mediamatters |The New York Times downplayed the impact of the Supreme Court's Citizens United ruling and dismissed the influence of money in politics by ignoring record-breaking spending of outside groups, the role of large donor political contributions, and dark money in the 2014 midterm election.
A December 9 New York Times Magazine article entitled "Who Wants to Buy a Politician?" argued that the "forecast that a flood of money would follow" the 2010 Citizens United ruling has largely not come to fruition. Author Binyamin Appelbaum noted that "spending has declined in each of the last two congressional elections" and argued that spending on campaign elections is "economically inefficient" because campaign spending has little impact on election outcomes:
[T]he 2012 presidential election, which recorded $2.6 billion in campaign spending, underperformed many forecasts. And spending has declined in each of the last two congressional elections. Candidates and other interested parties spent $3.7 billion on this year's midterms, down from an inflation-adjusted total of $3.8 billion in 2012, which was less than the $4 billion spent in2010, according to the nonprofit Center for Responsive Politics.
[...]
[B]uying elections is economically inefficient. Most voters, like most consumers, have defined preferences that are difficult for advertisers to shift. Chevron spent roughly $3 million during a recent campaign backing, certain City Council candidates in Richmond, Calif., where it operates a major refinery. Voters instead chose a slate of candidates who want to raise taxes. "Campaign spending has an extremely small impact on election outcomes, regardless of who does the spending," the University of Chicago economist Steven Levitt concluded in a 1994 paper. He found that spending an extra $100,000 in a House race might be expected to increase a candidate's vote total by about 0.33 percentage points. Investors appear to agree that companies can't make money by investing in political campaigns. A 2004 study found that changes in campaign-finance laws had no discernible impact on the share prices of companies that made donations.Appelbaum points to small donor contributions to argue that the majority of donations are not meant as an influencing factor:
Most campaign money, after all, comes in smaller chunks from individual donors. People who gave $3 to Barack Obama's presidential campaign in 2008 could not have reasonably expected that their small contributions would influence the future president. Even those who give larger sums rarely contribute the maximum allowed by law, as might be expected of someone trying to buy influence. Instead, individual contributions have increased over time merely in proportion to personal income.
But this argument obscures the especially outsized role large donors have in elections and downplays the proportion of large donations to overall campaign spending. The Sunlight Foundation found that in 2012, the median contribution from this group of elite donors was $26,584. Demos, a progressive public policy think tank, analyzed campaign finance data collected by the Center for Responsive Politics and found that most campaigns in 2014 were actually fueled by big donors:
Just 50 individuals and their spouses accounted for more than a third of the total money raised by Super PACs this cycle. Many candidates, including some whose individual contribution totals reach into the millio
zerohedge | Obviously, the potential exists for those paying for the speeches to use the lucrative events as a way to gain undue influence over what goes on in Washington. For instance, some suggest there may be a connection between a $200,000 payment made to Bill Clinton by Goldman Sachs in 2011 and the bank’s efforts to lobby the State Department ahead of legislation involving the Export-Import Bank which was set to provide a loan that would end up financing the purchase of millions of dollars in aircraft from a company partially owned by Goldman.
On Thursday,WSJ is out with a fresh lookat the connection between Clinton's State Department and her husband's speaking tour.
"More than two dozen companies and groups and one foreign government paid former President Bill Clinton a total of more than $8 million to give speeches around the time they also had matters before Mrs. Clinton’s State Department," The Journal says, adding that "fifteen of them also donated a total of between $5 million and $15 million to the Bill, Hillary and Chelsea Clinton Foundation, the family’s charity."
And on, and on.
Of course the Clinton's deny there's any connection despite the rather obvious parallels and convenient timing."No evidence exists" to link any actions taken by Mrs. Clinton’s State Department to organizations hosting Mr. Clinton’s speeches, Clinton campaign spokesman Brian Fallon told The Journal.
Yes, "no evidence exists," other than the $8 million Bill made from speeches made to companies who had "matters pending" with Hillary's State Department. That's just a coincidence.
Don't worry though - none of this will happen if Hillary wins the White House. Bill says that although he'll still give speeches "on subjects [he's] interested in," he "doesn't think" he'll accept any payment.
NYTimes | Wealth can be bad for your soul. That’s not just a hoary piece of folk
wisdom; it’s a conclusion from serious social science, confirmed by
statistical analysis and experiment. The affluent are, on average, less
likely to exhibit empathy, less likely to respect norms and even laws,
more likely to cheat, than those occupying lower rungs on the economic
ladder.
And it’s obvious, even if we don’t have statistical confirmation, that
extreme wealth can do extreme spiritual damage. Take someone whose
personality might have been merely disagreeable under normal
circumstances, and give him the kind of wealth that lets him surround
himself with sycophants and usually get whatever he wants. It’s not
hard to see how he could become almost pathologically self-regarding
and unconcerned with others.
So what happens to a nation that gives ever-growing political power to the superrich?
Modern America is a society in which a growing share of income and
wealth is concentrated in the hands of a small number of people, and
these people have huge political influence — in the early stages of the
2016 presidential campaign, around half the contributions came from
fewer than 200 wealthy families. The usual concern about this march
toward oligarchy is that the interests and policy preferences of the
very rich are quite different from those of the population at large,
and that is surely the biggest problem.
