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A Musical Treat

Feeling depressed by the state of the world these days? Over 55? Head on over to Itunes and watch the Beatles Concert at the Washington Coliseum. Their first appearance on U.S. soil after the Sullivan show. It’s free, at least for now. You can’t watch it without feeling just a little better, albeit perhaps a little older.


The next bailout foretold

Looks like we may have another bailout coming:

Widespread problems in how U.S. lenders documented foreclosures could spark a wave of legal challenges resulting in massive losses to banks and serious new troubles for the housing market, a federal watchdog warned on Tuesday.

In the worst-case scenario, the panel said banks may be unable to prove that they own the mortgage loans they claim to own, legal challenges could call into question the validity of 33 million mortgage loans — many of which were then securitized and sold to investors — and banks could face billions of dollars in unexpected losses.

If, indeed, the worst happens, the banks will once again go to the Feds with their hands outstretched. These are the banks who purchased a Republican Congress just a few weeks ago, the same Republicans who were blaming Obama for the bailout that they voted for and from which their contributors benefitted so much.

Here’s what should happen, if the Democrats had any brains and/or political sense. The Democrats would step back and let the Republicans, with a smattering of blue dogs, take the lead in trying to rescue the banks. Make them step up, load and clear. Obama should threaten to veto any new bailout. This time, we should nationalize, as we should have done the last time. At all events, the Democrats should force the Republicans to put their fingerprints indelibly on any bailout.

Here’s what will happen. Obama will step up to “do the right thing”. He will seek bipartisan compromise. He will get some Democrats to fall on their swords, whose votes, along with those of safe-district Republicans, will be enough to get the banks what they want. Once the deed is safely done, the Republicans will tar the Democrats with it.

Then Obama will blame himself for not fostering a more bi-partisan atmosphere.

To which one can only observe that even Charlie Brown never blamed himself when Lucy pulled back the football.

The New York Times follows the Day’s lead

A while back I noted that the New London Day printed a story about some ghostbusters, without giving even a passing clause to the idea that, just possibly, there are no such things as ghosts.

PZ Myers points out over at Pharyngula that the New York Times is apparently as credulous as the Day.

The Times printed an entire story about a revival of the use of exorcism in the Catholic Church without once questioning the basic premise that a person can be possessed by a demon. Apparently, when it comes to spooks or religion, there aren’t two sides of the story. “Balance” is apparently reserved for scientific issues like global warming, where scientific consensus is balanced by the misrepresentations of the self-interested and the deluded.

Global Warming Myth Debunked

Since everything is evidence that global warming is a myth, I submit the following as exhibits, pictures of roses taken today in my wife’s garden.


Some might argue that the existence of blooming Connecticut roses (and should the tiny little fellow in the second picture still be alive?) in November is more substantial evidence of global warming than, as Fox would have it, cold weather in January is evidence for its non-existence. But such people are silly rationalists, hidebound adherents to a “fact based” scientism of the past, when everyone should know, as the Republicans tell us, that God has given us his word that he won’t destroy the planet again.

The pictures were taken after we took a walk in a nearby state park, enjoying the typically balmy temperatures of mid-November.

My wife, who as a gardener pays attention to these things, tells me that we have yet to have a killing frost, which according to Connecticut’s DEP is now about a month overdue.

By they way, I realize this is, in a sense, only a single data point, much like Fox’s cold day in January. But those roses, and the little insect, owe their existence to a sustained deviation from the norm, so I maintain they are a little more significant that a cold day in the winter.

Friday Night Music, with lamentation

Several weeks ago I had a banner night free associating on youtube, and put a bunch of songs in reserve. I actually started with this one, which I sought out because I recently purchased the album, Manassas, and figured a cut from it would be a good choice. So here’s Steven Stills and the band singing It Doesn’t Matter.

But I really write tonight to bemoan my musical fate. Few of those reading this appreciate the sacrifices we bloggers must make to contribute our mite toward their edification and amusement. Two weeks ago (Oh, unhappy fate) I posted what I then thought (and still do, I must confess) was the funniest Friday Night Video of them all, featuring a wholesome Midwestern couple singing One Toke Over the Line on the Lawrence Welk show.

Perhaps it was the stress of the election. Perhaps it was Lawrence Welk, inflicting a righteous punishment from somewhere up in Polka Heaven. Whatever the reason, the song would not-has not-left my head since that date. By Tuesday, while the political sky was falling, I was in my own personal Hell, having lost all hope that it would ever abandon me. Don’t get me wrong, it’s a fine song-go ahead, give it a listen-but it has a bit of the jingle to it, and it got me at a vulnerable time with all my defenses down.

It has receded somewhat, but is still there, two weeks on, lurking in the background, popping up in those half awake, half asleep times in the night, or acting as background music of which I am more or less dimly aware, somewhat like the accursed and ubiquitous Muzak that was put here on earth by an unjust god to punish saints and sinners alike. I hold out hope that someday it will disappear, but then, of course, should I realize it has gone, it will come back to haunt me yet again.

