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This makes too much sense to ever happen

I’m a big fan of economist Dean Baker, who used to have a blog called Beat the Press, but is now behind a Patreon paywall. I’m a subscriber, and I thought I’d pass along the gist of his latest, as I think it makes a whole lot of sense, which is precisely why what he proposes will never happen. The post is his take on the failure of Silicon Valley Bank, and he proposes an obviously good way to make sure such bank failures don’t affect the larger financial system:

We know that the view of most of our policy elites (the politicians who make policy, their staff, and the people who write about it in major news outlets) is that the purpose of government is to make the rich richer. But, there are alternative ways to structure the financial system for people who care about fairness and efficiency.

The most obvious solution would be to have the Federal Reserve Board give every person and corporation in the country a digital bank account. The idea is that this would be a largely costless way for people to carry on their normal transactions. They could have their paychecks deposited there every two weeks or month.

They could have their mortgage or rent, electric bill, credit card bill, and other bills paid directly from their accounts.

This sort of system could be operated at minimal cost, with the overwhelming majority of transactions handled electronically, requiring no human intervention. There could be modest charge for overdrafts, that would be structured to cover the cost of actually dealing with the problem, not gouging people to make big profits.

Former Fed economist (now at Dartmouth), Andy Levin, has been etching the outlines of this sort of system for a number of years. The idea would be to effectively separate out the banking system we use for carrying on transactions from the system we use for saving and financing investment.

We would have the Fed run system to carry out the vast majority of normal financial transactions, replacing the banks that we use now. However, we would continue to have investment banks, like Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley, that would borrow on financial markets and lend money to businesses, as well as underwriting stock and bond issues. While investment banks still require regulation to prevent abuses, we don’t have to worry about their failure shutting down the financial system.

Let’s face it. For most of us, our bank accounts are not about saving money. They are about having a place to stash the money that is used to cover our mostly electronic payments. In fact, these days, most money never has a physical existence. It consists of an entry on a computer. There’s no reason why those computers can’t be maintained by the government. In fact, it would likely be a boon for the economy because at the present time the banking system extracts a cut from the seller every time someone uses a debit or credit card to make a purchase. Since almost all transactions are electronic, this has to force prices upward from where they otherwise might be. For that matter, it might bring us back to the days when banks were getting us used to ATMs, and didn’t charge us to withdraw our money from a competitor’s ATM. (Remember Yankee 24?)

If our money were separated from the risky stuff that brings down banks like Silicon Valley, we wouldn’t need to worry about banks collapsing, or about paying for their inevitable rescues.

Of course this will never happen, even if the Democrats get firm control of both houses of Congress. They’re better than the Republicans, but they still tend to see things from the perspective of the folks who line their pockets. Consider Democratic Senator Mark Warner’s statement today that he doesn’t at all regret making it easier for banks such as Silicon Valley to escape effective regulation. Elizabeth and Bernie would probably go for it, but not the “moderates”.

The probable end result of the Silicon Valley debacle is that the Fed will take some action that will put more money into the pockets of the already rich, while jacking up interest rates and throwing people out of work.

A bit off the main subject, but if you breach Baker’s paywall and read the full article, he has some interesting information about the amount of money the executives at Silicon Valley (according to Warner, a “mid-size bank”) were making. He points out that the CEO was making yearly what a minimum wage worker would make in approximately 15 lifetimes. They also handed out bonuses just before the bank collapsed.

If they’re against it, they’re doing it

One thing we lefties all realize is that the best way to figure out what crimes Republicans are committing is to see what they are accusing Democrats of doing. For instance, while they accuse Democrats of stealing elections, it is Republicans that are being convicted of voter fraud and Republicans that are suppressing the vote and gerrymandering the majority out of a say in how they are governed. Sometimes the hypocrisy is stunning, as we see Gym Jordan mewling about people ducking subpoenas even though he himself refused to comply with one.

But it’s often the case that Republicans attack others besides Democrats for things they themselves are doing. It’s almost as if they are compelled to magnify their hypocrisy. Latest example, but one of many, is the Tennessee Lieutenant Governor:

The 79-year-old East Tennessee Republican — who has presided over a legislative session defined by bills outlawing drag shows in public places and targeting gender care for the trans community — found himself facing accusations of hypocrisy after a progressive site, the Tennessee Holler, unearthed his social media interactions with a 20-year-old gay model.

Seems he “liked” the fact that the model was also a male prostitute who liked to smoke dope.