But it’s also true that those empowered by money-driven politics
include a disproportionate number of spoiled egomaniacs. Which brings
me to the current election cycle.
theintercept | What happened to all the dismissive lectures about how if you’ve done
nothing wrong, then you have nothing to hide? Is that still applicable?
Or is it that these members of the U.S. Congress who conspired with
Netanyahu and AIPAC over how to sabotage the U.S. government’s Iran
Deal feel they did do something wrong and are angry about having been
monitored for that reason?
I’ve always argued that on the spectrum of spying stories, revelations
about targeting foreign leaders is the least important, since that is
the most justifiable type of espionage. Whether the U.S. should be
surveilling the private conversations of officials of allied
democracies is certainly worth debating, but, as I argued in my 2014
book, those “revelations … are less significant than the agency’s
warrantless mass surveillance of whole populations” since “countries
have spied on heads of state for centuries, including allies.”
But here, the NSA did not merely listen to the conversations of
Netanyahu and his top aides, but also members of the U.S. Congress as
they spoke with him. And not for the first time: “In one previously
undisclosed episode, the NSA tried to wiretap a member of Congress
without a warrant,” the New York Times reported in 2009.
The NSA justifies such warrantless eavesdropping on Americans as
“incidental collection.” That is the term used when it spies on the
conversations of American citizens without warrants, but claims those
Americans weren’t “targeted,” but rather just so happened to be
speaking to one of the agency’s foreign targets (warrants are needed
only to target U.S. persons, not foreign nationals outside of the U.S.).
This claim of “incidental collection” has always been deceitful,
designed to mask the fact that the NSA does indeed frequently spy on
the conversations of American citizens without warrants of any kind.
Indeed, as I detailed here, the 2008 FISA law enacted by Congress had
as one of its principal, explicit purposes allowing the NSA to
eavesdrop on Americans’ conversations without warrants of any kind.
“The principal purpose of the 2008 law was to make it possible for the
government to collect Americans’ international communications — and to
collect those communications without reference to whether any party to
those communications was doing anything illegal,” the ACLU’s Jameel
Jaffer said. “And a lot of the government’s advocacy is meant to
obscure this fact, but it’s a crucial one: The government doesn’t need
to ‘target’ Americans in order to collect huge volumes of their
communications.” Fist tap Dale.
newyorker |
It’s hard to remember a time when Rahm Emanuel wasn’t a Democratic
Party superstar. Go back to 1991, when the thirty-two-year-old took
over fund-raising for Bill Clinton. He was soon renowned for
making the staff come to work on Sundays, shrieking into the phone to
donors things like “Five thousand dollars is an insult! You’re a
twenty-five-thousand-dollar person!”—and, not incidentally, helping
Clinton afford the blitz of TV commercials that saved him from the
Gennifer Flowers scandal, clearing his course to the White House. The
legend continued through this past April, when Rahm—in Chicago and
D.C., he’s known by that single name—won a second term as the mayor of
Chicago in a come-from-behind landslide.
Now the sins of Emanuel are finally catching up with him. Lucky for
him,
however, the compounding police-shooting scandal has erased from the
news a peccadillo from this past November: the mayor’s press team
was
eavesdropping and recording reporters while they interviewed aldermen critical of the
mayor. A spokesman responded to the press by saying that their only
intent was also “to make sure reporters have what you need, which is
exactly what you have here.” That made no sense. But then so much of
the legend of Rahm Emanuel’s brilliant career makes little sense. The
bigger question, perhaps, is what this says about a political party and
the political press that bought the legend in the first place.
antimedia |During aReddit AMA, he argued that the future is wrought with the peril of rampant inequality expedited by an automated machine-based global economic system.
“If machines produce everything we need, the outcome will depend on how things are distributed.”Hawking continued,“Everyone can enjoy a life of luxurious leisure if the machine-produced wealth is shared, or most people can end up miserably poor if the machine-owners successfully lobby against wealth redistribution. So far, the trend seems to be toward the second option, with technology driving ever-increasing inequality.”
Predictably, a dramatic response thread followed. Many commenters agreed with Hawking and denounced the globalist oligarchy that is currentlyconsolidating wealthat an unprecedented rate. Responses ranged from calls for a “bloody revolution” to references to the recent filmsElysium, Wall-E,andZeitgeist 2: Addendum. One commenter invoked theanarcho-syndicalistpolitical views of linguist Noam Chomsky.
The main theme of the discussion centered around the automation of labor and how that would affect the human workforce and the global economy. Hawking seems to believe that our current trajectory will make such automation a death knell for the working classes, with thebourgeoisiemachine owners exerting total economic control over human civilization.
One commenter strongly disagreed with Hawking, referencing recentJournal of Economic Perspectivearticles and claiming “technology has never, will never, and simply cannot result in structural unemployment.”
