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As Groton goes…

Over at Daily Kos they are claiming to be covering all the races, big and small, yet I’ve seen nary a word about one of the biggest Democratic triumphs of the night. It therefore falls to this humble blogger to report the startling news, that here in the Town of Groton, home of the City of Groton, the Borough of Groton Long Point, and more political subdivisions than you can find in New York City, the Democrats have swept the table.

We are the majority on the Town Council, for the first time in 30 years. That means, from what I overheard, that one of our candidates (that would be Joe Delacruz), was not yet in his swaddling clothes the last time our fair city had a Democratic mayor.

 

Groton’s New Democratic Majority

 

From Left to right, Incumbent Rita Schmidt, Bob Frink, Rich Moravsik, Joe Delacruz, and Gen Cerf

The council consists of nine members. We only ran five candidates; the Republicans ran seven. All of our candidates won, so it turned out to be a good strategy.

We also preserved and extended our RTM majority and we have a majority on the Board of Ed. So, while you may have gotten results of those minor races in Virginia, New York and Boston at low rent sites like the Daily Kos, remember that news of this stunning Democratic victory was here at CTBlue exclusively.

 

UPDATE: I am reliably informed that not a single Groton Democrat lost yesterday. That may be something of a Groton record for any party.

Friday Night Music, the late great Lou Reed

This is becoming an occasional feature, but this week I had to bring it back. Lou Reed was a giant of rock, and his passing cannot go unnoticed.

A lot of great music, the obvious being Walk on the Wild Side, but I decided to go with Perfect Day. I found several really good versions, and since this is my blog, I decided to go with them all. Watch as few or as many as you’d like.

I think I may actually have used this one before. You just couldn’t make this up. Lou Reed and Pavarotti:

 

Then there’s this. Lou with the good Elvis:

 

Finally, this, featuring among countless others, Dr John, David Bowie, Duran Duran, and Elton John. A prize to whoever can name the most.

Tender Corporate Consciences

Back in July the 6th Circuit turned back a challenge to the Affordable Health Care act’s birth control coverage mandate, on the common sense grounds that while Mitt Romney may think they’re people, they can’t have religions. I thought I wrote about it at the time, but can’t find the post.

Anyway, this decision is one of those no-brainers that anyone with the least understanding of the law could predict. So, naturally, we now have a bunch of looney Republican judges ruling the other way:

The D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals — the second most influential bench in the land behind the Supreme Court — ruled 2-1 in favor of business owners who are fighting the requirement that they provide their employees with health insurance that covers birth control.

Requiring companies to cover their employees’ contraception, the court ruled, is unduly burdensome for business owners who oppose birth control on religious grounds, even if they are not purchasing the contraception directly.

“The burden on religious exercise does not occur at the point of contraceptive purchase; instead, it occurs when a company’s owners fill the basket of goods and services that constitute a healthcare plan,” Judge Janice Rogers Brown wrote on behalf of the court.

Legal analysts expect the Supreme Court to ultimately pick up an appeal on the birth-control requirement and make a final decision on its constitutionality.

via The Hill

The article is not clear on whether the employer in this case is a corporation, but the reference to “companies”, and the fact that the entity has 400 employees practically guarantees that we are not dealing with an individual here. So, here we have an anomaly (see my previous post for more on this subject). The owners of this corporation are not liable for its misdeeds in a court of law. In other words, they and the corporation are seperate entities when it comes to their pocketbooks. But they are indistinguishable when it comes to their alleged consciences, at least when those firmly held beliefs are consistent with the right wing views of the DC Circuit. As I’ve written before, this raises all kinds of interesting possibilities, for whose to say what strange beliefs corporations might find themselves impelled by self interest conscience to adopt. But rest easy, if the Supreme Court agrees with this abomination, it will likely restrict the result to the facts, much as it did in Bush v. Gore.

This, by the way, is the court that has three vacancies that Obama can’t fill because of Republican’s filibusters. Time to go nuclear.

Personal Responsibility is for the little people

This morning’s Times has an article about the travails of Craig Zucker, who founded a company that manufactured Buckyballs. Buckyballs were very small, very powerful magnets which, as the article explains, were a hazard to children. The package contained a warning, but that didn’t stop the carnage:

The product safety agency says it has reports of about 1,700 emergency room visits involving children who had ingested Buckyballs. The power of the magnet in some cases caused ripped intestines.

Written warnings do no good once the package is opened, and the fact is that Buckyballs were kid magnets as well as real magnets. It was inevitable, warnings or not, that they would cause real harm.

Mr. Zucker is by no means an evil man, and I must say that I myself almost bought a set of Buckballs, and would have done so had the price not been so high.