I will soldier on. If I can face two years of John Boehner I can face a lifetime of One Toke Over the Line.


States rights vs Corporate Greed. The Supreme Court will decide.

Every once in a while a case comes along that reveals a lot about the Supreme Court’s priorities. Such a case was argued yesterday.

The case pits states rights against corporate interest. Which will win? And should it even be close?

The case involves a class action brought by a California couple who are suing AT&T for fraud. Buried in the fine print of their contract with AT&T is a provision that requires them to arbitrate any dispute they may have against AT&T. The provision also states that they must bring their claim individually, and cannot bring it as a class action. This is a typical provision buried in the boilerplate of thousands of consumer contracts.

The purpose of such provisions is fairly clear. They allow the corporations to engage in profitable small scale consumer fraud while depriving the affected consumers any meaningful remedy. In this case, AT&T told its customers it would give them a free cell phone if they signed a contract, then charged them a $30.00 sales tax for the phone. Only a lawyer could argue that it’s still a free cell phone that way, but that doesn’t mean that every judge will agree.

Federal law encourages arbitration, but there is no law that says you can’t bring an arbitration claim as a class action. AT&T argues:

In its main brief in the case, AT&T Mobility v. Concepcion, 09-893, the company said “no rational business will agree” to class-wide arbitration, which it called “a lose-lose proposition” with all the cost and risk of litigation but none of the procedural protections and appellate oversight.

Let me translate. AT&T is saying that they would have no incentive to arbitrate a class action because they can’t game the system. They like the system that makes it utterly impracticable for a consumer to bring a claim, which that consumer will likely lose in arbitration anyway. Right now they have a “win-win” situation, with them on both sides of the dash.

Now, California courts have ruled that restricting the class action remedy in a consumer contract is unconscionable as a matter of state law. Unconscionable clauses are non-enforceable. The California courts have not declared arbitration clauses in consumer contracts to be unconscionable (which they are) because that would run afoul of a federal statute passed at the behest of the AT&Ts of the world by a compliant Congress, which “favors” arbitration. But the corporations didn’t think to legalize contract clauses that limit class actions. Since there is no federal law on that subject, state law should apply.

So, the California couple argued (and have so far prevailed) that the class action restriction voided the entire clause, and they were free to go to court and bring a class action, which they did.

Now, it should be a non-controversial principle of law that a state court, absent explicit federal legislation pre-empting the question, has the right to determine what is and what is not unconscionable. A real fan of states rights and “limited federal government” would do all he or she could to protect the state’s right to determine its own laws. In other words, the “conservative”, “strict constructionist” response to this case should be clear. AT&T should lose. That happens to also be the liberal response, but of course, we don’t count.

But what if the state’s laws interfere with a corporation’s desire to cheat the American public? Ah! There’s the rub. Many members of the court feel AT&T’s pain, particularly Alito and Scalia, who were, after all, appointed for their pro-corporate, and not their anti-abortion, credentials. So now we will see. When conservative theory conflicts with corporate interests, which wins? Once again, it will likely be all up to Kennedy, because I’m fairly certain we’ll see the true stripes of the other four when this one gets decided.


Call me paranoid, but…

Not that it really matters whether the establishment right wing crazy or the tea party right wing crazy wins the day in Alaska, but…

I was intrigued by the fact that Joe Miller is making an interesting article in his federal lawsuit challenging the way ballots are counted in Alaska. He is claiming that any person writing in Murkowski’s name with the incorrect spelling was actually voting against her, because a number of folks called some right wing radio hosts and said that was what they intended to do.

Odd that they just wouldn’t vote for Miller, but, consider the following.

Everyone knew that Miller was going to file this lawsuit, assuming Murkowski won. Everyone knew that the spelling issue would be one of the claims he would make. Is it a stretch to suspect that those callers were plants by the Miller campaign to sow the factual seeds for their later legal claim? Personally, I don’t think it is, but maybe I’m paranoid.


Yet another example of IOKIYAR

Imagine this guy a Democrat and imagine the hyperventilation on Fox, aided and abetted by the rest of the media. But this will be little noted nor long remembered.

n one of the Tea Party’s biggest victories, Florida’s Allen West defeated incumbent Democrat Ron Klein in a rematch of their 2008 race. West, an Army veteran, became a YouTube sensation by criticizing “this tyrannical government” and crying out: “if you’re here to stand up to get your musket, to fix your bayonet, and to charge into the ranks, you are my brother and sister in this fight.” He said that the country was engaging in “class warfare” between “a producing class and an entitlement class,” which is composed of Obama supporters.

While serving in Iraq, he was forced out of the Army for his violent handling of an investigation of a police officer. During the interrogation, West dragged “him outside, pushed his head into the sand, and fired a gun next to his face to get him to sing.” According to West: “It wasn’t torture. Seeing Rosie O’Donnell naked would be torture.”

West also has close ties to the Outlaws motorcycle gang, which an NBC News report found had criminal-ties and a website that features a page honoring members who are in prison, extolling “members convicted of violent crimes, including murder.” In a letter, West wrote: “Please, no more references to ‘criminal’ because I can tell you, they have the utmost respect for me and that which I seek to achieve. I was never more amazed at how members of the Outlaws guarded me during a one hour cell phone radio interview.”