Thecomment threadis a treasure trove of wide-ranging ideas that include:
~The efficacy, or lack thereof, of voting
~A “universal basic income”
~Microeconomics
~Techno-socialism, with “an open source decentralized consensus algorithm for the masses”
~A post-scarcity society run by strong artificial intelligence
davidstockman | After the Berlin Wall fell in November 1989 and the death of the Soviet Union was confirmed two years later when Boris Yeltsin courageously stood down the red army tanks in front of Moscow’s White House, a dark era in human history came to an end.
The world had descended into what had been a 77-year global war, incepting with the mobilization of the armies of old Europe in August 1914. If you want to count bodies, 150 million were killed by all the depredations which germinated in the Great War, its foolish aftermath at Versailles, and the march of history into the world war and cold war which followed inexorably thereupon.
To wit, upwards of 8% of the human race was wiped-out during that span. The toll encompassed the madness of trench warfare during 1914-1918; the murderous regimes of Soviet and Nazi totalitarianism that rose from the ashes of the Great War and Versailles; and then the carnage of WWII and all the lesser (unnecessary) wars and invasions of the Cold War including Korea and Vietnam.
I have elaborated more fully on this proposition in“The Epochal Consequences Of Woodrow Wilson’s War“, but the seminal point cannot be gainsaid. The end of the cold war meant world peace was finally at hand, yet 25 years later there is still no peace because Imperial Washington confounds it.
In fact, the War Party entrenched in the nation’s capital is dedicated to economic interests and ideological perversions that guarantee perpetual war; they ensure endless waste on armaments and the inestimable death and human suffering that stems from 21st century high tech warfare and the terrorist blowback it inherently generates among those upon which the War Party inflicts its violent hegemony.
So there was a virulent threat to peace still lurking on the Potomac after the 77-year war ended. The great general and president, Dwight Eisenhower, had called it the “military-industrial complex” in his farewell address, but that memorable phrase had been abbreviated by his speechwriters, who deleted the word “congressional” in a gesture of comity to the legislative branch.
So restore Ike’s deleted reference to the pork barrels and Sunday afternoon warriors of Capitol Hill and toss in the legions of beltway busybodies that constituted the civilian branches of the cold war armada (CIA, State, AID etc.) and the circle would have been complete. It constituted the most awesome machine of warfare and imperial hegemony since the Roman legions bestrode most of the civilized world.
In a word, the real threat to peace circa 1990 was thatPax Americanawould not go away quietly in the night.
In fact, during the past 25 years Imperial Washington has lost all memory that peace was ever possible at the end of the cold war. Today it is as feckless, misguided and bloodthirsty as were Berlin, Paris, St. Petersburg, Vienna and London in August 1914.
Back then a few months after the slaughter had been unleashed, soldiers along the western front broke into spontaneous truces of Christmas celebration, singing and even exchange of gifts. For a brief moment they wondered why they were juxtaposed in lethal combat along the jaws of hell.
The truthful answer is that there was no good reason. The world had stumbled into war based on false narratives and the institutional imperatives of military mobilization plans, alliances and treaties arrayed into a doomsday machine and petty short-term diplomatic maneuvers and political calculus. Yet it took more than three-quarters of a century for all the consequential impacts and evils to be purged from the life of the planet.
The peace that was lost last time has not been regained this time for the same reasons. Historians can readily name the culprits from 100 years ago, such as the German general staff’s plan for a lightening mobilization and strike on the western front called the Schlieffen Plan or Britain’s secret commitments to France to guard the North Sea while the latter covered the Mediterranean.
Since these casus belli of 1914 were criminally trivial in light of all that metastisized thereafter, it might do well to name the institutions and false narratives that block the return of peace today. The fact is, these impediments are even more contemptible than the forces that crushed the Christmas truces one century ago.
zerohedge | Need some help with this movie. Seems like the movie created the idea
that the system as a whole is corrupt and put most of the blame on the
rating agencies, and totally bypasses the US government and Federal
Reserve, with only a scant mention in the credits that Burry tried to
contact the White House and tell them how he figured it out ultimately
leading to him being audited four times and being visted by the FBI.
The main scene that seems to dump the most blame came with Baum and
his numbers guy pushing the old lady at Standards and Poor's into saying
"if we don't give the banks the rating they want they go down the
street to moodys". The movie makes alot of top people look like bafoons
who didn't know what was going on like the Bear Sterns guy on stage with
Baum as the stock is plumitting saying he would "buy moar".
All three groups that the movie follows who made a bunch of money on
the "big short" are all shown as doing so because of Burry who they
portrayed as an idiot savant type who can single handidly digest
unlimited numbers while everyone else (Government, Federal Reserve,
Freddie Mae, Banks, Investment firms, hedge funds, regulators, etc) are
asleep at the wheel. I'm sorry something seems amiss here!!
Consider me totally ignorant about the finer details of banking,
finance, housing, etc, but it seems almost comical that the Federal
Reserve Bank whose primary function is setting the feds fund rate did
not have a complete model of the impact that rate would have on
mortgages in the US? A central theme in the movie is the cascadding
effect of the default of sub prime mortgages.
The collapse happens in the last year of Bush's presidency with the
most unpopular bill TARP being signed as he is leaving office with no
hope of re-election. The bailout is presented only very briefly as Baum
speaks in low key amazement that they are going to bail out the banks.
