Skip to content

Great moments in hypocrisy

Given today’s partisan reality, Jack Lew breezed through his confirmation. Comparisons to confirmations past are irrelevant. Any Obama nomination that is even allowe a vote without a filibuster or at least protracted delay has to be considered a breeze; any nomination that gets more than three Republican votes has to be considered a landslide (and a sure sign that the nominee in question is a corporate tool). Apparently many Democrats (including, one would hope, Elizabeth Warren and Chris Murphy) held their noses while doing so, but I have not come to condemn those who disgraced themselves in that fashion. The article to which I’ve linked does that well.

No, I’m writing to note how widespread massive hypocrisy is among our politicians, and how little noted it is, perhaps for that very reason.

Here’s Orrin Hatch, his eye no doubt on Wall Street donors, justifying his vote on Lew:

Hatch complained that the committee only had 12 days to vet Lew’s nomination. He also has expressed concerned about Lew having received compensation from Citigroup, saying that Lew’s appointment might look like the administration is catering to special interests. But Hatch said he believes the president has the right to select his cabinet, which is why he would vote for Lew’s confirmation.

“I am bending over backwards to show deference to the president’s nomination and I hope that doesn’t go unnoticed,” Hatch said.

(via The Hill)

Well, that amount of bending is very impressive. Now, care to guess whether this latter day Gumby bended on Hagel, about whom there were no legitimate questions? If you really can’t guess, you can find the unsurprising answer here.

Friday Night Music, Twin Bill

Okay, these videos have almost nothing in common, except that they’re both from the dim and distant past, and there’s a bit of religion in both of them.

I had to pass this along because it blew me away when I saw it on the Washington Monthly’s “Political Animal” blog. This is sister Rosetta Tharpe, who I never heard of before, at the dawn of the rock age, singing about Jesus and playing a mean electric guitar. Anyway, ignore the lyrics and listen to the rock.

Now, for a more topical piece, but from roughly the same era, give or take a few years. Tom Lehrer sings the Vatican Rag.

I want in

Looks like I picked the wrong line of blogging:

A range of mainstream American publications printed paid propaganda for the government of Malaysia, much of it focused on the campaign against a pro-democracy figure there.

The payments to conservative American opinion writers — whose work appeared in outlets from the Huffington Post and San Francisco Examiner to the Washington Times to National Review and RedState — emerged in a filing this week to the Department of Justice. The filing under the Foreign Agent Registration Act outlines a campaign spanning May 2008 to April 2011 and led by Joshua Trevino, a conservative pundit, who received $389,724.70 under the contract and paid smaller sums to a series of conservative writers.

(via Daily Kos)

How come we left wing types don’t get paid to prostitute ourselves? We can use the money. I’ve mentioned before that the battery on my Ipad’s getting weak, and it’s now my primary device for sharing my amazing insights with the rest of the world. Do I have to use my own money to get one, when some third world dictator could buy one for me?

Look, I can see some merit in the Malaysian dictatorship. I’m sure they keep the trains running on time. Where’s my boodle?

Modern Times

I confess I haven’t followed the Bradley Manning story as perhaps I should. But I was struck by his account of his attempts to get the dirt he had on the government into the mainstream:

At my aunt’s house I debated what I should do with the SigActs [war logs]– in particular whether I should hold on to them– or expose them through a press agency. At this point I decided that it made sense to try to expose the SigAct tables to an American newspaper. I first called my local news paper, The Washington Post, and spoke with a woman saying that she was a reporter. I asked her if the Washington Post would be interested in receiving information that would have enormous value to the American public. Although we spoke for about five minutes concerning the general nature of what I possessed, I do not believe she took me seriously. She informed me that the Washington Post would possibly be interested, but that such decisions were made only after seeing the information I was referring to and after consideration by senior editors.

I then decided to contact [missed word] the most popular newspaper, The New York Times. I called the public editor number on The New York Times website. The phone rang and was answered by a machine. I went through the menu to the section for news tips. I was routed to an answering machine. I left a message stating I had access to information about Iraq and Afghanistan that I believed was very important. However, despite leaving my Skype phone number and personal email address, I never received a reply from The New York Times.

