Wednesday, August 05, 2020

Trump Isn't JUST Fiddling While Rome Burns-- He Also Wants to Further Enrich Himself

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Drawing by Nancy Ohanian

Yesterday Mnuchin told reporters he and Meadows-- team Trump-- are not close to a deal with Pelosi and Schumer-- Team America. "We did try to agree to set a timeline that we're going to try to reach an overall agreement if we can get one by the end of this week, so that the legislation could be then passed next week," was all the reporters got out of him, other than blaming it on Team America for not doing exactly what Team Trump demands. He may not quite get the urgency for working Americans, folks who never who ran banks crookedly and were able to buy off the corrupt California Attorney General to avoid prison.

Progressive candidates across the country are extremely concerned that this move along faster. Earlier, Texas Democrat Mike Siegel reiterated that "We're in a moment of overlapping crises including a global pandemic, economic meltdown, climate crisis, and the fight for racial justice." He told me that in each of those cases, his opponent, Trump enabler Michael McCaul "is failing the people of the Texas 10th and the nation." As you know, at least if you've read DWT once or twice before today, Siegel is a progressive civil rights attorney squaring up against McCaul for the second time-- after he shocked the country in 2018 when he held McCaul to just 51%, cutting his normal win margin by 15 points, turning TX-10 into a national battleground race. Siegel recently penned a knock-down critique of McCaul's ineptitude on Covid-19, and he's expanded his coalition from 2018 to include major support from Bernie, Elizabeth Warren and the Sunrise Movement to finish the job this year. "McCaul is worth hundreds of millions of dollars, and he's supporting cuts in vital coronavirus relief to thousands of hardworking families across our district. We need automatic stabilizers, full expanded unemployment insurance, eviction relief, isolation support, as well as bold investment in faster testing and contact tracing," said Siegel.

Yesterday, reporting for the Wall Street Journal, Kristina Peterson pointed out that the Coronavirus Stimulis Proposals Aren't Limited To Cononavirus Spending. Team Trump is attempting to shove all kinds of priorities into the bill that has nothing to do with the pandemic. Peterson referred to the non-pandemic-related proposals as "bargaining chips for another priority. For example, McConnell introduced a $1.75 billion fund to rebuild the FBI building, something no one thinks is a good idea but TRump and his family, who fear that if the FBI sticks with plans to abandon the building, it could be bought by a hotel and give Trump's own hotel across the street competition. And you know crooked Republican businessman-- no one hates competition more than they do.
The Trump administration abruptly canceled plans in 2017 to build a suburban FBI campus. Instead, it pushed to keep the agency’s current downtown location, saying officials wanted it to remain across the street from the main Justice Department building, and the White House is pushing for funds to construct a new building. Keeping the FBI downtown would prevent the redevelopment of the site, which is near the Trump International Hotel. Both Democrats and Republicans have widely criticized the inclusion of the funds in the bill. “You have to be near the Justice Department,” Mr. Trump said last week. “They had sites way out in Virginia, way out in Maryland, I said the best place is right where it is…. So we have that in the bill. It should stay.”

McConnell also asked for $377 million for renovations to the West Wing of the White House and a screening facility. Most people prefer that money be used to help rescue ordinary American families from the pandemic that Trump has made much worse, only thinking about himself.

Hardball by Nancy Ohanian


There is also $29 billion shoved in there by McConnell for the military-- and not pandemic-related. "In the GOP bill," wrote Peterson, "Senate Republicans included $29 billion for the Defense Department, including $686 million for F-35 jet fighters, $283 million for Apache AH-64 attack helicopters, $1 billion for maritime surveillance aircraft, $1.5 billion for four expeditionary medical ships and $49 million for sonar buoys that can track objects underwater. In some instances, the bill replenishes Defense Department funds that were redirected in previous years by the administration to help build the wall along the border with Mexico. Senate Armed Services Committee Chairman James Inhofe (R-OK) has said that while the stimulus bill isn’t the ideal place for military spending, the military needs every opportunity possible for rebuilding."


Pelosi also put some items in the bill that aren't, strictly speaking, pandemic-related. She wants to repeal the $10,000 cap on the state and local tax deduction for 2020 and 2021. "In their 2017 tax overhaul," explained Peterson, "Republicans placed a $10,000 cap on the amount of state and local taxes that taxpayers can deduct from federal taxable income. Governors of high-tax states such as New York and New Jersey want Congress to eliminate the cap. Doing so would help their constituents, make it easier for them to raise state and local taxes and reduce incentives for people to move to lower-taxed states. Repealing that limit would also deliver direct tax cuts to high-income households, and the top 1% of households would get 57% of the benefits, according to the Tax Policy Center. “We need to cushion the blow of this virus. The SALT cap hurts people affected by the virus,” Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) said in New York last month. “It hurts so many of the metropolitan areas like New York.”

A marijuana provision made it into the Democratic bill as well and Trump wants it removed. "The provision would protect financial institutions that serve marijuana businesses in states where the substance is legal," explained Peterson. "Federally insured depository institutions are prohibited from offering financial services to such businesses because pot is illegal under federal law, forcing the companies to deal primarily in cash. Supporters say the proposal would make it easier for legitimate marijuana businesses to conduct transactions without cash, making them safer during a pandemic. 'I don’t agree with you that cannabis is not related to this. This is a therapy that has proven successful,' House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) said last week when asked by reporters about the proposal."

Goal ThermometerRiverside County southeast of L.A. has been hit really hard with the virus. It has the second most confirmed cases in the state-- 38,642-- and the second highest death toll-- 738. Progressive Democrat Liam O'Mara is running for a seat in the western part of Riverside County, the only Republican part of Riverside now. "Seven months into this pandemic, and five months past the beginning of the shut-downs," Liam told me today, "Crooked Ken Calvert has finally started circulating questionnaires to see where his voters stand on relief bills. Perhaps he has noticed that I am consistently standing up for ordinary people & consumers, and for small businesses, by demanding that the federal government step up and provide direct aid. Perhaps he has begun to worry that hitching himself to the austerity wing of his party is a liability when so many have lost their jobs, and may lose their homes and much else besides. Perhaps he is concerned that going to bat for corporate welfare for defence contractors while claiming that unemployment benefits make people too lazy to work isn't going to resonate with enough people during a literal depression of the GOP's own making. After all, one of the many lessons from the Great Depression we should never have forgotten is the one about consumer spending. Our GDP shrank by 33% because spending fell so sharply-- and that was with the added 600 in unemployment insurance. Now imagine how bad it will get without direct cash relief, and when millions have lost everything and have no way of spending at all. As far as I'm concerned, if Congress cannot meet its responsibility to protect the American people during a pandemic and depression, that government has lost legitimacy and should be replaced-- and our chance to do that is coming up on 3 November."





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Thursday, June 11, 2020

Defund The Police: Good Idea, Poor Choice Of Words

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-by Noah and Exile Johnny
The police have not just been incidentally tainted by racism. For much of U.S. history, law enforcement meant enforcing laws that were explicitly designed to subjugate black people.

-Jon Oliver, HBO's Last Week Tonight, June 7, 2020
Of course, unfortunately, much of that law enforcement structure still exists, as most recently exemplified by a career criminal cop's knee on the streets of Minneapolis. George Floyd is dead but a lot of traditions die hard. Those 4 cops that we've seen on film thanks to a 17-year-old armed with a smartphone thought they had permission, not just from the President of the United States but even more so by the police culture they live in, and, certainly, as events have proven for decades, there is nothing unusual about the Minneapolis Police Dept. and no amount of sensitivity training has or will change a sociopath in a blue uniform.