The Consumer Product Safety Commission has taken the unusual step of trying to hold Mr. Zucker liable for the cost of the product recall. Mr. Zucker feels that he should be shielded from personal liability. Isn’t that what corporations are for? He’s being assisted, the article implies, by the inevitable Koch Brothers, whose tentacles reach everywhere.

Holding Mr. Zucker liable for the harm he caused, whether intentional or not, would, according to him and his allies, cause irreparable harm to the nation:

The groups argue that holding an individual responsible for a widespread, expensive recall sets a disturbing example and runs counter to the business desire for limited liability. They contend that such risk would have a detrimental effect on entrepreneurism and openness in dealing with regulatory bodies.

“It really has a chilling effect on the kinds of things all of us were trying to do, which is involve corporate officers in these kinds of decisions — to decide if something should be reported and if there should be a recall,” said Lee Bishop, a lawyer for the manufacturers association, who helped draft the brief.

..

“This really punishes entrepreneurship and establishes a bad precedent for businesses working to create products for consumers,” said Daniel Z. Epstein, the group’s executive director. “It undermines the business community’s ability to rely upon the corporate form.”

There are some things that become so ingrained that we fail to ask fundamental questions about them. The concept of limited liability, in my humble opinion, is one of them. We assume, without asking “why?”, that the business community should be allowed to “rely upon the corporate form” so that the people who benefit the most from corporate wrongdoing can escape liability and responsibility when they are caught out.

First, a very brief course in the history or corporations. Initially, a corporation could be created only be the legislature, for a limited purpose, and usually to accomplish something that the legislature deemed to be a public good. Limited liability was an inducement for men (no women need apply) of means to invest without hazarding more than their investment, and it makes sense, and still makes sense if the person involved is investing money only and is not responsible for the day to day operation of the business, or, in the case of today’s banks, for instance, the day to day direction of the criminal enterprise.

But, back to the brief history. As time went on, and no doubt at the behest of the monied interest, the several states made it easier and easier to form corporations. Nowadays, you can form one for the cost of a filing fee and a small fee to a lawyer, and you too can conduct business behind a corporate shield. With a minimal amount of care you can reap any profits your “entrepeneurship” may yield, while evading any financial liability for any harm it might cause. It is, in brief, a way to launder liability much like some people launder money, and it is often simply a license to steal. I won’t bore you with war stories, but I’ve been involved in many a case where an individual took advantage of the corporate form to evade liability for debts of one sort or another that we mere mortals would be stuck paying, or at least, subject to suit for not paying.

So, returning to Mr. Zucker. The costs of the recall can be borne by a combination of three entities: his corporation, now defunct, him, and us, the taxpayers. It is not immediately clear why we taxpayers should pay for the harm he has caused over a thousand children, even if we stipulate that he meant no harm. The country is littered with non-entrepreneurs who have been held liable for unintentional negligence. The fact is, he caused the harm, intentionally or not. A case can be made that his corporation should pay, and no doubt the CPSC would be content with that if his corporation could pay, but it is bankrupt. There is no indication that Mr. Zucker has shared its fate. He remains wealthy as a result of selling a product that maimed children. So, the proper question is this: Is it good public policy to let “entrepreneurs” retain the profits from an enterprise that causes social harm? Why is it bad if “entrepreneurs” are made aware that among the risks they run is the possibility that they will be responsible for the harm they cause, which they must weigh along with all the other risks and benefits. Why must society at large pick up the costs, while the “entrepeneurs” pocket all the benefits?

Etymological sidenote: I’ve put the term “entrepreneur” in quotes because it’s use by the various corporate shills quoted in the article is instructive. The word, for some reason, gives us warm and fuzzy feelings. It evokes an image of a struggling inventor battling long odds to bring his brilliant idea to market. In Mr. Zucker’s case, that image almost holds water, but it’s not Mr. Zucker the Koch Brothers are concerned about. This case threatens to do something they and their ilk cannot abide: make them personally responsible for the social harm they cause. They shield themselves behind the term “entrepreneur”, because it does not evoke the same response as more accurate terms might bring to mind.

Enough Already

This past Sunday we had a chance to talk to Senator Blumenthal at a fundraiser in West Mystic. We asked him about the filibuster, an issue on which his position when elected was good, and on which he’s stood firm.

Today we’ve seen yet another example of Republican misuse of the filibuster, or, as it’s come to be known to our nation’s press, “blocking”. (Why, one must wonder, is the less precise word used in place of the reality?) Besides making it standard operating procedure, they’ve also made it standard operating procedure to lie about their motivations. One meme they’ve been spreading: Obama is engaged in court packing by appointing judges to fill vacancies in the DC circuit. That’s the opposite of court packing, but close enough for our media to allow the Republicans to spread the meme.