(via The Dissenter)

Daniel Ellsberg would be an unknown had he tried to peddle the Pentagon Papers in this day and age.

Mixed emotions

Today is a landmark day for me, and not because the nation has started the process of slow motion economic suicide. No, this is personal to me, for today I have lost a bet, something about which I have mixed emotions.

Many months ago I bet a friend who shall remain nameless (but not totally impoverished) that by this very date Joe Lieberman would be a commentator on Fox. This was a win-win bet for me, obviously. Worst case I got $5.00, best case Lieberman was not being paid to express his undying concern for the party that “left him”. Either way I sort of win.

So, I have to make arrangements to pay up. I’m actually surprised I lost this one. Fox and Lieberman seemed like a perfect match.

One would like to think that local media, including local independent newspapers, would be immune from the disease of beltway centrism, but at least in the case of the New London Day, that’s clearly not the case. Today’s Day channels the Washington Post.

A basic requirement for beltway punditry is that one must operate in a historical vacuum. One must pretend, for instance, that experiences of the very recent past will not repeat themselves. For instance, one must pretend to believe that this time around the Republican Lucys will not pull the football away. The Day follows the pundits’ lead. In a nutshell: Obama is right, but the deadlock is still his fault. The unspoken corollary is that since we can’t expect Republicans to be reasonable, there is no reason to demand that they should be. So, here’s the Day:

Conceptually, President Obama talks of the kind of approach to reducing deficit spending that most economists agree is the right one. It is the approach recommended by the deficit-reduction committee he appointed, headed by Republican Alan Simpson and Democrat Erskine Bowles. That approach involves modest cuts in the short term, while reforming the big entitlement programs – Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security – that will be unsustainable long term without adjustments to curb spending. President Obama is also right in calling on Congress to raise revenues by reforming tax policies – ending the carried interest tax rate that allows hedge fund or private equity managers to pay a measly 15 percent tax rate on their vast incomes, correcting abuses in the use of deductions, and ending tax policies that provide incentives to move jobs overseas.

The problem is that the president has not laid out a detailed proposal. Even in a second term, and no longer having to face an election, he refuses to provide details of how he would rein in entitlement spending, fearful apparently of causing damage to the Democratic Party by staking out positions that will be politically unattractive.

(via theday.com Mobile Edition)

Maybe I’m giving the Day too much credit; maybe it’s channeling David Brooks. At least the Post did some good work in the seventies, whereas Brooks has never been known to actually know what he’s talking about. It will be up to future historians to try to solve the mystery of precisely why Brooks has a column in the New York Times. He takes full advantage of his right wing right to make things up, in this case his right to claim that Obama does not have a specific plan to deal with the sequester, a claim the Day embraces in the editorial above. Brooks came out with that gem last week, and unashamedly admitted it wasn’t true shortly thereafter.

> Ezra Klein: In the column, you said that the Obama administration doesn’t have a plan to replace the sequester. I feel like I’ve had to spend a substantial portion of my life reading their various budgets and plans to replace the sequester, and my sense is that you’ve had to do this, too. So, what am I missing?

> David Brooks: First, the column was a bit of an over-the-top lampooning column about dance moves. I probably went a bit too far when saying the president didn’t have a response to the sequester save to raise taxes on the rich. In the cool light of day, I can say that’s over the top. There’s chained CPI and $400 billion in health proposals. So I should say I was unfair. I’m going to attach a note to the column, if it’s not up already.

> The second thing I would say is that, as [Congressional Budget Office director] Doug Elmendorf said in testimony before the Senate Budget Committee, there’s no scorable plan they’ve come up with, at least this time around. And given that one theme of the budget negotiations has been that it can be very hard to tell what’s on the table from the White House, it would serve the country well if they put out something specific.

> EK: I don’t know the Elmendorf comments off-hand, but CBO did score the president’s budget, and almost all of their proposals are drawn from that. I find, in general, that legislators often ask Elmendorf if he’s scored things from the White House and then crow about the fact that he hasn’t, when all that’s really going on is CBO doesn’t score everything the president does or says.