So what happens now? We will always need some sort of entity to "protect and serve" but simply chanting "Defund The Police" is an offer of words that are way too easily used against those who chant them and justifiably demand change. For a large segment of the population, those three words are a non-starter. Older citizens, whether they are Democrats or easily scared FOX viewers aren't going to buy in. This has bothered me for the last several days as I heard the phrase. As a person who witnessed police violence live and in person 50 years ago, I got it but as an adult who marketed pop culture, I knew it was a poor choice of wording.

Yesterday morning, I got an email from a close friend. He goes by the name Exile Johnny and he shares the byline of this post. As you can see below, he feels the same. It ain't what you say. More often than not, it's how you say it. My friend grew up in a right wing working class neighborhood in the Bronx. It was the kind of neighborhood where, if you sold your house, you should offer it to your neighbors or members of your own extended family rather than put it on the market. That might lead to, you know, "the wrong kind of people" moving into the neighborhood. His own family inhabited a political mindset that was slightly better but was either apolitical or definitely leaned to the right. Until he was almost 40, he was of the apolitical variety and rarely voted. Then George W. Bush came along, followed by the passing of Obamacare which has been "a godsend" to his family. That was enough to set his mind seriously in motion about politics and he is particularly focused on the messaging used by the two major parties while painfully aware of the shortcomings of both. Here's Johnny:
...of why Republican win elections and Democrats lose them consistently:

Republicans pay millions of dollars to people like that guy, Frank Luntz, to come up with names and slogans like "The Freedom Caucus," or "Make America Great Again." They never give you a hint as to what these things really are. They never call their groups or causes "Make America White Again" or "The Racist Coalition" or "The Economic And Social Injustice League."

Could Democrats tee it up any better than they just have? Defund The Police? Surely, they could have taken 3 or 4 minutes and called this movement something like "The Social Unity Project or "The And Justice For All Movement." And those headings, at least would have been honest. If this was a Republican movement, they would be certain to name this something that is the opposite of what it really is. Instead of "Defund The Police," they'd call it the "New Law And Order Regime."

As usual, Democrats have gone out of their way to give Republicans fuel that they can use. There are swarms of older Democrats right now, who are saying aloud "Defund The Police, what the hell are they talking about? I'm not for that!" Even in a best case scenario, one where Dems get the presidency and both houses, I guarantee you this branding costs them at least a few elections where a candidate has already said that they are looking into or sympathize with "Defund The Police" and their opponent was able to use it against them, getting voters to think that that means the democrat wants to totally do away with their local police department.
Obviously, there's a ton of discussion on the subject to be had. As members of the Minneapolis City Council have said, you can't reform something that is rotten to the core. Across the country, city councils and the voting public are discussing variations on the same theme. Most center around restructuring what police departments should be doing. We've given way too much money and power to the police. We have 911 for a variety of services. Do so many have to be handled by the police? In some cities and towns, more people are taken to the hospital by police squad cars because there are many more squad cars than ambulances. It's an imbalance. Do cops always have to go to every domestic dispute or petty crime episode? Might a lot of the money we give police departments, including the money for tanks and high end military gear be better used for social programs that alleviate crime in the first place? Might the money be better used for prevention in the form of youth summer programs, job and economic development, more easily obtainable medical care, food security, and other things that provide hope and end despair? Here's an idea, how 'bout we do things that level the playing field and not literally steal whatever gains impoverished citizens can achieve if given a fair chance? Well, that's not the republican way at all, no matter what they say. They come up with frauds like "Trickle Down Economics" and laugh. "Trickle Down Economics" is one of the Republican Party's greatest hits. As Kimberly Jones says, the social contract is badly broken.





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Friday, March 20, 2020

Welcome To The COVID Economy

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Sure, there's a Trump tweet for occasion; but there's also a George Carlin video for every occasion as well. You may prefer how Carlin explains what we're going through as a society now but economist James Galbraith is slightly less pessimistic. In fact, he wrote a piece for The Nation this week about how to confront the side-effects of the pandemic, namely the economic one. He looks at it square in the eyes and wants you to accept it: "a house of cards has fallen. An entire world of illusions, self-deceptions, and sophistries has died. We’ve come to the end of a very long string. The string has been unspooling since the triumphs of Milton Friedman and Friedrich von Hayek, conventionally thought of as Margaret Thatcher and Ronald Reagan, but rooted equally in Jimmy Carter and Bill Clinton, in Tony Blair and Gordon Brown, and in the Bushes and Obama and many lesser figures. A binational, bipartisan coalition of catastrophe in the Anglo-Saxon realm of ideas. Donald Trump and Boris Johnson are consequences, not causes, of this mental failure. The delusion is economics as we’ve known it. Here, two concepts have ruled: self-organization and the veil of money. The first argued for markets, for all of society to be mediated by the forces of supply and demand. Its supposed virtues were competition, flexibility, incentives, efficiency; the reality is a fragile web, woven in strands of glass. The second submerged the financial system-- the banks, traders, speculators-- rendering those people and institutions as mere messengers, unimportant and invisible."

He wrote that "our leaders now plan to send out cash, as 'stimulus'-- as though a market response will organize itself. It is another delusion. In Europe "border controls are back" and America "is breaking apart." I agree with him that "federal officials, with few exceptions, are predatory, indifferent, or merely stupid [and that] congressional leaders appear stymied. The few steady hands are those of some governors-- in both parties-- many mayors, county judges, and other local officers." I don't know what he means by governors of both parties. The only governor who appears to be doing a genuinely good job at confronting the pandemic-- not a cosmetic job-- is DeWine, an Ohio Republican.
For the population, it is a test of character. Ordinary Americans are for the most part community-minded, prepared to follow instructions and do right, if others will do likewise. Around me in Austin, people are curtailing activities while going about their day jobs in the face of increasing risk. Pools and playgrounds and libraries are closed—we’re told, for several weeks. Everyone knows it could be months and months.

As everyone also knows, there has been far too little testing. There is no reserve of hospital beds or equipment. Global supply chains are broken, and medicines of many types will run short. The only possible advantage to being in America right now is that it is a large country; many people live in more space and can self-isolate more easily, for a time. This is not a consolation for the poor, nor for New Yorkers, nor for those reliant on assistance that they may not be able to get.





It is hard to look past the imminent swamping of the health system, but there are deeper disasters afoot. In California, nearly 6 million elderly have been told to stay home. Many of them live alone or in pairs. Who will feed them? To this, the governor replied, “Good question.” The reality is, we’ve done a good job in this country of keeping many frail and elderly people alive, a very poor job of keeping them healthy, and we have no system for keeping them fed. We may not even know where they are.

We are told there is plenty of food in the country. Can it get to the stores? Yes, for now; but for how long? How long will people be there to stock and sell and run the checkout counters and maintain security? Distribution and security are the weak links in the food chain. The market has given us efficiency and a high living standard. It has by the very same token not given us resilience, spare capacity, coordination, or leadership. It has, instead, given us fragility. A web of glass. Panic is both the rational response and the enemy. If panic takes control, it will destroy whatever is left.