Apparently, Reid is keeping the threat of “going nuclear” alive. It’s really about time to pull the trigger. The filibuster does us no good, even when we’re in the minority, since Democrats won’t use it for anything important, and are easily shamed into dropping the tactic. Senator Blumenthal told us that he was one of 17 (all Democrats, mostly relatively newly elected) who voted to get rid of the filibuster. He told us that his Democratic colleagues told him that he didn’t understand, that if the shoe were on the other foot the Democrats would need the filibuster in order, for instance, to prevent confirmation of a judge who would overturn Roe v. Wade. “Or”, I said, “judges that might hand the government over to the corporations or overturn the Voting Rights Act”. He agreed with my observation, even referring to it in the brief speech he gave to the attendees. The fact is, as recent Supreme Court history demonstrates, that Democrats did nothing to stop the nominations of people who presented a clear and present danger to this nation. Both Alito and Roberts were known to be corporate tools. Both were known to be hostile to minorities. Both were known to be sure votes to overturn Roe. No one breathed a word about filibuster, or if anyone did, it was with a very shallow breath.

So, it’s time for Reid to activate that nuclear device. The Republicans will conclude soon enough, if he leaves it unused, that it will never be used.

What Price Victory?

Now that the World Series has come to an end, regular blogging will be resuming at this location. We all have our priorities.

Now, as a long time Red Sox fan I feel I can wallow in this win for a while, and even pronounce this post my obligatory, sometimes weekly dose of good news. The tension is over, and we can all now try to shed the pounds we gained nibbling away at comfort food (Reese’s peanut butter cups for some, I understand) while waiting for what used to be the inevitable disappointment. But this year, like twice this century, that disappointment did not come. Ah, there’s the rub.

Since I am constitutionally incapable of seeing only the bright side of life (no matter what I may preach each Good Friday), I must point out the small cloud contained within this massive silver lining.

I grew up as a Red Sox fan, always hopeful, and always disappointed. Worse yet, I grew up surrounded by Yankee fans, who rubbed it in almost yearly during my formative years. The best I could hope for was a Yankee World Series loss, which came all to infrequently. Some might say that this was an unalloyed negative, but we Sox fans knew better. Suffering the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune built character, and as a result of our outrageous fortune, we Sox fans had loads of character, certainly more than those superficial Yankee fans. We understood that life is a struggle in which, ultimately, you always lose, but that struggle you must.

Who will teach the New Englanders of today this precious lesson? Why, even last night’s victory was bittersweet. Sure, we old timers had the nagging feeling, deeply entrenched through years of experience, that they’d find some way to blow their early lead. We shall, after all, never forget Bill Buckner (I, by the way, still do not blame Bill. He was injured and McNamara should have put in Stapleton for defense. I said so before the fatal moment.). But today’s Sox fans probably suffered not a moment of angst as the Sox skated without incident to victory. A cliff hanger it was not. Ultimately, nothing good can come of this.

So, we folks within the Boston orbit must accept the fact that our characters shall no longer be built in the fashion they once were. Winning has spoiled us, or at least it has spoiled our offspring, and may, we can hope, spoil their offspring to the nth generation. If you want character, you must look west, where it is still being built in Chicago, the home of the character building Cubs. Long may they lose.

Nothing succeeds like failure

My most humble apologies if I have used this title for a post in the past. But eternal verities tend to get repeated.

The New York Times reports this morning that some people are claiming that a little more inflation would be a good thing for the economy. I'm on the side of “some people” in this particular debate, this position being long advocated by the various blogging economists I read, including Dean Baker and Paul Krugman, who are nearly always right and are therefore universally ignored. I'm not arguing from authority here; to the best of my understanding the people I read make sense and their analysis and predictions are usually borne out by results in the real world.

Now in this particular article the Times consults with two “experts”, one on each side. So, of course, both can't be right. But what I found truly stunning was the choice of “experts” for each side.

On the pro-inflation side we have Kenneth Rogoff. For what, you should ask (in order to co-operate with the thrust of this piece) is Kenneth Rogoff best known? This:

In 2010, economists Carmen Reinhart and Kenneth Rogoff released a paper, “Growth in a Time of Debt." Their "main result is that…median growth rates for countries with public debt over 90 percent of GDP are roughly one percent lower than otherwise; average (mean) growth rates are several percent lower.” Countries with debt-to-GDP ratios above 90 percent have a slightly negative average growth rate, in fact.

