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Month: February 2014

Fix the Debt haz a sad

Fix the Debt haz a sad

by digby

… and settles in for a good old fashioned cry:

The decision to exclude the proposal from the budget was based on political factors. This is an election year with control of Congress at stake and Democrats did not want to be associated with an idea that slows the growth of Social Security benefits and pressured the president not to offer it.

Giving in to such blatant political calculations is disappointing, especially from a president who campaigned on changing the culture of Washington. We need real leadership in order to complete the changes necessary to put the country on a sustainable fiscal course. As we said in a statement:

The withdrawal by the President on this specific issue, and his general pivot away from focusing on the nation’s medium and long-term fiscal challenges, reflects a dangerous trend.

Reaching agreement on a comprehensive debt deal will require consideration of all policy options and compromises by both sides. While we welcome today’s statements from the administration indicating they remain open to supporting chained CPI in the context of a bipartisan deficit reduction agreement, the nation needs the President to lead on this issue. The clear pullback on his part is a disturbing sign that he will not.

The decision is a clear signal that the spirit of bipartisan compromise necessary to achieve any major breakthrough will not be available this year as both parties position themselves for the voting in November. This sad reality means that little will likely be accomplished on any issue this year.

Boo hoo hoo. The centrist fiscal scolds lost one. And to those icky hippies which makes it all the more galling. But I’m sure once they pull themselves out of their funk they’ll realize just how many middle class and poor people they’ve already made to “sacrifice” with their slash and burn austerity campaign and they’ll turn those frowns upside down:

And look at it this way — with all that slashing of government spending, if the Democrats had managed to destroy Social Security too, these deficit fetishists would have to close up shop and go home. This way, they’ve managed to create a whole lot of suffering but they still have a good reason to keep making nice livings calling for other people to sacrifice even more. What could be better than that?

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Hungry in America

Hungry in America

by digby

I confess that I am rather obsessed with Rich Kids Insragram and its shameless pride in sickening excess. Here are some recent ones:

Yes, they’re are all useless heirs to the .001%, bragging about inherited wealth. These are the nice little boys and girls we musn’t tax because of their creativity and the necessity not to stifle the “entrepreneurial” spirit in our job creators.

In other news, Americans are going hungry. Via Susie Madrak, here’s a first person account of what life is like among those who’ve fallen through the cracks:

Jealousy isn’t limited to clothing. I’ve been jealous that friends can do wild and crazy things like buy a full tank of gas, get new brakes for their cars, buy a pack of toilet paper, eat. Food is a big one. In this age of social media, one can guarantee that at least 3 ultra-filtered Instagram photos of a friend’s lunch will scroll on by on their computer screen each day. Back in the day, I would just note that so-and-so had a bagel for lunch and I’d go on with my day. Now, I just sit there and wish it was me.

I wish I had a plate full of good food to obnoxiously photograph, but I don’t.

It’s the food that really drove the issue home for me not too long ago. I had taken my children to Ikea. We weren’t there to buy anything. It was damn cold, we were tired of being cooped up in the house, and there weren’t many options for a free place to play. Ikea has a play zone for my older child. My daughter is more than happy to walk around the store, sitting on sofas and chairs. I love Ikea because it’s fun to imagine having different furniture and organization.

While there, I bought my kids lunch. They had one of their specials going and kiddie meals were free! My kids each had a meal, which included drinks. I didn’t get anything for me. As they ate, I would pick at their plates, stealing a bite here and there. I looked at everyone eating around me and that’s when the tears, which I fought very hard to hold back, started to flow. I wanted so badly to be able to order something for myself. I was starving and the little bites of steamed veggies and mac ‘n’ cheese weren’t very filling.

I hadn’t eaten yet that day and found myself just staring at the plates of strangers, wishing I was free to get myself something to eat. I found myself glaring at people through my tears as they took plates and bowls half full of food to the trash center – what a waste of food! Never before had I been tempted to say, “hey, I’ll take that,” than I was on that day. My son noticed me wiping tears and asked what was wrong. I lied and told him I took a bite of his sister’s squash and it must have had some sort of spice on it and I was reacting to that. He believed me for a moment, taking a last bite of his mashed potatoes before pushing the plate over to me and telling me he was full. More tears to fight off.

I just cannot wrap my mind around the fact that people think this is ok. Sure, people should be able to be rich. But they shouldn’t be able to keep it all. Certainly, do decent, wealthy society in 2014 should allow so many people to slip through the cracks and fall into poverty. And no one should be hungry in America. There is something deeply sick about that.

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So many third rate burglaries

So many third rate burglaries

by digby

Sure, it’s probably nothing:

It’s probably nothing, but the office of a major Washington, DC national security whistleblowers organization was broken into last week.