The American economy must convert, in full and at once, to fight the pandemic. A public corporation-- the Health Finance Corporation, based on the Reconstruction Finance Corporation of the Depression and World War II, with power to borrow and allocate and meet problems as they arise-- is needed now. The National Guard and the Army and all their resources must be deployed. And every civilian resource, including all available human beings, must be enlisted.

The immediate medical need is supplies, beds, personnel. Hospitals can be built in days, we have learned. Space can be requisitioned; hotels and dormitories are empty. The military is said to know how to deal with mass casualty events. The Defense Production Act gives authority to command companies to make masks, oxygen tanks, respirators. Unlimited jobs are available for people to clean and perform other basic functions. It’s risky work, and it must be decently paid. Guarantee the jobs, and people will do them. China managed that much, and many people volunteered.

The next need is to stabilize priority civilian supply: food, drugs, cleaners, paper goods. The existing system may hold up for a while. The essential is to lock it in place, supporting the people doing their jobs so that they can continue: drivers, stockers, checkout clerks, cooks and kitchen help, and scrubbers. If the necessary goods keep coming in, people will stay calm and get along without the rest. As in Korea, ride-share and taxi drivers can be trained to disinfect and mobilized to drop off meals and medicines. Suddenly, all these workers are essential and must now be treated that way.

All the information services should now be drafted and basic customer bills should suspended for the duration: cable, cellular, landlines, Internet. Let the federal government compensate the companies for basic costs. Having secure communications and entertainment will help keep people at home. The boost in disposable incomes will help in exact inverse proportion to wealth; those losing work income will benefit most.

Among the most necessary big corporations right now are those who run mass distribution networks: Amazon, Walmart, FedEx, UPS, and the drugstores and major fast-food chains. They should be run as public utilities for the duration. That means giving delivery at cost on essential goods and stop-orders on frills. Top executives should contribute their time. The workers should get raises and medical care and protective equipment and unions. In return for staying on the job in the emergency, those workers too should emerge in an entirely different position after this ends.

Many large, medium, and small employers are down for the count and may be bankrupt soon: airlines, hotel chains, shopping malls, convention centers-- more than anyone can list. The equity will be gone; there must be financing to maintain essential operations and to hold the physical and engineering assets in place, and a debt moratorium to stave off the creditors and the vultures. Needless to say, evictions and foreclosures and utility stoppages must be stopped immediately; if necessary, it is better to ration the supplies. As businesses go down, so will the bankers. After the wave passes, we’ll see what can be rebuilt.

Through it all, the people must be reassured. Those at home must be cared for. And those who remain healthy must be given useful work. Solidarity, organization, determination: These are the words for us now.





Changing times... very changing times requires agile, competent leadership which is in short supply in our ruling class. Take the idea of bailouts. The airlines near our money to stay in business? OK, our tax dollars should go towards buying their stock. As Aaron Gordon wrote at Vice yesterday, "U.S. airlines have spent the last decade shoveling billions in profits to stockholders. Now they want your tax dollars with no strings attached. Fuck that."
The last decade has been very good to U.S. airlines. Industry consolidation, stuffing more people into smaller spaces on planes, and stacking fees upon fees have resulted in unprecedented prosperity for the country’s Big Four (American, Delta, United, and Southwest). From 2012 to 2016, these four airlines were the most profitable in the world, walking away with a combined $42.3 billion, according to an analysis by L.E.K. Consulting. In the two subsequent years, 2017 and 2018, the US airline industry raked in an additional $27.3 billion in profits. They then used nearly all of that money, a whopping 96 percent, to buy back shares from stockholders-- a move that enriches investors while doing nothing for the company itself-- and handsomely compensating executives.

Now, the airline industry, like nearly every other industry, is suffering due to the unprecedented coronavirus travel restrictions. The airlines are asking the federal government or a bailout of almost $60 billion, to be paid for with our tax dollars.

To which I say: Fuck that. The airlines shouldn’t get a dime from American taxpayers unless there are so many strings attached it can support a 787.

If a working class person had handled their finances in the same way the airlines have, it would be a caricature of a Republican talking point about individual responsibility. During the good times, airlines spent all of their money on financial chicanery and self-enrichment while saving virtually nothing for a rainy day. Now that the good times have stopped, they’re rapidly running out of cash, which is what tends to happen when you don’t have much sitting around. It’s like a meme about millennials and avocado toast except it’s about the boomers who run airlines.

You could be excused for doing this once, but not twice. The airlines should have learned their lesson after the September 11 bailouts that they are not normal companies. The industry, already in financial trouble, saw demand collapse all at once after which the feds gave them $18.6 billion in direct assistance and loan guarantees. The lesson here ought to have been that airlines are uniquely vulnerable to huge shocks and need to plan accordingly. These do not happen often-- oh, once every 20 years, thereabouts-- but often enough. That was not the lesson the airlines learned.

I suppose the airlines did have a plan. The plan was to get bailed out by us.

Fair play to the airlines, because they almost certainly will. Congress, which is comprised of some of the most frequent fliers and loyal airline customers in the country, will oblige them. Our political leaders will almost certainly meet the airlines on the industry’s terms because Congress overvalues the airlines themselves relative to the average American. A 2018 survey by an air travel industry group found 52 percent of Americans didn’t fly at all in 2017, and nearly three quarters of all trips were personal, not business. And airline flyers are disproportionately higher income, with the majority of airline trips coming from Americans with an annual household income of at least $75,000, well above the median household income (the most frequent fliers by income group, according to the airline industry survey, make more than $150,000 a year).

Airlines and other pro-business groups will argue a bailout is necessary in order to prevent massive job losses, an argument that made sense in 2001 when airlines were bearing the brunt of the recession following September 11 and mandatory flight groundings. But that argument doesn’t make sense today, because everyone is hurting just as much. The airlines, while experiencing massive revenue losses, can get in line with every other industry experiencing massive revenue losses, including but not limited to the entire hospitality and travel industry.

Even within the transportation industry, airlines don’t have a special case for bailouts. Public transportation is experiencing a similar shock, with ridership and revenue drops in line with what airlines are experiencing. According to the Bureau of Transportation Statistics, they employ the same number of people. Public transit agencies-- which, it’s worth bearing in mind, are publicly owned and operated, not private corporations-- are also asking for federal funds so they can keep running service for critical workers like hospital and grocery store staff, but they’re asking for about $13 billion, or about one-fifth of what the airline industry wants.

Fake Magic by Nancy Ohanian


Some, like Florida Senator Rick Scott, have argued against bailouts of any kind for anyone, including the airline industry. At the very least, industries like airlines that quite clearly have embedded federal bailouts as part of their long-term plans need to have their courses corrected.

The exact details are up for debate, but fundamentally, the government must set a precedent for corporations that spend the boom years enriching themselves and their shareholders only to crawl to Capitol Hill hat in hand. Rather than filling up the hat, they ought to get a kick in the butt.


Massachusetts Senator Elizabeth Warren laid out a plan (of course she did) of what this might look like for companies that get federal funds including: a mandatory $15 an hour minimum wage for all employees, a permanent ban on stock buybacks, no dividends or executive bonuses for three years, and criminal penalties for CEOs who violate any of these rules. It’s a start.

