theatlantic | As the Texas shootout that killed
nine motorcyclists fades from national headlines, local newspapers and a
few larger media organizations have broken a series of small stories
that prompted one alert Houston Press journalist to predict,“in
the coming years, the Waco authorities' handling of the Twin Peaks
biker gang shootout will become a textbook example of how not to handle
an emergency situation.”
Two weeks later, Waco authorities still aren’t telling how many of
the dead bikers were shot by police officers, how many cops fired their
weapons, or how many total rounds they discharged.
Yahoo News filed public records requests to try to learn more, but reported last night that Waco authorities have asked state officials for permission to withhold documents.
Police haven’t released any video of the shoot-out to the public.
But a few news outlets have seen footage from one security camera. The New York Daily Newssums up part of it:
“Most of the leather-clad patrons ran away from the shooting or ducked
under tables to dodge violence, video showed. Some bikers tried to
direct other people to safety. One camera angle showed people piling
into the men’s bathroom for cover. When there was no more room left, the
bikers dashed toward the kitchen.” That doesn’t much sound like
everyone present was conspiring to fight.
And Brian Doherty argues
that the AP’s coverage of the video it saw raises questions about
police behavior. “Despite police reports that the fighting and shooting
began inside the restaurant and spilled out, closed-circuit footage of
the restaurant seen by AP and reports from the restaurateurs indicate the shooting began outside, which is where the police already were,” he writes. “Police were already surrounding the restaurant in force,
ready for action. How and why they began firing on the bikers and what
happened before then should not necessarily be trusted merely from their
mouths.”
harvard | scarcity had stolen more than flesh and muscle. It had captured the starving men’s minds.
Mullainathan is not a psychologist, but he has long been fascinated
by how the mind works. As a behavioral economist, he looks at how
people’s mental states and social and physical environments affect their
economic actions. Research like the Minnesota study raised important
questions: What happens to our minds—and our decisions—when we feel we
have too little of something? Why, in the face of scarcity, do people so
often make seemingly irrational, even counter-productive decisions?
And
if this is true in large populations, why do so few policies and
programs take it into account?
In 2008, Mullainathan joined Eldar Shafir, Tod professor of
psychology and public affairs at Princeton, to write a book exploring
these questions. Scarcity: Why Having Too Little Means So Much
(2013) presented years of findings from the fields of psychology and
economics, as well as new empirical research of their own. Based on
their analysis of the data, they sought to show that, just as food had
possessed the minds of the starving volunteers in Minnesota, scarcity
steals mental capacity wherever it occurs—from the hungry, to the
lonely, to the time-strapped, to the poor.
That’s a phenomenon well-documented by psychologists: if the mind is
focused on one thing, other abilities and skills—attention,
self-control, and long-term planning—often suffer. Like a computer
running multiple programs, Mullainathan and Shafir explain, our mental
processors begin to slow down. We don’t lose any inherent capacities,
just the ability to access the full complement ordinarily available for
use.
But what’s most striking—and in some circles, controversial—about their work is not what they reveal about the effects
of scarcity. It’s their assertion that scarcity affects anyone in its
grip. Their argument: qualities often considered part of someone’s basic
character—impulsive behavior, poor performance in school, poor
financial decisions—may in fact be the products of a pervasive feeling
of scarcity. And when that feeling is constant, as it is for people
mired in poverty, it captures and compromises the mind.
This is one of scarcity’s most insidious effects, they argue:
creating mindsets that rarely consider long-term best interests. “To put
it bluntly,” says Mullainathan, “if I made you poor tomorrow, you’d
probably start behaving in many of the same ways we associate with poor
people.” And just like many poor people, he adds, you’d likely get stuck
in the scarcity trap.
sciencedaily | The study, "Anticipating and Resisting the Temptation to Behave
Unethically," by University of Chicago Booth School of Business
Behavioral Science and Marketing Professor Ayelet Fishbach and Rutgers
Business School Assistant Professor Oliver J. Sheldon, was recently
published in the Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin. It is the
first study to test how the two separate factors of identifying an
ethical conflict and preemptively exercising self-control interact in
shaping ethical decision-making.
In a series of experiments that included common ethical dilemmas,
such as calling in sick to work and negotiating a home sale, the
researchers found that two factors together promoted ethical behavior:
Participants who identified a potential ethical dilemma as connected to
other similar incidents and who also anticipated the temptation to act
unethically were more likely to behave honestly than participants who
did not.
"Unethical behavior is rampant across various domains ranging from
business and politics to education and sports," said Fishbach.
"Organizations seeking to improve ethical behavior can do so by helping
people recognize the cumulative impact of unethical acts and by
providing warning cues for upcoming temptation."
wikipedia | In cities of ancient Greece, the boule (Greek: βουλή, boulē; plural βουλαί, boulai) was a council of citizens (βουλευταί, bouleutai) appointed to run daily affairs of the city. Originally a council of nobles advising a king, boulai evolved according to the constitution of the city; in oligarchiesboule positions might be hereditary, while in democracies members were typically chosen by lot, and served for one year. Little is known about the workings of many boulai, except in the case of Athens, for which extensive material has survived.
The Athenian Boule
The original council of Athens was the Areopagus. It consisted of ex-archons and was aristocratic in character.
Solonian Boule
The Athenian boule under Solon
heard appeals from the most important decisions of the courts. Those in
the poorest class could not serve on the Boule of 400. The higher
governmental posts, archons (magistrates), were reserved for citizens of
the top two income groups.[1]
The Reforms of Cleisthenes
Under the reforms of Cleisthenes enacted in 508/507 BC, the boule was expanded to 500 men, made up of 50 men from each of the ten new tribes also created by Cleisthenes. The 500 men were chosen by lot at the deme level, each deme
having been allotted certain number of places proportional to
population. Membership was restricted at this time to the top three of
the original four property classes (the Pentacosiomedimni, Hippeis and Zeugitae, but not the Thetes)
and to citizens over the age of thirty. The former restriction, though
never officially changed, fell out of practice by the middle of the 5th
century BC. Members of the boule served for one year and no man could serve more than twice in his life, nor more than once a decade. The leaders of the boule (the prytany) consisted of 50 men chosen from among the 500, and a new prytany was chosen every month. The man in charge of prytany was replaced every day from among the 50 members. The boule met every day except for festival days and ill-omened days. According to Aristotle, Cleisthenes introduced the Bouleutic Oath.[2]
The Boule in the Democracy of the late 5th century BC
After the reforms of Ephialtes and Pericles in the mid-5th century BC, the boule
took on many of the administrative and judicial functions of the
Areopagus, which retained its traditional right to try homicide cases.