The intruder or intruders left dozens of computers and other valuable office equipment untouched but jimmied open a file cabinet at the Project on Government Oversight, a private organization that has conducted several sensitive investigations in recent months, including a critical report on a controversial Pentagon leak investigation.

The Washington Metropolitan District Police report on the Feb. 11-12 overnight incident listed its probable cause as “occupation,” which means that it was “related to the kind of business” POGO conducts, not ordinary theft, an MPD spokeswoman told Newsweek.

“Whoever did this was after information,” the investigators told POGO officials.
[…]
The purpose of the break-in remains a mystery. The lone file cabinet that was jimmied held only mundane financial items like deposit slips and blank checks, Rutter said. A few employees reported that papers on their desks seemed to have been disturbed, but no sensitive documents were compromised.

Last June, POGO reported that the Pentagon Inspector General’s office was “sitting on” a report that former CIA Director and Defense Secretary Leon Panetta “had disclosed ‘top-secret’ information and other sensitive details” relating to the assassination of Osama Bin Laden at an event attended by a producer of the movie Zero Dark Thirty. The IG draft also referenced an interview that the Defense Department’s chief of intelligence, Michael Vickers, gave to Zero Dark Thirty screenwriter Mark Boal. When the IG report was published, Panetta’s name was omitted, POGO subsequently reported, as was Vickers’s, and neither was subjected to further investigation—a sharp departure from the Obama Administration’s practice of vigorously pursuing leaks by lesser-ranking officials and dissidents.

The Pentagon did, however, open a so-called “insider threat” investigation into who leaked the IG draft—which was unclassified—to Adam Zagorin, a former Time magazine reporter who is a POGO journalist-in-residence. “Our work touches upon a lot of sensitive areas in federal government operations — from Wall Street cronyism to military corruption,” said POGO Executive Director Danielle Brian. “We have a 30-year history of going after the ‘bad guys’ and protecting our sources, so we’re not going to let something like this stop us.”

POGO is the second national security whistleblowers group to encounter suspicious activity.

Three years ago, in another heretofore unreported incident, burglars broke into the Washington offices of the Government Accountability Project, which offers legal support to whistleblowers—including, since last summer, NSA leaker Edward Snowden. In the Jan. 6, 2011 incident, the burglars seemed interested in just a few of the computers among the dozen or so in the office. Of the six stolen, two belonged to GAP’s national security attorneys, and one to its legal director, according to GAP President Louis Clark. No culprits have been arrested.

It sounds like amateur hour. But then you never know. Sometimes even the most powerful people on earth have been known to order a third rate burglary ….

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Almost no one seems to care about the Millennials, by @DavidOAtkins

Almost no one seems to care about the Millennials

by David Atkins

Hullabaloo vet Dave Dayen with a fantastic new piece in The New Republic:

Outstanding student debt again topped $1 trillion in the fourth quarter of 2013, making it the second-largest pool of debt in the nation behind mortgages. This has tripled in just a decade, as higher-education prices increased faster than medical costs, up 500 percent since 1985. While delinquency rates for all loans have trended downward for the past three years, student loan delinquencies have surged; currently 11.5 percent of all student loans are 90 days behind or more.

The recent explosion in student debt—now held by one in five U.S. households—coincided with the Great Recession’s awful job market. Millennials have come of age amid stagnant wages, high unemployment, a lack of quality jobs (44 percent of recent graduates work in positions that don’t require a college degree), and, for those fortunate enough to attend college, an average of nearly $30,000 in debt…

First-time homebuyers accounted for just over one-quarter of all sales over the past year, far lower than the historic average. That percentage was even lower for households under age 40. All-cash home purchases, by contrast, hit 42 percent of sales last November, according to RealtyTrac. Recent college graduates typically don’t have that kind of money lying around.

While weak wages and high unemployment for young people explains much of the problem, an analysis from the New York Fed offers compelling evidence for the role of student debt. In 2012, 30-year-olds were more likely to have a mortgage if they had no student debt than if they did. The same trend held for vehicle purchases. In one way, this makes no sense—college graduates have much higher average wages than their counterparts, and should have a higher percentage of auto and home purchases. But student debt is holding them back. Indeed, you can say that student debt is crowding out other forms of credit. For example, high student loan delinquencies damage credit scores, often putting access to credit out of reach. Just having a student loan increases overall debt, making it hard to qualify for other loans, especially under new mortgage rules that limit total debt for a would-be borrower to 43 percent of their annual income.

This isn’t just about the housing market; it’s about the entire economy. A struggling student debt holder who can’t afford a mortgage—or find a job—may also have trouble affording rent or passing a credit check from a landlord. They may have to find roommates to bunk with, or move back in with their parents. This leads to a reduction in household formation, one of our most unsung economic indicators.

All of that is certainly true, but I must add that outrageous housing costs are certainly part of the equation.