We must also stop the cycle of corporations privatizing profits while socializing costs. Why should we, the taxpayers of the United States, spend $50 billion or $60 billion or whatever it may be when we see nothing in return? As of this writing, the total market cap of the Big Four US airlines is $54 billion, almost exactly the value of the bailout being proposed. What if, instead of bailing out the airlines, the US government became the majority shareholder of each so it could profit from its investment?

This is not some pie-in-the-sky proposal. It’s exactly what happened with Conrail, a government-created railroad entity formed in the 1970s out of the bankruptcy of a bunch of private railroads including Penn Central. The government bought the bankrupt railroads for dirt cheap then privatized Conrail in the late 1980s once it started turning a profit, netting some $3.7 billion in 2020 dollars for taxpayers.

Whether or not that specific model is right for the airline bailout is up for debate. But the general idea, that the public needs to stop subsidizing the irresponsible financial behavior of large corporations while the average taxpayer suffers, needs to be the focus of Congress going forward. Maybe, just maybe, we can come out of this mess with a fairer and more equitable relationship between corporations and the American public. And, while I’m dreaming, with some minimum leg room requirements, too.

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Friday, November 07, 2014

Wait... Why Didn't Voters Vote?

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Many of the Democrats who lost their seats-- or nearly lost their seats-- Tuesday had nothing to offer voters, which helps explain why voters stayed away. DCCC Chair Steve Israel had a purposeful "mystery meat" strategy for his collection of lousy candidates-- almost all of whom lost. That excuse for a strategy calls for candidates to say nothing controversial that might make someone (like a Republican) not want to vote for them. Of course, by offering nothing, you not only don't get Republicans to vote for Democrats, you discourage Democrats to even both. So they didn't turn out. That's why consummate centrist Mark Warner came within a few thousand votes of losing his seat to a ridiculous party hack who didn't even bother airing any TV commercials in October and never thought he had a serious chance to win. Democratic voters were just plain not inspired by Warner's insipid, contentless, mealy-mouthed, doctrinaire centrism. Populist and progressive candidates like Jeff Merkley, Al Franken and Brian Schatz won with sizable majorities in their states because they had records of standing up-- unabashedly so-- for working families... and they ran on those records.

working families didn't find much reason to vote
Other than John Rockefeller, who is retiring in January, Mark Warner is the richest member of the Senate, with a net worth of $95.13 million. He's not exactly a raging populist. Merkley and Schatz are blue color guys. We need more like them in the Senate-- a lot more... and a lot fewer multimillionaires. Yesterday Jeffrey Sachs won the day with his HuffPo piece, Understanding and Overcoming America's Plutocracy. Mark Warner should read it before he tries to persuade the Clintons to let him be Hillary's VP nominee. When Sachs explained that what unites the billionaire financiers of the two parties is greater than what divides them, he could have just as well been talking about the super-rich members of Congress on both sides of the aisle. "The much-discussed left-right polarization is not polarization at all," he wrote. "The political system is actually relatively united and working very effectively for the richest of the rich."
There has never been a better time for the top 1%. The stock market is soaring, profits are high, interest rates are near zero, and taxes are low. The main countervailing forces-- unions, antitrust authorities, and financial regulators-- have been clobbered.

Think of it this way. If government were turned over to the CEOs of ExxonMobil, Goldman Sachs, Bechtel, and Health Corporation of America, they would have very little to change of current policies, which already cater to the four mega-lobbies: Big Oil, Wall Street, defense contractors, and medical care giants. This week's election swing to the Republicans will likely give these lobbies the few added perks that they seek: lower corporate and personal tax rates, stronger management powers vis-à-vis labor, and even weaker environmental and financial regulation.

The richest of the rich pay for the political system-- putting in billions of dollars in campaign and lobbying funds-- and garner trillions of dollars of benefits in return. Those are benefits for the corporate sector-- financial bailouts, cheap loans, tax breaks, lucrative federal contracts, and a blind eye to environmental damages -- not for society as a whole. The rich reap their outsized incomes and wealth in large part by imposing costs on the rest of society.

...The evidence is overwhelming that politicians vote the interests of their donors, not of society at large. This has now been demonstrated rigorously by many researchers, most notably Princeton Professor Martin Gilens. Whether the Republicans or Democrats are in office, the results are little different. The interests at the top of the income distribution will prevail.

Why does the actual vote count for so little? People vote for individuals, not directly for policies. They may elect a politician running on a platform for change, but the politician once elected will then vote for the positions of the big campaign donors. The political outcomes are therefore oriented toward great wealth rather than to mainstream public opinion, the point that Gilens and others have been finding in their detailed research. (See also the study by Page, Bartels, and Seawright).

It's not easy for the politicians to shun the campaign funds even if they want to. Money works in election campaigns. It pays for attack ads that flood the media, and it pays for elaborate and sophisticated get-out-the-vote efforts that target households at the micro level to manipulate who does and does not go to the polls. Campaigning without big money is like unilateral disarmament. It's noble; it works once in a while; and it is extremely risky. On the other hand, taking big campaign money is a Faustian bargain: you may win power but lose your political soul.

Yes, yes, yes, of course there are modest differences between the parties, and there is a wonderful, truly progressive wing of the Democratic Party organized in the Congressional Progressive Caucus, but it's marginalized and in the minority of the party. So many Democrats have their hand in the fossil-fuel cookie jar of Big Oil and Big Coal that the Obama administration couldn't get even the Democrats, much less the Republicans, to line up for climate-change action during the first year of the administration. And how do Wall Street money managers keep their tax privileges despite the public glare? Their success in lobbying is due at least as much to Democratic Party Senators beholden to Wall Street as it is to Republican Senators.

Is there a way out? Yes, but it's a very tough path. Plutocracy has a way of spreading like an epidemic until democracy itself is abandoned. History shows the wreckage of democracies killed from within. And yet America has rallied in the past to push democratic reforms, notably in the Progressive Era from 1890-1914, the New Deal from 1933-1940, and the Great Society from 1961-1969.

All of these transformative successes required grass-roots activism, public protests and demonstrations, and eventually bold leaders, indeed drawn from the rich but with their hearts with the people: Teddy Roosevelt, Franklin Roosevelt, and John F. Kennedy. Yet in all of those cases, the mass public led and the great leaders followed the cause. This is our time and responsibility to help save democracy. The Occupy Movement and the 400,000 New Yorkers who marched for climate-change control in September are pointing the way.
Working class voters can smell that Jeff Merkely is part of that-- and that Mark Warner is not... and not even close. 




UPDATE: Republicans Are Laughing At Israel And The Beltway Democratic Leaders

Looks like mealy-mouthism didn't work for the pathetic Republican wing of the Democratic Party (aka, the self-proclaimed centrists like DCCC chair Steve Israel, DSCC chair Michael Bennet and DNC chair Debbie Wasserman Schultz. They should all be fired and made to sit in the corner and keep their traps shut. Israel, with his mystery meat "strategy" of keeping candidates from talking about a progressive Democratic economic vision-- which he abhors-- was the biggest failure of all. Republican strategists can't stop laughing.
Republican operatives still relishing their Senate election victory offered some unlikely criticism of their Democratic opponents’ campaigns Thursday.

“They sidelined the president,” Rob Collins, the Executive Director of the National Republican Senatorial Committee (NRSC) told reporters at a backslapping post-election briefing. Instead, Collins argued, Democrats shouldn’t have been scared off by Republican attempts to tie Obama to their candidates.