It supervised the state's finances, navy, cavalry, sacred matters,
building and shipping matters and care for invalids and orphans. Its own
members staffed many boards that oversaw the finer points of these many
administrative duties. It undertook the examination of public officials
both before and after leaving office (most offices lasting one year) to
ensure honest accounting and loyalty to the state. It heard some cases
of impeachment of public officials for high crimes and mismanagement or
serious dereliction of duties.[3] At some point in the late 5th century, pay was instituted for those serving in the boule; this may have been a way to encourage poorer citizens to volunteer, who would otherwise be reluctant to serve. The boule
was considered the cornerstone of the democratic constitution,
providing a locus for day-to-day activities and holding together the
many disparate administrative functions of the government. Because of
the rotation of members, it was assumed that the boule was free
from the domination of factions of any kind, although there is some
evidence that richer citizens served out of proportion to poorer
citizens. This may be due to the heavy investment of time required, time
that poorer citizens would not have had to spare.[4]
democracynow | A longtime anti-eviction activist has just been elected mayor of
Barcelona, becoming the city’s first female mayor. Ada Colau co-founded
the anti-eviction group Platform for People Affected by Mortgages and
was an active member of the Indignados, or 15-M Movement. Colau has
vowed to fine banks with empty homes on their books, stop evictions,
expand public housing, set a minimum monthly wage of $670, force utility
companies to lower prices, and slash the mayoral salary. Colau enjoyed
support from the Podemos party, which grew out of the indignados
movement that began occupying squares in Spain four years ago. Ada Colau
joins us to discuss her victory.
archdruidreport | Stories in the media, some recent, some recently reprinted,
happen to have brought up a couple of first-rate examples of the way that
resources get locked up in unproductive activities during the twilight years of
a failing society. A California newspaper, for example, recently mentioned that
Elon Musk’s large and much-ballyhooed fortune is
almost entirely a product of government subsidies. Musk is a smart
guy; he obviously realized a good long time ago that federal and state
subsidies for technology was where the money was at, and he’s constructed an
industrial empire funded by US taxpayers to the tune of many billions of dollars.
None of his publicly traded firms has ever made a profit, and as long as the
subsidies keep flowing, none of them ever has to; between an overflowing feed
trough of government largesse and the longstanding eagerness of fools to be
parted from their money by way of the stock market, he’s pretty much set for
life.
This is business as usual in today’s America. An article
from 2013 pointed out, along the same lines, that the
profits made by the five largest US banks were almost exactly equal to the
amount of taxpayer money those same five banks got from the
government. Like Elon Musk, the banks in question have figured out
where the money is, and have gone after it with their usual verve; the
revolving door that allows men in suits to shuttle back and forth between those
same banks and the financial end of the US government doesn’t exactly hinder
that process. It’s lucrative, it’s legal, and the mere fact that it’s
bankrupting the real economy of goods and services in order to further enrich
an already glutted minority of kleptocrats is nothing anyone in the citadels of
power worries about.
A useful light on a different side of the same process comes
from an editorial (in PDF) which claims that
something like half of all current scientific papers are unreliable
junk. Is this the utterance of an archdruid, or some other wild-eyed
critic of science? No, it comes from the editor of Lancet,
one of the two or three most reputable medical journals on the planet. The
managing editor of The New England Journal of Medicine, which
has a comparable ranking to Lancet, expressed much
the same opinion of the shoddy experimental design, dubious analysis,
and blatant conflicts of interest that pervade contemporary scientific
research.
Notice that what’s happening here affects the flow of
information in the same way that misplaced government subsidies affect the flow
of investment. The functioning of the scientific process, like that of the market,
depends on the presupposition that everyone who takes part abides by certain
rules. When those rules are flouted, individual actors profit, but they do so
at the expense of the whole system: the results of scientific research are
distorted so that (for example) pharmaceutical firms can profit from drugs that
don’t actually have the benefits claimed for them, just as the behavior of the
market is distorted so that (for example) banks that would otherwise struggle
for survival, and would certainly not be able to pay their CEOs gargantuan
bonuses, can continue on their merry way.
....
These days, despite a practically endless barrage of rhetoric to the
contrary, the great majority of Americans are getting fewer and fewer
benefits from the industrial system, and are being forced to pay more
and more of its costs, so that a relatively small fraction of the
population can monopolize an ever-increasing fraction of the national
wealth and contribute less and less in exchange. What’s more, a growing
number of Americans are aware of this fact. The traditional schism of a
collapsing society into a dominant minority and an internal proletariat,
to use Arnold Toynbee’s terms, is a massive and accelerating social
reality in the United States today.
As that schism widens, and
more and more Americans are forced into the Third World poverty that’s
among the unmentionable realities of public life in today’s United
States, several changes of great importance are taking place. The first,
of course, is precisely that a great many Americans are perforce
learning to live with less—not in the playacting style popular just now
on the faux-green end of the privileged classes, but really, seriously
living with much less, because that’s all there is. That’s a huge shift
and a necessary one, since the absurd extravagance many Americans
consider to be a normal lifestyle is among the most important things
that will be landing in history’s compost heap in the not too distant
future.
At the same time, the collective consensus that keeps the hopelessly
dysfunctional institutions of today’s status quo glued in place is
already coming apart, and can be expected to dissolve completely in the
years ahead. What sort of consensus will replace it, after the
inevitable interval of chaos and struggle, is anybody’s guess at this
point—though it’s vanishingly unlikely to have anything to do with the
current political fantasies of left and right.
philly | When a self-described cabal repeatedly
engages in what the attorney general calls "brazenly illegal behavior"
and pleads guilty to criminal acts, it is reasonable to expect its
members will get some jail time. But not in the paradoxical world ruled
by mega banks and paralyzed by fears that being too harsh with banks
deemed too big to fail might implode the economy.
Consequently, JPMorgan Chase, Barclays, Citigroup, and the Royal Bank
of Scotland, which recently pleaded guilty to conspiring to manipulate
international currency markets, will collectively pay only $5.7 billion
in state, federal and foreign fines for a scam that ran six years and
netted them $85 billion. A fifth bank, UBS, cooperated with
investigators and pleaded guilty to a charge in a separate
investigation.
Currency manipulation inflates the cost of imported consumer goods
ranging from phones to clothing. That means Americans who purchased
these items have already paid for the banks' crimes. But they will pay
even more. The banks will likely charge higher service fees to recover
the cost of their fines.
