatest Generation, as newsman Tom Brokaw dubbed the men and women who endured the Great Depression, helped win World War II, and went on create the most prosperous society the world had ever known.

Rep. Darrell Issa, R-Calif., offered a less reverential footnote today, attributing the origins of today’s fiscal crisis to entitlement programs fostered by some of those same people.

“The Greatest Generation created many of what the private sector would call Ponzi schemes,” Issa said at an Association of Government Accountants conference here. “They created Social Security, they created Medicare on their watch, [they] created Medicaid.” All of that, Issa continued, ”without resources or funding.”

“A generation that was doing many things right–coming out of World War II–also planted the seeds for all the problems we have today.”

I think it’s interesting that these wingnuts don’t want to go back to the 1950s anymore, which for many decades was considered the golden era for conservatism. Apparently, they’ve realized that a lot of what made the 50s so prosperous and peaceful (for nice white people) was the New Deal. So they have no choice but to sully their reputations as con-men.

They still revere the 50s, mind you. The 1850s.

*For a nuanced look at the GG, check out this great article by Chris Hayes.

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Uh-Oh — by tristero

Uh-Oh

By tristero

Gail Collins today:

Maybe the real answer to this and all the other Tea Party-over-establishment upsets is that the traditional Republican party is just burned out, and devoid of fresh faces.

This is a common and very old fallacy: Because the Republican party has such awful people and/or such awful ideas, it is burnt out, ie, weak, powerless. But their ideas have been awful for generations, and they have consistently elected mediocrities and scoundrels that are easily comparable to the current crop. But that’s not where the fire ever burnt.

It’s all about power, not ideas or people. And the Republican’s obsession with gaining a monopoly on political and financial power is blazing brighter than ever right now, fueled by hundreds upon hundreds of millions of pieces of green paper.

There is nothing burnt out about the Republicans, nothing at all.

UPDATE: Anyone who thinks this is a reason not to worry should stand outside one of those fast food chicken joints that’s celebrating hate today. There are a lot of very angry, very sick people in this county – and they vote. So should you.

Scott Brown maintains the Big Lie–and the Big Gamble, by @DavidOAtkins

Scott Brown maintains the Big Lie–and the Big Gamble

by David Atkins

Scott Brown, slagging Elizabeth Warren and President Obama for daring to suggest that business owners actually pay taxes to pay for the society that makes their success possible, reiterates the big lie:

America’s entrepreneurs have built great things on their own. If only leftists like Warren and all Occupy protesters weren’t so wrapped up in taxing and regulating them without end or in denigrating their achievements, these men and women would do even greater things and hire even more workers.

There is nothing in this statement that isn’t a lie. Taxes? They’re at their lowest point in 60 years, especially on the wealthy. Income inequality? At or near record highs. The stock market? Still doing much better than the real economy, with the Dow Jones up near a nosebleed-worthy 13,000–nearly 4,000 points ahead of where it was when President Obama took office. Oh, and the reason we’re in this economic slump in the first place? Deregulation was the primary cause. So where are all the jobs?

Scott Brown is peddling full-bore Ayn Rand Objectivism: the business owner as epic hero, struggling to succeed to provide jobs to the ungrateful and parasitic masses. In reality, of course, corporations aren’t in the business of creating jobs: they’re in the business of making profits for shareholders and investors. If they can do so by hiring fewer workers and paying them less, they’ll do it in a heartbeat. The success of small business depends on the infrastructure our taxes pay for, and a healthy consumer base willing and able to purchase products. The biggest threat to small businesses is the predation of big business forcing them out of the market. The biggest destabilizing threats to general prosperity going forward are the financialized casino economy in the short term, and the effects of climate change in the long term.

Republicans like Scott Brown are staking everything on convincing the public of this Galtian Big Lie. It’s an incredibly risky gamble. If they lose this argument, the entire edifice of their economic policy crumbles along with it. As Greg Sargent at The Plum Line notes:

This is what this whole thing has been about from the start. It’s about selling voters a bill of goods — a narrative about what ails the economy that obscures the fact that Republicans don’t have a plan to fix the short term unemployment crisis. Brown and Mitt Romney want voters to believe that the recovery is being held back by taxes, regulations, and Obama’s and Warren’s disdain for your success. If we just put people in charge who want people to succeed — who would of course promptly cut regulations, government and taxes on the rich — then the recovery will roar forward.