(via [Does Obama have a plan? A conversation with David Brooks)

The “centrist” media, a category to which the Day clearly aspires, is slowly coming around to implicitly recognize the fact that Republicans are crazy, but it still refuses to let go of its insistence that both sides are to blame, even as one side (Obama and the Democrats) pretty much embraces “centrist” prescriptions. In order to preserve the “both sides are to blame” myth, it has turned to “yes, the Republicans are crazy but it’s still Obama’s fault because…” lines of argument, in this case “because Obama has failed to lead by laying out a specific plan to deal with the sequester.” The Post is, in addition, also pushing the line that because, supposedly, Obama suggested the sequester, and because the sequester itself contains only cuts, any solution to the manufactured “crisis” must itself consist of only cuts. (This raises the question of why we should do anything, if Obama is just supposed to match one set of cuts with another. The answer, of course, is that we are not serious people unless we preserve wasteful military spending by relieving the citizenry of the burdens of Medicare benefits and social security. After all, beltway pundits don’t need these things, but they have friends making money off defense spending. ) The Day, so far as I can tell, has not yet drunk that Kool-Aid, though it does get quite teary eyed over the possibility that we might not build enough useless submarines. But by and large, it’s going with the “specific plan” gambit.

Give the Day extra credit, however, for insisting on changes to social security despite the fact that it has nothing to do with the deficit. That’s de rigueur for aspiring centrists, who never let facts get in the way of a good meme. But note that even while doing so, they refuse to recognize that Obama’s embrace of chained CPI, is in fact a specific proposal to stick it to the middle class, which is apparently what the Day is demanding.

I am by no means endorsing Obama’s specific proposals. They are far too “centrist” (i.e., soaked in Beltway dogma and skewed against the 99% (remember them?)). The fact is, though, that they do exist. Obama’s budget reflects what Day type “centrists” want, and very little of what the majority of the American people want-or need. Our “centrists” are a vital cog in the Republican machine, validating and justifying the ever rightward moving “center” of our political discourse. Consider the latest attempt by Simpson and Bowles to enter the fray. They started out, bear in mind, as the co-chairs of a commission that was supposed to come up with an economic plan that was best for the country, on the merits. But the latest proposal from the co-chairs (the commission is dead and never actually made a proposal) is an admitted attempt to find the mid ground between Obama’s “centrism”, which is only slightly (if at all) to the left of the original proposal from Simpson and Bowles (not from the commission, remember), and the Republican’s new crazy:

This isn’t meant to be an update to Simpson-Bowles 1.0. Rather, it’s meant to be an outline for a new grand bargain. To that end, Simpson and Bowles began with Obama and Boehner’s final offers from the fiscal cliff deal. That helps explain why their tax ask has fallen so far: Obama’s final tax ask was far lower than what was in the original Simpson-Bowles plan, while Boehner’s tilt towards spending cuts was far greater than what was in the original Simpson-Bowles.

(via Ezra Klein)

So the goalposts move again, and Simpson and Bowles move along with them, and then complain about the fact that some people don’t find them all that credible.

Back to the Day. It’s a shame that the editorialists there don’t have the time to educate themselves about the issues on which they pontificate. Perhaps they figure that if David Brooks can make up his own facts, why shouldn’t they be able to pass them along.

It actually kinda makes a little bit of sense

John Aravosis, at Americablog, does not take kindly to some remarks made by a black African cardinal (a serious pope candidate, apparently):

His name is Cardinal Peter Turkson of Ghana, and he’s one of the top candidates being considered for next Pope. He also has some disturbing theories on race. You see, Cardinal Turkson, who is black, thinks being a pedophile or gay (to him they’re the same) is a white thing.

Cardinal Turkson was asked about the Catholic church’s ongoing pedophile scandal, and whether there was a chance the scandal might spread to Africa – most of the cases have been in western Europe and America.