That's not justice. Some people busted for small amounts of marijuana
face jail time. Was no one in the executive suites aware of the banks'
criminal acts? These sweetheart plea deals are hardly a deterrent to
future misdeeds. Before the deals were even struck, the banks extracted
assurances from banking regulators that their businesses would in no way
be inconvenienced by the guilty pleas.
systemicdisorder | A small country immiserates itself under orders of international
lenders; unemployment and poverty rise, the debt burden increases and
investment is starved in favor of paying interest on loans. If this
sounds familiar, it is, but the country here is Jamaica.
So disastrous has austerity been for Jamaica that its per capita
gross domestic product is lower than it was 20 years ago, the worst
performance of any country in the Western Hemisphere. In just three
years, from the end of 2011 to the end of 2014, real wages have fallen
17 percent and are expected to fall further in 2015, according to the
country’s central bank, the Bank of Jamaica.
Such is the magic of austerity, or “structural adjustment programs,”
to use the official euphemism of the International Monetary Fund and
World Bank.
A new paper from the Center for Economic and Policy Research, “Partners in Austerity: Jamaica, the United States and the International Monetary Fund,”
reports that the amount of money Jamaica will use to pay interest (not
even the principal) on its debt will be more than four times what it
will spend on capital expenditures in 2015 and 2016. And despite a new
loan, the country actually paid more to the IMF than it received in
disbursements from the IMF during 2014!
As a further sign of the times, the current pro-austerity government
of Jamaica is led by the National People’s Party, the party of former
democratic socialist President Michael Manley. President Manley took
office in 1972 on promises to combat social inequality and injustice,
and he is credited with enacting legislation
intended to establish a national minimum wage, pay equality for women,
maternity leave with pay, the right of workers to join trade unions,
free education to the university level, and education reforms that
enabled students and teachers to be represented on school boards.
He also became an international figure advocating for progressive
programs to be implemented elsewhere. Naturally, this did not sit well
with the United States government. When President Manley stood with
Angola against the invasion by the apartheid South African régime and
supported Cuban assistance to Angola, he defied a warning from U.S.
Secretary of State Henry Kissinger. The CIA presence in the Jamaican capital, Kingston, was doubled.
A Jamaica Observer commentary noted parallels between the overthrow of Salvador Allende in Chile and unrest in Jamaica later in the 1970s:
“The imperialists applied the same ‘successful’ Chile
model of destabilisation in Jamaica. They applied the same strategy of
‘making the economy scream,’ creating artificial shortages of basic
items, promoting violence, including the savage murder of 150 people in a
home for the elderly. Violence erupted in Jamaica as was never seen
before in the ‘shock and awe’ tactics mastered by the imperialists
whenever they want to create fundamental change in someone else’s
country. Manley and Jamaica yielded under the pressure and eventually
took the IMF route.”
Replacing human development with austerity
The conservative who took office in 1980 reversed President Manley’s
programs. By the time that President Manley returned to office in 1989,
he had moved well to the right under the impact of changing world geopolitical circumstances and the dominance of neoliberal ideology. As an obituary in The Economistdryly put it, “He did as the IMF told him, liberalised foreign exchange and speeded up the privatisation of state enterprises.”
The one-size-fits-all program, a condition of IMF and World Bank
loans, includes currency devaluation (making imports more expensive),
mass privatization of state assets (usually done at fire-sale prices),
cuts to wages and the prioritization of the profits of foreign capital
over a country’s own welfare. The 2001 film Life and Debt,
produced and directed by Stephanie Black, depicted a country on its
knees thanks to “structural adjustment.” The film’s Web site sets up the picture then this way:
“The port of Kingston is lined with high-security
factories, made available to foreign garment companies at low rent.
These factories are offered with the additional incentive of the foreign
companies being allowed to bring in shiploads of material there
tax-free, to have them sewn and assembled and then immediately
transported out to foreign markets. Over 10,000 women currently work for
foreign companies under sub-standard work conditions. The Jamaican
government, in order to ensure the employment offered, has agreed to the
stipulation that no unionization is permitted in the Free Trade Zones.
Previously, when the women have spoken out and attempted to organize to
improve their wages and working conditions, they have been fired and
their names included on a blacklist ensuring that they never work
again.”
nationofchange |On Saturday at the Left Forum in New York City, Chris Hedges joined professors Richard Wolff and Gail Dines
to discuss why Karl Marx is essential at a time when global capitalism
is collapsing. These are the remarks Hedges made to open the discussion.
Karl Marx exposed the peculiar dynamics of capitalism, or what he
called “the bourgeois mode of production.” He foresaw that capitalism
had built within it the seeds of its own destruction. He knew that
reigning ideologies—think neoliberalism—were created to serve the
interests of the elites and in particular the economic elites, since
“the class which has the means of material production at its disposal,
has control at the same time over the means of mental production” and
“the ruling ideas are nothing more than the ideal expression of the
dominant material relationships … the relationships which make one class
the ruling one.” He saw that there would come a day when capitalism
would exhaust its potential and collapse. He did not know when that day
would come. Marx, as Meghnad Desai
wrote, was “an astronomer of history, not an astrologer.” Marx was
keenly aware of capitalism’s ability to innovate and adapt. But he also
knew that capitalist expansion was not eternally sustainable. And as we
witness the denouement of capitalism and the disintegration of
globalism, Karl Marx is vindicated as capitalism’s most prescient and
important critic.
In a preface to “The Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy” Marx wrote:
No social order ever disappears before all the productive
forces for which there is room in it have been developed; and new
higher relations of production never appear before the material
conditions of their existence have matured in the womb of the old
society itself.
Therefore, mankind always sets itself only such tasks as it can
solve; since looking at the matter more closely, we always find that the
task itself arises only when the material conditions necessary for its
solution already exist, or are at least in the process of formation.
Socialism, in other words, would not be possible until capitalism had
exhausted its potential for further development. That the end is coming
is hard now to dispute, although one would be foolish to predict when.
We are called to study Marx to be ready.
The final stages of capitalism, Marx wrote, would be marked by
developments that are intimately familiar to most of us. Unable to
expand and generate profits at past levels, the capitalist system would
begin to consume the structures that sustained it. It would prey upon,
in the name of austerity, the working class and the poor, driving them
ever deeper into debt and poverty and diminishing the capacity of the
state to serve the needs of ordinary citizens. It would, as it has,
increasingly relocate jobs, including both manufacturing and
professional positions, to countries with cheap pools of laborers.