Or there’s this guy who, to be honest, I am assuming is a Republican, who spray painted the word “Groomers” on libraries who is now charged with seven counts of possessing child sex abuse materials. As the linked article points out, he’s not alone in accusing others of what he himself was doing:

In December, John Amato reported that QAnon leader Phil Godlewski, who made a fortune highlighting conspiracy theories about secret pedophile rings at pizza places outed himself as having an inappropriate relationship with a minor. Godlewski groomed a child. I’m starting to see a pattern here.I’m sure there are Democrats who engage in this sort of stuff, but I’ve yet to hear of one who has made a point of accusing others of doing so. One would think that one who is engaging in this sort of stuff would just keep their mouths shut when the topic comes up, but that’s not the Republican way. Another good example, lying liar George Santos actually had the nerve to tweet out that Joe Biden is a pathological liar. It’s almost as if every time they attack they are actually confessing.

Something that might happen in an alternate universe

It occurred to me that there might be an opening in the GOP primaries for a candidate whose message is “I am sane” or words to that effect. I do think there remains within the Republican Party a significant segment of people who are not insane, but have simply failed to accept the fact that the Republican Party is now the party of conspiracists and fascists. You know, they inherited their party affiliation from their parents, who inherited it from theirs, and the idea of not being a Republican is simply foreign to them.

No doubt these folks are a minority of registered Republicans, but I think they exist. They may be interested in voting for a candidate who pledges to return the Republican Party to its saner past, though that past is usually said to have been in 2015 when in fact the party went permanently off the rails in 1980.

Of the Republicans whose names have been bandied about as potential candidates, other than the genius, there are two types. The first, represented at the moment by DeSantis and Haley, are people who are dedicated to appealing to the nutjob base. There may be more of that type waiting in the wings. It is quite possible that they, along with the genius, assuming he’s not in prison, will be dividing up the whacko vote.

The other potential candidates, such as Pompeo and Pence, are DOA, so far as I can see. They will be attempting to appear sane while catering to the base, thereby convincing no one. It won’t help that they embrace stuff like getting rid of social security. Sure, the other candidates probably agree with them on those issues, but they would rather concentrate on whining about the threat posed by the microscopic sliver of the population that is trans, even though trans folks pose no threat to anyone on the planet. That’s a continuation of a strategy that has worked for the GOP ever since Nixon. You always have to have a boogie man. The appeal to racists has been constant, either via dog whistle or out and out racism. But it helps to have new boogie men, because some tend to wear out their usefulness. Back in the 2000s it was gays and gay marriages that were vilified, but most people have gotten past that, so now it’s drag queens and trans people.

Okay, I’ve digressed. My point is that none of the potential candidates who are not totally committed to the conspiracists are ready to campaign against them. Someone who campaigned as a person who would both take back the party from the looneys and promise to leave the programs alone that both Republicans (even the looneys) and Democrats rely on, could take a decent percentage of the Republican vote, while the genius and his ilk split the remainder. While the crazies would certainly garner a combined percentage greater than my hypothetical sane candidate, my hypothetical sane candidate might well get a higher percentage of votes than any single nutjob thereby giving them at least a plurality of votes at a convention.

While it’s true that Bill Weld failed miserably in his 2020 attempt to take down Trump, remember that was a one on one battle against an incumbent. Trump was absolutely assured of every whackjob vote.

The question is: is there currently any Republican politician who is both sane and willing to run as the candidate pledged to restore the Republican Party to sanity. I suppose Liz Cheney or Adam Kinzinger are the names that would come to mind (e.g, example here), but I don’t think either of them would do and I won’t even get into the question of whether both of them are sane. They are both dedicated right wingers that just happen to believe in the democratic process, to the limited extent that they believe the person with the most votes should win, though they also both believe that it’s perfectly acceptable to make sure certain people can’t vote, and that if they do, it follows that their votes should be gerrymandered into insignificance.

So, depending on your point of view, there is no need to either hope or worry that such a candidate will make an appearance. That’s probably all to the good, since if such a person ever got the nomination, they might have a better chance against Biden than any of the other potential candidates.

Lies and lying liars

Over at Hullabaloo we read that Fox’s right wing competitors have utterly failed to cover the Dominion lawsuit and the unsurprising revelations that Fox’s on air personalities were knowingly lying to their viewers about the 2020 election, among a host of other things. Digby concludes:

This just shows how homogenous the right wing media sphere is. Even Fox’s competitors won’t show their audience what Fox did. And the reason Fox did what they did was because the audience was leaving them and going to those very competitors! I guess the right is just now all about the grift and actual competition and capitalism are no longer relevant. Amazing.

