Saturday, January 19, 2008

Slashdot | New Findings Confirm Darwin's Theory — Evolution Not Random

Slashdot | New Findings Confirm Darwin's Theory — Evolution Not Random: "ScienceDaily is reporting a team of biologists has demonstrated that evolution is a deterministic process, rather than a random selection as some competing theories suggested. 'When the researchers measured changes in 40 defined characteristics of the nematodes' sexual organs (including cell division patterns and the formation of specific cells), they found that most were uniform in direction, with the main mechanism for the development favoring a natural selection of successful traits, the researchers said.'"

Slashdot | State of US Science Report Shows Disturbing Trends

Slashdot | State of US Science Report Shows Disturbing Trends: "coondoggie writes to mention that the National Science Board is concerned about certain indicators in the science and engineering fields for the United States. 'For example, US schools continue to lag behind internationally in science and math education. On the other hand, the US is the largest, single, R&D-performing nation in the world pumping some $340 billion into future-related technologies. The US also leads the world in patent development.'"

Slashdot | Texas Creationist Museum Facing Extinction

Slashdot | Texas Creationist Museum Facing Extinction: "'A small Texas museum that teaches creationism is counting on the auction of a prehistoric mastodon skull to stave off extinction. The founder and curator of the Mt. Blanco Fossil Museum, which rejects evolution and claims that man and dinosaurs coexisted, said it will close unless the Volkswagen-sized skull finds a generous bidder. 'If it sells, well, then we can come another day,' Joe Taylor said. 'This is very important to our continuing.'' Meanwhile, the much larger Creation Museum in Kentucky that we discussed and toured when it opened last year seems to be thriving."

AlterNet: Blogs: MediaCulture: Right Wing Furious Over Snub of Radio Host Who Called African-Americans 'Savages'

AlterNet: Blogs: MediaCulture: Right Wing Furious Over Snub of Radio Host Who Called African-Americans 'Savages': "Bob Grant is one of the godfathers of incendiary right-wing talk radio and has been an inspiration for figures such as Sean Hannity."

AlterNet: Blogs: MediaCulture: Fox Attacks Homeless Vets: O'Reilly Says They're "Non-Existent" [VIDEO]

AlterNet: Blogs: MediaCulture: Fox Attacks Homeless Vets: O'Reilly Says They're "Non-Existent" [VIDEO]: "Meet some of the so-called 'non-existent' vets and sign a petition demanding that Bill O'Reilly personally apologize to them."

Vanishing Of The Bees documentary - Boing Boing

Vanishing Of The Bees documentary - Boing Boing

BeesssssHoney bees are dying in vast numbers and nobody knows exactly why. As honey bees are responsible for pollinating a third of the crop species in the US alone, this phenomena, called Colony Collapse Disorder, is potentially very bad news for everyone. "Vanishing of the Bees" is an independent documentary currently in production about this ecological nightmare and its potential impact. The trailer is beautiful, provocative, and deeply moving. I hope the filmmakers gather the funds to complete the full movie. Link (Thanks, Kelly Sparks!)

Life After People, new documentary - Boing Boing

Life After People, new documentary - Boing Boing
Life After People is a new TV documentary airing on the History Channel that attempts to forecast what our planet would be like if we were gone. It premieres this coming Monday, January 21. Looks like a lot of post-apocapalyptic fun! From the show's mini site:

 Minisites Life After People Images Buildings DecomposingAbandoned skyscrapers would, after hundreds of years, become "vertical ecosystems" complete with birds, rodents and even plant life. One small animal might be responsible for bringing down the Hoover Dam hydroelectric plant. Swelled rivers, crumbling bridges and buildings, grizzly bears in California and herds of buffalo returning to the Great Western Plains: In a world without humans, these would be the visual hallmarks. Our cars would shrivel to piles of dust, our house pets would be overtaken by flourishing wildlife and most of the records of our human story -- books, photos, records -- would fade quickly, leaving little evidence that we ever existed.

Using feature film quality visual effects and top experts in the fields of engineering, botany, ecology, biology, geology, climatology and archeology, Life After People provides an amazing visual journey through the ultimately hypothetical.

The 1986 nuclear power plant accident at Chernobyl and its aftermath provides a riveting and emotional case study of what can happen after humans have moved on. Life After People goes to remote islands off the coast of Maine to search for traces of abandoned towns, beneath the streets of New York to see how subway tunnels may become watery canals, to the Montana wilderness to divine the destiny of the bears and wolves.
Link (Thanks, Jason Tester!)

Presidential milkshakes - Boing Boing

Presidential milkshakes - Boing Boing
Sean T. Collins of Attention Deficit Disorder has created a presidential milkshake list that tells you all you need to know about the candidates. Here are a few:

I drink your milkshake, even though I opposed drinking your milkshake four years ago. -- Mitt Romney

I drink your milkshake, but only if the Bible says it's allowed. -- Mike Huckabee

I may drink your milkshake for another 100 years, if that's what it takes. -- John McCain

I drank a milkshake on 9/11. -- Rudy Giuliani

I drink your milkshake, but I'm paying for it with gold. -- Ron Paul

I will fight the corporations so that you can drink your own milkshake. -- John Edwards

I have 35 years of milkshake-drinking experience. *sob* -- Hillary Clinton

I peacefully drink your milkshake. -- Dennis Kucinich

Link

Feds plan digital spying on pigs, llamas, terrorcritters. - Boing Boing

Feds plan digital spying on pigs, llamas, terrorcritters. - Boing Boing

Noah Shachtman at Wired's DANGER ROOM blog says:

This is beyond ridiculous. The federal government is now going to track every farm animal across the country, from birth to death, because it wants to watch out for the extremely faint possibility of a bioterrorist attacking the food chain.
Snip from LA Times article:
A Bush administration initiative, the National Animal Identification System is meant to provide a modern tool for tracking disease outbreaks within 48 hours, whether natural or the work of a bioterrorist. Most farm animals, even exotic ones such as llamas, will eventually be registered. Information will be kept on every farm, ranch or stable. And databases will record every animal movement from birth to slaughterhouse, including trips to the vet and county fairs. But the system is spawning a grass-roots revolt.
Link to DANGER ROOM post.


Unusual list of sex-related terms - Boing Boing

Unusual list of sex-related terms - Boing Boing
Here's a list of words that (mostly) describe sexual behavior.

Faunoiphilia (FAW-nay-FIL-ee-uh) - An abnormal desire to watch animals copulate.

Brassirothesauriast (bruh-zeer-oh-thuh-SAW-ree-ast) - A person who collects brassieres or pictures of women wearing them.

Eunoterpsia (YOO-noh-TURP-see-uh) - The doctrine that pursuing sexual pleasure is the goal of life.

Typhlobasia (TIF-luh-BAY-zee-uh) - Kissing with the eyes closed.

Amychesis (AM-i-KEE-sis) - The involuntary act of scratching or clawing your partner in the heat of passion.

Mammaquatia (MAM-uh-KWAY-shee-uh) - The bobbing or jiggling of a woman's breasts when she walks, dances, or exercises.

Ozoamblyrosis (OH-zoh-AM-bli-ROH-sis) - Loss of sexual apetite because your partner has wicked B.O.

Amomaxia (AM-uh-MAX-see-uh) - Love-making in a parked car.

Colpocoquette (KAHL-puh-koh-KET) - A woman who knows she has an attractive bosom, and who makes good use of its allure.

Melolagnia (MEL-uh-LAG-nee-uh) - Amorous feelings inspired by music.

Link (Via sexoteric NSFW)

Sprint is Crawling in the Mobile Phone Race

Sprint is Crawling in the Mobile Phone Race
In the race of who can attract the most subscribers and keep them onboard in the mobile phone world, Sprint is crawling! Their subscribers are leaving by the thousands, and because of that, their employees are forced to leave in the thousands as well. In a News Release dated January 18th, Sprint says that in the fourth quarter alone, they experienced a loss of 683,000 post-paid subscribers (meaning those with monthly service plans and contracts) and 202,000 pre-paid users. In all, they saw 885,000 subscribers walk out the door and head to other services.