Industries would mechanize their workplaces. This would trigger an
economic assault on not only the working class but the middle class—the
bulwark of a capitalist system—that would be disguised by the imposition
of massive personal debt as incomes declined or remained stagnant.
Politics would in the late stages of capitalism become subordinate to
economics, leading to political parties hollowed out of any real
political content and abjectly subservient to the dictates and money of
global capitalism.
But as Marx warned, there is a limit to an economy built on
scaffolding of debt expansion. There comes a moment, Marx knew, when
there would be no new markets available and no new pools of people who
could take on more debt. This is what happened with the subprime
mortgage crisis. Once the banks cannot conjure up new subprime
borrowers, the scheme falls apart and the system crashes.
Capitalist oligarchs, meanwhile, hoard huge sums of wealth—$18
trillion stashed in overseas tax havens—exacted as tribute from those
they dominate, indebt and impoverish. Capitalism would, in the end, Marx
said, turn on the so-called free market, along with the values and
traditions it claims to defend. It would in its final stages pillage the
systems and structures that made capitalism possible. It would resort,
as it caused widespread suffering, to harsher forms of repression. It
would attempt in a frantic last stand to maintain its profits by looting
and pillaging state institutions, contradicting its stated nature.
rwer | The Scientist and the Church is a wide-ranging biography of research,
showcasing Bichler and Nitzan’s attempts to break through the stifling
dogmas of the academic church and chart a new scientific cosmology of
capitalism. Central to the authors’ work is the notion that capital is
not a productive economic category but capitalized power, and that
capitalism should be conceived and researched not as a mode of
production and consumption but as a mode of power.
The articles collected in this volume outline the general contours of
their approach, flesh out some of their recent research and offer
personal insights into the broader politics of their journey. The first
chapters reexamine the common foundations of the neoclassical and
Marxist doctrines, sketch the contours of the authors’ alternative
cosmology of capitalized power, identify the asymptotes – or limits – of
this power and explore the all-encompassing logic of modern finance.
Subsequent chapters research the connection between redistribution and
cyclical crises, reassess the Marxist nexus between imperialism
and financialism, rethink the oft-misunderstood role of crime and
punishment in the capitalist mode of power and articulate a new theory
and history of Middle-East energy conflicts. The closing chapters
include two big-picture interviews, as well as riveting reflections on
the authors’ own scientific clashes with the church.
democracynow | Despite the Senate vote approving a measure to give President
Obama fast-track authority to negotiate the secretive Trans-Pacific
Partnership deal, opposition to the deal continues to mount ahead of
this month’s House vote. Critics, including a number of Democratic
lawmakers, oppose the TPP, saying it will fuel
inequality, kill jobs, and undermine health, environmental and
financial regulations. The negotiations have been secret, and the public
has never seen most of the deal’s text. Well, this morning the
whistleblowing group WikiLeaks launched a campaign to change that. The
group is seeking to raise $100,000 to offer what they describe as a
bounty for the leaking of the unseen chapters of the TPP. We speak to WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange.
This is a rush transcript. Copy may not be in its final form.
AMYGOODMAN:
Despite the Senate vote approving a measure to give President Obama
fast-track authority to negotiate the secretive Trans-Pacific
Partnership deal, opposition to the deal continues to mount ahead of
this month’s House vote. Critics, including a number of Democratic
lawmakers, oppose the TPP, saying it will fuel
inequality, kill jobs, and undermine health, environmental and
financial regulations. The negotiations have been secret, and the public
has never seen most of the deal’s text. Well, this morning, the
whistleblowing group WikiLeaks launched a campaign to change that. The
group is seeking to raise $100,000 to offer what they describe as a
bounty for the leaking of the unseen chapters of the TPP. WikiLeaks just posted this video online.
paecon | States acting as lenders of last resort in the aftermath of the
2007/2008 financial crisis clearly illustrated the central role that
states have in the operations of financial markets. Despite their
active roles, however, states continue to be presented as passive
actors that dance to the tunes of the financial markets. This paper,
however, takes a close look at how states’ geopolitical concerns
influence financial regulation.
States are perceived as serving the interests of their citizens, yet
future rescue operations (as lenders of last resort) at the costs of
the taxpayers remain a strong possibility in particular, Too Big To
Fail (TBTF) banks persist and their leverage ratios have not greatly
improved.
To better understand why this is the case, this paper argues that
geopolitical concerns influence the triangular relationships between
the (democratic) state, the financial sector, and the state’s citizens
(and taxpayers) in
favour of the financial sector. Accordingly, the paper argues that we
should more explicitly ask ‘what drives states (and politics) in their
approaches to finance?
thinkprogress | Tax day doesn’t sting much if you live at the gilded edge, according
to new data on how the top one-hundredth of one percent and the top
one-thousandth of a percent of all filers pay their income taxes. People
who make tens of millions of dollars enjoyed falling income tax rates
and ballooning wealth for a decade as middle-class taxpayers floundered.
The new Internal Revenue Service (IRS) data helps illustrate the
logic behind Sen. Bernie Sanders’ (I-VT) call for radically reshaping
the American income tax system to create pricey new brackets for
extremely high earners. The numbers provide a deeper look inside the
highest income echelon, breaking out data on income tax rates and total
yearly earnings in previously unpublished detail. In the last year of
the Bush tax cuts, there were well over a thousand people who reported
more than $60 million in earnings but paid federal income tax rates far
below 20 percent.
In late May, Sanders called for restoring top income tax rates as high as 90 percent.
The graduated income tax system means that policymakers could create
new tax brackets up at that level without raising taxes on everyone
below whatever level of wealth they choose to target.
Sanders based his comments on generalized information about wealth inequality, but the new IRS data on income inequality bolster his argument.
Currently, the highest income tax bracket and capital gains tax bracket
each kick in at a little over $400,000 in annual income. But there are
nearly 14,000 tax filers who earned more than $12 million in 2012 as
members of the best-paid 0.01 percent of all taxpayers, according to the
IRS, and about 1,360 who earned over $62 million that year. Their vast
earnings were not taxed any more heavily – and indeed, they paid a lower
overall income tax rate than their merely one-percent brethren.
It is the first time the IRS has ever broken out income tax data at
the very top end of the earnings spectrum. Previous releases have shown
the top 1 percent and the top 0.1 percent of filers, but the new data
drill deeper. There were a little under 1,400 income tax returns filed
in that very richest sliver of data in 2012, the agency reports, with an
average income of roughly $161 million for the year.
The poorest filer to qualify for that group in 2012 made $62,068,187
in adjusted gross income (AGI). Like a tax wonk’s version of the “must
be this high to ride” sign at a carnival, these threshold income levels
for each grouping in the IRS data offer working definitions of the
economic class each category depicts.
