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Buffett on class warfare

Warren Buffett on class warfare:

QUESTIONER: Are you happy seeing your suggestion, this new Buffett Rule, becoming more of a basis of a political battle that really has turned into class warfare?

BUFFETT: Actually, there’s been class warfare going on for the last 20 years, and my class has won. We’re the ones that have gotten our tax rates reduced dramatically.

If you look at the 400 highest taxpayers in the United States in 1992, the first year for figures, they averaged about $40 million of [income] per person. In the most recent year, they were $227 million per person — five for one. During that period, their taxes went down from 29 percent to 21 percent of income. So, if there’s class warfare, the rich class has won.

Buffett’s point is an obvious one, and one that the Democrats, were they really concerned for their alleged constituency, would have been making for the past thirty years. Who knows, maybe Buffett will give the Democrats some cover to start fighting back; maybe those kids in New York will help force the issue into the national conversation, and maybe Obama will take it up as the only way for him to survive politically. For whatever reason, it seems that the floodgates have opened a bit, and maybe the fact that the rich have systematically plundered the rest of us will finally become an issue.

Speaking of those kids in New York, they’ve answered the ginned up criticism that they haven’t articulated their grievances ( funny how no one has demanded coherence from the tea baggers ). Check out their Declaration here.

The responsible mainstream media

Before I start this rant, let me say that I appreciate the fact that the New London Day is one of the best, if not the best, newspapers in the state, even now that Ted Mann is gone. But that, unfortunately proves only how low the profession has sunk. In this morning’s paper, a “poll” was reported, giving responses to the following question:

Would you support Michael Buscetto III as a write-in candidate for New London mayor?

There is no direct link to what turns out to be an Internet poll, which I found embedded on the Region section on-line.

I have my opinions on Buscetto, who is mounting an independent bid for mayor after losing the Democratic primary, but they’re irrelevant to this post. What I found amazing about the fact that this was reported in the print edition was that there was no caveat whatsoever to the effect that the poll has no scientific validity whatsoever. It was reported as a poll. Is the Day unaware that readers go to their newspapers for facts, and when a paper reports poll results their is an implied representation that the results being reflect some meaningful reality? There is no way that a poll that anyone can answer, as many times as they like, tells us anything about the actual state of things in New London. It is possible that a scientifically conducted poll would reach results similar to those published in the Day, but if it did one could only chalk it up to coincidence. If such a poll were conducted, I, being a resident of Groton, would not be among those polled, yet I cast a vote on-line without a problem. The Day is certainly free to conduct meaningless on-line polls, if that’s what it takes to up its hit count, but it has an obligation to disclose that the results are meaningless.

A Double Standard?

From this morning’s New London Day (via the AP):

Southington state Sen. Joe Markley is asking state auditors to review how the Connecticut Department of Social

Services handled the recent distribution of payments to needy people who sustained losses from Tropical Storm Irene.

The ranking Republican leader of the General Assembly’s Human Services Committee said he wants auditors to investigate claims of fraud. He said news reports indicated that the Disaster Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program was poorly handled.

Low-income residents who don’t already receive food stamps were eligible for one-time payments, issued through ATM-style debit card, to cover damages such as spoiled food, loss of income and shelter costs.

Last month, thousands turned up at DSS offices to receive the payments, forming lines that snaked through city neighborhoods. DSS had to deploy reinforcements to their offices.

It’s wondrous how upset Republicans get at the prospect that some poor person might be getting a dollar more in government benefits than they deserve, yet they can’t summon up a bit of moral fervor about the rich sucking us taxpayers dry. How many poor people have to commit this type of alleged fraud to equal the amount of money that the baks have siphoned from us all by a mixture of pure fraud plus greed? At least it has a stimulative effect, while the bankers drove us into recession and are now lecturing us against taking effective action to free ourselves from the mess they created? Where, I wonder, is Markley on all that?

Friday Night Music

This is dedicated to all those poor misunderstood Wall Streeters presently under attack by the proles in New York:

As you can see here, they’re suffering terribly:

The emails keep coming

If you’re like me, and if you read this blog you probably are, your in-box is full these days. The hours are ticking down until the midnight reporting deadline for political campaign funds, and, judging by the emails, it’s a matter of life and death that I give today. I imagine the few right wing readers I have (and I know you’re out there) are experiencing the same thing. No doubt their missives are even more frantic, as each and every beggar is the last bulwark between liberty and socialism.

To those on the left, the threats are many, and most of them are real. I’d feel better if I thought that those grasping for my money would actually do anything to defend us from them, but the past, as they say, is prologue. James Carville, for instance, reminds me of the threat posed by a Republican takeover of the Senate:

They get their crazy ideas through the House, and the Senate stops ’em. Thing is, they flip four seats, and their ideas will fly right on through.

He’s right. They will fly right on through. But James, why didn’t our ideas “fly right on through” in 2009 and 2010? For that matter, why don’t they fly through the Senate now? Why does it take sixty votes to pass something when the Democrats are in the majority, and only 51 when it’s the Republicans?