What happens when such a large number of people leave? Well, the obvious. They don’t need as many employees to deal with customer’s needs, and they don’t need as many retail stores. Sprint is expected to kick 4,000 employees to the curb and close 8 percent (or 125) of their retail locations, and 4,000 third-party distribution points. All of these changes should be complete by the end of the first half of the year. By doing this, they’re hoping to reduce their labor costs by $700-$800 million by the end of the year.

So who and what is to blame for this decrease? Well, first of all, Sprint themselves are partially to blame. Remember all of those contracts they canceled because the users were calling too much? I think the iPhone is partially to blame too. People who wanted the iPhone bad enough were willing to cancel their contracts with other service providers like Sprint to head over to AT&T. With the popularity of the iPhone, I think every mobile provider has had a difficult time.

It was just two weeks ago that Ryan and I ended up calling Sprint to cancel our service. We’ve both been Sprint customers for years, but after multiple customer service issues, we decided not to renew our contract when it ran out at the beginning of January and head over to AT&T. One such issue was being charged per KB for Internet usage when we were supposed to have had an Internet plan. By the time we realized it, we had racked up over $100 in Internet usage. Calling customer service was useless– they said they couldn’t do anything about it! It took calling and asking to speak with the CEO before we could actually get connected with someone who was able to fix the issue.

Ryan made the phone call to cancel two week ago and it was clear that they were willing to do just about anything to keep us as subscribers. Here’s what they offered (all of which, we declined):

  • Three months of service for free if we stayed with them (this would be tempting for a lot of people, but they were also banking on the fact that we’d forget to call back and cancel)
  • We declined the first offer- so they said we could give the phones to friends to use the three free months
  • A plan to use direct connect only
  • Keep the phone number active for $5 per month in case we wanted to come back

Definitely not a good start to the year for Sprint!

"Hacker Safe" Sites are Really Hacker Friendly

"Hacker Safe" Sites are Really Hacker Friendly
One of the logos that users have come to trust is the “Hacker Safe” label placed on certain sites. Geeks.com has that logo on their site, but that didn’t stop them from getting hacked back in December. Are the sites that say they are Hacker Safe really all that secure?

The Hacker Safe program is run by McAfee’s ScanAlert service, and 62 different websites that are certified by them have been found to have cross-site scripting (XSS) attacks over the last year…including the ScanAlert site itself. Most of the sites have plugged the holes, but the 62 sites affected includes popular ones such as brookstone.com, cafepress.com, cduniverse.com, gnc.com, petsmart.com, and sportsauthority.com. All of those are “Hacker Safe” sites.

There was some speculation as to whether Geeks.com was Hacker Safe when they had their data breach in December, but I pulled up the archives for their site and the logo has been on their site for a long time. Unfortunately there was no archive available around the timeframe of the breech, but I think ScanAlert is just trying to cover their butt by passing off the blame.

I guess the moral of the story is that the Hacker Safe logo may give you some initial reassurances, but even some of the biggest sites are still left vulnerable. Try to make sure that the sites you are ordering from don’t store your personal information, such as a credit card number.

[via Information Week]

Friday, January 18, 2008

U.S. Supreme Court: Lying by Omission Okay for Corporations

U.S. Supreme Court: Lying by Omission Okay for Corporations

On Tuesday of this week the U.S. Supreme Court ruled 5 to 3 against plaintiffs who had sued a couple of cable television equipment companies who had assisted Charter Communications to inflate its earnings and conceal from investors how the company had failed to reach its financial goals.

In a follow-up article on Wednesday Linda Greenhouse reported in the New York Times:

"The decision in the case, Stoneridge Investment Partners v. Scientific-Atlanta Inc., was a major and ardently sought victory for investment banks, accountants and vendors — the deep pockets that have become nearly automatic targets of class-action lawsuits that accuse them of having engaged in a fraudulent scheme with the company that actually issued the stock."

And:

"The notion of "scheme liability," as the theory behind such lawsuits is known, now appears to be dead."

The core of the fraud is summed up here best:

"The case, which was dismissed before trial in the lower courts, involved an accusation of a deceptive arrangement between a cable television company and two suppliers that gave the company's books the illusion of an additional $17 million in revenue."

The USSC simply side-stepped the whole issue of aiding and abetting by mumbling about there being no clear laws compelling second-parties communicating to the "markets" that they are well aware of a company deceiving investors (especially it seems if they themselves are helping in this deception).

So, apparently, once again, the USSC decides that there are two separate law books in this country: one for the average citizen and one for Corporate America.

Let me pose this scenario: you are hauled into court and put on the stand. There you are being grilled by the district attorney. "Did you know that this crime had been committed Mr. X?"

"Yes."

"And you did not report it?"

"No, I did not."

I don't know about anyone else but in my law books that's defined as an accessory "after the fact." You can BET your ass is in serious trouble...

These two cable equipment companies ABETTED Charter Communications by inflating the cost of their equipment TO Charter, then used that extra money to purchase more ADVERTISING on Charter's cable stations. So Charter gets to use this advert purchasing as current revenue and penciling out the "extra" money spent on the equipment as "capital expense".

In my law books this is called "accessory before the fact". Now your ass is not simply leaning in the direction of that abyss, it is HANGING out over it...

But apparently, in America, there are two sets of rules...

According to the Supreme Court, a company, standing right behind another, as it is rifling through your pockets and stealing you blind is under no "legal" obligation to tell you about this. Why should they since they're assisting with the wallet rape themselves?

Justice Kennedy explains it to us this way:

"Section 10(b) does not incorporate common-law fraud into federal law."

This is the way lawyers and judges tell us that Justice has left the building (and no one's sure if it ever had the right address).

So now Wall Street must be sighing with huge relief. You can see why can't you?

We have a Congress that hasn't passed any meaningful legislation in decades in an effort to rein in these carpetbaggers. And an increasingly neo-conservative court (not seen since the Age of the Robber Barrons) and an Executive Branch increasingly beholden to them (over the past four decades) that is loath to do anything unless, in the most egregious case, such as Enron, it is forced to. Oh happy days!

Indeed, Wall Street won't give a damn who sits in the White House come a year hence. They've wrapped up all three branches of the our government nice and tight.

So there it is! All wrapped up nice for them by the Robert's court! The last real vestige of laws supposedly there to protect the investor.

This blows a hole a MILE WIDE in the arguments of all those "free market" backers who insist that "business is much better" at "regulating themselves". That the "free market will police itself!"

Oh really?

Let's review...

• Thirty plus years of these forces stripping away government regulation of most major industries.

• A Congress that has been and is increasingly deeper in the pockets of lobbyists and special interests, unwilling, consequently to pass new laws or strengthen remaining ones...

• A Justice Department, at one time (supposedly) apolitical in its philosophy now giving a whole NEW meaning to "Justice is blind..."

Yes, this must be a proud day for all those championing laissez-faire economy... You've won. There is now, LITERALLY nothing keeping Corporate America from stealing this country BLIND.

So, just remember, if you're ever facing a deposition as an ordinary citizen you'll burn in hell should you knowingly omit a fact but if you're the CEO of a major corporation you'll now not only be expected to not report a crime as it's being committed but you'll be rewarded for not doing so later on as you cash in your shares.

Sporadic Sequential: Get 'Em Hooked While They're Young

Sporadic Sequential: Get 'Em Hooked While They're Young
this is cute....

Cloverfield Monster Revealed! For Real This Time! -- Vulture -- Entertainment & Culture Blog -- New York Magazine

Cloverfield Monster Revealed! For Real This Time! -- Vulture -- Entertainment & Culture Blog -- New York Magazine

Star Trek: Exclusive First Look at the Enterprise - Moviefone

Star Trek: Exclusive First Look at the Enterprise - Moviefone

IESB.net - Movie News, Reviews, Interviews and More! - First Image of the Enterprise is Online

IESB.net - Movie News, Reviews, Interviews and More! - First Image of the Enterprise is Online

Sundance Dispatch: Checking In With Jackie The Jokeman

Sundance Dispatch: Checking In With Jackie The Jokeman

Tuesday, January 15, 2008

Wesley Snipes to Go on Trial in Tax Case - New York Times

Wesley Snipes to Go on Trial in Tax Case - New York Times

Neatorama » Blog Archive » Revenge Gone Wild!