Collins said NRSC polling had long identified the economy as the issues voters cared about most, and one where Democrats stood to gain. “We felt that that was their best message and they sidelined their best messenger,” he said. Collins added that in many states, Democratic candidates had positive stories to tell. “In Colorado, unemployment is 5.1 percent and they never talked about it,” he added.

“They were so focused on independents that they forgot they had a base,” Collins said of Democratic Senate candidates. “They left their base behind. They became Republican-lite.”

...“I can’t remember a Democrat who spent any kind of money in a significant way talking about the economy,” he added. “If I had a choice between talking about the number one issue we saw in every single poll, and talking about a single issue, I would be talking about the number one issue.”
A friend of mine, a white southern Democrat and a local elected official told me that the career-oriented Beltway Democratic elite are losing the middle class. "Too much narrow issues and not broad economic statements," said of the campaign Steve Israel and Michael Bennet (and Nancy Pelosi and Harry Reid) put together. "The middle class is scared; they're afraid. How many of us wake up every day and even though we have jobs, wonder if you got fired, how would you make ends meet? Wages in general don't allow cushions to anyone. A medical problem can bankrupt you. People with children feel this fear every day... not enough solid broad economic platforms to the people that are going to vote."

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Thursday, October 23, 2014

You're now strolling along George Carlin Way

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by Ken

The great George Carlin (1931-2008), was not just a Manhattan kid, but specifically a Morningside Heights kid, having grown up in the neighborhood -- perched on the first of the series of elevations rising along the Hudson River in the northern part of the island's western flank -- known for Columbia University and a host of other educational as well as cultural and religious institutions. And now a stretch of the very street he grew up on has taken on a new name.



With Morningside Park, behind us, to the east and Riverside Church rising majestically to the west, this stretch of West 121st Street is now officially George Carlin Way. DNAinfo New York's Emily frost reports (links onsite):
MORNINGSIDE HEIGHTS — Comedians, celebrities, relatives and fans of legendary comedian George Carlin gathered Wednesday to commemorate him with a new street sign at the corner of Morningside Drive and West 121st Street.

Gilbert Gottfried, Judah Friedlander, Robert Klein, Rain Pryor, Rick Overton, and Lizz Winstead were among the celebrity comedians who showed up to honor Carlin. His daughter and only child, Kelly Carlin, officiated the ceremony for "George Carlin Way," with speakers alternating between joke and tears.

It was a moment three years in the making, said comedian Kevin Bartini, who made it his mission to get a secondary street sign with Carlin's name placed on 121st Street, where the outspoken comedian grew up.
At the dedication City Councilman Mark Levine, who represents the area, observed: "You really can't understand the life of George Carlin without understanding Morningside Heights. It was a grittier, hardscrabble neighborhood back then," meaning the 1940s and '50s.

Tricky logistical issues had to be solved, Kevin Bartini explained.
The street is also the home of Corpus Christi School, which Carlin attended and which was often his target, Bartini said. The school opposed putting a sign right outside its doors, on Carlin's block between Broadway and Amsterdam, he said. The school did not respond to a request for comment.

Eventually, a compromise was reached where the sign was moved east between Morningside Drive and Amsterdam Avenue, away from the school, he said.

Kelly Carlin thought the move was fitting and described Bartini's efforts as a "great moment of civic action."
"As we know," Kelly recalled, "my father and the church had a couple of philosophical differences." But, she pointed out as the crowd looked out over Morningside Park, "Dad loved trees." Reflecting on life with her father, she recalled --
eating pancakes for dinner with her father and lauding him for passing on to her a "genuine adoration of fart jokes."

"He was committed to our family, but he was driven by his craft," she said.
And there were lots of reminiscences from assembled colleague-friends-relations:
Carlin's widow, comedian Sally Wade, said her late husband loved being a New Yorker and that this sign was "the best tribute he could have short of a drink named after him."

Nothing was sacred to Carlin, added comedian Colin Quinn.

"It was not just society; George Carlin harangued all of us," he said, adding that Carlin ironically was "a priest to all the damaged Catholic people."

Patrick Carlin, the comedian's older brother, told stories of growing up in the neighborhood and of his family.

George shared his mother's irreverence, Patrick said, describing her as "a girl who gave a box of horse s--t to a girl who didn't invite her to a birthday party."

He too felt the spot overlooking the park was perfect for George's sign, in spite of the struggle to get it placed right in front of their childhood apartment.

"George used to smoke dope right over there," Patrick said, gesturing to the park, noting George would be happy with the spot.


George Carlin's comedy community provided a salute carefully calibrated to their much-loved pal's sensibilities.
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Friday, June 07, 2013

An Uneducated Society Can't Succeed-- Or Even Survive

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In less than a month, if Republicans keep obstructing any progress, certain student loan rates will double, making a college education even more out of reach for the children of working class parents. This isn't the problem itself; it's a symptom of a much greater problem. The wealthy, greedy and far too entitled plutocrats who have been increasingly calling the shots in American politics-- owning one party outright and pretty much controlling the other one-- have decided free, high-quality, universal education isn't worth paying for. So while Obama was in North Carolina yesterday announcing that he would like to see "the nation’s classrooms transformed into digital learning centers and he is ready to ask federal regulators to use billions of dollars to pay for the broadband and high-speed Internet connections that will be needed to make it happen," the American plutocracy that financed his career, McCain's career and Romney's career already had a long-standing policy of easing out and discarding the whole concept of public education in America firmly in place.

Elizabeth Warren noted to her supporters that the Senate had a big test yesterday-- and flunked it. She pointed out that Senate Republicans filibustered a vote on the Reed-Harkin Student Loan Affordability Act-- legislation that would freeze federal Stafford student loan interest rates at 3.4% before the big July 1st deadline. A majority of senators voted to shut down Miss McConnell's deranged anti-student filibuster, but every Republican plus multimillionaires Joe Manchin (D-WV) and Angus King (I-ME), killed the amendment by defeating cloture. "Let me just make it clear," wrote Warren. "This wasn’t my own bill to help students more by lowering interest rates to 0.75%, the same rate the banks pay. This was a bill that would simply extend the current 3.4% rate for two more years... Are we really a country that wants to push our kids tens of thousands of dollars into debt to go to school? Or are we a country that believes investing in our kids-- from Head Start to college-- to put the conditions in place so that everyone has the chance to succeed?"

She probably knows the answer to that question. The deck is stacked against us-- which reminds me of a George Carlin video I haven't watched in a while, The American Dream:



Van Jones has a different way of expressing some of the same ideas-- and he did so for CNN this week. His point is societal, not just something that impacts students. "The approximately $1.1 trillion in student debt out there already," he warns, "constitutes a crisis for every one of us." Like anyone with a lick of sense, he understands why Elizabeth Warren's proposal to cut student loan rates to 0.75% is something that wouldn't just be great for students but for the whole society.
It is the only form of household debt that has continued to rise during the Great Recession. It is also the only form of debt that cannot be discharged under bankruptcy or even death, as parents who have lost children have discovered to their horror. It is preventing young people from buying homes and starting businesses.

In short, student debt is a $1.1 trillion anvil dragging down the entire U.S. economy.

Unfortunately, the conversation in Washington is not about big fixes, but simply how to avoid making matters worse by letting interest rates rise.

...A few weeks ago, Warren, D-Massachusetts, proposed groundbreaking legislation that would give students the same deal that big Wall Street banks get. This bill is good policy, and even better politics.