This is a pleasing little tale, but it’s wholly at odds with the consensus view of many mainstream economists, who think the problem lies in weak demand. Economists believe that government spending, in the form of Obama’s stimulus, did bring down the unemployment rate. Economists don’t believe that high end tax cuts will produce the runaway growth necessary to bring in the revenues to pay for them. Economists don’t believe that getting rid of Obamacare will solve the crisis. As Mark Hopkings of Moody’s Analytics has put it: “The central problem is not burdensome regulations. It’s that people can’t sell anything.” Nor do economists believe that cutting government will fix the crisis; in fact, reduced government outlays are partly responsible for slow growth, and economists say that in the short term, more fiscal austerity will slow growth further.

Neither Obama nor Warren demeaned success or individual initiative, but even if they had, the idea that those sentiments are responsible for holding back the recovery is just snake oil. From the start, this whole thing has been about selling people a storyline about the short term economic crisis that covers up the fact that Republican ideas wouldn’t do anything to solve it.

On the one hand, it’s an outrage that national Republicans are daring to make such a mendacious and immoral argument. On the other, it’s almost exhilarating that they’re staking so much on it. So much, in fact, that Democrats who have spent the past half century arguing simply for equality of basic opportunity and access to our flawed meritocracy are now being forced to actually make arguments in favor of the social contract itself.

This is a good thing, and potentially bodes well for the future.

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The Taser War on the mentally ill continues

The Taser War on the mentally ill continues

by digby

I have often written about the taser war on the mentally ill, but I’ve never seen anything as awful as this:

Someone using a stun gun like a cattle prod assaulted a dozen patients at the Sonoma Developmental Center last fall, inflicting painful thermal burns on their buttocks, arms, legs and backs.

The center’s in-house police force, the Office of Protective Services, had a suspect from the start. An anonymous whistle-blower called a tip line in September 2011 and accused Archie Millora, a caregiver at the Sonoma center, of abusing several profoundly disabled men with high-voltage probes.

Detectives found burn injuries on the patients, according to internal records obtained by California Watch. The following morning, they discovered a Taser and a loaded handgun in Millora’s car at the Sonoma center.

The facility is one of five state-run board-and-care institutions that serve roughly 1,700 residents with cerebral palsy, mental retardation and severe autism – disabilities that make communication difficult, if not impossible.

The one victim who is able to speak named Millora and used the word “stun” when interviewed by a detective at the center, according to a state licensing record.

As part of an ongoing investigation, California Watch has detailed how the institutions’ internal police force, created by the state to protect the vulnerable residents at these state homes, often fails to conduct basic police work when patients are abused and harmed.

In case after case, detectives and officers have delayed interviews with witnesses or suspects – if they have conducted interviews at all. The force also has waited too long to collect evidence or secure crime scenes and has been accused of going easy on co-workers who care for the disabled.

Those shortfalls again were on display in the Taser case, records show.

After the assaults were discovered, the Office of Protective Services made no arrest, deciding instead to handle it as an administrative matter. Also, at least nine days after the revelations, records show, detectives still had not interviewed Millora, whose personal Facebook page includes wall photos of assault weapons and handguns.

To make matter even worse, if that’s possible, this was once a top flight facility that has been degraded over time with budget cuts, turning it into a Bedlam for the 21st century. And there is fear on the part of advocates that this will be used as an excuse to close it down and sell off the land to speculators who have been eyeing the valuable property for some time.

Obviously, this is a case of a sadistic gun-nut employee rather than your average street cop and his behavior is beyond the pale of all but the worst taser abuses. But I can’t help but think that if tasers were less generally “acceptable” this sort of thing would carry more of a risk. When they are featured as big laughs in the movies one can see how a person could get the idea they could get away with using them.

By the way, the man was fired. But click over to the whole story to see how an incompetent and corrupt police department deals with something like this. It isn’t pretty.