This has been one of the most cited stats in the public debate during the Great Recession. Paul Ryan's Path to Prosperity budget states their study “found conclusive empirical evidence that [debt] exceeding 90 percent of the economy has a significant negative effect on economic growth.” The Washington Post editorial board takes it as an economic consensus view, stating that “debt-to-GDP could keep rising — and stick dangerously near the 90 percent mark that economists regard as a threat to sustainable economic growth." 

via Next New Deal

Yes, Professor Rogoff is the guy who gave intellectual respectability to the austerians who have tanked the economies of almost every Western nation. Did I forget to say that it turns out that the work of Harvard Professor Rogoff and his sidekick has been demonstrated, by a UMass graduate student, to be, to put it mildly, total bullshit, and in part based on an error in the Excel spreadsheet they used:

In a new paper, "Does High Public Debt Consistently Stifle Economic Growth? A Critique of Reinhart and Rogoff,” Thomas Herndon, Michael Ash, and Robert Pollin of the University of Massachusetts, Amherst successfully replicate the results. After trying to replicate the Reinhart-Rogoff results and failing, they reached out to Reinhart and Rogoff and they were willing to share their data spreadhseet. This allowed Herndon et al. to see how how Reinhart and Rogoff's data was constructed.

They find that three main issues stand out. First, Reinhart and Rogoff selectively exclude years of high debt and average growth. Second, they use a debatable method to weight the countries. Third, there also appears to be a coding error that excludes high-debt and average-growth countries. All three bias in favor of their result, and without them you don't get their controversial result.

So that's the guy that the Times chose as spokesman for what is probably the correct position. As to the spokesfailure for the anti-inflationistas: who else but Alan Greenspan, whose wrong calls are legend, and need not even be demonstrated here.

As I said, this time around one of these guys has to be right, and, based on what I've read, it's probably Rogoff. The mystery is why the Times goes to one guy whose most widely cited work was plagued by error, which he refuses to acknowledge, and who justified policies that caused and are causing untold suffering for millions of people, and to another guy, all of whose work was plagued by error, which he refuses to acknowledge, and who justified policies that caused and are causing untold suffering for millions of people. Is there no failure big enough to disqualify these people as sources of wisdom? And why are the guys like Baker and Krugman almost universally ignored? Krugman writes for the Times, yet I can't recall a single instance when he's been cited in one of its articles. Mind boggling.

The Fed delivers for its constituents

One of the hallmarks of our age is the propensity of our government to adopt Rube Goldberg solutions to problems that invite simple solutions. Obamacare could have been invented by Rube himself, and while there may be practical political reasons that justify the complexity, the fact remains that had we simply adopted Medicare for All, or something similar, we would be a lot better off, and it would have been a lot harder for the Republicans to demonize the program.

Most of the time, of course, the resort to complexity is a cover for an intent to do unto the rich as they would want to have done unto them.

A short time ago the New York Times published an article in which it established beyond much doubt that the bankers were manipulating the price of commodities, and that, among other things, the fact that they were allowed to own and “sell” commodities was at the root of the problem. The specific example involved Goldman Sachs manipulating the price of aluminum, to its own profit, and to everyone else's detriment.

Now, the obvious solution to the problem is to simply bar banks from engaging in this sort of business. Problem solved. But the Fed, which regulates banks (and is required by law to have representatives of the regulated involved in its decision making) can't bring itself to do something effective about the problem, though of course it wants to make both the public and the Congressfolks who are pressuring it think it is doing something. So, taking a lesson from Rube Goldberg:

An excellent report at Quartz explains how an anodyne-seeming response from the Fed is actually another huge gimmie to the banks:

Last week, Federal Reserve officials leaked to the Wall Street Journal their tentative plan to limit the ability of Goldman Sachs and big banks to own metals warehouses, power plants, and other physical commodity assets.

But experts say that, if implemented, the policy the Fed is floating would actually expand the rights of all banks to enter these physical markets, by creating an official entrance instead of locking the door shut. Presented like a deterrent, it would also be a novel enabler.

According to the Wall Street Journal, the Fed’s plan would call for balancing out the new right to hold assets with a requirement that banks hold more capital to cover the potential risks posed by these activities…

Some experts believe that this additional cost will lead most banks to abandon these lines of business. But it’s an unsafe bet. Not only is it not clear how the Fed would structure these surcharges, there is no guarantee that a steep fee would push banks out. “When you have regulatory costs associated with highly lucrative businesses, the banks just typically pass them through to customers and end users,” said Josh Rosner, managing director of Graham Fisher & Co, who testified in July on a Senate hearing about whether banks should be doubling as oil refiners and coal miners.