Neatorama » Blog Archive » Revenge Gone Wild!

revenge stories including the one below...

REVENGE OF THE SPAM HATERS

Background: In November 2002, Detroit Free Press columnist Mike Wendland wrote a story about a man named Alan Ralsky. Ralsky had become a multimillionaire through marketing spam on the Internet. How much spam? His company sent up to 250 million e-mails a day. The story told readers about Ralsky’s new 8,000-square-foot, $740,000 home. The spammer bragged that one entire wing of the house was paid for by a single weight-loss e-mail.

Revenge Gone Wild! A group of spam haters decided to give Ralsky a dose of his own medicine. They posted his home address on hundreds of websites, and Ralsky started getting tons - literally - of junk mail. Then they posted his e-mail address and his phone number, and the mega-junkmailer got inundated with the very thing he had made his millions from - spam. And, no surprise: He was annoyed! Ralsky later complained, "They’ve signed me up for every advertising campaign and mailing list there is. These people are out of their minds! They’re harassing me!" (Photo: The Detroit News)

SI.com - NBA - LeBron ticketed for driving 101 mph on highway - Sunday January 13, 2008 11:29PM

SI.com - NBA - LeBron ticketed for driving 101 mph on highway - Sunday January 13, 2008 11:29PM: "Cavs star accused of going 101 in 65 mph zone"

The Future Of Apple Is In 1960s Braun: 1960s Braun Products Hold the Secrets to Apple's Future

The Future Of Apple Is In 1960s Braun: 1960s Braun Products Hold the Secrets to Apple's Future

Heisman winners...where are they now? • Straight Talk From the Left Coast - FOX Sports Blogs

Heisman winners...where are they now? • Straight Talk From the Left Coast - FOX Sports Blogs

Apple flies in the MacBook Air | Crave : The gadget blog

Apple flies in the MacBook Air | Crave : The gadget blog

FCC Approves Google For Wireless Auction | WebProNews

FCC Approves Google For Wireless Auction | WebProNews
Bidding starts on Jan. 24

The 700MHz wireless spectrum auction on January 24th opens with 214 bidders chasing the big prize, with Google competing with an assortment of telecoms both big and small.

As part of the process of lining up bidders who will pay upwards of $4.6 billion to secure a prized block of wireless spectrum, the Federal Communications Commission approved 214 firms for participation in the upcoming auction.

Google Airwaves, the entity listed as Google's participant in the auction, faces giants like Verizon and AT&T in bidding for the spectrum. Another notable bidder, Vulcan Spectrum, is backed by billionaire Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen.

The growing importance of the mobile device for Internet access made the 700MHz spectrum a desirable acquisition. Analog TV broadcasts over that spectrum will be phased out in favor of digital transmissions, and the ability for devices to easily receive 700MHz signals inside buildings created this fervent interest.

This would give the auction winner the ability to deliver whatever services it likes to people in major urban areas, where tall buildings interfere with typical wireless signals. For Google, it means the chance to serve its ad-backed products to thousands of demographically-desirable people in New York and similar places.

portland imc - 2006.10.15 - G.W. Bush Buys Land In Northern Paraguay

thanks to an anonymous poster who sent me a link to google: Bush Reportedly Purchased 100s Acres of Land in Remote Area of Paraguay in
http://www.google.com/search?as_q=bush+buys+land+paraguay&hl=en&num=100&btnG=Google+Search&as_epq=&as_oq=&as_eq=&lr=&as_ft=i&as_filetype=&as_qdr=all&as_nlo=&as_nhi=&as_occt=any&as_dt=i&as_sitesearch=&as_rights=&safe=images

portland imc - 2006.10.15 - G.W. Bush Buys Land In Northern Paraguay
On October 13, 2006, the Prensa Latina paper reported that George W. Bush had purchased 98, 842 acres on the Acuifero Guarani
in northern Paraguay, between Bolivia and Brazil. This news was also reported in Asuncion, Paraguay on Oct. 12, and by Upsidedownworld
on Oct. 11. The Fortunate Son is not the first Bush to do so -- earlier George H.W. Bush purchased 173, 000 acres in Paso de Patria, the
Chaco area of Paraguay. Jenna Bush has spent time in Paraguay as a representative of UNICEF.
One of the 25 top censored stories, "U.S. Military In Paraguay" revealed that the U.S. military had purchased land in Paraguay, and had
sent 500 U.S. troops to Paraguay in 2005, along with ammunition, weapons, helicopters, and planes. The U.S. military base was set up in the
region of Mariscal Estigarribia, not long after the government of Paraguay gave U.S. politicians, U.S. troops, and U.S. civilians complete
immunity from national and international criminal prosecution.
Both U.S. and Paraguayan government officials hotly deny the existence of a U.S. military base at Mariscal Estigarribia, and the Bush
estates -- dismissing them as rumors. However, a leaked classified memo, which was later included in the 9/11 Commission report,
stated that the U.S. government regretted the lack of good targets in Afghanistan and Iraq -- and suggested that the U.S. initiate military
attacks in South America (and possibly Southeast Asia) to surprise the "al Qaeda terrorists."
After 9/11, Douglas Feith appointed two men to write the memo: Michael Maloof, former defense analyst and David Wurmser, a Middle
East expert and the #1 foreign-policy aide to V.P. Dick Cheney. This memo, claiming U.S. intelligence reports, said that Hezbollah
terrorists, supported by Iran, were active in the border region of Brazil, Argentina, and Paraguay -- and that a U.S. military raid on the
terrorist base would have a detrimental effect on other terrorist groups operating in South America. Not surprisingly, the U.S. military base
in Mariscal Estigarribia, Paraguay, is not too far away from the large, rich gas fields in Bolivia.
It is obvious that the U.S. government/military have understood nothing from their lost wars in Afghanistan and Iraq.
Related story:
Bush Shields Dad on Chile Terrorism -- The Baltimore Chronicle
http://www.politicalcortex.com/story/2006/10/14/11926/843

Pensito Review » Bush Legacy: Presidents Can Be Impeached After They Leave Office

Pensito Review » Bush Legacy: Presidents Can Be Impeached After They Leave Office
"Just as hindsight shows that Americans 30 years ago could have prevented the abuses of Bush and Cheney by prosecuting and imprisoning Nixon in 1974, we owe it to future generations of Americans to hold Bush and Cheney accountable for their crimes and incompetence today."

If Alberto Gonzalez gets punk’d at speaking engagements, and Donald Rumsfeld has to be whisked out of France to avoid a war crimes indictment. what does the future hold for George W. Bush after he leaves office one year and six days from now?

Chris Hedges probably has it right:

Bush will soon be reduced to the cipher he once was, left to spend the rest of his life trying to salvage a legacy of shame and deceit. In a just world he would be put on trial, if not by the International Criminal Court of Justice then by the U.S. Congress. He would be forced to face up to his lies and wars of aggression. But the moral rot that infects the nation has seeped into the bowels of the legislative as well as the executive branch.

There are many organizations and efforts dedicated to the impeachment of George Bush. And Rep. Robert Wexler (D-Fla.) is leading a drive to impeach Dick Cheney — if you haven’t signed his online petition, do it now. Rep. Dennis Kucinich (D-Ohio) introduced articles of impeachment against the vice president last spring.

But there is one insurmountable obstacle to impeachment this year, and it is not Speaker Pelosi — it’s the continued support for Bush by Republicans in Congress. Unless and until it is expedient for them to get rid of Bush and Cheney, the congressional Republicans have shown that they will block any move to hold them accountable.