I graduated UCLA on full-ride scholarship and thus have no student loan debt. But at 33 years old, I’m looking at renting for the forseeable future despite a healthy middle class income stream. Housing is simply preposterously unaffordable where my wife and I work and live–and we’re not even in a big city. My 32-year-old brother who makes fairly decent money but lives in a big city, is renting a studio apartment. I know a lot of other young people with decent jobs who still live with relatives, are holed up in small apartments, or made the mistake of becoming house-poor just by buying a condo, and are being shredded by HOA fees.

There is very little housing inventory, partly because banks are artificially restricting inventory by keeping vacant properties, and partly because there’s simply so little turnover as homeowners age in their homes, cannot afford to sell, and eventually their adult children inherit and either keep the property or sell to investors. Note that figure about all-cash home purchases being 42% of all home purchases. That number means that most people under 40 are effectively completely squeezed out of the housing market where the jobs are.

If I had less pride, I’d be living in my parents’ basement, too. Instead, I try to run a small business and be a “producer” in the lovely parlance of Objectivists while renting. But with no rent control, however, that too is an unsustainable proposition over the long term. So I’m a tasty little morsel for some big property management company that sees no problem raising rents beyond the rate of inflation even as wages continue to fall below it. But rents aren’t rising as fast as buying costs, so what are you doing to do?

Someone might want to do something about all of that. But it doesn’t look like either party cares. If anyone on either side of the aisle talks about housing at all, it only seems to be about raising prices so that the asset class will be more comfortable. Meanwhile, most of the progressive conversation (Elizabeth Warren excepted) seems to be all about either defending Medicare and Social Security or raising the minimum wage, neither of which are immediately relevant issues for 25-40 year olds with crappy, unstable low-mid five-figure jobs trying to figure out how to pay the rent and if they’ll ever be able to afford to have children.

Medicare, Social Security and minimum wages are incredibly important, of course. But if there’s a reason Millennials seem to be veering away from the Democratic Party and becoming more apathetic, maybe it’s because neither side seems to give a damn about us. Even Obamacare, for all its benefits, has the side effect of making younger adults at low risk for health problems pay more into an insurance scheme to reduce costs for mostly older Americans. The Republican Party despises us, and the Democratic Party seems to think it’s enough that just opposing blatant Republican bigotry and the most outrageous economic exploitation will be enough to rally us around the flag.

Somehow I don’t think it’s going to work. Nor should it. Supporting the Democratic Party is still the only viable option because the other side is depraved. But frankly, at this point neither political party actually deserves our votes.

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Job Creators

Job Creators

by digby

I hadn’t thought of it that way. They create more “jobs” for people who are already employed. Now I get it.

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With liberty and justice for all

With liberty and justice for all

by digby

A man called police to report a bicycle accident. The police arrived and thought he failed to respond to their orders for him to leave the street quickly enough. He was brutalized, arrested and thrown naked into solitary confinement for the night. He made the mistake of thinking he had rights.

No charges were filed.

One friend told me that I should chalk this up as another of life’s brutal lessons, that I should just be quiet, move on, and record this in my personal diary (if I must), and only return to these thoughts again if I am one day rich and powerful, when my decisions and donations can make a difference in the police force and civil affairs, and even then I might not really care. Stay coy until you are out of reach of the system, he emphasized. You think you’re clear now, but how many things went the way you expected?

Is there a weird middle ground, an uncanny valley, where you have no access to justice? Unless you’re severely beaten with cameras rolling or really have nothing to lose, your wiser friends will tell you to shut up and deal.

Yes they will. This is how authoritarian societies get normal, everyday people to keep their heads down and be wary of involvement, worried that they don’t have enough power to fight the system and too much to lose if they try. Don’t get involved. Don’t make waves. Move along.

And if it isn’t the state, it’s some power mad civilian with a gun looking for trouble.

Liberty.

Read the whole story. It could be you or me. It most certainly is anyone who makes the mistake of interacting with the wrong people without having white skin.

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Liberals are irrelevant to the Democratic Party. (Except for their votes …)

Liberals are irrelevant to the Democratic Party. (Except for their votes …)

by digby

Eric Schultz from the White House press office tweeted this. Apparently, anything is better than being seen as bending to a demand from their own base, even being pwnd by the GOP:

It’s obvious at this point that the Chained-CPI is not something the White House put in the budget simply to entice the Republicans into voting for tax hikes. They really believe in it — and they really want it. And they must believe the whole country wants it that badly because in their minds it’s a win whether they get it passed or whether it’s obstructed by Republicans and they can blame them for it. It’s that good.

They honestly think this administration’s legacy will be burnished by having proposed to cut Social Security.

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Yes Virginia, America does torture. A lot more than anyone realizes.