Just lucky timing I guess that the largest financial bailout in history
and the financial collapse happended a few months before a very
unpopular president leaves office and is going to hand over the reigns
to the first black president.
Sure there is the revolving door between SEC and financial firms
referenced in the film with the red head in vegas who is trying to bed
goldman guys, but her cluelessness is tied to the SEC not being funded
when she is asked why they are not paying attention to the ratings of
MBS.
Seems like the point of this movie is to leave most watching it (the
massess) with the impression that the system is just a mess and made up
of greedy people. This just reinforces what I think most people already
think. If there is a bigger story in regards to the timing of the
collapse coming at the end of the Bush presidency, with the political
capital of Obama to over see the coming QEs and the overall takeover of
the economy that was provided by the TARP and related legislation, that
story is burried in this story of Burry the savant. (I'm not attacking
Burry, don't know a thing about him other than this movie)
Hollywoods story is that one idiot savant single handely figured out
some corruption in the ratings of securities and made a big bet and won a
billion or so as millions lost. Seems like this story, while
significant and outrageous and interesting, is designed to hide a bigger
story.
seattletimes | After a few years living with her sister, Rose Mary Zunie, 59, was ready to move into a place of her own.
So, on an arid Saturday morning this past summer, the sisters piled
into a friend’s pickup truck and headed for a mobile-home sales lot
here just outside the impoverished Navajo reservation.
The women — one in a long, colorful tribal skirt, another wearing
turquoise jewelry, a traditional talisman against evil — were steered
to a salesman who spoke Navajo, just like the voice on the store’s
radio ads.
He walked them through Clayton-built homes on the lot, then into the
sales center, passing a banner and posters promoting one subprime
lender: Vanderbilt Mortgage, a Clayton subsidiary. Inside, he handed
them a Vanderbilt sales pamphlet.
“Vanderbilt is the only one that finances on the reservation,” he told the women.
His claim, which the women caught on tape, was a lie. And it was illegal.
It is just one in a pattern of deceptions that Clayton has used to help
extract billions from poor customers around the country — particularly
people of color, who make up a substantial and growing portion of its
business.
The company is controlled by Warren Buffett, one of the world’s richest
men, but its methods hardly match Buffett’s honest, folksy image:
Clayton systematically pursues unwitting minority homebuyers and baits
them into costly subprime loans, many of which are doomed to fail, an
investigation by The Seattle Times and BuzzFeed News has found.
Clayton’s predatory practices have damaged minority communities — from
rural black enclaves in the Louisiana Delta, across Spanish-speaking
swaths of Texas, to Native American reservations in the Southwest. Many
customers end up losing their homes, thousands of dollars in down
payments, or even land they’d owned outright.
Over the 12 years since Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway bought Clayton
Homes Inc., the company has grown to dominate virtually every aspect of
America’s mobile-home industry. It builds nearly half the new
manufactured homes sold in this country every year, making it the most
prolific U.S. homebuilder of any type. It sells them through a network
of more than 1,600 dealerships. And it finances more mobile-home loans
than any other lender by a factor of more than seven.
In minority communities, Clayton’s grip on the lending market verges on
monopolistic: Last year, according to federal data, Clayton made 72
percent of the loans to black people who financed mobile homes.
The company’s in-house lender, Vanderbilt Mortgage, charges minority
borrowers substantially higher rates, on average, than their white
counterparts. In fact, federal data shows that Vanderbilt typically
charges black people who make over $75,000 a year slightly more than
white people who make only $35,000.
WaPo | Rex Muller has had lots of tenants over the years, but none quite like
Terrence Taylor. He moved into a house miles outside of town but
couldn’t drive. He was 30 years old but played with toy cars. His face
was badly disfigured by burns, but attractive women often accompanied
him. Muller nonetheless trusted Taylor more than most. He had lots of
money.
When Taylor moved from Fairfax County to Muller’s Martinsburg, W.Va.,
townhouse in 2012, agreeing to pay $870 in monthly rent, he flashed an
insurance document bearing impressive numbers. It said New York Life
Insurance was paying him $10,000 every month as a result of a lawsuit
settled in 1989. Muller learned that a malfunctioning electric heater
had burst into flames when Taylor was a boy, leaving him disfigured —
and rich. His settlement would pay him many millions of dollars over
the course of his life.
Two years later, in June 2014, Muller watched as a local deputy knocked
at Taylor’s door. Muller had just taken his tenant, who had not paid
rent in three months, to court and evicted him. He stepped into the
darkened home as Taylor, an amputee, descended the stairs and, without
a word, limped past him on a prosthetic leg.
Taylor had left behind a mess of toys, dirty dishes and cards written
by “go-go girls,” Muller recalled. Strange documents were strewn across
the kitchen table. “It was a lot of legal mumbo-jumbo,” Muller said. “A
lot of lawyer talk.”
The landlord, however, understood enough to know the tenant had been
doing a lot of business deals. “He was selling off his loan,” Muller
reasoned.
Not quite. What Taylor had been selling, chunk by chunk, for pennies on
the dollar, was a settlement that had a lifetime expected payout of
$31.5 million. In numerous deals approved in Virginia courts over two
years, Taylor sold everything owed to him through 2044 and was now
broke and homeless.