So while it looks likely that the millions of Americans who believe the Bush-Cheney regime has committed impeachable acts — lying about the pretext for war, betraying a secret operation that tracked the WMD black market, spying on Americans without warrants, torturing prisoners and firing U.S. attorneys without cause, to name a few — will have to settle for the cold comfort of watching Bush and Cheney grow old in disgrace, there is another option for bringing them to justice:

It is possible to impeach someone even after the accused has vacated their office in order to disqualify the person from future office or from certain emoluments of their prior office (such as a pension).

Another take:

Does it sound farfetched for Congress to impeach and try someone who is no longer in office? It has happened! In 1876, Secretary of War General William Belknap [who served in the scandal-plagued Republican administration of Pres. Ulysses Grant], accused of accepting a bribe, resigned just hours before the House was scheduled to consider articles of impeachment. The House went ahead and unanimously impeached him, and by a vote of 37-29 the Senate rejected the argument that Belknap’s resignation should abort the case. The Senate proceeded with the trial, but Belknap was narrowly acquitted. A number of the Senators who voted for acquittal explained that they felt they lacked jurisdiction because of his resignation…

By contrast, when in 1926 Illinois District Judge George English, impeached for various acts of wrongdoing, resigned from office six days before the scheduled commencement of his trial in the Senate, the matter was discontinued. The same was true, of course, when Richard Nixon resigned just prior to adoption of articles of impeachment by the House.

The Belknap precedent aside, is there any logic to impeaching and trying an official who is no longer in office? One answer might be the value of establishing a precedent that certain misconduct is (or is not) impeachable … Evidence suggests that the Framers of the Constitution concurred in this conclusion — they did not regard resignation as automatically precluding impeachment or conviction.

The purpose of a post-term impeachment of Bush and Cheney would be to send a message to future rightwing cabals who intend to highjack the American republic that they do so at their own peril — that they will be brought to justice.

A strong case can be made that if Pres. Nixon had been impeached, followed by a trial and conviction in court on the obstruction of justice and other charges and sentenced to prison, even briefly, Bush and particularly Cheney would have felt less emboldened to behave like despots. (In fact, it’s doubtful Cheney would have been interested in the vice presidency if he’d felt constrained from looting the government for his corporate cronies.)

Just as hindsight shows that Americans 30 years ago could have prevented the abuses of Bush and Cheney by prosecuting and imprisoning Nixon in 1974, we owe it to future generations of Americans to hold Bush and Cheney accountable for their crimes and incompetence today.

If the move for post-term impeachments took hold, Republicans would doubtless object — but just seven years ago it was GOP legal types who floated the idea of a post-presidential, second impeachment Pres. Clinton because they didn’t like the pardons he granted as he left office.

But, assuming current trends play themselves out, the dynamics of the upcoming 111th Congress could be quite different from any in recent memory. Conviction on impeachment charges requires 60 votes in the Senate, and it is quite possible that Democrats could end up controlling as many as 55 Senate seats, if not more. The split in the House is also likely to widen in favor of the Democrats. (And, technically, Speaker Pelosi only took impeachment “off the table” for the 110th Congress.)

It is also possible that Bush is aware he could be brought to justice after he leaves office. What else would explain the rumors that he purchased 100,000 acres of land in the Chaco region of Paraguay two years ago?

PoliGazette » The Case Against Ethanol

PoliGazette » The Case Against Ethanol

I’ve long been an opponent of ethanol as a viable source of alternative energy for America. At best it’s a short sighted and inefficient attempt at energy independence at worst its just another way to subsidize corn. Over at Scientific American the recently published an article showing the results of a five year study on switchgrass and found that acre per acre it produces over twenty one times more energy than ethanol.

But yields from a grass that only needs to be planted once would deliver an average of 13.1 megajoules of energy as ethanol for every megajoule of petroleum consumed—in the form of nitrogen fertilizers or diesel for tractors—growing them. “It’s a prediction because right now there are no biorefineries built that handle cellulosic material” like that which switchgrass provides, Vogel notes. “We’re pretty confident the ethanol yield is pretty close.” This means that switchgrass ethanol delivers 540 percent of the energy used to produce it, compared with just roughly 25 percent more energy returned by corn-based ethanol according to the most optimistic studies.

The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) is partially funding the construction of six such cellulosic biorefineries, estimated to cost a total of $1.2 billion. The first to be built will be the Range Fuels Biorefinery in Soperton, Ga., which will process wood waste from the timber industry into biofuels and chemicals. The DOE is providing an initial $50 million to start construction.

“Cost competitive, energy responsible cellulosic ethanol made from switchgrass or from forestry waste like sawdust and wood chips requires a more complex refining process but it’s worth the investment,” Energy Secretary Samuel Bodman said at the Range Fuels facility groundbreaking in November. “Cellulosic ethanol contains more net energy and emits significantly fewer greenhouse gases than ethanol made from corn.”

Additionally switchgrass can be grown on land that is of marginal use to farmers meaning that farming it won’t raise the price of food the same way diverting corn to ethanol production has.
There is bound to be resistance to the loss of corn subsidies to be sure. However those lawmakers that do resist are most likely much more interested in staying in office (by securing pork/subsidies) than they are in solving problems. Hence those are exactly the type of lawmakers we can do without.

AlterNet: Health and Wellness: The Poor Get Diabetes, the Rich Get Local and Organic

AlterNet: Health and Wellness: The Poor Get Diabetes, the Rich Get Local and Organic

By Mark Winne, Beacon Press
Posted on January 9, 2008, Printed on January 15, 2008
http://www.alternet.org/story/72417/

The following is an excerpt from Mark Winne's new book, Closing the Food Gap: Resetting the Table in the Land of Plenty.

As a class, lower income people have been well represented in some of the best-covered food stories of our day, particularly hunger, obesity, and diabetes. As these issues have faded in and out of the public's eye over the last 25 years, another food trend was rapidly becoming a national obsession -- namely, local and organic.

At about the same time that Berkeley diva Alice Waters was first showing us how to bestow style and grace on something as ordinary as a local tomato, the Reagan administration's anti-poor policies were driving an unprecedented number of people into soup kitchens and food banks. And as organic food advocates were putting the finishing touches on what was to become the first national standard for organic food, supermarket chains were nailing plywood across their city store windows bidding farewell to lower income America.

Organic food and agriculture had barely climbed out of the bassinet in 1989 when 60 Minutes ran its now famous Alar story. The exposure it received before 40 million television viewers ignited a firestorm of consumer reaction that eventually made organic food the fastest growing segment of the U.S. food industry.

Yuppie families reacted first. Like every parent since time immemorial, these parents wanted what was best for their children, and the emerging evidence that our food supply was tainted accelerated their desire for the healthiest and safest food possible. Though the research surrounding the health and safety attributes of various foods remained foggy, competing claims opened up a never ending number of consumer options. One's food choices may be vegetarian, vegan, organic, grass-fed, free-range, humanely raised, or some combination of these. As to the source of this food, it could range from "generally local when it's easy to get" to "obsessively local and will eat nothing else."

In low-income circles, however, such food anxieties got little traction. Between getting to a food store where the bananas weren't black and having enough money to buy any food at all, low-income shoppers had little inclination to parse the differences between grass-fed and grass-finished. But this didn't imply that their awareness of organic food was non-existent, nor did it mean that low-income consumers were less likely to buy organic if they had the chance.

Low-Income Shoppers Speak

To better understand a variety of issues, the Hartford Food System, a Connecticut-based non-profit organization that I directed for 24 years, would often meet with low-income families to get their point of view. On one such occasion, we asked eight members of Hartford's Clay/Arsenal neighborhood to discuss local and organic food. Like other impoverished urban neighborhoods, Clay/Arsenal was entirely devoid of good quality food stores, and their residents experienced hunger, obesity, and diabetes at rates that were two to three times the national average. This group was comprised exclusively of Hispanic and African American residents.

First off, the group expressed an immediate consensus that fresh, inexpensive food -- the food they generally preferred -- was unavailable in their neighborhood. Everyone agreed that traveling to a full-line supermarket was a hassle because it required one or two long bus rides or an expensive taxi fare. As a result, they did their major shopping once or twice a month, and when they shopped, price was their most important consideration.