Yes Virginia, America does torture. A lot more than anyone realizes.

by digby

“This government does not torture people” President George W. Bush

“I have said repeatedly that America doesn’t torture, and I’m going to make sure that we don’t torture” President Barack Obama

In my writing about Guantanamo and the other US prison camps around the world I’ve often remarked at the odd construction of those comments — odd for them to say “doesn’t” instead of “didn’t” when asked directly if the US government authorized torture. (But then there would be a little matter of war crimes and the like … )I’ve also evoked those comments with respect to rampant police tasering, which is electric shock torture used to coerce compliance with authority, in this case of citizens who have not been charged and are not even (usually) in police custody.

But this powerful op-ed in today’s New York Times highlights yet another example of “America” torturing, and in this case torturing thousands of its own citizens who are incarcerated. It’s a first person account of a prison official’s experience in solitary confinement for 24 hours:

In regular Ad Seg, inmates can have books or TVs. But in R.F.P. Ad Seg, no personal property is allowed. The room is about 7 by 13 feet. What little there is inside — bed, toilet, sink — is steel and screwed to the floor.

First thing you notice is that it’s anything but quiet. You’re immersed in a drone of garbled noise — other inmates’ blaring TVs, distant conversations, shouted arguments. I couldn’t make sense of any of it, and was left feeling twitchy and paranoid. I kept waiting for the lights to turn off, to signal the end of the day. But the lights did not shut off. I began to count the small holes carved in the walls. Tiny grooves made by inmates who’d chipped away at the cell as the cell chipped away at them.

For a sound mind, those are daunting circumstances. But every prison in America has become a dumping ground for the mentally ill, and often the “worst of the worst” — some of society’s most unsound minds — are dumped in Ad Seg.

If an inmate acts up, we slam a steel door on him. Ad Seg allows a prison to run more efficiently for a period of time, but by placing a difficult offender in isolation you have not solved the problem — only delayed or more likely exacerbated it, not only for the prison, but ultimately for the public. Our job in corrections is to protect the community, not to release people who are worse than they were when they came in.

Terry Kupers, a psychiatrist and expert on confinement, described in a paper published last year the many psychological effects of solitary. Inmates reported nightmares, heart palpitations and “fear of impending nervous breakdowns.” He pointed to research from the 1980s that found that a third of those studied had experienced “paranoia, aggressive fantasies, and impulse control problems … In almost all instances the prisoners had not previously experienced any of these psychiatric reactions.”

That’s torture folks. And we are doing it prisons all over this country. When you factor in the prison rape, the over crowding, the disparate sentencing and the sheer numbers of inmates, it’s hard to escape the obvious fact that the United States doesn’t just torture, it’s made an industry of it.

The state of New York has now offered up new “guidelines” for the use of solitary torture:

On Wednesday, corrections officials took a major step toward reform by agreeing to new guidelines for the maximum length prisoners may be placed in solitary. The state will also curb the use of solitary for the most vulnerable groups of inmates: those younger than 18 will receive at least five hours of exercise and other programming outside their cell five days a week, making New York the largest prison system yet to end the most extreme form of isolation for juveniles. Solitary confinement will be presumptively prohibited for pregnant women, and inmates with developmental disabilities will be held there for no more than 30 days.

That’s nice. But it needs to be abolished. Allowing prisoners to keep their sanity is not a “privilege” that can be offered and taken away. It’s a basic human right.

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QOTD: Blame America Firster, Bill Kristol

QOTD: Blame America Firster, Bill Kristol

by digby

Why does he hate America so much?

Kiev is ablaze. Syria is a killing field. The Iranian mullahs aren’t giving up their nuclear weapons capability, and other regimes in the Middle East are preparing to acquire their own. Al Qaeda is making gains and is probably stronger than ever. China and Russia throw their weight around, while our allies shudder and squabble.

Why is this happening? Because the United States is in retreat. What is the Obama administration’s response to these events? Further retreat.

Everything bad in the world is America’s fault, right Bill?

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Meanwhile, back in the states

Meanwhile, back in the states

by digby

Jon Stewart surveyed the methlabs of democracy:

Speaking of which, this interview with T-Bone Burnett (regarding the series True Detective) was brought to my attention and I thought his description of certain parts of the heartland was quite interesting:

In places that had once had purpose, all that’s left is a pawnshop, next to a gun shop, next door to a motel, next door to a gas station, with a Walmart right outside of town. There are people working three jobs just to get by and having to take methamphetamines to do it. That’s the middle of the country, and that’s a plague that’s spreading outwards. We’re not seeing it, and these are things that you see in the show…”

I guess I had never thought about the fact that people might need to use meth because they have to work so much. But damn if it doesn’t make some sense. I’ve had to work more than one job at a time in my life and it’s not easy. I can’t imagine what it’s like if you have kids.

But hey, whatever you do, don’t give any of those people who are working night and day a raise. It’ll just make ’em lazier that they already are. (We know they’re lazy because hard workers always become millionaires. Obviously.)

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