How did this happen, Muller said he wondered as he picked through the detritus.
NYTimes | In summer 1972, Mr. Clinton was in Miami working on George McGovern’s
presidential campaign when Mrs. Clinton traveled from Washington to
Atlanta to meet with civil rights lawyers and activists, then rented a
car and drove the nearly four hours to Dothan.
“Hillary was not a derring-do type of person. It wasn’t her normal
mode,” said Taylor Branch, the civil rights activist and author, who
was a close friend of Bill and Hillary Clinton at the time. “But,” he
added, “you do these things when you’re young, and this was the era
when young people did more of that than normal.”
In Dothan, Mrs. Clinton most likely stayed at the Holiday Inn on Ross
Clark Circle, since locally owned hotels might have been suspicious of
a single woman with black acquaintances, several people who did the
same work said. While Mrs. Clinton favored corduroy bell-bottoms for
casual wear, the dress code for the investigative work called for
conservative blouses and skirts, her colleagues said.
She drove over the railroad tracks near downtown, east of Park Avenue,
to the black part of town. There, she met local contacts who told her
over a lunch of sweetened ice tea and burgers “that many of the school
districts in the area were draining local public schools of books and
equipment to send to the so-called academies, which they viewed as the
alternatives for white students,” she wrote in “Living History.”
Years later, Mrs. Clinton does not say she ever felt afraid, but a
white woman traveling alone in the South would have been “looking over
her shoulder,” said Marlene Provizer, who did similar research into
segregation academies in Mississippi and Georgia in the same era.
“There weren’t many folks doing this work,” she said. “I was very conscious of being ‘the other.’ ”
NYTimes | “Rahm’s particular challenge isn’t whether he leaves office — it’s that
he’s going to stay in office at a time that’s particularly demanding,”
said David Axelrod, a political consultant and a longtime friend of Mr.
Emanuel’s.
“Look, it’s been a painful, difficult time for him,” Mr. Axelrod said.
“No human being could be unaffected by this whole episode and by the
sort of anger and rancor that it’s stirred. When you talk to him, he
clearly feels that he missed it, and that this whole episode has
uncovered a problem on which he, himself, would say he was
insufficiently focused — that this was not handled well by him or his
administration.”
Mr. Emanuel swept into the mayor’s office in 2011, helped in part by
what black Chicagoans knew about him at the time: that Mr. Obama
trusted him. Four years later, he faced a steeper climb in a city that
had gotten to know him better. He was forced into a runoff with Jesus
G. Garcia, a county commissioner who was seeking to become the city’s
first Latino mayor, partly because of critics who said Mr. Emanuel was
too brusque and more attentive to the wishes of downtown interests than
the needs of residents from some poorer neighborhoods.
The mayor, whose clash with public schoolteachers helped set off the
city’s first teachers’ strike in a quarter-century, drew special anger
in 2013 for overseeing the closing of nearly 50 public schools, many of
them in black and Latino neighborhoods. After winning the unexpectedly
tense campaign in April, Mr. Emanuel promised that he had gotten the
city’s message.
The start of Mr. Emanuel’s second term already was complicated by the
city’s fiscal problems. Facing mounting pension payments and sinking
credit ratings, Mr. Emanuel pushed through the largest property tax
increase in the city’s modern history. Also, the possibility of another
teachers’ strike looms.
realitysandwich | The esoteric, Hermetic tradition, forced underground by the rise of material, mechanical science, has suffered, I believe, a full scale, no holds barred assault by the left brain and the deficient mode of the mental-rational structure. Its right brain worldview, with its sense of a living, intelligent universe with which we can participate through our imagination, was targeted for attack by its left brain antagonist. It is not the case, as it is generally accepted, that the Hermetic/esoteric view, anchored in what it erroneously believed was a profound “ancient wisdom,” was, with the rise of reason, rationality and the Enlightenment, simply superseded by a more correct view. It was not simply a case of “superstition” giving way to “science,” or of dogma dissolving in the face of free thought. That “more correct view,” informed by the proselytizing zeal of acompeting form of consciousness, seems to have purposely and ruthlessly set out to consciously obliterate its rival. This was, indeed, a real war, one carried out on the fields of consciousness.
In the early stages of its campaign, the anti-esoteric view enjoyed many victories, and it eventually established itself as the sole arbiter of what is true, and what is “real” knowledge and what is not. But now, some four hundred years after Hermes Trismegistus the thrice great sage of magic and the ancient wisdom was dethroned, his usurper’s position seems threatened – or at least the foundations on which it established its supremacy seem somewhat less secure. In our time, the deficient mode of Gebser’s mental-rational consciousness structure has reached its peak, as it were. Developments like “deconstructionism” and “post-modernism” suggest that the western intellectual tradition has begun to take itself apart, with the left brain’s obsession with analysis turning on itself. Even earlier than these, the rise of the “new physics” of quantum theory and related fields in the early part of the last century has shown that the neat nineteenth-century vision of a perfectly explainable mechanical universe is no longer tenable. But there are more pressing concerns. We’ve seen that Gebser in his last days believed that we were heading toward a “global catastrophe,” and the various crises – ecological, environmental, economic, social, political, religious, and cultural – that fill our daily news reports suggest he was not far wrong. Our era has had no shortage of Cassandras, and it would be easy to lump Gebser’s concerns together with other, less eloquent — not to mention researched — jeremiads. But there is a tension, an anxiety about our time that somehow seems to suggest thatsomethingwill happen, that some dike will burst, and that we will have a flood. As the philosopher Richard Tarnas remarked, “late modern man”– that is, ourselves — is “the incongruously sensitive denizen of an implacable vastness devoid of meaning,” living in a world in which “gigantism and turmoil, excessive noise, speed and complexity dominate the human environment.” Things, many believe, cannot stay this way much longer. As Yeats said long ago, “the center cannot hold.”