When asked what the word organic meant to them, the residents answered "real food," "natural," "healthy," and "you know what's in it." While they believed that organic food was preferable to food they described as "processed," "full of chemicals," or "toxic," they said that buying organic food wasn't even an option, because it was simply not available to them. One young woman made a point of saying that she didn't trust the environment where she lived or the food she ingested. "Everything gives you cancer these days," she said. Conversely, there was an underlying tone of confidence in the safety and healthfulness of food that they could identify as local and organic.

Their awareness of the benefits of local and organic food was very high. For the elderly, there was the nostalgic association with tastes, places, and times gone by. For those with young children, there was an apprehension that nearly everything associated with their external environment, including food, was a threat. Like parents of all races, education levels, and occupations, these moms wanted what was best for their children as well, even when they knew that what was best was not available to them.

Local and Organic Go Mainstream

"In a burst of new interest in food," spouted Newsweek's 2006 food issue, "Americans are demanding -- and paying for -- the freshest and least chemically treated products available." Whole Foods' John Mackey told the Wall Street Journal, "The organic-food lifestyle is not a fad ... It's a value system, a belief system. It's penetrating into the mainstream."

As we cast our eye over the sheer effulgence of American food, there appears to be no limit to the type and number of food products for those who are motivated by taste, environmental concern, animal welfare, political correctness, or simple virtue. Niman Ranch produces a pork to die for, and costs significantly more than the factory-farmed alternative. Don't want to spend the "best four years of your life" eating swill from the college cafeteria trough? Select from any of hundreds of colleges and universities that are now featuring "sustainable dining" (some inspired by master chef Alice Waters). And when you just can't find anything that satisfies your organic lifestyle where you live, you can always pack up and leave. The New York Times style page featured a number of families who had the financial wherewithal to escape from New York City to the Hudson River valley. Once there, the families "began eating strictly organic foods." One couple said they had moved because the wife was pregnant with their second child and "we decided that the children needed to be in nature."

Sounds pretty good. In fact, it just may be the latest incarnation of the American dream. But what about those who can't escape or afford to eat "strictly organic" or for whom "buying local" means the past-code date, packaged baloney at the neighborhood bodega? How do we fulfill the desire for healthy and sustainably produced food that is increasingly shared by all?

There are two general directions that have shown promise in closing this food gap: one is through private, largely non-profit projects and the other is through public policy. At the Hartford Food System we founded the Holcomb Farm Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) Farm that made an explicit commitment to distribute about 40 percent of its local and organic produce to the city's low-income community. Using a hybrid method of funding, CSAs like the Holcomb Farm (Just Food in New York City and the Western Massachusetts Food Bank in Hadley are other examples) have been organized around the country to ensure that CSAs are not solely the province of a white, bright elite. Other models like the People's Grocery in Oakland are using mobile markets to bring high quality, healthy food into communities that are underserved by supermarkets.

Public policy advocacy has leveraged federal and state funding to provide special farmers' market vouchers to low-income women, children, and elders (Farmers Market Nutrition Program). These small denomination coupons have opened an increasing share of the nation's 4,500 farmers' markets to a wider demographic of shoppers. Along the same lines, a small but steady stream of farmers' markets are installing swipe card machines to enable food stamp recipients to use their electronic benefit transfer (EBT) cards to buy local food. And in what might be the biggest breakthrough yet, the national Women, Infant, and Children Program (WIC) will be implementing a new fruit and vegetable program that is potentially worth hundreds of million dollars to lower income consumers and local farmers.

While it may be some time before we see a Whole Foods open in East Harlem, non-profit organizations like the Philadelphia-based Food Trust have secured millions of dollars in state financing to develop food stores in underserved urban and rural Pennsylvania communities. As part of an overall economic development strategy, these stores are not only providing new sources of healthy and affordable food to low-income families, they are also expanding employment opportunities and the local property tax base.

These projects and policies have inched us closer to bridging the divide between the haves and have-nots, but unless every segment of society rejects the notion that there is one food system for the poor, and one for everyone else, these gains will remain marginal.

Mark Winne was the executive director of the Hartford Food System for 25 years. His first book "Closing the Food Gap: Resetting the Table in the Land of Plenty" was published by Beacon Press in January 2008.

© 2008 Independent Media Institute. All rights reserved.
View this story online at: http://www.alternet.org/story/72417/

AlterNet: Health and Wellness: The Future of Medicare Is the Future of Health Care

AlterNet: Health and Wellness: The Future of Medicare Is the Future of Health Care

By Trudy Lieberman, Columbia Journalism Review
Posted on January 11, 2008, Printed on January 15, 2008
http://www.alternet.org/story/72554/

Of the millions of words written and spoken about U.S. health care, only a tiny percentage have been about Medicare. So far, stump speeches and media coverage boil down, on the Democratic side, to whose health proposal covers more people, and, for GOP candidates, who will not embrace that American bugaboo, "socialized medicine." Medicare, which covers more than forty million seniors and people with disabilities, seems to be off limits, even though there's plenty to talk about. The scant coverage of Medicare that does exist is cryptic, code-like, and assumes that the public knows the ins and outs of one of the government's most complicated programs.

This is unfortunate because the future of Medicare may well tell us what kind of health care all of America will eventually have. Will we conquer budget challenges and find a way to continue Medicare as a successful social insurance program? Or will we privatize the program to mirror the rest of the U.S. health insurance system, with its holes and shortcomings?

A New York Times CBS News poll in December found that less than one percent of respondents thought Medicare and Medicaid were the most important problems facing the country, a stat which raises a chicken and egg question. Do candidates think that people don't care about Medicare, justifying their silence, or do voters not yet care because the media (and the candidates) aren't telling them what's at stake?

Back in August, Hillary Clinton gave a speech in Iowa and briefly discussed Medicare, which she said faced significant financial challenges driven by the spiraling cost of health care. True enough. She told the gathering that the current president had not called for a national commitment to save Social Security and Medicare and that it was time "we talked about and confronted a lot of these issues." She described them as "invisible." True again. But neither Clinton, the other candidates, nor the media have done much to make them visible.

Mike Huckabee's words are puzzling. Right before Christmas, Huckabee talked to an Iowa woman who is dying from a progressive lung disease. When she asked him what he would do to change the national health care system, he responded that change must start with federal programs like Medicare and Medicaid. "If we don't set the model, then the rest of the industry doesn't move that way." But if Huckabee explained what model he had in mind, The Associated Press didn't tell us.

On the trail, Huckabee notes that Medicare obligations, if not "fixed," will lead to financial ruin, and quips, "Wait till all these aging hippies find out they'll get free drugs for the rest of their lives." Does he mean free LSD or free Lipitor? Medicare provides neither, but aging hippies might indeed want to know what kind of program Medicare will be five years from now -- one where everyone is entitled to a standard set of benefits or one where people must fish in the pond controlled by private insurance companies. The Medicare drug benefits, now sold by commerical insurers, moved in the latter direction.

Fred Thompson said he would cut Medicare for wealthy people like Warren Buffet. Does he really mean billionaires, or merely those with incomes higher than $80,000? (Right now single people with incomes greater than that pay higher premiums -- another step in the direction of privatization.) Does Thompson aim to destroy the universality of Medicare, which most experts believe contributes to the program's popularity and success? A Miami Herald story into this for readers, many of whom are already on Medicare and would presumbly want to know if they will lose benefits under a Thompson plan.

John Edwards started to talk about how the drug companies wrote the Medicare prescription drug law. "Why do we have that mess of a Medicare prescription drug law? The thing was written by drug company lobbyists. I was there..." A New York Times story cut off the rest of his remarks so we don't know, if he said anything, about how he would fight drug company opposition to negotiating prices with Medicare, a position he supports.