I’m sure Digby is also aware of the underlying reason why Fox’s competitors have remained silent. If they were to cover the story, they would have to turn somersaults to avoid letting on that the lies the Fox people were telling are the same lies they themselves are endorsing. After all, they are knowingly lying to their viewers as well, and the last thing they want to do is acknowledge in any way, shape or form that the election was not stolen since it follows as the night the day that they too have been lying to their viewers. Not that their viewers would conclude that they had been lied to in the past; they would instead conclude that they were being lied to in the present, and they would go elsewhere as they did to Fox when it made the mistake of calling Arizona for Biden.

An announcement

I don’t think I’ve written much about Ron DeSantis, the fascist who is governor of Florida, but I intend to do so a lot hereafter, should the state of Florida actually pass the proposed bill that would require any paid blogger to register with the state of Florida if he or she writes about DeSantis.

Now, the reader may ask: since when do you get paid to write this two-bit blog? Well, the fact is that years ago I was contacted by an organization called Newstex that actually does pay bloggers as it passes on their content in some form or manner, and I signed on, because why not? Payments are based on readership, and this two bit blog has often earned four bits, or even more in the course of a year. I get emails from them periodically telling me what I’ve earned, and that someday, when it amounts to enough, they’ll actually pay me. And they have, once or twice. So I am paid, somewhat, and I feel it’s my duty to write about the Florida Fascist, without, of course, registering with the Reich of Florida.

In another time period, not so long ago, the proposed law would have been laughed out of court as blatantly unconstitutional, but that was then and this is now, so you never know.

Both Siderism to the 10th power

Any regular readers of this blog, should they exist, know that I’m a big fan of Driftglass, who has spent years document bothsiderism and the attendant atrocities. It’s a shame that he isn’t aware of today’s New London Day, which has once again bent over backward to so far to be “fair and balanced” it has put its head up its ass, and not for the first time, though even Driftglass might have trouble doing justice to the latest Day atrocity.

If you have today’s rag, take a look at the editorial page (on which there are, by the way, no editorials). There are two political cartoons.

The first consists of three panels, the first two of which show Mark Twain saying “There are lies.. Damned Lies, and…” followed by a panel with a Greek column on which rests a stone with the words “Fox News” on it.

So far, so good. Recent revelations have proven what everyone with a brain has known for years: Fox trades in lies and half truths.

But the Day cannot stop there. After all, Both Sides (!) must be represented on its pages, even if by so doing the Day itself implicitly endorses lies and damned lies.

The second cartoon, the product of a right wing cartoonist that the Day uses for “balance” consists of an image of a television newscaster with the words “Conservative News” behind him. He is muzzled, his desk is swathed with ribbons reading “Speech Police Line, Do not cross”, and a document with the word “Blacklist” is stuck on the wall behind him.

Yes, the Day felt it necessary to counter truth with a lie in order to present both sides. The right wing cartoon is a classic Republican lie, accusing the other side of what they themselves are doing, for we can presume that the cartoon newsman from “Conservative News” would be fine with the book banning going on in red states, where only sanitized versions of American history may be propagandized and where teachers are being placed in criminal jeopardy should they dare to teach real history. One would be hard pressed to find an example of a politician on the left attempting to use the power of the state to prevent the free expression of ideas or historical truth.

Since this is an exercise in bothsiderism, could it be that we are to infer that the cartoonist responsible for this abomination believes Fox is being unfairly muzzled because it is being sued for consistently lying about Dominion voting machines? The Free speech clause has never, to date, been understood to exempt one who libels or slanders another from suffering the consequences in a civil action, but that’s something the right fails to understand, unless they’re bewailing their own alleged inability to sue someone on the left for slander. See, e.g., Trump mewling about changing libel laws so he can sue people for what they say about him, while he uses every trick in the book to duck responsibility for his own repeated libels and slanders. It is true that liberals have largely escaped being sued for libel, but that’s mostly because facts tend to have a liberal bias, so they don’t have to lie.

I have no hope that the Day will ever change. It used to be a good paper, but it lost its way when it caved to a bunch of right wing letter writers that accused it of liberal bias so it proceeded to make sure that the right had more exposure on its editorial page than anyone approaching the left, going so far as to give column space to a local right wing radio bloviator. No left wing local bloviator has ever been given similar space. After all, part of the both sides religion requires that one tilt to the right in order to prove that one treats both sides fairly. Do they contradict themselves? As Walt Whitman would say, “very well, the contradict themselves”. But that’s only to be expected.