Moreover, he addressed events sponsored by Outlaws-linked organizations, used Outlaws members toharass his rival’s campaign workers, and writes a column for their magazine. Their magazine, “Wheels on the Road,” has also used anti-Semitic, racist and sexist material, and once called women “oral relief stations.”

West encouraged his supporters to use violence in suppressing the votes of opponents, saying, “You’ve got to make the fellow scared to come out of his house.”

It goes on, but you get the drift. Well, you might say, he was duly elected, but not his chief of staff, who has advocated violent revolution. Remember when Obama’s incredibly tenuous connection with Bill Ayers was a disqualification for office?

West and his revolutionary chief of staff may get some play on Olbermann, but it will stop there. It’s not polite to criticize Republicans, no matter how crazy they may be.


Maher must be right

because he agrees completely with me.

At one time or another, I’ve made every point that Maher makes in this video, which only goes to prove he’s a brilliant guy.


Foley’s Legal Strategy Revealed?

Not being an election law specialist, I have been somewhat at a loss to conceive of the legal strategy Foley is thinking of employing to get the results of the election reversed. However, I have, from a secret source from my many contacts in the upper echelons of the Republican party, come into possession (if you choose to believe it) of what appears to be a first draft of the brief Foley’s lawyers are thinking of presenting to the court in hopes of overturning the election. I’m advised this is a work in progress; brainstorming, so to speak, so it’s entirely possible that they’ll come up with some additional grounds. But, for the moment, this is what they’ve come up with, and I have to admit, the legal reasoning is novel.:

Facts: Petitoner Thomas Foley (hereafter “plaintiff”) was the Republican Candidate for Governor at an election that took place on November 2, 2010. On the night of the election he was ahead in the vote tally, as reported by various news media, until the very end, when the votes from Bridgeport were added to the tally. These votes were added at the very last minute, and are subject to dispute herein because a) many voters in the heavily Democratic City were discouraged from voting due to the fact that the ballots ran out and b) the secretary of state made a lot of mistakes in the course of announcing the results. The plaintiff requests that the certified results of the election be set aside, and a declaratory judgment be entered declaring him the winner of the election, for the reasons more fully set forth below.

I It would be inequitable to permit the voters of Bridgeport to decide the election in light of the plaintiff’s legitimate expectations of victory given his early lead in the returns

As set forth above, the plaintiff was leading in the election returns throughout election night. He and his supporters thereby developed a reasonable expectation of victory. The voters in Bridgeport upset these expectations because their votes were reported late, and in some cases those votes were cast on xeroxed ballots. This unexpectedly high turnout, combined with the time at which it was reported, unreasonably dashed the expectations of the plaintiff. In addition, while those turned away due to ballot problems would not in a million years have voted for the plaintiff, the theoretical possibility exists that a once in a billion year event may have taken place, and those votes not cast might have gone unanimously for the plaintiff. While his vote total would still have been less than his opponent, it would have been much closer, thereby giving this court additional cover to rule in plaintiff’s favor in this case.

II. The votes totals in Bridgeport and other areas in the state should be revised to reflect the value of the voters involved.

It should be observed here that many, if not most, of the Bridgeport voters, as well as voters in other large Connecticut municipalities, have skin that is of a distinctly dark hue. Our founding fathers wisely decided that such persons should count as only three-fifths of a person. Applying that fraction to the total number of votes cast by such persons yields vote totals more in line with the plaintiff’s desires. It follows, therefore, that this methodology should be used in counting the votes.

III. The courts have inherent power to name the winner in an election when the person chosen by the public is a Democrat.

There is ample precedent for the proposition that courts have inherent power to substitute their own preferences for those of the public when the public chooses a Democrat for high office. See, e.g. Bush v. Gore. Courts should not exercise this power lightly. It should be exercised only when circumstances are such that the court can plausibly claim that the result it has reached is impelled by some newly created legal principle that can never be invoked again, at least not by a Democrat. The plaintiff submits that this threshold has been reached here because 1) all election night he was ahead and therefore a lot of people expected that he would win; 2) the Secretary of State made some mistakes that, while irrelevant to the outcome, are still sufficient to act as a smokescreen for a reversal of the election, and 3) as a Republican the plaintiff has a vested right to office, regardless of the views of “voters”, particularly voters who live in cities. Should the courts fail to intercede when the voters fail to elect the proper Republican, a situation might arise in which the government, albeit in this case the state government, might attempt to address the actual problems facing the state, rather than continuing our hallowed national tradition of transferring our dwindling national wealth to the rich while ignoring the economic and environmental trends that are hastening our decline.

For the foregoing reasons, the plaintiff requests that the court grant the requested relief.

As I said, I’m no expert, but my initial reaction is that this reasoning, while sufficient to convince Scalia, Roberts, et. al., may not work with our humble Connecticut jurists, many of whom still cling to outmoded jurisprudential philosophies.