The media and the candidates are ignoring other serious issues:

Overpayments to insurance companies selling private-fee-for-service plans to Medicare beneficiaries. Seniors can choose one of these plans instead of traditional Medicare benefits. But independent experts like the Medicare Payment Advisory Commission say the government pays these insurers 19 percent more than it costs to provide the same benefits under traditional Medicare. Medicare's own actuaries predict that overpayments hasten the depletion of the system's trust funds, resulting in benefit cuts unless new revenues flow in. When President Bush vowed to veto any legislation that cut the excess payments, Congress didn't push for cuts during its end-of-the-year session. The media missed a golden opportunity to press the candidates. For the record: Both Obama and Clinton supported cutting the overpayments, important positions that have gotten no attention or traction so far.

How Medicare will cope with the rising cost of health care, and who will pay those costs. Medicare like other segments of the health care system has been unable to control the mounting costs of new technology and treatments. To continue benefits, tax increases might be necessary. Yet the snippets of Medicare policy we have heard come mostly from Republicans promoting market solutions -- like shifting future costs to beneficiaries -- instead of revenue solutions that will retain Medicare's fundamental structure. Clinton said almost a year ago that the president's attempt to make higher-income beneficiaries pay surcharges for their Medicare drug benefits was "exactly the wrong approach." But as the year unfolded, squabbles over whose health care plan forced more people to buy insurance drowned out this crucial policy difference.

A recent retirement column posted on businessweek.com/investing questioned the silence about Medicare and other retirement issues. The writer, Ellen Hoffman, scanned position papers, statements, and tried, sometimes without success, to get more information from campaign staffs. It's a hopeful sign that she tried. Maybe other reporters will start delving in to the effects of government overpayments and rising health care costs on Medicare, and whether Medicare will continue to cover all of the elderly. Here's a case where the press needs to lead rather than wait for the spinmeisters to decide what gets covered.

© 2008 Independent Media Institute. All rights reserved.
View this story online at: http://www.alternet.org/story/72554/

AlterNet: Health and Wellness: Pentagon, Big Pharma: Drug Troops to Numb Them to Horrors of War

AlterNet: Health and Wellness: Pentagon, Big Pharma: Drug Troops to Numb Them to Horrors of War: "The DoD is flirting with the idea of medicating soldiers to desensitize them to combat trauma -- will an army of unfeeling monsters result?"

AlterNet: Health and Wellness: Bush's Prescription for Plutocracy

AlterNet: Health and Wellness: Bush's Prescription for Plutocracy

By Sam Pizzigati, Too Much: A Commentary on Excess and Inequality
Posted on January 14, 2008, Printed on January 15, 2008
http://www.alternet.org/story/73703/

Imagine yourself the CEO in an industry that has been registering record profits year after year -- mainly by overcharging consumers for products they feel they literally can't live without. But suddenly you find yourself with a problem: Your products have simply become too costly for consumers to afford.

So what do you do? You convince lawmakers to plow billions of taxpayer dollars into a program that will help consumers pay for your overpriced products. Problem solved. You can now, as a certified CEO genius, look forward to years of windfall rewards.

This scenario sound far-fetched? You haven't been paying attention. This scenario has actually just unfolded -- in the pharmaceutical industry.

Big Pharma, as the industry has become less than affectionately known, entered the 21st century the most profitable industry in the world. In 2002, notes Harvard Medical School analyst Marcia Angell, the top 10 drug companies in the United States netted more earnings than all the rest of the companies in the Fortune 500 taken together.

Big profits like these translated into hefty paydays for top Big Pharma executives. In 2001, the five most lavishly compensated drug company execs averaged over $30 million each. Three Big Pharma execs entered that year with at least $131 million worth of stock options they hadn't yet cashed in.

The fuel for these big earnings: revenues from outpatient prescriptions that were rising at a remarkable 15 percent annual rate. By 2002, 12 cents out of every dollar Americans were expending for health care were going for prescription drugs.

But no industry can sustain, over the long haul, such annual revenue increases. For Big Pharma, the first big sign of trouble would come in 2003. In that year, after over two decades as Corporate America's most profitable sector, the pharmaceutical industry lost its number one profitability ranking, dropping to third place.

The industry would waste no time crying in its chemicals. In that same 2003, Big Pharma would team with the Bush White House to push through Congress legislation that added a prescription drug benefit to the Medicare program.

Seniors, the White House crowed, would finally have help paying for their prescriptions.

This new Medicare legislation guaranteed all seniors eligibility for some form of drug benefit by January 2006. But the legislation didn't guarantee any decrease in prescription drug prices.

Indeed, the new law specifically prohibited any federal government action to negotiate for lower prices directly with the drug companies.

"The key goal," notes Ron Pollack of the health care watchdog group Families USA, "was to make sure there'd be no interference in the drug companies' abilities to charge high prices and to continue to increase those prices."

To safeguard this price-inflating provision, Big Pharma would spend the next three years overrunning Capitol Hill with lobbyists and cash. Through 2005 and the first six months of 2006 alone, the Center for Public Integrity reported last April, drug companies and their trade groups spent $155 million on lobbying Congress.

Those dollars, the Center notes, unleashed an army of 1,100 paid lobbyists on the House and the Senate -- over two lobbyists, in effect, for every Capitol Hill lawmaker.

On top of that, Big Pharma invested millions more in campaign contributions, over $70 million in all from 1998 through June 2006 -- and spent even more millions ushering members of Congress into America's economic elite.

In 2005, for instance, the industry's top trade association — the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America — named former Congressman Billy Tauzin its new CEO. His pay package: a reported $2 million, over 15 times his take-home as a lawmaker.

These Big Pharma investments all paid off. Attempts to amend the 2003 drug "benefit" legislation went nowhere. The legislation went into full effect exactly as the drug industry wanted.

The results would be predictable. In 2006, overall outlays for prescription drugs "accelerated for the first time in six years," soaring 8.5 percent.

An analysis of that increase, published last week by the U.S. Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, hands all the credit to the new federal Medicare benefit.

In 2006, $41 billion taxpayer dollars went toward underwriting the drug benefit. Over the course of the year, the share of the nation's total prescription drug costs paid by Medicare leaped from 2 percent to 18 percent.

In other words, an unalloyed victory for the drug companies. They can now continue to overcharge with impunity. America's taxpayers have come to their rescue.

The drug companies, not surprisingly, aren't exactly sharing their new-found good fortune. In 2007, Fortune reported this past December, Big Pharma deep-sixed over 30,000 jobs. The companies are busily outsourcing, big-time, to China and India.

Drug company executives, on the other hand, continue to prosper. Wyeth CEO Bob Essner, for one, pulled in over $32 million in 2006.

Other industry execs have fared even better. Pfizer CEO Hank McKinnell exited his executive suite with a $200 million golden parachute in 2006. Another Pfizer executive, executive VP Karen Katen, walked off with a $78 million "consolation prize" after she lost out in a bid to become McKinnell's successor.

Last Monday, a day before the official release of the first Medicare benefit analysis, a bipartisan band of nationally prominent former lawmakers -- mostly former U.S. senators along the lines of Sam Nunn and David Boren -- gathered at a conference in Oklahoma to lament gridlock in Washington, D.C.

The nation's two parties, this illustrious group avowed, have lost the capacity to solve problems.

Hogwash. Lawmakers in Washington, as the Medicare prescription drug benefit story demonstrates so clearly, solve problems all the time. Rich people's problems.

In a plutocracy, that's simply what lawmakers do.

Sam Pizzigati is the editor of the online weekly Too Much, and an associate fellow at the Institute for Policy Studies.

© 2008 Independent Media Institute. All rights reserved.
View this story online at: http://www.alternet.org/story/73703/

AlterNet: Blogs: PEEK: US Medical System: The Worst in 19 Industrialized Nations

AlterNet: Blogs: PEEK: US Medical System: The Worst in 19 Industrialized Nations

Reuters reports on a study from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, authored by Ellen Nolte and Martin McKee, published in Health Affairs, a peer-reviewed journal:

France, Japan and Australia rated best and the United States worst in new rankings focusing on preventable deaths due to treatable conditions in 19 leading industrialized nations, researchers said on Tuesday.