From a biological perspective, which includes a bio-social
anthropological perspective, religions function primarily as in-group
markers for a breeding population. Human breeding populations have been competing
since the birth of your species as long as there are barriers to gene
flow between them. Religion is a good barrier for gene flow. The
scenario is always the same. An in-group grows > internal dissension
(often over beliefs) > group splitting > competition between the
groups, which often includes armed conflict. Competition always makes
things better, including you deuterostems. As long as religions act as barriers to
gene flow between populations, the conflicts will continue.
The metaphor of seeing religion as a mask for the clash of
civilizations could be helpful if one thinks of religion-unique masks
as in-group markers for a specific breeding population like the
religious beard and hat on most Muslim men and the hijab on most Muslim
women. These other items, like your metaphorical masks, are also just
in-group markers for a breeding population like the gold crosses that
some Christian women wear around their neck or the musty black clown outfits worn
by Orthodox Jewish men.
The only way the conflicts using religions will end will be when the
rest of the world's horny male deuterostems can get at lovely Muslim women
with minimal barriers to entry. The Muslim male will not willingly
secularize and share access to his women. He will have to be crushed
into submission to the will of deez nutz. Human nature being what
it is, this will of course happen. Once that occurs, you humans will
have to find other backwards isht to fight over. Political and racial ideologies
also act as barriers to gene flow. Race, religion, and politics are
about equal in their ability to act as in-group markers that keep
breeding populations apart.
Religions decline in the industrialized western democracies correlates
with the breaking down of barriers for gene flow between previously separated religious peoples. In the United States in the 1950s, 95% of
Jews only married other Jews. Today, only about 30% of Jews marry other Jews outside of Israel. In Europe, now secularized
Catholics and Protestants intermarry with some frequency, although
there are still barriers to gene flow between previously Christian
secularized Europeans and Muslims, most of whom in Europe are still
religious.
Form follows function. If the function is removed, the form
becomes vestigial. Everything else is simple-minded conversation...,
Tribune | Despite strong efforts at reform, history shows that it often takes atrocity to enact real change.
Before President Lyndon Johnson signed the Civil Rights Act in 1964,
President John F. Kennedy tried to pass it and failed. It took horrific
images of police hosing black protesters and voters in Alabama, of
police dogs attacking them, to enable Johnson to push monumental
legislation past an entrenched bloc of prejudiced lawmakers. It took an
enraging video from New York last year of a dying Eric Garner gasping
"I can't breathe" to force the NYPD to institute an unprecedented
policy — one promising serious consequences for police who witness
another officer's use of excessive force without reporting it. Sadly,
it's now Chicago's turn.
Amid our anger, can we give City Hall a chance to break down previously
impenetrable walls? Despite strong feelings about Mayor Rahm Emanuel's
decision to delay showing the Laquan McDonald video to the public while
a federal investigation continued, we must not confuse facts. Never was
there an attempt by the city to withhold the video from investigators
or slow down the federal investigation, which started within weeks of
the shooting. Emanuel didn't cause this problem. As in too many
American cities, issues regarding police using excessive force started
decades before he became mayor. But this tragedy may finally enable him
to challenge a despicable status quo.
As in 1964, we need leadership to enact change, but atrocity and public
commitment must create an opening to do what couldn't be done before. A
formidable police union that protects its worst and undermines its best
must be challenged. Actions need to be taken ahead of the U.S.
Department of Justice findings, and we all must support that effort.
The brotherhood of deadly silence can no longer be tolerated.
We can't have it both ways. After pummeling Emanuel for challenging a
powerful teachers union, can we really be enraged that he hasn't been
able to take on the police union? Even within the force, good officers
have been punished for speaking out. Former police Cmdr. Lorenzo Davis,
a 23-year veteran, lost his job on the Independent Police Review
Authority for refusing to justify certain police shootings of
civilians. His review said he showed a "bias against police." How many
other good officers hesitate to speak out?
WaPo | Thisscoop from Jerry Markon and David Nakamurais going to scramble the politics of immigration in the presidential race, and it may create more problems for Democrats than for Republicans:
The Department of Homeland Security has begun preparing for a series of raids that would target for deportation hundreds of families who have flocked to the United States since the start of last year, according to people familiar with the operation.
The nationwide campaign, to be carried out by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents as soon as early January, would be the first large-scale effort to deport families who have fled violence in Central America, those familiar with the plan said. More than 100,000 families with both adults and children have made the journey across the southwest border since last year, though this migration has largely been overshadowed by a related surge of unaccompanied minors.