After all, why are we loaning money to mega-profitable international financial institutions at 0.75%, but demanding up to nine times more from our own young people?

By comparison, the otherwise ideal Harkin-Reid proposal for a two-year extension of the current 3.4% rate is simply not as ambitious.

Unfortunately, the proposals with the most energy behind them are worse than both these options. House Republicans, the Obama administration, and a number of senators are all pushing to permanently tie the rate for student loans to the government's borrowing costs.

It may seem commonsense, but the devil is in the details.

For instance, the Republican plan passed recently is just plain bad for students. Interest rates on July 1 would actually be higher than 6.8% for some borrowers, and vary wildly and unpredictably over the lifetime of the loan. The government would mark up the costs 2.5% to 4.5%, based on the type of loan. The profit would pay down a deficit young people did not create, instead of funding education.

The Obama plan, by contrast, has better terms for borrowers and would offer fixed-rate loans that will not suddenly spike in cost. But it lacks any cap on how high interest rates can go, and continues the worrying practice of the government profiting off student loans.

As for borrowers who already have loans? Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, D-New York, has proposed allowing students to simply refinance their old loans at today's historically low rates. It is almost shocking that you cannot do this already. California Democratic Rep. Karen Bass' Student Loan Fairness Act would make repayment fairer and easier.

Young people should be rallying behind the Warren, Bass, and Gillibrand bills. But they can and should demand a whole lot more.

The problem is not just that the cost of borrowing could go up. The real problem is the skyrocketing cost of tuition that is forcing students to take on unmanageable levels of debt in the first place. It is in our leaders' own best interests to do something about that.

After all, millennials will make up one-third of eligible voters in 2020. It is no accident that the two best Senate bills were introduced by senators-- Warren and Gillibrand-- who have been rumored as future presidential candidates.

But at the end of the day, this is not a student issue. It is not a youth issue. This is a corrosive crisis that touches your life whether you know it or not. If you live in the United States of America, this is your issue.
I don't get out much. I just sit and blog all day. When I worked at Warner Bros. all the employees had been well-vetted and they all did their jobs well and if they started performing badly, there was an institutional policy of trying to help straighten them out-- like with free drug counseling, for example-- and then, if they weren't performing in a way that was conducive to a well-functioning, successful company, they would have to find another job someplace else. That rarely happened. Since leaving, I've realized how good I had it at Warner Bros. Everywhere else all I run into is grotesque incompetence and people who wouldn't last a week at Warner Bros. I've been spending a lot of time at the UCLA Medical Center in the last few months. Don't get sick. (This will make you sick and, I swear, isn't worth it.) Other than the doctors (fingers crossed) no one seems qualified to do their jobs at UCLA. It's as bad as going to a bank. The people who work there are uneducated, incapable of problem-solving, divorced from the joys of doing a good job, and, worst of all, a danger to the well-functioning organization. That, I've come to conclude, is because society doesn't want to invest in good universal education.

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Sunday, November 25, 2012

Way Too Many Multi-Millionaires In Congress For A Fair Grand Bargain

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There aren't enough Members of Congress who empathize with ordinary American working families because Congress has become a rich man's (and rich woman's) game. You might expect the GOP to be the natural home for wealthy people aspiring to political positions-- and you would be partially correct. But so is the Democratic Party. Both parties were quick to bail out the wealthy when the big Bush crash occurred, even though it was a crash created by the overreach and greed of the wealthy-- while ordinary middle class families were, basically, let to rot by both parties.

Both parties almost exclusively recruit millionaires as their candidates. And the party leaderships are made up of millionaires who feel comfortable around other millionaires, but not around normal people. The Democratic Party has sold out and the Beltway Establishment Democrats are essentially, almost as useless to the legitimate aspirations of working families as the GOP is.

Roll Call's annual list of the 50 richest Members (2012) includes 31 Republicans and 19 Democrats.
Michael McCaul (R-TX)- $305.96 million up from $294.21 million last year and up from $12 million when he first entered Congress in 2005
John Kerry (D-MA)- $198.65 million
Darrell Issa (R-CA)- $140.55 million
Mark Warner (D-VA)- $85.81 million
John Rockefeller (D-WV)- $83.08 million
Richard Blumenthal (D-CT)- $79.11 million
Jared Polis (D-CO)- $72.09 million
Frank Lautenberg (D-NJ)- $56.80 million
Dianne Feinstein (D-CA)- $41.78 million
Jim Renacci (R-OH)- $36.67 million
Vern Buchanan (R-FL)- $36.49 million
Chellie Pingree (D-ME)- $28.58 million
Nancy Pelosi (D-CA)- $26.43 million
Diane Black (R-TN)- $24.79 million
Rick Berg (R-ND)- $23.78 million
Rodney Frelinghuysen (R-NJ)- $21.73 million
Bob Corker (R-TN)- $19.63 million
James Risch (R-ID)- $19.09 million
Gary Miller (R-CA)- $17.41 million
Claire McCaskill (D-MO)- $15.57 million
Mike Kelly (R-PA)- $14.95 million
Ron Wyden (D-OR)- $14.47 million
Nita Lowey (D-NY)- $14.34 million
Richard Hanna (R-NY)- $13.69 million
Nan Hayworth (R-NY)- $12.34 million
Ron Johnson (R-WI)- $12.0 million
Trent Franks (R-AZ)- $11.60 million
Scott Rogell (R-VA)- $10.75 million
Kenny Marchant (R-TX)- $10.33 million
Jim Sensenbrenner (R-WI)- $10.20 million
Herb Kohl (D-WI)- $10.06 million
Carolyn Maloney (D-NY)- $10.05 million
Tom Harkin (D-IA)- $10.01 million
Tom Petri (R-WI)- $9.53 million
Shelley Berkley (D-NV)- $9.17 million
Olympia Snowe (R-ME)- $9.01 million
Miss McConnell (R-KY)- $8.95 million
Lloyd Doggett (D-TX)- $8.94 million
John Campbell (R-CA)- $8.93 million
Tom Price (R-GA)- $8.81 million
John Hoeven (R-ND)- $8.41 million
Fred Upton (R-MI)- $7.69 million
Blake Farenthold (R-TX)- $7.65 million
Steve Pearce (R-NM)- $7.48 million
Randy Neugebauer (R-TX)- $7.10 million
Bill Flores (R-TX)- $6.94 million
Rob Portman (R-OH)- $6.72 million
John Yarmuth (D-KY)- $6.47 million
Johnny Isakson (R-GA)- $6.28 million
Ben Nelson (D-NE)- $6.14 million
Changes this year mostly just confirm that old adage that the rich get richer, although "one theme that emerged on this year's list is that about half of Congress' wealthiest lawmakers reported having a lower minimum net worth than the year before. Though in most cases the difference was negligible, some lawmakers reported a precipitous drop. Issa's reported minimum net worth in 2011 was about $80 million less than in 2010. Rep. Kenny Marchant's (R-Texas) reported net worth dropped by more than a third. Some of the apparent lost wealth can likely be attributed to the new mortgage disclosure requirement.

"Though McCaul, Kerry, Issa, Warner and Rockefeller kept a lock on the top five spots, there was movement elsewhere on the list.