The study abstract:

We compared trends in deaths considered amenable to health care before age seventy-five between 1997 - 98 and 2002 - 03 in the United States and in eighteen other industrialized countries. Such deaths account, on average, for 23 percent of total mortality under age seventy-five among males and 32 percent among females. The decline in amenable mortality in all countries averaged 16 percent over this period. The United States was an outlier, with a decline of only 4 percent. If the United States could reduce amenable mortality to the average rate achieved in the three top-performing countries, there would have been 101,000 fewer deaths per year by the end of the study period.

One hundred thousand deaths per year. You'd think Mike Huckabee would be all over this, after his statement about requiring immigrants for labor because we've been aborting people for 35 years:

Sometimes we talk about why we're importing so many people in our workforce," the former Arkansas governor said. "It might be for the last 35 years, we have aborted more than a million people who would have been in our workforce had we not had the holocaust of liberalized abortion under a flawed Supreme Court ruling in 1973.

One hundred thousand deaths per year. We need immigrants because of aborted fetuses, but there's no need to stop killing 100,000 people unnecessarily because we don't have universal health care:

"I think health care in the U.S. is pretty good if you have access. But if you don't, I think that's the main problem, isn't it?" Nolte said in a telephone interview.

I have a little experience with universal health care, because I've lived in Canada for four years. It's taken me almost that long to stop asking people, "Have you seen a doctor for that?" when they talk about a health problem. Canadians look at you funny if you ask them that.

Last month I was visiting a dojo in Bellingham and one guy tweaked his knee when his foot didn't pivot on the mat (nobody hit him, he just went one way and his foot didn't follow) -- and I was confused when he talked about whether or not he could visit the doctor. Then I remembered where I was: the United States, land of trillion dollar wars and between 47 million and 58 million uninsured.

Regardless of insurance status, nearly 20 percent of Americans lack a regular source of health care, a "strong indication many Americans may not be receiving needed care", according to the CDC. Dr. Amy Bernstein, chief of the CDC's analytic studies branch at the Office of Analysis and Epidemiology (and director of the study) notes that "research shows having a usual source of care results in improved care."

One hundred thousand extra deaths per year. That's roughly one every five minutes, around the clock, 24/7/365 -- every year. Where are the Right to Lifers when you need them? From the National Right to Life mission statement:

The ultimate goal of the National Right to Life Committee is to restore legal protection to innocent human life.

In a logical world, the Right to Lifers would be blockading insurance companies as well as abortion providers.

AlterNet: Health and Wellness: Designer Vaginas, Anyone?

AlterNet: Health and Wellness: Designer Vaginas, Anyone?: "Hymenoplasty, vaginal tightening, revirgination, G-spot amplification and labial reduction are the latest craze for women with more money than sense."

Monday, January 14, 2008

MyDD :: Direct Democracy for People-Powered Politics

MyDD :: Direct Democracy for People-Powered Politics

John Edwards is pi$$ing off all the right people.

As the primary process continues, amidst the daily barrage of broadsides fired from one campaign onto another, it's worth remembering that John Edwards is still talking about real issues.

John Edwards' campaign isn't about him. It's about us. It's about taking back power from the wealthy elites who want to run this country and putting it in our hands. It's about finally taking on the corporations that dominate more and more of the American economy. It's about challenging the system.

And it's pissing off the all right people....


Sunday, January 13, 2008

AlterNet: We Forget What It Was Really Like Under the Clintons

AlterNet: We Forget What It Was Really Like Under the Clintons: "NAFTA failures; deregulation of banking and ENRON's rise; 'Welfare Reform' that led to more poor people. This and more is what the Clintons gave us."

Twelve days before the Iowa caucuses, the New York Times Magazine cover, in large white letters on a deep black background, carried the single word title of its lead article: Clintonism. In the article Matt Bai, the Times reporter on all things Democratic, with a big D, made one undeniable assertion and two highly debatable ones.

Bai's contention that Bill Clinton's "wife's fortunes are bound up with his, and vice versa" is incontestable. The primaries and even more so the general election, if Hillary is the nominee, will be a referendum less on Hillary than on Clintonism, the philosophy and strategy that guided the White House for eight years. Hillary clearly welcomes such a prospect, as demonstrated by her constantly reminding voters that she was "deeply involved in being part of the Clinton team."

Bai's much more problematic assertions involve his evaluation of the nature and impact of Clintonism. Bai begins by mocking "Clinton's critics on the left" for displaying "a stunning lack of historical perspective." Yet it is Bai, who demonstrates a remarkable lack of historical knowledge, a dangerous shortcoming for a reporter with his portfolio.

The most glaring example is Bai's bizarre assertion that Clinton "almost single-handedly pulled the Democratic Party back from its slide into irrelevance." The historical fact is that when Clinton took office, the Democratic Party controlled both houses of Congress and a majority of state governorships. By the time he left office, the Republicans controlled both Houses of Congress and two-thirds of the governorships. By the numbers, it was Clintonism that relegated the Democratic Party to the shadows.

Bai's other dubious assertions is that Clintonism was good not only for the Democratic Party but for the nation as well. He applauds Clinton's "courage, at the end of the Reagan era, to argue inside the Democratic Party that the liberal orthodoxies of the New Deal and the Great Society, as well as the culture of the anti-war and civil rights movements, had become excessive and inflexible. Not only were Democratic attitudes toward government electorally problematic, Clinton argued; they were just plain wrong for the time."

But then, astonishingly, in his 7,000-word piece, Bai does not describe the many legislative initiatives Clinton undertook to reverse the New Deal and the Great Society.

Clinton himself summed up the principle guiding his initiatives in his famous declaration, "The era of big government is over."

The Telecommunications Act of 1996 was the first major overhaul of United States telecommunications law in nearly 62 years. The broadcasting industry couldn't get the legislation through under Reagan or George H.W. Bush, but it succeeded under Clinton. The day he signed the bill into law, Clinton boasted, "Landmark legislation fulfills my administration's promise to reform our telecommunications laws in a manner that leads to competition and private investment, promotes universal service and provides for flexible government regulation."

The Act removed the legal barriers to local and long distance phone companies acquiring each other. The results were immediate and massive. In 1996 there were eight major U.S. companies providing local telephone service and five significant long-distance companies. By 1999, these 13 companies had merged into five telecommunications giants, in a series of record-breaking merger deals.

Prior to this law, tightly regulated broadcasters could own just 40 stations nationally, and only two in a given market. Suddenly, without the FCC's input or any public hearings, ownership limits on radio stations was eliminated and a feeding frenzy took place.

By 2001, there were 10,000 radio station transactions worth approximately $100 billion. As a result, 1,100 fewer station owners were in the business, down nearly 30 percent since 1996. Two companies -- Clear Channel and Viacom's Infinity Broadcasting -- controlled one-third of all radio advertising revenue; in some individual markets their stations commanded nearly 90 percent of the ad dollars. Clear Channel alone owned nearly 1,200 stations, the result of buying up 70 separate broadcast companies.

In 1999, the Financial Services Modernization Act overturned the Glass-Steagall Act of 1933. The Act effectively barred banks, brokerages and insurance companies from entering each others' industries, and separated investment banking and commercial banking. The law was enacted in response to revelations of gross corruption and manipulation of the market by giant banking houses that organized huge corporate mergers for their own profit, leading to the collapse of the stock market in 1929.

The Wall Street Journal celebrated the agreement to end such restrictions with an editorial declaring that the banks had been unfairly scapegoated for the Great Depression. The headline of one Journal article declared, "Finally, 1929 Begins to Fade."

The unleashed and deregulated financial services sector boomed, bringing us the speculative boom that in turn gave us the temporary budget surplus of the late 1990s and the finance-led booms and busts since then. The hedge fund was not invented in the 1990s, but it was under Clinton that they were transformed into their modern form, with the Clinton White House cheerleading that transformation. In 1998, when the hedge fund, Long Term Capital Management, collapsed, leading to federal intervention, the president established the Working Group on Financial Markets. In February 2000, it concluded that hedge funds needed no regulation.