NYTimes | In
Mr. Pearce’s view, the villain is not overpopulation but, rather,
overconsumption. “We can survive massive demographic change,” he said in
2011. But he is less sanguine about the overuse of available resources
and its effects on climate change
(although worries about the planet’s well-being could be a motivator
for finding solutions, much as demographic fears may have helped defuse
the population bomb).
“Rising
consumption today far outstrips the rising head count as a threat to
the planet,” Mr. Pearce wrote in Prospect, a British magazine, in 2010.
“And most of the extra consumption has been in rich countries that have
long since given up adding substantial numbers to their population,
while most of the remaining population growth is in countries with a
very small impact on the planet.”
“Let’s
look at carbon dioxide emissions, the biggest current concern because
of climate change,” he continued. “The world’s richest half billion
people — that’s about 7 percent of the global population — are
responsible for half of the world’s carbon dioxide emissions. Meanwhile,
the poorest 50 percent of the population are responsible for just 7
percent of emissions.”
To
some extent, worrying about an overcrowded planet has fallen off the
international agenda. It is overshadowed, as Mr. Pearce suggests, by
climate change and related concerns. The phrase “zero population
growth,” once a movement battle cry, is not frequently heard these days;
it has, for instance, appeared in only three articles in this newspaper
over the last seven years.
But
Dr. Ehrlich, now 83, is not retreating from his bleak prophesies. He
would not echo everything that he once wrote, he says. But his intention
back then was to raise awareness of a menacing situation, he says, and
he accomplished that. He remains convinced that doom lurks around the
corner, not some distant prospect for the year 2525 and beyond. What he
wrote in the 1960s was comparatively mild, he suggested, telling Retro
Report: “My language would be even more apocalyptic today.”
medialens | It is certainly a harder question to answer honestly:
'Some of the warmongers believed that deploying shock and awe in Iraq
would enhance American power and influence around the world. Some saw
Iraq as a sort of pilot project, preparation for a series of regime
changes. And it's hard to avoid the suspicion that there was a strong
element of wagging the dog, of using military triumph to strengthen the
Republican brand at home.'
Here Krugman was trying very really hard to focus on any obscure
corner of the living room to avoid noticing the elephant. In his book,
'Fuel on the Fire', based on declassified British Foreign Office files,
Greg Muttitt explains:
'The most important strategic interest lay in expanding global energy
supplies, through foreign investment, in some of the world's largest
oil reserves – in particular Iraq. This meshed neatly with the secondary
aim of securing contracts for their companies.'
Ironically, having himself failed to write frankly about this key
issue, Krugman then speculated on the causes behind the political and
media silence:
'Some of them, I suppose, may have been duped: may have fallen for
the obvious lies, which doesn't say much about their judgment. More, I
suspect, were complicit: they realized that the official case for war
was a pretext, but had their own reasons for wanting a war, or,
alternatively, allowed themselves to be intimidated into going along.
For there was a definite climate of fear among politicians and pundits
in 2002 and 2003, one in which criticizing the push for war looked very
much like a career killer.'
Again, this was a deeply irrational analysis from Krugman. Politicians and journalists were
foolish, duped, intimidated, fearful of losing their careers, of
course. But this hardly explains a pattern of political and corporate
media subservience to corporate power over decades, with the same
mendacity on virtually every issue impacting power and profit.
A rational analysis would at least glance at the structure and
corporate funding of political parties; at the profit-orientation, elite
ownership and advertiser-dependence of the corporate media. Why focus
on poor 'judgement' and a 'climate of fear' when political and economic
structures endlessly producing the same pattern of media 'failure' are
staring us in the face? Why was rational analysis of this kind suddenly
impossible for someone as astute as Krugman? Had he suddenly become a
fool?
Of course not, he was exactly repeating the self-censoring
behaviour he lamented in other journalists - honest analysis of the
corporate media is taboo in the corporate press.
Krugman also seriously misled his readers when he wrote:
'On top of these personal motives, our news media in general have a
hard time coping with policy dishonesty. Reporters are reluctant to call
politicians on their lies, even when these involve mundane issues like
budget numbers, for fear of seeming partisan. In fact, the bigger the
lie, the clearer it is that major political figures are engaged in
outright fraud, the more hesitant the reporting. And it doesn't get much
bigger — indeed, more or less criminal — than lying America into war.'
In fact, corporate media are the corporate arm of the
propaganda system they are supposed to be monitoring. Far from having 'a
hard time coping with policy dishonesty', they have a hard time coping
with the occasional journalists who attempt
to expose the dishonesty. Immensely powerful economic and political
forces select, shape, mould, reward and punish editors, journalists and
whole organisations to ensure that they do not deliver the kind of
'frank discussion' Krugman promised but failed to supply.
Apart from the motives for war and the structural conditions behind
media performance, there was one other crucial consideration missed by
Krugman. What reasonable analysis would discuss a spectacular
contemporary example of political mass deception without placing it in
some kind of historical context? Was the great Iraq deception a one-off?
Was it an outlier event? Was it a standard example, a carbon copy of
similar events over years and decades? Have we seen similar events since
2003? Are they happening now? Again, one of US journalism's
finest – at the extreme left of the 'mainstream' spectrum – had nothing
at all to say about these key questions.
And in fact, as we and others have documented, the Iraq deception was not
at all an outlier. It was a standard example of corporate
political-media deception that just happened to go so catastrophically
wrong that the reality could not be entirely ignored - although the
propaganda system was far more effective in burying the truth than we
might imagine. According to a 2013 ComRes poll,
44% of UK respondents estimated that fewer than 5,000 Iraqis had died
since 2003. 59% thought fewer than 10,000 had died. Just 2% put the toll
in excess of one million – the likely real toll.
Krugman did not even mention that Iraqis had died, let alone discuss
the almost unimaginable scale of the bloodbath. He concluded:
'But truth matters, and not just because those who refuse to learn from history are doomed in some general sense to repeat it.'
Crucially, Krugman was unable to recognise that history had already
repeated itself, not least in the repetition of his own self-censoring
analysis. The West's overthrow of the Libyan government in 2011 was
based on exactly the same kind of lies and media complicity,
the same enthusiasm for war waged by Western powers who somehow,
miraculously, were said to retain moral credibility as humanitarian
agents.