"One notable newcomer is Rep. Chellie Pingree (D-Maine), who saw her minimum net worth increase from about $500,000 in 2010 to $28.58 million in 2011 after her marriage to financier Donald Sussman.

"Others who broke into the top 50 this year were Sen. Rob Portman (R-Ohio), Rep. John Yarmuth (D-Ky.) and Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.), who even made it into the top half.

"Lawmakers who dropped off the list include Sens. Lamar Alexander (R-Tenn.), Jeff Bingaman (D-N.M.), Kay Hagan (D-N.C.) and John McCain (R-Ariz.)."

In his new book, Twilight Of The Elites, Chris Hayes writes a lot about the concept of distance between elites and the rest of us. "A wide distance between the governors and the governed will produce a state that is predatory toward its own citizens, indifferent to their desires, and subject to the inbred whims and compulsions of its ruling class... [T]hose members of the elite who occupy the high offices of our pillar institutions and organizations are already psychologically disposed to close themselves off to the perspectives of others... Time and again, in radically different contexts, we saw those in charge be so blind to the interests of those outside their small circle that they pursued a course of action that would ultimately bring ruin and disgrace."

And these are the people who will craft an anti-democratic lame duck Grand Bargain whose ultimate goal is to begin the process of destroying Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid. Class war indeed. Never forget this George Carlin speech, one of the most important ones in our lifetimes:

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Thursday, October 27, 2011

Banksters Let Their Politicians Know It's Time To Wrap Up This Occupy Stuff

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Who wouldn't find a touch of irony in that fact that Obama's UN Ambassador, Susan Rice, crowed that "We will stand up for people who seek to assert their basic human rights" as the Obama Administration stood by while a gang of police thugs attacked and brutalized the OccupyOakland encampment? And, oddly, that was at the same time police were harassing American citizens exercising their constitutional rights of free assembly in Atlanta, Baltimore, Orlando, Clarksville, San Diego and several other cities. Looks like a breakdown in law and order again. Matt Taibbi:
Cain said he believed that the protesters are driven by envy of the rich.

"I find the one thing [the protesters] have in common revolves around the human emotions of envy and entitlement," he said. "What you have is more than what I have, and I'm not happy with my situation."

Cain seems like a nice enough guy, but I nearly blew my stack when I heard this. When you take into consideration all the theft and fraud and market manipulation and other evil shit Wall Street bankers have been guilty of in the last ten-fifteen years, you have to have balls like church bells to trot out a propaganda line that says the protesters are just jealous of their hard-earned money.

Think about it: there have always been rich and poor people in America, so if this is about jealousy, why the protests now? The idea that masses of people suddenly discovered a deep-seated animus/envy toward the rich-- after keeping it strategically hidden for decades-- is crazy.

Where was all that class hatred in the Reagan years, when openly dumping on the poor became fashionable? Where was it in the last two decades, when unions disappeared and CEO pay relative to median incomes started to triple and quadruple?

The answer is, it was never there. If anything, just the opposite has been true. Americans for the most part love the rich, even the obnoxious rich. And in recent years, the harder things got, the more we've obsessed over the wealth dream. As unemployment skyrocketed, people tuned in in droves to gawk at Evrémonde-heiresses like Paris Hilton, or watch bullies like Donald Trump fire people on TV.

Moreover, the worse the economy got, the more being a millionaire or a billionaire somehow became a qualification for high office, as people flocked to voting booths to support politicians with names like Bloomberg and Rockefeller and Corzine, names that to voters symbolized success and expertise at a time when few people seemed to have answers. At last count, there were 245 millionaires in congress, including 66 in the Senate.

And we hate the rich? Come on. Success is the national religion, and almost everyone is a believer. Americans love winners. But that's just the problem. These guys on Wall Street are not winning-- they're cheating. And as much as we love the self-made success story, we hate the cheater that much more.

In this country, we cheer for people who hit their own home runs-- not shortcut-chasing juicers like Bonds and McGwire, Blankfein and Dimon.

That's why it's so obnoxious when people say the protesters are just sore losers who are jealous of these smart guys in suits who beat them at the game of life. This isn't disappointment at having lost. It's anger because those other guys didn't really win. And people now want the score overturned.

All weekend I was thinking about this “jealousy” question, and I just kept coming back to all the different ways the game is rigged. People aren't jealous and they don’t want privileges. They just want a level playing field, and they want Wall Street to give up its cheat codes, things like:


FREE MONEY. Ordinary people have to borrow their money at market rates. Lloyd Blankfein and Jamie Dimon get billions of dollars for free, from the Federal Reserve. They borrow at zero and lend the same money back to the government at two or three percent, a valuable public service otherwise known as "standing in the middle and taking a gigantic cut when the government decides to lend money to itself."

Or the banks borrow billions at zero and lend mortgages to us at four percent, or credit cards at twenty or twenty-five percent. This is essentially an official government license to be rich, handed out at the expense of prudent ordinary citizens, who now no longer receive much interest on their CDs or other saved income. It is virtually impossible to not make money in banking when you have unlimited access to free money, especially when the government keeps buying its own cash back from you at market rates.

Your average chimpanzee couldn't fuck up that business plan, which makes it all the more incredible that most of the too-big-to-fail banks are nonetheless still functionally insolvent, and dependent upon bailouts and phony accounting to stay above water. Where do the protesters go to sign up for their interest-free billion-dollar loans?

CREDIT AMNESTY. If you or I miss a $7 payment on a Gap card or, heaven forbid, a mortgage payment, you can forget about the great computer in the sky ever overlooking your mistake. But serial financial fuckups like Citigroup and Bank of America overextended themselves by the hundreds of billions and pumped trillions of dollars of deadly leverage into the system-- and got rewarded with things like the Temporary Liquidity Guarantee Program, an FDIC plan that allowed irresponsible banks to borrow against the government's credit rating.

This is equivalent to a trust fund teenager who trashes six consecutive off-campus apartments and gets rewarded by having Daddy co-sign his next lease. The banks needed programs like TLGP because without them, the market rightly would have started charging more to lend to these idiots. Apparently, though, we can’t trust the free market when it comes to Bank of America, Goldman, Sachs, Citigroup, etc.

In a larger sense, the TBTF banks all have the implicit guarantee of the federal government, so investors know it's relatively safe to lend to them -- which means it's now cheaper for them to borrow money than it is for, say, a responsible regional bank that didn't jack its debt-to-equity levels above 35-1 before the crash and didn't dabble in toxic mortgages. In other words, the TBTF banks got better credit for being less responsible. Click on freecreditscore.com to see if you got the same deal.

STUPIDITY INSURANCE. Defenders of the banks like to talk a lot about how we shouldn't feel sorry for people who've been foreclosed upon, because it's they're own fault for borrowing more than they can pay back, buying more house than they can afford, etc. And critics of OWS have assailed protesters for complaining about things like foreclosure by claiming these folks want “something for nothing.”

This is ironic because, as one of the Rolling Stone editors put it last week, “something for nothing is Wall Street’s official policy." In fact, getting bailed out for bad investment decisions has been de rigeur on Wall Street not just since 2008, but for decades.

Time after time, when big banks screw up and make irresponsible bets that blow up in their faces, they've scored bailouts. It doesn't matter whether it was the Mexican currency bailout of 1994 (when the state bailed out speculators who gambled on the peso) or the IMF/World Bank bailout of Russia in 1998 (a bailout of speculators in the "emerging markets") or the Long-Term Capital Management Bailout of the same year (in which the rescue of investors in a harebrained hedge-fund trading scheme was deemed a matter of international urgency by the Federal Reserve), Wall Street has long grown accustomed to getting bailed out for its mistakes.

