The Economist argues with fools

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The Economist uses the Obama Administration restructure and bailout of GM and Chrysler to make a reasoned argument against Obama being called a socialist.

The label “Government Motors” quickly stuck, evoking images of clunky committee-built cars that burned banknotes instead of petrol—all run by what Sarah Palin might call the socialist-in-chief.

Yet the doomsayers were wrong. Unlike, say, France’s President Nicolas Sarkozy, who used public funds to support Renault and Peugeot-Citroën on condition that they did not close factories in France, Mr Obama has been tough from the start. GM had to promise to slim down dramatically—cutting jobs, shuttering factories and shedding brands—to win its lifeline. The firm was forced to declare bankruptcy. Shareholders were wiped out. Top managers were swept aside. Unions did win some special favours: when Chrysler was divided among its creditors, for example, a union health fund did far better than secured bondholders whose claims should have been senior. Congress has put pressure on GM to build new models in America rather than Asia, and to keep open dealerships in certain electoral districts. But by and large Mr Obama has not used his stakes in GM and Chrysler for political ends. On the contrary, his goal has been to restore both firms to health and then get out as quickly as possible. GM is now profitable again and Chrysler, managed by Fiat, is making progress. Taxpayers might even turn a profit when GM is sold.

via General Motors: Government Motors no more | The Economist.

The problem is they are wasting a reasoned argument rebutting people who actually think or cynically suggest that Obama is a socialist.

California Mothers on Whitman/Housekeeper fiasco

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Hector Tobar’s article about the relationship between the upper middle class in Brentwood, California and their domestics is a pretty good read, just for some of the candid discussions with these affluent women who for years employed a domestic who have emigrated to the U.S. illegally.

The retired teacher told me that when her immigrant housekeeper went into labor, she drove her to the hospital. “When her daughter was having problems in school I helped her with tuition for private school,” she said. “That little girl is in college now.”

Thinking about the larger issue of undocumented immigrants working in this country, this mom added: “It’s an unfortunate situation. We need to be generous to them.”The moms I met know how much work is done for them. They know the lives of those who do that work can be hard. They express compassion for the women in their kitchens and nurseries. They speak of trying to help them.

But generosity on this front seems to be in short supply these days.

We live in a country rich in hypocrisy. Here a billionaire running for governor can vow to hold employers accountable for following the law but deny accountability in her own home. And she can ask us to trust her while absolving her of any moral responsibility to try to help a woman who for so long helped her.

via Hector Tobar: Mothers with immigrant housekeepers have harsh words for Meg Whitman – latimes.com.

Tobar also spoke to a maid working illegally on a tourist visa.

The Beverly Hills maid told me she wouldn’t lie to her employer. “I know that here, for the Americans, lying is the worst,” she said. “But the necessity of this lady led her to lie. I wouldn’t do that, but I can put myself in her shoes.”

The maid told me she arrived here a few months ago on a tourist visa. She’s not supposed to be working. But so far no one has asked her for a Social Security number. And now that her husband has lost his job running a San Salvador gas station, she’s desperate to make enough to keep their two daughters in school.

“These mansions — the Americans don’t clean them,” she said as we looked across Sunset Boulevard at the opulent order of Beverly Hills. “It’s Latinas who do it.”

Read it. The Brentwood mothers didn’t understand how Meg Whitman could just dismiss a woman who had worked in her household for so long without any compassion or regard for her future.

From afar it does seem like a stunning lack of compassion, especially for a candidate that could afford to spend 140 million of her own money on her own campaign.

As a matter of politics, Whitman would’ve been better off hiring an immigration lawyer for Nicandra Diaz Santillan or sponsoring her visa the minute she had designs to run for Governor of California. As a matter of compassion, after 9 years of service, even if Whitman felt the best solution was to dismiss Santillan, she she seems to have done it without any regard for Santillan’s well being.

Either way, Whitman says that she knows “Nicky really well” (video below) and that her public statement was due to manipulation by Gloria Allred. Apparently she didn’t know her well enough.