Turkson’s response included two basic parts:

  1. The pedophile scandal is really a gay scandal.

  2. It’s a white thing, so black Africa shouldn’t have a problem.

(via Americablog)

Now, in a larger sense, this is total hogwash, but in a smaller sense, there is a grain of truth hid within it.

You see, it is an open secret that priests in Africa don’t take their vows of celibacy all that seriously. A huge percentage have wives or mistresses. (See, e.g., here and here) This is not so unusual in the history of the church; parish priests in the Middle Ages often more or less openly kept wives and mistresses, with their parishioners kindly looking the other way.

This means that African priests actually have the option of having fairly normal sex lives, which means that fairly normal people are more likely to opt for the priestly career. You know, like those same type people might do here if they had the option to also live a normal life. Now, the gay remark, about which Aravosis probably feels more personally offended, is completely baseless, since pedophiles come in all orientations, but the white thing is at least statistically true, since white priests are drawn from a population far more skewed toward deviancy than that from which their African colleagues are harvested.

So, the pope-hopeful has a point, though it’s well hidden by a camouflage of bigotry. His problem is that he’s not allowed to acknowledge the reasons why there’s a glimmer of truth in his slanders.

Can’t make this stuff up

A few days ago, while writing about a local proposal to allow non-resident taxpayers to vote in local referenda, I engaged in a bit of slippery slope argumentation, wondering among other things, if corporate taxpayers would also get to vote and wondering if perhaps votes should be weighted: the greater the property, the greater the vote. Proving that this country is really both satire and parody proof, it turns out that the idea has some support out there.

A bill introduced by Montana state Rep. Steve Lavin would give corporations the right to vote in municipal elections:

Provision for vote by corporate property owner. (1) Subject to subsection (2), if a firm, partnership, company, or corporation owns real property within the municipality, the president, vice president, secretary, or other designee of the entity is eligible to vote in a municipal election as provided in [section 1].

(2) The individual who is designated to vote by the entity is subject to the provisions of [section 1] and shall also provide to the election administrator documentation of the entity’s registration with the secretary of state under 35-1-217 and proof of the individual’s designation to vote on behalf of the entity.

(via Reader Supported News)

Lavin is an ALEC flunky, and his bill has gone nowhere so far, but from tiny acorns…

Obama’s Legacy

It is an unfortunate fact that Barack Obama will not go down in history as another Franklin Roosevelt, though the times and circumstances conspired to give him the opportunity, had he grabbed for it. We forget that he started his presidency with commanding majorities in both houses; but failed to use them to take decisive steps to deal with the current depression.

The single reason for his failure is the fact that, for whatever reason, he is in thrall to Wall Street. Maybe it’s a lack of confidence, maybe he really believes their bullshit, but he’s been on their side in every major decision he’s made. Exhibit 1 has always been little Timmy Geithner, who never met a Wall Street exec he didn’t like, and never met a consumer friendly regulation or regulator that he did. We knew there was something amiss when he breezed through his confirmation hearings even though he had tax problems that would have left a nomination of an Elizabeth Warren DOA.

Tim Geither Beavis

It may be that reflexive Obama hating may now do us all some good. Chuck Grassley, a relative moderate, is going after Jack Lew, no doubt much to the consternation of Wall Street. Grassley probably figures he can gain some tea party cred by opposing an Obama nomination (or at least making trouble), and in this case he’s doing the right thing.

On Wednesday, Senator Chuck Grassley who sits on the Senate Finance Committee which held the confirmation hearing of Lew, released Lew’s answers to the written followup questions the Senator had submitted, saying Lew had been evasive. One question pertained to a whopping $1.4 million loan given to Lew by New York University.

“My understanding,” said Grassley, “is that according to Forms 990 filed by New York University from 2002 to 2005 you were provided a sizable loan as part of your employment. The amounts reported include $1.4 million in 2002, $748,000 in 2003, $698,000 in 2004, and $673,000 in 2005.”