In fact, this was an even more extreme example of propaganda
deception than Iraq, precisely because it happened in the aftermath of
that earlier deception. And, unlike Iraq, the media have not yet
summoned the courage to expose even a portion of the US-UK governments'
lies, or the media's complicity in them. All of this falls beyond
Krugman's idea of a 'frank discussion'.
kimnicholas |Nearly two out of three countries in the world today
participate in a new kind of “virtual land trade,” where not only the
goods produced but land ownership itself is traded internationally. This
was the finding of our new study, published 7 November 2014.
This
phenomenon of large-scale global land acquisitions, sometimes called
“land grabbing,” is receiving increasing international attention because
of its potential to contribute to development and raise yields in
developing countries, but amidst concerns about local land rights and
livelihoods.
We found that the land trading network is dominated by a
few key players with many trading partners- led by China, which imports
land ownership from 33 countries, closely followed by the UK and the US
(Figure 1).
One-third of countries both import and export land
ownership. Of the 80 countries that export land ownership, most export
to only a handful of trading partners, with a third having just one
import partner. On the other hand, Ethiopia exports land to 21 different
countries, and the Philippines and Madagascar both export land to 18
countries.
Geographically,
countries in the global North primarily act as land importers, while
the global South acts primarily as land exporters (Figure 2). There are
four main areas that import land: North America, Western Europe, the
Middle East, and developing economies in Asia. Southeast Asia is also an
exporter of land, along with South America, Eastern Europe, and
especially Africa. Many of the areas exporting land currently have low
agricultural productivity, so have potential to boost yields with
technological improvements. Fist tap Arnach.
scientificamerican | Fertile land is becoming scarce worldwide, especially for crops for
food, feed, biofuels, timber and fiber such as cotton. To produce those
goods, wealthy countries such as the U.S. and small countries with
little space are buying up or leasing large tracts of land that are
suitable for agriculture in other nations. Products are shipped back
home or sold locally, at times squeezing out native farmers, landowners
and businesses. In the past 15 years companies and government groups in
“investor” countries have grabbed 31.8 million hectares of land, the
area of New Mexico (column on right), according to the Land
Matrix Global Observatory's database of transactions that target low-
and middle-income countries. Crops are being produced on only 2.7
million of those hectares thus far (column on left). Overall, a large transfer of land ownership from the global south to the global north seems to be under way. Fist tap Arnach.
rsn | So yes, war is on the table, and innocent people die
as a result of the ongoing Natural Resource Procurement Wars every day –
including Americans.
Against that backdrop comes the effort by the Obama
administration, in concert with Congressional Republicans, to negotiate
the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) trade agreement, and its deeply
troubling Investor-State Dispute Settlement (ISDS) system provisions.
What is specifically of interest to the investors
whose interests are central to the TPP agreement is natural resources.
Not production, of course. Goods can now be produced anywhere. As long
as workers are willing or compelled to accept ruthless exploitation, the
international investor class has plenty of “jobs” available for them.
Will American workers see more jobs? Yes – if they are on their knees.
From old-growth forests to agricultural products, to
fracked natural gas, to Arctic oil, to bobcat pelts, the international
investor class will pay, and pay well. This is where the betrayal
begins.
Enforcing a global agreement of this scope requires muscle, military muscle. That is where the Global Force for Good,
as the U.S. military likes to market itself, comes in. Effectively, the
U.S. military, which routinely channels and directs the efforts of
young Americans who have enlisted to serve America, is into protecting not U.S. national security but the interests of the international investor class.
For the record, peace leads to stability, which in
turn leads to security. But not to profit. Therein lies the motivation
for perpetual war.
What makes the TPP treasonous is its betrayal
of America’s natural resources, vital economic interests, military
service members, and national security as a whole.
The TPP seeks to directly subjugate and invalidate
American law, granting to multinational investors and to the agreement
itself and its dispute resolution process ultimate authority, literally,
over American home rule. All while American service members fight and
die to protect the interests of whoever the investors are.
guardian | Fast-tracking the TPP, meaning its passage through Congress without
having its contents available for debate or amendments, was only
possible after lots of corporate money exchanged hands with senators.
The US Senate passed Trade Promotion Authority (TPA) – the fast-tracking
bill – by a 65-33 margin on 14 May. Last Thursday, the Senate voted 62-38 to bring the debate on TPA to a close.
Those impressive majorities follow months of behind-the-scenes
wheeling and dealing by the world’s most well-heeled multinational
corporations with just a handful of holdouts.
Using data from the Federal Election Commission, this chart shows all donations that corporate members of the US Business Coalition for TPP made to US Senate campaigns between January and March 2015, when fast-tracking the TPP was being debated in the Senate:
Out of the total $1,148,971 given, an average of $17,676.48 was donated to each of the 65 “yea” votes.
The average Republican member received $19,673.28 from corporate TPP supporters.
The average Democrat received $9,689.23 from those same donors.
The amounts given rise dramatically when looking at how much each senator running for re-election received.
Two days before the fast-track vote, Obama was a few votes shy
of having the filibuster-proof majority he needed. Ron Wyden and seven
other Senate Democrats announced they were on the fence on 12 May,
distinguishing themselves from the Senate’s 54 Republicans and handful
of Democrats as the votes to sway.
In just 24 hours, Wyden and five of those Democratic holdouts –
Michael Bennet of Colorado, Dianne Feinstein of California, Claire
McCaskill of Missouri, Patty Murray of Washington, and Bill Nelson of
Florida – caved and voted for fast-track.
Bennet, Murray, and Wyden – all running for re-election in 2016 –
received $105,900 between the three of them. Bennet, who comes from the
more purple state of Colorado, got $53,700 in corporate campaign
donations between January and March 2015, according to Channing’s
research.
HuffPo |I’ve been reading your book Narcoland, and your
vision of Mexico’s drug war caught my attention -- it’s very different
from what we’re accustomed to reading in the U.S. press. What are the
biggest misconceptions that you see in the media about the drug war?
When
I started to work on that book about Chapo Guzmán back in 2005, I had
the same misconceptions that most of the media and journalists had in
Mexico, the U.S. and the rest of the world. I had swallowed the story
that Chapo Guzmán was just a brilliant criminal -- a man so intelligent
that he was capable of subjecting the governments of Mexico and the
United States to his will. The Mexican government constantly said they
couldn’t catch him because he lived in a cave in a mountain in the
Sierra Sinaloa surrounded by people who protected him.
And those
of us in the media had only concentrated on the legend of Chapo Guzmán,
based on his violence, on the tons of drugs he trafficked, without
asking ourselves, “How does he do it? How can this man be so powerful?"