Obama to veto H.R. 3808

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Good news:

President Obama will not sign legislation approved by Congress that could make it harder for homeowners to fight foreclosures in court.

White House press secretary Robert Gibbs said at his daily press briefing that Obama will not sign the “Interstate Recognition of Notarizations Act.”

The legislation would require federal and state courts to accept document notarizations from out of state. The measure would have included notarizations filed electronically, which critics say have been used to improperly rush home foreclosures through the courts.

“Our concern is the unintended consequences on consumer protections,” Gibbs said. “So the president is exercising a pocket veto to send that bill back to Congress to iron out some of those unintended consequences.”

via Obama to pocket veto bill that could affect foreclosure fights – The Hill’s Blog Briefing Room.

I still don’t know how this bill made it through the Senate amidst a worldwide financial crisis and US foreclosure crisis.

“Hearts and Minds”

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As our military is engaged in winding down the Iraq War, ramping up the Afghanistan War and fighting a covert war in Pakistan all based on the COIN strategy (trying to win Hearts and Minds), it’s quite simple that we remember how flawed a strategy this is.

After our military attacks and occupies a country, we will then convince it’s citizens that they should side with our country. John Cole keeps it simple:

Again, this is not rocket surgery. If they were not sympathetic to the Taliban and Al Qaeda before, after you bomb the shit out of them, they will be. As far as I am concerned, the Obama reliance on this kind of warfare is the absolute worst thing he has done since he has come into office, yet, oddly enough, few seem to give a shit.

via Balloon Juice » Blog Archive » Very Complicated Logic.

And to be fair, Obama thought this war was worth fighting and campaigned to fight this war so walking into the war built on COIN, properly staffing the current strategic initiative makes sense administratively. It just seems that COIN is a strategy that flies in the face of human nature. My sincere hope is that Obama sticks fast to deadline for wind down of the Afghanistan War next summer regardless of what various generals may say or want. If American military brass attempt delay or reject Obama’s efforts to end the war in Afghanistan, he needs to be firm in terminating their commands and finding generals that will prepare an end to the war in earnest. The war has been too long and the cost of this military engagement is too great.

It seems to me hoping the leaders of the previous religious tyrannical regime and the leaders of the current hand picked corrupt administration can agree to some sort of working treaty seems much more realistic than hoping COIN creates some acceptable equilibrium in Afghanistan and Pakistan.

Sanchez’s non-apology apology for anyone else

Former CNN news anchor Rick Sanchez
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Former CNN news anchor Rick Sanchez

Former CNN news anchor Rick Sanchez

TNC thought Jon Stewart piled on a Rick Sanchez a little too much with his “Hurty Sanchez” segment on Monday’s episode of the Daily Show. The 9 minute Sanchez focused segment was after Stewart had already used Sanchez as a punchline while presenting at Comedy Central’s “Night of Too Many Stars” Autism fundraiser over the weekend. I disagreed with TNC Tuesday morning (especially considering Stewart’s fair approximation of Sanchez probably being a better guy than his statements on October 1st and that CNN may have overreacted). I agree even more after Rick Sanchez issued this statement:

On October 4th, I had a very good conversation with Jon Stewart, and I had the opportunity to apologize for my inartful comments from last week. I sincerely extend this apology to anyone else whom I may have offended.

via Rick Sanchez Releases Statement Saying he has ‘Nothing but Highest Regard’ for CNN – FishbowlDC.

Sanchez’s non-apology apology to “anyone else” makes me think that Jon Stewart was gracious enough. That being said Sanchez is no Mel Gibson or Don Imus even. Regarding Sanchez himself, Latoya Patterson at Racialicious decries Sanchez’s “Oppression Olympics” that obscured valid points he made regarding race and society:

I particularly like where Sanchez stops Dominick in his example to point out that racism isn’t always as overt as someone being compressed into an existing stereotype. Often, particularly in media, minorities face racism because they do not fit a certain mold. That’s something that always frustrates me when talking to well-meaning folks about racism. It’s very easy for them to identify really egregious examples – much harder for them to acknowledge some biases are quiet, yet devastating. After all, we aren’t hearing broadcasts from Ricardo León Sánchez de Reinaldo

[…]

But even more than that, the outburst allowed all the truth in his statement to become buried by the weight of one prejudicial statement. And it allowed for those who are truly in power to laugh, check the ratings, and continue on with the status quo.

via On Rick Sanchez, Jon Stewart, and Why We All Lose Playing the Oppression Olympics | Racialicious – the intersection of race and pop culture.