Grassley asked Lew to “describe the terms of the loan including interest rate, minimum payment requirements, term, and the purpose of the loan…how a reasonable rate of interest was determined… how the loan was repaid and whether any portion of it was forgiven…were any terms of the loan altered at any point? If so, please describe which terms were altered and when. Please provide the promissory note and any other documents related to the loan.”

Lew responded as follows:

“In short, the University provided a mortgage forgiven in equal installments over five years, and an additional shared appreciation mortgage. I do not recall the interest rate or other specific terms. According to my employment agreement, the interest on both loans was equal to the rate earned by the bond portion of NYU’s endowment in the quarter preceding the signing of the mortgage. NYU provided an annual payment equal to the interest paid on the first mortgage described above. NYU reported income related to housing assistance on my Forms W-2, and I paid all taxes that were due.”

It’s difficult to imagine that a future Treasury Secretary of the United States would not recall the interest rate he paid on a staggering $1.4 loan; especially a numbers cruncher like Lew. It’s even more astounding that the President’s nominee for Treasury Secretary does not know mortgages on residential real estate are publicly filed documents, accessible with a few clicks on the internet. If he wanted to be responsive to a Senate committee, he could have been quite easily.

Those internet records show that when Grassley asked Lew “were any terms of the loan altered at any point,” Lew failed to provide a serious, material fact of the transaction; namely, Citigroup took over one of the NYU mortgage loans with a balance of $147,805 on January 15, 2004 while Lew was still with NYU and Citigroup was a preferred lender to NYU students. Citigroup extended an additional $352,195 loan to Lew in that transaction for a total of $500,000 at a rate of 5.5 percent on a 15-year mortgage on a heavily indebted piece of property.

(via Wall Street on Parade)

Read the entire article. The NYU stuff hits rather close to home for me. While they were making Lew’s comfortable life more comfortable the folks running NYU were paying my grad student son a less than living wage to teach classes and depriving him of his union to boot.

More on Lew here.

I’m presently reading an interesting book called Assholes, a theory by Aaron James, a philosophy professor. He defines an asshole as follows:

“Our theory is simply this: a person counts as an asshole when, and only when, he systematically allows himself to enjoy special advantages in interpersonal relations out of an entrenched sense of entitlement that immunizes him against the complaints of other people. (Because assholes are by and large men, we use the masculine pronoun “he” advisedly. We will suggest that women can be assholes as well. For the time being, think of Ann Coulter. We consider the question of gender in detail in chapter 4.) Our theory thus has three main parts. In interpersonal or cooperative relations, the asshole:

“(1) allows himself to enjoy special advantages and does so systematically;
(2) does this out of an entrenched sense of entitlement; and
3) is immunized by his sense of entitlement against the complaints of other people.”

This appears to describe just about everyone on Wall Street (and James argues that Wall Street is basically an asshole greenhouse), and it certainly describes Jack Lew. These guys can’t begin to understand why some of us don’t share their belief that they are entitled to huge sums of money for performing socially useless functions, nor do they understand why we sort of resent the fact that they get to fail up, while we ride the down escalator as we pay for their failures.

In the end, I suspect that the Republican grumping is just for show. They, after all, serve Wall Street too, so while they may bloody Lew a bit, in the end they’ll step aside and let him through.

It is a genuine mystery why Obama feels the need to hand our economic futures over to people like Lew. FDR took effective action to rein in what another Roosevelt called “malefactors of great wealth”. Had FDR’s reforms been left untouched we might not be in the depression we’re in today. Obama will be remembered for having blown his chance at greatness by handing our economy over to the people who blew it up.

Meanwhile, on a slightly related point, let me predict that the assholes in charge here, no doubt led by Lew, will do whatever they can to frustrate enforcement of the financial transaction tax being introduced in Europe, where the breed must have slightly less influence than here. It would be hard to conceive of a more socially useful tax, reason enough for the Geithners and Lews of the world to oppose it.

UPDATE: The Geithner picture sent by a reader. It does seem appropriate. Thanks FS.

Friday Night Music

Dedicated to Dan Friedman of the New York Daily News.

Actually, only the title fits, but it’s not a bad song.

If you don’t get the reference, let Stephen Colbert explain.