And the only way of explaining how the Sinaloa cartel and Chapo Guzmán
became so powerful is with the complicity of the government.
It
was that way, reporting on the story of Chapo Guzmán and the power he
was accumulating during the Felipe Calderón administration, that I found
that this so-called drug war was completely false. When I started
investigating, I began receiving information in documents and testimony
in the U.S. courts and interviews I did with drug traffickers that the
Sinaloa cartel enjoyed government protection since the Vicente Fox
administration, and that protection continued through the government of
Felipe Calderón. [editor's note: Former Mexican President Vicente Fox
was in office from 2000 to 2006. Former Mexican President Felipe
Calderón served from 2006 to 2012.]
I starting doing public
information requests in Mexico to see if these things being said in [the
U.S.] courts were true. What I found was that during Felipe Calderón’s
so-called drug war, the cartel that was attacked the least, that had the
fewest arrests, was the Sinaloa cartel. And in government statistics,
throughout the Felipe Calderón administration’s six years, there were
increases in marijuana production, increases in opium production,
increases in amphetamine production, increases in drug consumption in
Mexico. What kind of drug war is this where a cartel gets stronger,
becomes the most powerful cartel in the world, and on the other hand,
drug production reaches historic levels in Mexico?
NYTimes |In Stanislaus County,
as in many counties in California and across the United States,
law-enforcement officers keep a database of individuals that they have
identified as gang members. From their point of view, these lists are
vital and necessary, but activists argue that they can be
discriminatory. Researchers have found that white gang membership tends
to be underestimated and undercounted, while the opposite is true for
black and Latino youth. In 1997, California created a statewide
database, called CalGang, and by
2012, according to documents obtained by the Youth Justice Coalition,
there were more than 200,000 individuals named in it (roughly the same
number as the population of Modesto), including some as young as 10.
Statewide, 66 percent were Latino, and one in 10 of all
African-Americans in Los Angeles County between the ages of 20 and 24
were on the list.
When
the STEP Act became law, there were dissenting voices, some of them
unsurprising, like the American Civil Liberties Union. But there were
others you might not expect: Among law-enforcement authorities, for
example, there were concerns that the STEP Act could be applied too
broadly. Wes McBride, a retired sergeant of the Los Angeles County
Sheriff’s Department and the executive director of the California Gang
Investigators Association, told me that although he has come to see the
law as valuable, he was initially skeptical. “We thought the original
writing of that bill was bad,” he said. “It made being a gang member a
crime, and that flies in the face of the Constitution, in my mind.
What’s to stop the Boy Scouts from being considered a gang?” Shortly
after the STEP Act went into effect, The Los Angeles Times quoted
an anonymous law-enforcement official expressing concern: “I realize
that we have to do something, but when you have carte blanche, it’s
difficult not to abuse it.”
A
quarter of a century later, this point is still being raised. Manohar
Raju, a lawyer who manages the felony unit at the San Francisco Public
Defender’s Office, told me he has seen prosecutors’ use of gang
enhancements go up in recent years. Young men and women are bundled into
the broad category of “gang member” all the time, based on photos like
the ones shown at Sebourn’s trial; based on their wearing this color or
that one; based, essentially, on a misunderstanding of how difficult
these neighborhoods really are for youth. “Posing in a picture, acting
cool or acting tough can be a navigation strategy,” Raju said. “That may
not mean they want problems; in fact, it may mean the opposite.”
According
to Raju, weak cases can seem stronger when prosecutors introduce gang
enhancements. Instead of concrete evidence related to the criminal
charge, gang allegations permit prosecutors to introduce potentially
inflammatory information that might otherwise be legally irrelevant.
“Now we’re looking at: what did some other person do six months earlier
or six years earlier,” Raju said. “Your client may not have anything to
do with them, but they both have some connection to some name or
symbol.” In other cases, the very threat of the gang enhancement can
often be enough to persuade a defendant to accept a plea bargain. Given
the lengthy sentences that can result, a trial might not be worth the
risk.
Roughly
7 percent of California’s prison population, around 115,000 people, is
serving extra time because of gang enhancements; given that the state
has been ordered by the Supreme Court to reduce its prison overcrowding,
this is hardly an insignificant figure. According to the California
Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation, nearly half of those
convicted with gang enhancements are serving an additional 10 years or
more. Black and Latino inmates account for more than 90 percent of
inmates with gang enhancements; fewer than 3 percent are white.
physorg |
"If we want to
understand why men are much more likely to perpetrate crimes than women,
why offending peaks during late adolescence and early adulthood, and
why crime is often related to the experience of social and economic
disadvantage, then we need to consider the selection pressures faced by
our species in ancestral environments," says Dr Durrant.
"Around 90 percent of homicides are perpetrated by males
and most of those are directed against other males. We argue that
humans largely follow a pattern of sexual selection similar to what we
see in other mammalian species." He says this includes males competing
for access to status and resources which in evolutionary terms would
have led to increased reproductive success.
"It is important to recognise, however, that there is nothing
inevitable about male violence—although risk-taking and fighting is one
way that males obtain status, there are alternative routes that separate
us from other mammals, such as demonstrating skills, valuable knowledge
and prosocial behaviour,"
says Dr Durrant. "It would make sense, then, to focus on policies and
programmes that enable males to pursue status through non-violent
means."
Early social environments have a strong impact too, he says. Young
children who are exposed to dangerous and unpredictable environments
will adapt their behaviour rapidly in anticipation of an unsafe future.
"This is a period where individuals will shift their behavioural
strategy to one that involves more risk taking and competition," says Dr
Durrant. "This makes early intervention crucial, in order to shift
individuals along more pro-social pathways."
Although frequent media coverage of crime can tend to make us think
that violent and antisocial behaviours are rife in society, humans are
actually a remarkably cooperative and prosocial species, says Dr
Durrant. This reflects a long evolutionary history of living in small
groups where antisocial behaviour is punished by group members.
hoskinsoncharles | From time to time, I enjoy investing an afternoon considering politics
and the state of affairs here in the United States. Our country is the
first hyperpower forcing all other nations to consider us in whatever
policy happens to be the day's grock. This reality is divorced from
ethical or moral metrics and the war on drugs is no different.
For whatever reason (religious, practical, dystopian, etc), policymakers
in the United States have continuously decided to label a behavior or
substance as dangerous to the social fabric™ of our society.
Prohibition is the standard example and its spectacular failure is
somehow forgotten. We saw and acknowledge the rise of the modern mafia.