The 2008 crash, of course, birthed a whole generation of new bailout schemes. Banks placed billions in bets with AIG and should have lost their shirts when the firm went under-- AIG went under, after all, in large part because of all the huge mortgage bets the banks laid with the firm-- but instead got the state to pony up $180 billion or so to rescue the banks from their own bad decisions.

This sort of thing seems to happen every time the banks do something dumb with their money. Just recently, the French and Belgian authorities cooked up a massive bailout of the French bank Dexia, whose biggest trading partners included, surprise, surprise, Goldman, Sachs and Morgan Stanley. Here's how the New York Times explained the bailout:

To limit damage from Dexia’s collapse, the bailout fashioned by the French and Belgian governments may make these banks and other creditors whole — that is, paid in full for potentially tens of billions of euros they are owed. This would enable Dexia’s creditors and trading partners to avoid losses they might otherwise suffer...

When was the last time the government stepped into help you "avoid losses you might otherwise suffer?" But that's the reality we live in. When Joe Homeowner bought too much house, essentially betting that home prices would go up, and losing his bet when they dropped, he was an irresponsible putz who shouldn’t whine about being put on the street.

But when banks bet billions on a firm like AIG that was heavily invested in mortgages, they were making the same bet that Joe Homeowner made, leaving themselves hugely exposed to a sudden drop in home prices. But instead of being asked to "suck it in and cope" when that bet failed, the banks instead went straight to Washington for a bailout-- and got it.

UNGRADUATED TAXES. I've already gone off on this more than once, but it bears repeating. Bankers on Wall Street pay lower tax rates than most car mechanics. When Warren Buffet released his tax information, we learned that with taxable income of $39 million, he paid $6.9 million in taxes last year, a tax rate of about 17.4%.

Most of Buffet’s income, it seems, was taxed as either "carried interest" (i.e. hedge-fund income) or long-term capital gains, both of which carry 15% tax rates, half of what many of the Zucotti park protesters will pay.

As for the banks, as companies, we've all heard the stories. Goldman, Sachs in 2008-- this was the same year the bank reported $2.9 billion in profits, and paid out over $10 billion in compensation-- paid just $14 million in taxes, a 1% tax rate.

Bank of America last year paid not a single dollar in taxes-- in fact, it received a "tax credit" of $1 billion. There are a slew of troubled companies that will not be paying taxes for years, including Citigroup and CIT.

When GM bought the finance company AmeriCredit, it was able to marry its long-term losses to AmeriCredit's revenue stream, creating a tax windfall worth as much as $5 billion. So even though AmeriCredit is expected to post earnings of $8-$12 billion in the next decade or so, it likely won't pay any taxes during that time, because its revenue will be offset by GM's losses.

Thank God our government decided to pledge $50 billion of your tax dollars to a rescue of General Motors! You just paid for one of the world's biggest tax breaks.

And last but not least, there is:

GET OUT OF JAIL FREE. One thing we can still be proud of is that America hasn't yet managed to achieve the highest incarceration rate in history-- that honor still goes to the Soviets in the Stalin/Gulag era. But we do still have about 2.3 million people in jail in America.

Virtually all 2.3 million of those prisoners come from "the 99%." Here is the number of bankers who have gone to jail for crimes related to the financial crisis: 0.

Millions of people have been foreclosed upon in the last three years. In most all of those foreclosures, a regional law enforcement office-- typically a sheriff's office-- was awarded fees by the court as part of the foreclosure settlement, settlements which of course were often rubber-stamped by a judge despite mountains of perjurious robosigned evidence.

That means that every single time a bank kicked someone out of his home, a local police department got a cut. Local sheriff's offices also get cuts of almost all credit card judgments, and other bank settlements. If you're wondering how it is that so many regional police departments have the money for fancy new vehicles and SWAT teams and other accoutrements, this is one of your answers.

What this amounts to is the banks having, as allies, a massive armed police force who are always on call, ready to help them evict homeowners and safeguard the repossession of property. But just see what happens when you try to call the police to prevent an improper foreclosure. Then, suddenly, the police will not get involved. It will be a "civil matter" and they won't intervene.

The point being: if you miss a few home payments, you have a very high likelihood of colliding with a police officer in the near future. But if you defraud a pair of European banks out of a billion dollars-- that's a billion, with a b-- you will never be arrested, never see a policeman, never see the inside of a jail cell.

Your settlement will be worked out not with armed police, but with regulators in suits who used to work for your company or one like it. And you'll have, defending you, a former head of that regulator's agency. In the end, a fine will be paid to the government, but it won't come out of your pocket personally; it will be paid by your company's shareholders. And there will be no admission of criminal wrongdoing.

The Abacus case, in which Goldman helped a hedge fund guy named John Paulson beat a pair of European banks for a billion dollars, tells you everything you need to know about the difference between our two criminal justice systems. The settlement was $550 million-- just over half of the damage.

Can anyone imagine a common thief being caught by police and sentenced to pay back half of what he took? Just one low-ranking individual in that case was charged (case pending), and no individual had to reach into his pocket to help cover the fine. The settlement Goldman paid to the government was about 1/24th of what Goldman received from the government just in the AIG bailout. And that was the toughest "punishment" the government dished out to a bank in the wake of 2008.

The point being: we have a massive police force in America that outside of lower Manhattan prosecutes crime and imprisons citizens with record-setting, factory-level efficiency, eclipsing the incarceration rates of most of history's more notorious police states and communist countries.

But the bankers on Wall Street don't live in that heavily-policed country. There are maybe 1000 SEC agents policing that sector of the economy, plus a handful of FBI agents. There are nearly that many police officers stationed around the polite crowd at Zucotti park.

These inequities are what drive the OWS protests. People don't want handouts. It's not a class uprising and they don't want civil war-- they want just the opposite. They want everyone to live in the same country, and live by the same rules. It's amazing that some people think that that's asking a lot.

Coincidentally, Glenn Greenwald's new book, Liberty And Justice For Some: How the Law Is Used to Destroy Equality and Protect the Powerful has just been released. I haven't read it yet. But Mark Karlin interviewed him for Truthout and I don't think Greenwald and Taibbi will find much to disagree about. "[W]hat is happening with the Occupy Wall Street protests," Greenwald told Karlin, "is as perfect an illustration of the book's argument as anything I could have imagined. The book's central theme is that law is no longer what it was intended to be-- a set of rules equally binding everyone to ensure that outcome inequalities are at least legitimate-- and instead has become the opposite: a tool used by the politically and financially powerful to entrench their own power and control the society. That's how and why the law now destroys equality and protects the powerful.

"What we see with the protests demonstrates exactly how that works. The police force-- the instrument of law enforcement-- is being used to protect powerful criminals who have suffered no consequences for their crimes. It is simultaneously used to coerce and punish the powerless: those who are protesting and who have done nothing wrong, yet are subjected to an array of punishment ranging from arrest to pepper spray and other forms of abuse.

That's what the two-tiered justice system is: elites are immunized for egregious crimes while ordinary Americans are subjected to merciless punishment for trivial transgressions."

No, not a brand new message. One can never watch this too many times:

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