The Fed’s given the public no insight into its thinking on this crucial decision, but a surcharge generally works like a tax, meaning it makes sense for banks to continue these businesses if they bring in significant revenue. In other words, a surcharge could actually encourage banks to scoop up warehouses and refineries any time profits from trading metals and oil soar. As Marcus Stanley, policy director at Americans for Financial Reform, explained, “Next time there is a commodity boom, you could get very nice returns even with capital surcharges.”

Rosner’s and Stanley’s concerns are spot on. The Fed officials, if they are at all competent, should recognize that a tax is the wrong remedy for this sort of situation. First, we’ve already seen that Goldman was able to act as an oligopolist through its control of warehouses. Taxes don’t undermine the ability of oligopolists to push prices higher than where they would be otherwise. Second, in general, the alternatives for dealing with a situation like this is to consider prohibition versus taxation. Which you favor depends on which party bears the greater costs. In this case, the answer is clearly prohibition.

via Naked Capitalism

Read the whole post for the whole story. Here's the summary in a nutshell:

Sports fans, the “should we give too-big-to-fail banks more running room in commodities land?” is as clear cut a case as you will ever find in the Weitzman framework. There is NO policy reason for letting the banks in save their own profits. We have efficient and well functioning physical commodities markets without their participation. So when we are considering “private benefit”, it is the additional profit to a handful of firms that are already too powerful, too sprawling, and have repeatedly demonstrated their tendency towards predatory behavior, rule-breaking, and regulatory arbitrage. There isn’t an obvious reason why they should get any breaks at all, save the Fed is working on their behalf, not the public at large.

On the “social benefit” which might also be framed as “public costs avoided” we have systemic risk and higher commodities prices. The stunning part of the New York Times article is that that market participants had firm estimates of the price impact, and across the market it was $5 billion. Aluminum is not an essential commodity, but even so, the harm in dollar terms was considerable. Banks can seek to find similar ways to either gain price advantage or use key choke points to manipulate prices.

In an even smaller nutshell: the Fed has concocted a plan to allow banks to divert even more money from the economy in exchange for providing nothing in the way of social benefits.

Paranoia strikes deep, but sometimes misses the mark

Apparently I missed this when in happened. A woman came close to fainting as she stood behind Obama during a press availability during which he was touting Obamacare. Parenthetically, I've always hated this stunt, first pioneered by St. Reagan, of having common every day folks stand behind the President while he misleads us. But that's another issue altogether.

Apparently the paranoid right, cheered on by the half term governor of Alaska, is claiming that the woman did not actually faint, but that it was all a sham, engineered by Obama.

Did I call them the paranoid right? Well, I do an injustice to true paranoids everywhere. At least with most paranoids, one must at least admit that, if their suspicions were true, they might actually be at risk to suffer the results they fear. But in this case, I am having a great deal of trouble figuring out precisely why Obama would have arranged for a woman in his peanut gallery to faint. What possible benefit could he hope to derive? Has anyone on the right articulated that? It would seem to me that it would be the last thing he would actually want to happen, putting aside the fact that it's manifestly unbelievable that he or anyone else would have scripted something so bizarre. Now I know the sheep will believe anything, but really, the shepherds ought to be a little more discerning about the nonsense they ask their followers to believe.

Equal Justice Under the Law

As a certified bleeding heart liberal, I'm really not sure what to think about this:

A former US campus policeman who pepper-sprayed peaceful protesters has been awarded $38,000 (£23,400) in compensation for psychiatric damage.

Lieutenant John Pike received threats after footage of the incident went viral on the internet in 2011.

It showed him casually spraying protesters from the Occupy Wall Street movement as they sat on the ground at the University of California.

His award is not much less than that received by the protesters he harmed.

Mr Pike was suspended from his job at University of California Davis after the incident and left the force in July 2012.

via BBC News

Seems Mr. Pike was subjected to abusive emails and letters, causing him serious emotional damage. And that is totally understandable. After all, he was only doing his duty, as he saw it, as he strolled in front of those seated passive hippies and sprayed that stuff directly into their eyes. How could he possibly imagine that anyone might see anything amiss in that? After all, they weren't right wing protestors, who are quite different, as we all know. They're allowed to bring guns to their protests, but the distinction is so clear to see that there's really no reason to explain it to any red blooded American, though those weird Europeans might be a bit perplexed.

But I digress.

The mystery here is why Mr. Pike got such a small settlement; not even equal to the average award given to the hippies he sprayed. That's what's truly shocking about this development. What has this world come to when one of our men in blue is treated so shabbily?