The ICE operation would target only adults and children who have already been ordered removed from the United States by an immigration judge, according to officials familiar with the undertaking…The adults and children would be detained wherever they can be found and immediately deported. The number targeted is expected to be in the hundreds and possibly greater.
Readthe rest for the details, but the short version is that there has been vigorous internal debate inside the Obama administration about this policy, and it has not been signed off on officially. The administration has long signaled that families crossing over illegally who do not qualify for asylum will be deported. But advocates have been urging the administration to treat these migrants as refugees, because experts believe that violence in Central America is a key reason for their efforts to cross the southern border.
In a preview of more to come, a leading immigration advocate, Frank Sharry of America’s Voice, told me that there will be intense pressure on the Democratic presidential candidates — particularly likely nominee Hillary Clinton — to denounce the new policy. Sharry pointed out that this could force Clinton to decide whether to align with immigration advocates and Latinos, as she’s been doing in hopes of winning the Latino vote by a huge margin in the general election, which would mean breaking with the Obama administration and adopting a position that Republicans will attack as weak on immigration enforcement.
“This will be a political nightmare for the Democrats,” Sharry told me. “The specter of raids picking up families and sending them back to violent countries is going to put Hillary Clinton in a difficult position. She’ll have to choose between protecting refugees from Central America, a demand of the Latino community, or standing with the law-and-order position of Obama and Republicans.”
theburningplatform |
Ultimately, it is a highly entertaining movie with the right moral overtone, despite non-stop profanity that captures the true nature of Wall Street traders. This is a dangerous movie for Wall Street, the government, and the establishment in general. They count on the complexity of Wall Street to confuse the average person and make their eyes glaze over. That makes it easier for them to keep committing fraud and harvesting the nation’s wealth.
This movie cuts through the crap and reveals those in power to be corrupt, greedy weasels who aren’t really as smart as they want you to think they are. The finale of the movie is sobering and infuriating. After unequivocally proving that Wall Street bankers, aided and abetted by the Federal Reserve, Congress, the SEC, and the mainstream media, destroyed the global financial system, put tens of millions out of work, got six million people tossed from their homes, and created the worst crisis since the Great Depression, the filmmakers are left to provide the depressing conclusion.
No bankers went to jail. The Too Big To Fail banks were not broken up – they were bailed out by the American taxpayers. They actually got bigger. Their profits have reached new heights, while the average family has seen their income fall. Wall Street is paying out record bonuses, while 46 million people are on food stamps. Wall Street and their lackeys at the Federal Reserve call the shots in this country. They don’t give a fuck about you. And they’re doing it again.
Every American should see this movie and get fucking pissed off. The theater was deathly silent at the end of the movie. The audience was stunned by the fact that the criminals on Wall Street got away with the crime of the century, and they’re still on the loose. I had a great discussion with my 16 year old son on the way home. At least there is one millennial who understands how bad his generation is getting screwed.
bnarchives |Is economic growth a miracle of the free market? According to mainstream theory, growth is best ensured through conditions of ‘perfect competition’. However, economic growth is tightly correlated with the concentration of power in the hands of large corporations. Why? The capital as power framework provides potential answers that turn mainstream theory on its head: growth seems to be intimately related to the formation of hierarchy.
nbcnews | Hillary Clinton's campaign has run into another Twitterstorm over her Latino outreach over a blog that compares her to "abuelas"(Latina grandmothers), displaying the tightrope candidates are walking as they try to woo the community.
The blog post, written by a Latina, is titled"7 Things Hillary Clinton Has in Common With Your Abuela."It drew backlash and accusations of "Hispandering" Tuesday night that continued into Wednesday. The writer listed such things as "worries about children everywhere" and "knows what's best," things that many Latinos might say about their grandmothers. But the writer also says the seven items are ways Clinton is "just like your grandmother."
The Latino Twitterati found the blog's comparison so offensive, they started a hashtag, #NotMyAbuela, and listed ways Hillary is not like their abuela. It follows criticism over Clinton calling herself "Tu Hillary" and using Selena's "Bidi, Bidi, Bom Bom" as a campaign song in San Antonio.
But Clinton's also a candidate who has hired several Latino staffers, as well as a couple of Latino pollsters. She's tacked further left on her own view of immigration and taken positions on issues that many progressive Latino groups back, such as raising the minimum wage and finding a way to bring legal status to the 11 million people in the community who are not here legally.
Traversing the Latino identity landscape is a difficult thing. Republican Jeb Bush is often lauded among Latinos for having married a Mexican woman, speaking Spanish and having a "Hispanic heart." But Ted Cruz and Marco Rubio are referred to by some as Latinos in Name Only, despite their Cuban ancestry. While Clinton enjoys heavy Hispanic support, she's regularly targeted in social media.
Democratic strategist Larry Gonzalez said the backlash was a "headscratcher" for him. He saw the blog as the musings of a writer who wanted to share her thoughts on how she feels about Hillary Clinton in relation to her ownabuela.