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Deficit scolds on a bus

Deficit scolds on a bus

by digby

And the Deficit Fetish Club rolls out yet another stunt in preparation for their big Lame Duck moment:

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

July 25, 2012

The Hon. David M. Walker, former U.S. Comptroller General, today announced a first-of-its-kind national bus tour to engage Americans about our nation’s deteriorating financial condition — and show them what they can do to help restore fiscal sanity.

The “$10 Million a Minute Tour” will help voters understand that we face a fiscal cliff in January 2013 and a possible U.S. debt crisis within the next two years.

No matter what progress we make to improve economic growth and generate jobs, our nation’s current fiscal path puts our collective future severely at risk: jobs, education, health care, a secure retirement, infrastructure, national security, mortgage rates, an effective social safety net to prevent more poverty, and the success or failure of thousands of businesses.

Yet every minute, our nation’s financial hole gets deeper by about $10 million.

The Comeback America Initiative (CAI) has developed a U.S. Financial Burden Barometer (Burden Barometer) to supplement the “National Debt Clock.” The Burden Barometer is a far more accurate measure of our financial situation, since it includes both total liabilities and unfunded promises (e.g., Social Security and Medicare).

“We are at a crossroads in America. Our political leaders can keep hiding their heads in the sand and continue toward economic catastrophe. Or, they can take an honest look at our situation, and lead us by pursuing nonpartisan solutions, that can address our challenges in an effective, equitable, moral and sustainable manner,” said Mr. Walker.

Mr. Walker will kick off the tour in Manchester, N.H. on Sept. 7. From there, the bus will make its way to New York City, then on to at least 16 states, including swing states and key districts.

A who’s who of national leaders support the tour, including:

• Former Senators Alan Simpson (R-WY), Pete Domenici (R-NM), Sam Nunn (D-Ga.), and Judd Gregg (R-N.H.)
• Former Rep. Harold Ford, Jr. (D-TN) and Tom Coleman (R-MO)
• Hon. Erskine Bowles
• Former Director of the OMB and CBO Alice Rivlin
• Former Chairmen of the Federal Reserve Alan Greenspan and Paul Volcker
• Former DNC Chairs and Governors Ed Rendell and Roy Romer
• Former RNC Chairs and Senators Bill Brock and Mel Martinez
• Former Presidential candidate H. Ross Perot, Sr.
• Former AARP CEO Bill Novelli
• Former Lockheed Martin CEO Norm Augustine
• Former SEIU CEO Andy Stern
• Former Deloitte CEO Mike Cook
• Sojourners CEO Rev. Jim Wallis
• Former HP CEO Carly Fiorina

One measure of the enormity of our problem is that things have actually gotten worse since H. Ross Perot Sr. spotlighted the issue during his presidential campaign. “Our nation’s debt is about four times higher than when I first ran for president in 1992. It’s time to defuse our ticking debt bomb,” said Mr. Perot.

The former Comptroller General of the United States and a former Trustee of Social Security and Medicare, Mr. Walker is currently CEO of the Comeback America Initiative. Mr. Walker will be joined by various other fiscal experts at various stops on the tour.

Please visit the bus tour’s web site at www.10MillionaMinute.com for graphics of the Burden Barometer, a full list of high-profile bus tour supporters, and the tour itinerary.

I have a feeling that nobody in the country knows who any of these people are or care. But I suspect that’s not the point. This is all about building the Village consensus.

(It’s certainly nice to see Andy Stern and the AARP working together with Pete Peterson on this. With friends like these … )

Here’s the list of cities:

Manchester, NH
Friday, September 7 2012

New Haven, CT
Saturday, September 8 2012

New York, NY
Monday, September 10 2012

Philadelphia, PA
Tuesday, September 11 2012

Pittsburgh, PA
Wednesday, September 12 2012

Columbus, OH
Thursday, September 13 2012

Cleveland, OH
Friday, September 14 2012

Brunswick, OH
Saturday, September 15 2012

Milwaukee, WI
Monday, September 17 2012

St. Louis, MO
Tuesday, September 18 2012

Des Moines, IA
Wednesday, September 19 2012

Denver, CO
Friday, September 21 2012

Las Vegas, NV
Monday, September 24 2012

Phoenix, AZ
Tuesday, September 25 2012

Tucson, AZ
Wednesday, September 26 2012

Dallas, TX
Friday, September 28 2012

Orlando, FL
Tuesday, October 2 2012

Jacksonville, FL
Wednesday, October 3 2012

Atlanta, GA
Thursday, October 4 2012

Raleigh, NC
Friday, October 5 2012

Northern VA
Saturday, October 6 2012

Washington, DC
Tuesday, October 9 2012

I don’t know why people think this is in any way trying to influence the election, do you?

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Romneygaffe can’t even properly defend his own wife

Romneygaffe can’t even properly defend his own wife

by digby

If you wondered whether Romney really has no center, this should dispel any questions:

Mitt Romney tried to distance himself from the elite horse-dancing sport of dressage on Wednesday night, telling NBC’s Brian Williams that he doesn’t know anything about it – and doesn’t plan to watch his wife’s horse compete in the upcoming Olympics.

“It’s a big, exciting experience for my wife. I have to tell you, this is Ann’s sport,” Romney said. “I’m not even sure which day the sport goes on. She will get the chance to see it, I will not be watching the event. I hope her horse does well.”

This is low, even for him. This is his wife, to whom, by all accounts, he is completely devoted. And that was the best he could do?

Also too, he’s just lying:

Romney’s coolness towards dressage is certainly a new development. The presumptive Republican nominee has talked extensively about his love of horses, and he has been deeply involved with his wife’s Olympic contender, Rafalca, in the past. The Romneys have invested hundreds of thousands of dollars in the horse, and Mitt himself personally picked the music that Rafalca “danced” to at the World Cup.

Even if he couldn’t attend, it would be odd for a supposed family man — and Olympic enthusiast — to be unaware of what day his wife’s horse is competing.

He sure seemed up on the sport in this clip:

I don’t think it’s a big deal that Ann Romney is into dressage. She’s got millions and she likes horses and that’s one of the sports in which millionaires who like horses participate. (Personally, I think that cross country and show jumping are less cruel to the animals, but that’s just me.) But it’s absurd for them to try to hide it or pretend that it isn’t a big deal for their horse to be in the Olympics — especially since Mitt is supposedly Mr Olympics! Who do they think they’re fooling?

Mitt should have just said that Ann’s horse is competing and the family is very excited and hopes he brings home the Gold for the USA. Jesus, how hard is it for this guy to be a human being?

Update: On the subject of dressage, if you missed this from Stephen Colbert you must watch it immediately. (And good on the American dressage coach for being such a good sport too.)

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Romney ethics at the Olympics

Romney ethics at the Olympics

by digby

Ed Kilgore is righteously irked about the latest idiotic right wing contretemps over the fact that Olympic athletes have to pay taxes on their medals:

You could see this coming the moment Grover Norquist’s Americans for Tax Reform put out its press release on the tax liability of U.S. Olympics athletes who win medals and the honoraria that go along with them: Sen. Marco Rubio has introduced a bill creating a brand new tax loophole for the stars who are dominating our TV screen this week. The Atlantic’s Conor Friedersdorf explains why this is an idea that is fully as stupid as it sounds:

[T]his is a perfect example of why the tax code is a complicated and burdensome mess. Guys like Senator Rubio stumble upon a category of earning that they regard as being “different,” whether because there are campaign contributions in it for them, or because it advances a larger ideological agenda or, as in this case, because the category of people being taxed are popular. This particular loophole accords with a widespread intuition that the prize money and medals from an Olympic victory are unlike “regular income” that is subject to routine taxes….

But these are bad reasons to create a special exemption. The fact is that prize money from athletic victories is income, and there is no good reason for the government to treat that income differently than the income of all the non-Olympic athletes who earn analogous types of income. Why should Olympic athletes be exempted from paying taxes on their prize money, but not professional golfers, or poker players, or winners of literary prizes, or folks who win the lottery?

Because USA! USA! USA!, that’s why. And also they are heroes.