Clintonism never saw a sector it didn't want to deregulate. Wholesale electricity deregulation began under George H.W. Bush, but Clinton worked relentlessly to extend it and bring it to the retail level. We forget that Ken Lay, the founder of Enron and the driving force behind electricity deregulation was a friend of and mentor to Clinton as well as George W. Bush. Enron gave $420,000 to Clinton's party over three years and donated $100,000 to his inauguration festivities.

Clinton's appointees on the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) aggressively deregulated the electric grid system, even refusing to step in when Enron and other electricity traders' manipulation of prices drove California to the edge of bankruptcy.

And then there was welfare reform. During his 1992 presidential campaign, Clinton promised to "end welfare as we know it." Four years later he proudly pushed through the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act, which, for the first time in 60 years, eliminated the federal safety net for the poor. The legislation set work requirements for most welfare recipients and limited the length of time they could collect assistance.

The economic bubble of the late 1990s hid the impacts of this legislation during its first five years. But even then, the studies were mixed. A 2002 report by the Chicago, Ill.-based Joyce Foundation found that while hundreds of thousands of welfare recipients in the Midwest went to work since 1996, most had "taken jobs that pay low wages, are part-time, or don't last ... As a result, most of those who have made the transition from welfare to work remain poor."

Wendell Primus, an outspoken critic of the original legislation, resigned from the Clinton administration over welfare reform. A few years later he maintained that "while many families had earnings gains under welfare reform, a significant number would have done better without welfare reform under the expanding economy of the 1990s." Noting that the rates of child poverty dropped more in the 1992-1996, pre-welfare-reform period, than they did in the post-reform period, from 1996-2000, Primus said, "In the aggregate, there is absolutely no evidence that it (reform legislation) increased household income."

There is no question that welfare reform has succeeded in reducing welfare rolls in the states. But 10 years into welfare reform, "the number of people living in poverty had not," noted Robert Wharton, president and CEO of the Community Economic Development Administration. "At the same time, the safety net of services and support that once protected the poor lies in tatters."

The law also led to the privatization of welfare systems in many parts of the country. And an unfamiliar provision of the law called "charitable choice" allowed religious organizations to receive government funding for providing certain welfare-related services. The month he took office, January 2001, George W. Bush's faith-based initiative opened the doors to religious organizations to get government grants to provide services previously made available by government agencies.

And of course there is NAFTA, a key piece of legislation that Bai mentions only in passing. In retrospect, we can view it as a simple extension of Clintonism's obsession with deregulation, in this case deregulating trade and borders.

NAFTA was enacted despite the opposition of Clinton's own party. Two-thirds of House Republicans voted in favor while 60 percent of House Democrats voted against. In the Senate, Republicans voted 4-1 in favor while a slim majority of Democrats voted against.

I discussed the impact of NAFTA 10 years after in an earlier AlterNet piece. The slogan of those who championed a North American Free Trade Agreement was, "Trade, not aid." NAFTA would solve our problems, the White House insisted, with little or no transfer of funds from richer Canadians and Americans to poorer Mexicans. By raising Mexican living standards and wage levels, Attorney General Janet Reno predicted NAFTA would reduce illegal immigration by up to two-thirds in six years. "NAFTA is our best hope for reducing illegal migration in the long haul," Reno declared in 1994. "If it fails, effective immigration control will become impossible."

NAFTA did what it was intended to do. Trade volume soared, from about 30 percent of Mexico's Gross Domestic Product in 1990, to about 55 percent in 2005. Foreign investment increased by over 225 percent. Free trade theory teaches that these achievements should have led to universal prosperity. In the real world, opening up the borders between two exceedingly disparate economies leads to disaster.

Which is what happened here. Real wages for most Mexicans are lower than when NAFTA took effect. And Mexican wages are diverging from, rather than converging with U.S. wages, despite the fact that Mexican worker productivity has increased dramatically. From 1993 to 2003, worker productivity rose by 60 percent. In the same period, real wages declined by 5 percent.

As NAFTA intended, Mexico became an export-dependent economy. But this has not benefited most Mexicans. Sandra Polaski of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace points out that Mexican manufacturing is increasingly based on a production model in which component parts are imported, then processed or assembled and then re-exported. In the maquiladora sector, which accounts for most exports, 97 percent of components are imported; only 3 percent are produced in Mexico. The spillover effect of such operations on the broader economy is very limited.

The only thing that saved Mexico from collapsing into economic and social chaos was the massive emigration of Mexicans across their northern border.

Illegal migration has camouflaged Mexico's economic weakness. Between 1994 and 2004, Mexico's working-age population increased by a little over 1 million per year, but the number of jobs expanded by only half as much. The annual exodus of 500,000 to 1 million Mexicans kept unemployment at least to manageable levels.

Migration has served another even more important salutary function: national financial safety net. In 2005, Mexicans in the United States remitted some $20 billion home, about 3 percent of Mexico's national income. Remittances now exceed tourism, and the maquiladoras, and until the recent runup in oil prices, even oil as the country's top single source of foreign exchange. It turns out that it is aid, not trade, that is keeping the Mexican economy afloat.

NAFTA's designers promised it would keep Mexicans at home. Yet its very objectives undermined that possibility and spawned the waves of illegal migrants that have become one of the most divisive issues in the 2008 campaign.

And then there is healthcare, an issue that Bai did comment on. History has been rewritten in regard to the Clintons' health initiative. Today it is viewed as a bold but failed effort. Even Michael Moore's movie, Sicko, paints this picture. Nonsense. It was Hillary who concluded that it was politically impossible even to argue for a single-payer system. Whether a single payer initiative would have won is unclear, although the national educational effort around it would have been of unparalleled value. But as it was, Hillary's political miscalculation led not only to the idea of universal health care coverage being taken off the table for the next 13 years, but the loss of the House of Representatives and the coming to power of Newt Gingrich and the Republican right.

Matt Bai views Bill Clinton as a profile in courage for taking on the Democratic Party. But if we review his behavior in office, there is one characteristic that stands out above any other: cowardice. Whenever the powerful objected, he beat a hasty retreat. His first year set the pattern. Gays in the military. The btu tax. The jettisoning of Lani Guinier as nominee for assistant attorney general for civil rights, refusing even to allow her to confront her critics.

Bai quotes Jonathan Cowan, of the Third Way, "the next iteration of the D.L.C." As Bai approvingly describes it, "Clinton's politics have basically become the DNA of Democrats seeking the White House, and it's almost certain that they would all govern from that Clintonian center if they actually became president." I desperately hope that is not the case. In the 2008 primary and general election, a key question is, "How can we get back what we have lost without confronting those who took it?" To my mind, the only candidate who seems to understand that is John Edwards, who seems to represent Democratic DNA still untouched by Clintonism's experiment in genetic engineering.

TSA's no-bid, data-leaking website was a complete screw-up: House Oversight Committee - Boing Boing

TSA's no-bid, data-leaking website was a complete screw-up: House Oversight Committee - Boing Boing: "The TSA's Traveler Redress Website was created by a no-bid crony contractor, leaked giant amount of personal information from hundreds of travellers (who had already been screwed over by the agency and were writing in for justice) and exposed them to identity theft. The House Oversight Committee concluded that the TSA totally, absolutely screwed up."

Compound reverses Alzheimer's in minutes - Boing Boing

Compound reverses Alzheimer's in minutes - Boing Boing

Two views from an airplane windo (Comments)

Two views from an airplane windo (Comments): "One of these might be fake. Can you guess which?"

Octopus jealously guards his Mr Potato Head toy - Boing Boing

Octopus jealously guards his Mr Potato Head toy - Boing Boing

BostonHerald.com - Blogs: The Point After» Blog Archive » Postgame notes

BostonHerald.com - Blogs: The Point After» Blog Archive » Postgame notes
TOM BRADY SETS ALL-TIME NFL RECORD FOR HIGHEST COMPLETION PERCENTAGE IN REGULAR-SEASON OR PLAYOFF GAME

Bloomberg.com: North American

Bloomberg.com: North American
Patriots Beat Jaguars in NFL Playoffs; Packers Rout Seahawks