We saw the decentralized nature of resistance through bootleggers (some say one who's kid become president)
and the FBI form to stop the bootleggers empowering J. Edgar Hoover to
terrorize two generations of Americans via illegal spying and blackmail (including Martin Luther King). Yet why have no lessons been learned?
The war of drugs is a leviathan that has imprisoned millions of Americans (vastly disportionate for minorities),
formed massive bureaucracies such as the DEA and their state
equivalents, and like Hoover's FBI slowly transformed society to both
militarize the police and make their actions somehow ok.
Where in this process have we asked what the goal exactly is? Why are
we as a country destroying families, imprisoning millions and treating
addicts as hardened criminals? Why have we created an industry that robs
us of our constitutional rights and turns our police force into
something resembling the Stasi?
I honestly don't have a good answer. There is perhaps an historical
context that could be explored and used to synthetically explain why we
are somehow comfortable as a nation using a plato like ideal social fabric™ to justify incarcerating millions for non-violent crimes. Yet this leaves a putrid taste in my mouth.
firstlook | Even in the security-über alles climate that followed 9/11,
the Patriot Act was recognized as an extreme and radical expansion of
government surveillance powers. That’s why “sunset provisions” were
attached to several of its key provisions: meaning they would expire
automatically unless Congress renewed them every five years. But in 2005
and then again in 2010, the Bush and Obama administrations demanded
their renewal, and Congress overwhelmingly complied with only token
opposition from civil libertarians.
That has all changed in the post-Snowden era. The most controversial
provisions of the Patriot Act are scheduled to “sunset” on June 1, and
there is almost no chance for a straight-up, reform-free authorization.
The Obama White House has endorsed the so-called “reform” bill called
the USA Freedom Act, which passed the House by an overwhelming majority.
Yet the bill fell three votes short in the Senate last week, rendering
it very unclear what will happen as the deadline rapidly approaches.
Unlike many privacy and civil liberties groups, the ACLU has
refrained from endorsing the USA Freedom Act and instead is advocating
for allowing the Patriot Act provisions to sunset — i.e., to die a long
overdue death rather than being “reformed.” Meanwhile, almost all of the
86 “no” votes in the House were based on the argument that the USA
Freedom Act either does not go far enough in limiting the NSA or that it
actually makes things worse.
I spoke yesterday with the ACLU’s Deputy Legal Director, Jameel
Jaffer, about what is likely going to happen as the June 1 deadline
approaches, whether the USA Freedom Act is a net positive for privacy
supporters, and what all of this reform means for Edward Snowden’s
status. The discussion is roughly 20 minutes and can be heard on the
player below; a transcript is also provided.
yourdosage | To some extent, a bias to favor the self, where the self could be
people who look like me, people who act like me, people who have the
same taste as me, is a very strong human bias. It’s what one would
expect from a creature like us who evolved from natural selection, but
it has terrible consequences (3).
So, is the human’s inclination to form irrational biases an
unavoidable biological characteristic of the human race? We are born
with an innate ability to discriminate, and genocide is, it can
logically be argued, a consequence of such biological predispositions.
We identify a difference, say the varying width of a nose, and cling to
those similar to ourselves while alienating the other group. In Rwanda,
when Europeans introduced differing Rwandan “ethnicities” based on
barely differing physical characteristics, the Rwandans were receptive.
Why would a nation of people allow outsiders to introduce ideas that
divide their society? It seems strange and a bit too simplistic to blame
it solely on conformist values. Rwandans’ conformity played a large
role in causing the genocide, but I also believe that it is human nature
to discriminate. It is undeniable because as time goes on, genocide has
not disappeared from society’s landscape. If there were not some
biological cause, all types of discrimination would have disappeared
years ago, as we would learn from our mistakes. Genocide’s continual
occurrence in history can be attributed to the human desire to
distinguish between “us and them” and an innate need to punish the
different.
In Zistel’s “Remembering to Forget” she identifies “chosen amnesia”
as a result of the Rwandan genocide. Chosen amnesia is the conscious
decision of Rwandans, both Hutu and Tutsi, to forget the causes of the
genocide. All too recent memories of war and genocide ware on the minds
of all Rwandans, many of whom were soldiers and victims themselves;
therefore, chosen amnesia seems to be the only “strategy to cope with
living in proximity to ‘killers’ or ‘traitors’”(132). They must rely on
each other regardless of Hutu of Tutsi affiliation because their home
has been destroyed by war. In the wake of mass destruction and
widespread death, it has become extremely difficult for any Rwandan to
access necessary resources, such as food and water. Rwandans have
indicated through their ability to conveniently “forget” the many crimes
committed against humanity that their will to survive is stronger than
the hatred contained in their hearts. The lingering problems plaguing
Rwanda, such as trauma, depression, and HIV/AIDS, affect all Rwandans,
not one specific group. As a result, putting differences aside is a
necessary measure for the recovery and survival of Rwanda. Thus, the
tensions leading up to the genocide were forgotten in hopes for peaceful
coexistence. Although the intentions are ultimately good, chosen
amnesia impairs Rwanda’s chances for full recovery and enables similar
situations to arise in the future.
physorg |According to a longitudinal study following more than 1,000
homeless Australians and those at risk of homelessness, 42 percent of
people released from prison, juvenile detention or remand in the past 6
months were found to be homeless.
The findings are presented in the Journeys Home Research Report No.
6, written by the Melbourne Institute and commissioned by the Department
of Social Services.
Contributing report
author Dr Julie Moschion from the University of Melbourne said that the
study found that the longer the time spent in prison the longer the
individual was likely to be homeless.
"The connections between prison time and homelessness suggest that
there is a further role for policy makers to prevent the cycle between
crime and homelessness," said Dr Moschion.
"We also found that rates of homelessness were higher for those who experienced physical and sexual violence."
Risky drinkers and those using illegal drugs like marijuana are more
likely to be homeless and stay homeless for longer periods of time.
"Over the 30 month survey period, of those experiencing homelessness,
44 percent are in this situation for less than 6 months," said Dr
Moschion.
Multiple spells of homelessness are also relatively common with 40
percent of those experiencing homelessness cycling in and out of
homelessness.
On average, males were homeless for a larger proportion of the survey
period (23%) than females were (13%). Family contact was also found to
be important factor in preventing homelessness as well as assisting
individuals out of homelessness.
The report found that rates of homelessness are also higher in areas
with higher housing costs. Those who moved to areas with cheaper housing
are more likely to exit homelessness.
The report includes three types of homelessness: those without
conventional accommodation; those moving frequently between temporary
accommodation and people staying in boarding houses on a medium to
long-term basis.
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