At least as long as they don’t have to pay taxes. According to this fine fellow, if they do have to pay the tax, they’re likely to throw their match to avoid it:

This is what we are going to call “Romney ethics” from now on: the belief that there is literally nothing more important in life than not paying taxes. Even winning an Olympic Gold medal or the presidency of the United States.

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The choice, by @DavidOAtkins

The choice

by David Atkins

If you’ve been watching the Olympics, you’ve probably seen this:

Barack Obama isn’t the most progressive President the nation has had. There is still significant danger of some sort of Grand Compromise malarky in the lame duck session, and Clintonian concessions if the GOP takes the Senate and holds the House.

But the contrast with Romney and the Republicans is still enormous. If the Republican Party were sane, it could run a middle-of-the-road Eisenhower/Ford style candidate, focus on the bad economy, and probably slide into victory. But that’s not who the Republicans are. They’re wholly dominated by Objectivists and Dominionists. So instead, even as the Obama team runs devastating ads in primetime, they have to deal with stories like this:

A tax system overhaul along the lines that Mitt Romney has proposed would give big tax cuts to high-income households and increase the tax burden on middle- and lower-income households, according to an analysis from economists at the Tax Policy Center.

The researchers did not analyze the exact Romney plan, since it is incomplete and the researchers were reluctant to make assumptions until the campaign released more details.

Instead they created a model for a revenue-neutral income tax change that incorporates some of Mr. Romney’s proposals, which include lowering marginal tax rates, eliminating both the alternative minimum tax and taxation of investment income of most taxpayers, doing away with the estate tax and repealing the additional high-income taxes passed with the Affordable Care Act.

In a sane world this election wouldn’t even be a contest. But in the real world, race resentment, sexism and bald-faced economic lies are making it a nailbiter.

It would be nice if all the Ayn Rand and Tim LaHaye worshippers would go found their own country and destroy it apart from the rest of us. Sadly, they’re intent on dragging this country and the world down with them.

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Tea partying billionaires buy another seat

Tea partying billionaires buy another seat

by digby

Amidst all the breathless Villager adoration for the new (Ivy league) “Tea Party” Senator from Texas, it’s a good idea for less romantic types to step back and look at what really happened. Here’s Adele Stan with the bracing splash of cold water:

During the presidential primary, on the national political stage, Texas Gov. Rick Perry often looked like a Tea Party dupe. But in his home state he’s not quite Tea Party enough; his anointment of Dewhurst as the next U.S. senator from the Lone Star State didn’t stick, once FreedomWorks came to town.

You remember FreedomWorks, right? The neo-libertarian outfit led by Dick Armey that spent the summer of 2009 encouraging Tea Partiers to go thuggy at town-hall meetings led by Democratic members of Congress? The organization that showed Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell who’s boss when it supplanted McConnell’s prodigy, Trey Grayson, with Rand Paul for the G.O.P. slot on the 2010 U.S. senate ballot is the majority leader’s own state of Kentucy?

Yeah, that FreedomWorks.

Texas is a big, important state in Right-Wing-World, and it’s the land from whence Armey hails. No way was Perry going to be allowed to make some namby-pamby G.O.P. establishment pick for U.S. Senate, for God’s sake — not when Armey has laid claim to the U.S. Senate as his own little electoral playground, where he’s hard at work, as FreedomWorks spokesperson Adam Brandon once told me, building “a power center around Jim DeMint,” the senator from South Carolina. Since the Rand Paul coup in Kentucky, the DeMint cabal has essentially set the Republican agenda — and, through strong-arm use of the arcane rules of the deliberative body, that of the entire Senate.

Just imagine what DeMint will do with even more like him in the Senate.

As much as everyone would like to believe this bus is being driven by a bunch of rubes who will (naturally) get their comeuppance, it just isn’t. There’s a boatload of money behind all these guys. But they aren’t just craven corporatists, although they are that. They are hardcore ideologues as well.

It’s fun to pretend, (as “The Fix” did last night on twitter) that this is the result of a grassroots uprising. But unless you think that the billionaires who are funding Freedomworks are just good ole boys down to the townhall speakin’ their minds, you’re on the wrong track.

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