What Vetoes are for: H.R. 3808

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Ever hear of H.R. 3808 Interstate Recognition of Notarizations Act of 2010? It was a bill passed through the Senate by unanimous consent, and it’s a mess:

A bill that homeowners advocates warn will make it more difficult to challenge improper foreclosure attempts by big mortgage processors is awaiting President Barack Obama’s signature after it quietly zoomed through the Senate last week.

The bill, passed without public debate in a way that even surprised its main sponsor, Republican Representative Robert Aderholt, requires courts to accept as valid document notarizations made out of state, making it harder to challenge the authenticity of foreclosure and other legal documents.

The timing raised eyebrows, coming during a rising furor over improper affidavits and other filings in foreclosure actions by large mortgage processors such as GMAC, JPMorgan and Bank of America.

via Bank foreclosure cover seen in bill at Obama’s desk | Reuters.

President Obama needs to veto this bill if it indeed will make it easier for the banks to pass off falsified documents to foreclosure courts. The “cooling saucer” of the Senate found time to pass this bill without debate while banks are engaging in widespread fraud by seizing properties they do not have title to using false, insufficient or invalid documentation.

I am not a Nevada voter, but I don’t understand how Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, let alone any Democrat, let’s this nonsense get through the senate while his state is one of the epicenters of the foreclosure crisis, Nevada cities like Las Vegas have unemployment rates at 14.7% and he is an pitched battle with Sharon Angle.

Tea Party Expectations

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Christine O’Donnell is not only shutting out national media and non-right wing opinion media, she is simply not having public campaign events.

But Ms. O’Donnell is not an old-fashioned kind of candidate — nor is she an anomaly. As money and news media coverage cross state borders more easily than ever, driven by fiery commentators and online groups, we are bound to see politicians who are popular vehicles more than they are actual candidates, instruments of resentment whose grass-roots support may emanate mostly from states they have never visited.

via Political Times – Christine O’Donnell Is Hard to Find at Home – NYTimes.com.

What I wonder about the prototypical married, white, conservative Republicans above age 65 who disapprove of everything Obama and are supporting tea baggers: what do they really expect from their leadership?

Cap and Trade is here

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It’s not that Republicans, Tea Baggers and Blue Dogs don’t like cap and trade, they just prefer that their campaign and PAC accounts be the beneficiaries of the fees. Krugman runs the simple math:

Perhaps the most important thing to realize is that when billionaires put their might behind “grass roots” right-wing action, it’s not just about ideology: it’s also about business. What the Koch brothers have bought with their huge political outlays is, above all, freedom to pollute. What Mr. Murdoch is acquiring with his expanded political role is the kind of influence that lets his media empire make its own rules.

via Op-Ed Columnist – Fear and Favor – NYTimes.com.

The “cap” for pollution is the amount of money it takes to get enough politicians elected to stall, weaken or block any legislation that encourages pollution reduction. They trade that for business as usual.

UPDATE:

Apparently the energy companies have it just about right, because the American public is for the most part a willing accomplice.

Americans drive some of the largest, heaviest cars in the world, and fuel economy gains have tended to be reduced by engines that are ever more powerful.

Engineers have doubts about how fuel-efficient that kind of car can be, if Americans aren’t willing to compromise on size.

“There’s an awful lot of people that think an Escalade is a gorgeous vehicle. But they don’t care that it’s like driving a brick through the air,” said Steve Wesoloski, who spent two decades at General Motors Co. working on the Corvette and race cars.

via How Automakers Can Meet New Fuel Efficiency Standards: Scientific American.