Book report

I’m currently reading Myth America, a collection of essays edited by Kevin Kruse and Julian Zelizer. I am informed by the cover image on my e-reader that it is or was a New York Times bestseller, a fact of which I was unaware, in part because we can no longer get home delivery of the Times here in the wilds of Eastern Connecticut. I ran across the book by chance and decided to get it, as both my wife and I follow Kruse, she on Twitter and I on Mastodon, and we usually agree with what he has to say.

As the name implies, the book seeks to deflate a number of myths about this country, primarily by eschewing the both siderism so prevalent in our media today, except for the right wing media, of course, which exempts itself from what it demands of others. The book has a clear leftward slant, but that’s because facts have a liberal bias.

Needless to say, if one is relatively well informed, a reader is likely to already know that the myths in question are just that. It is, for example, self evident to almost anyone that the right wing trope that not only should the “Free Market” be left to develop on its own without governmental interference, but that doing so will solve all our problems, is an absurd notion. One need only imagine what the state of our rivers would be today had the government not stepped in to stop the free enterprisers from dumping anything they like into them. Why, the Cuyahoga River, in the immortal words of Randy Newman, would still “burn on”. The list could go on into infinity.

Still, it’s good to have the rebuttals to these myths presented in well documented form. Some of the essays delve into matters that are not so familiar, and are well worth knowing about, such as that by Kathleen Belew that documents the history and tactics of the right wing militia movement in this country. While I’ve been aware of these groups, I was unaware of the manner in which they organize and the extent to which what appear to be “lone wolf” actions are often actions taken consistent with goals spread through the network the militias use to coordinate their actions while making it quite hard to legally prove that coordination.

The book is well worth a read.

An interesting case

I’m just sort of passing this along. It’s a fascinating case covered at this post on Above the Law.

The Massachusetts Supreme Court is about to decide whether a convicted defendant who is black is entitled to a new trial because his public defender was a rabid racist.

The issue under debate is whether a public defender’s bigotry, evidenced by 20 racist social media posts that he made while representing his client, constitutes a conflict of interest. That would grant the defendant an automatic new trial, without having to pinpoint specific ways in which his attorney’s representation impacted his case.

Based on the questions from the judges that the post quotes, I’m guessing the court is going to do the right thing, though it may open a colossal can of worms. The lawyer in question was a public defender who represented more than 6,000 defendants in his career. Given certain realities, which of course by no means demonstrate systemic racism in our society (we are not Woke!) it is a sure thing that a hefty percentage of those defendants were black. If the court rules in favor of the individual in question, it would seem to follow as the night the day that all those other defendants deserve new trials as well.

Personally, I can see no way for the court to logically rule against the guy, and given that we’re talking about Massachusetts, I’d bet he will win. I’m sure, however, that courts in other states (and the feds, of course) will find a way to rule the other way should the issue come their way.

A brief Super Bowl day rant having nothing to do with the Super Bowl

There are a lot of things to rant about these days, and this rant is likely on one of the least important topics, but it’s still indicative of something that is seriously wrong with our media ecosystem.

There are certain politicians who should be nonentities, yet they tend to attract about 90% of the media attention. I refer to people like Matt Gaetz, Marjorie Taylor Greene, et. al. All they have to do to get attention is say something absolutely absurd. Meanwhile, serious legislators, like our own Joe Courtney, go about doing their jobs and go unnoticed.

If the media reported on the nonentities, but treated them as they deserved, that would be one thing. But they get to bloviate endlessly while those who seriously want to get things done are largely ignored. What, for example, has Majorie Taylor Greene ever actually accomplished, other than reducing Kevin McCarthy to a bowl of quivering jelly? Has she ever done anything of use to her consitituents, never mind the country? She’s in it for the attention, and she gets all she wants.

The more the system rewards such people, the more such people we will get. We have a tenuous hold on our democracy at the moment, and the more such politicians we get the more tenuous that hold will become.

End of rant.

Friday Night Music, Giddens and Woody

My wife and I don’t disagree on much, but for reasons I can’t fathom she isn’t a folk music fan, so I listen to Folk Alley when she’s not around.

So a few days ago, my wife being elsewhere, I was listening to a song and thought I recognized the voice of the truly great Rhiannon Giddens, and was a bit intrigued by the line “All You Fascists Bound to Lose”. I did a search and it was, indeed, Giddens with the Resistance Revival Chorus singing a song Woody Guthrie penned when the prospects for the Fascists, at least in this country, were indeed a bit dimmer than today.

Here’s the Giddens version:

And, for your listening pleasure, here’s Woody, from back in the day.

We can only hope that Woody was right.

As a side note, it’s been many a moon since I put up music, something that used to be a regular Friday night feature on this blog. Maybe I’ll start again.