"It's kind of a damned if you, damned if you don't situation," said Gonzalez, a Raben Group lobbyist in Washington, D.C. who is not working with any of the campaigns "You have Latinos on the campaign being given an opportunity to offer their opinions and who are not just window dressing and people don't appreciate whatever thoughts they have to offer."
NYTimes |
Biologists in the United States and Europe are developing a revolutionary genetic technique that promises to provide an unprecedented degree of control over insect-borne diseases and crop pests.
The technique involves a mechanism called a gene drive system, which propels a gene of choice throughout a population. No gene drives have yet been tested in the wild, but in laboratory organisms like the fruit fly, they have converted almost the entire population to carry the favored version of a gene.
Gene drives “could potentially prevent the spread of disease, support agriculture by reversing pesticide and herbicide resistance in insects and weeds, and control damaginginvasive species,” a group of Harvard biologistswrote last year in the journal eLIFE.
A much discussed application of gene drives would help rid the world of pest-borne diseases likemalaria,dengue feverandLyme disease.
A gene drive designed to render a population extinct is known as a crash drive. A crash drive being developed for mosquitoes consists of a gene engineered into the Y chromosome that shreds the X chromosome in the cells that make the mosquito’s sperm, thus ensuring that all progeny are male. Unless the drive itself is damaged through mutation, the number of females would be expected to dwindle each generation until the population collapses.
Biologists led byAndrea CrisantiandTony Nolanat Imperial College Londonreported this month in the journal Nature Biotechnologytheir development of mosquitoes with gene drives that disrupt three genes for female fertility, each of which acts at a different stage of egg formation. Because the female mosquitoes are infertile only when a copy is inherited from both parents, the gene drives would be thoroughly disseminated through a population before taking their toll. They could “suppress mosquito populations to levels that do not supportmalariatransmission,” the authors wrote.
The mosquitoes are not yet ready for release. Because natural selection will heavily favor any wild mosquitoes that acquire resistance to the gene drives, the researchers need to prevent such resistance from arising. One approach would be to target two or three sites in the same fertility gene, giving natural selection a much higher barrier to overcome.
SA | Robert G. Edwards might not be a household name, but the innovation he pioneered along with Patrick Steptoe certainly is. In vitro fertilization (IVF), the process whereby human eggs are fertilized outside of the body and the resulting embryos implanted in a woman's womb, led to the 1978 birth of Louise Brown—the world's first "test tube baby." To date,an estimated five million childrenworldwide have been born using this innovation. Edwards received the2010 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicinefor this remarkable achievement.
Edwards’s passing earlier this year prompted an outpouring of praise. He has been widely described as a maverick researcher disinterested in personal recognition who simply wanted to give babies to those who couldn’t make them on their own. TheNew York TimesquotedEdwards’s former collaborator, Barry Bavister, as saying “Dr. Edwards’s motivation—his passion, in fact—was not fame or fortune but rather helping infertile women.” Bavister continued, “He believed with all his heart that it was the right thing to do.”
But Edwards’s views on the technology he created and the uses to which it should be put may be more complicated than this portrayal. One detail omitted from the obituaries published around the world was that Edwards was a member in good standing of the Eugenics Society in Britain for much of his career. Recently uncovered documents show that Edwards served on the organization’s Council—its leadership body—as a trustee on three separate occasions: from 1968 to 1970, 1971 to 1973 and once again from 1995 to 1997 after the group euphemistically renamed itself "The Galton Institute" for the founder of the eugenics movement,Francis Galton. As we consider Edwards’s legacy in light of his recent passing, it is important to think critically about the relationship between Edwards’s development of IVF and his participation in an organization that was dedicated to promoting one of the most dangerous ideas in human history: that science should be used to control human reproduction in order to breed preferred types of people.
Coined by Galton in the late 1800s to mean "well-born," eugenics became a dominant aspect of Western intellectual life and social policy during the first half of the 20th century. It started with the seemingly simple proposition that one's social position is rooted in heritable qualities of character and intellect.
Eugenicists of that era also believed that people with what they considered the least desirable traits tend to have the most children, precipitating what they saw as an inevitable decline in a society’s intellectual and physical vigor. Taking their cue from livestock breeders, eugenicists argued that socially disadvantageous characteristics could be bred out of human populations through policies that limited the reproduction of "the unfit"—the "feebleminded," the poor and the weak. Many eugenicists considered these qualities to be more prevalent among racial and ethnic minorities.
A Foundation of Joy
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Two years and I've lost count of how many times my eye has been operated
on, either beating the fuck out of the tumor, or reattaching that slippery
eel ...
April Three
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4/3
43
When 1 = A and 26 = Z
March = 43
What day?
4 to the power of 3 is 64
64th day is March 5
My birthday
March also has 5 letters.
4 x 3 = 12
...
Return of the Magi
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Lately, the Holy Spirit is in the air. Emotional energy is swirling out of
the earth.I can feel it bubbling up, effervescing and evaporating around
us, s...
New Travels
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Haven’t published on the Blog in quite a while. I at least part have been
immersed in the area of writing books. My focus is on Science Fiction an
Historic...
Covid-19 Preys Upon The Elderly And The Obese
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sciencemag | This spring, after days of flulike symptoms and fever, a man
arrived at the emergency room at the University of Vermont Medical Center.
He ...