The DCCC, on the other hand, warns that the death of NPR is at hand. If you read Dean Baker, you might wonder why we should care. The Republicans have succeeded in doing with NPR what they have done with all other national media: made it a purveyor of their talking points while demonizing it for liberalism. Only Fox escapes the demonization, because it’s so enthusiastic about the purveying.

All these people are promising to fight for me, and yet somehow, once they have my money, they never seem to do so.

But hope springs eternal, so I just gave some money to Elizabeth Warren. But that’s it. I don’t even care if I’m giving up on a chance for dinner with Obama. At this point, I’m not sure I could remain civil if I won.

Tomorrow the emails all stop, and “for this [future] relief, much thanks”, but like Francisco “I am sick at heart”.

The Grifter (attempts to) speak

Wow, when I first read this quote it was at Kos and I thought it was satire, perhaps someone channeling Garry Trudeau channeling Sarah. But no, it’s pure Sarah:

“Is a title worth it?” she asked, rhetorically. “Does a title shackle a person? Are they someone like me who’s maverick? I do go rogue and I call it like I see it and I don’t mind stirring it up in order to get people to think and debate aggressively.”

“Is a title and a campaign too shackle-y?,” she continued. “Does that prohibit me from being out there, out of a box, not allowing handlers to shape me and to force my message to be what donors or what contributors or what pundits want it to be? Does a title take away my freedom to call it like I see it and to affect positive change that we need in this country? That’s the biggest contemplation piece in my process.”

Maybe it’s some sort of meta thing: Sarah Palin imitating Tina Fey imitating Sarah Palin

Between reason and fantasy, to the media the truth is in the middle

I glanced at the front page of the New London Day’s Perspective section and there was an article titled “Biologist who Challenges both Evolution and Religion”. (I have despaired of finding a link on the Day’s website, but you can read it here, where it originally appeared in the Times). Where, I thought, had they managed to find this figure of fantasy, a Broderesque man in the middle between the two extremes of reason and irrationality? This person, I thought, must be a crackpot of a truly unique variety.

As soon as I started actually reading, my preconceptions were dashed. The man in question was Richard Dawkins. I had already read the article, which itself is unobjectionable, when it originally appeared in the Times. But the Day authored headline rankled. I have read many, if not most, of Richard Dawkins’ books of popular science. No reasonable person can say that he “challenges” evolution. He has stoutly defended it for scores of years. The fact that he has suggested different ways of looking at the evolutionary process (e.g., “The Selfish Gene”) and that he takes part in debate within the community of evolutionary biologists, does not change that fact in the least. To say he challenges evolution is like saying the Pope challenges religion because he’s not a Protestant. Lest anyone say I quibble, bear in mind that many people merely scan most articles in the newspaper, so the headline may be the only thing they read. A casual, uninformed reader might conclude, or have the view reinforced, that there is reason to doubt both evolution (not so) and religion (for sure), just as they are encouraged to doubt the reality of global warming by the careful balancing of mountains of scientific evidence with the opinions of deep thinkers such as Michelle Bachmann and Rick Perry.

To the media in this country, the truth always lies in the middle between any two extremes, and by placing Dawkins in the non-existent middle between reason and faith, the person of little brain who wrote this headline no doubt intended to compliment Dawkins. There’s been no real harm done to Dawkins, but this is yet another illustration of the harm that the media does to rational discussion in this country by defining truth as the mid point between two contrary positions. In real life, the truth rarely occupies that point. It’s made worse, of course, by the media’s willingness to let the political and religious right constantly shift one end of the argument ever farther to the right, to the point where the “moderate” position on so many political issues would have been considered extreme a few decades ago.

I do want to modify one point I made above. I said the media defines truth as the mid point between two contrary positions, no matter how crazy one of those positions might be. It might more accurately be said that the media defines that midpoint as the point that should be occupied by “serious people”, like the people who shilled for the Iraq War and are now seriously invested in the proposition that deficits and inflation are, despite all evidence, our primary economic problem. Truth, in other words, is irrelevant. A false moderation is all.

A crime prevented

We here in Groton held a fundraiser last night, to raise money for the upcoming off year elections. It was a “celebrity” auction. Folks got to bid on items donated by politicians, etc., including stuff from Malloy (green tie), Blumenthal (not-green tie), Nancy Wyman (print), Chris Murphy (lunch), Joe Courtney (poster) and Denise Merrill (scarf). My wife, who organizes these things, was afraid there’d be a dearth of bidders, but in fact pretty much everything was bid up way over any actual value it might have had, with Blumenthal’s tie bringing in a monstrous (for us) sum. This was no doubt helped by the thin man’s presence, which we all much appreciated. I should mention that Nancy Wyman made it too, but she couldn’t stick around to watch her item auctioned off. It was, beyond a doubt, the most successful fund raiser our chronically impoverished committee has ever held. A pain in the neck for me, however, since I’m the treasurer, and the rules are opaque. How, for example, do you determine the fair market value of a used tie?

By far the most crucial auction of the evening was Malloy’s tie. A union loyalist, who made literally thousands of calls on Dan’s behalf last year, and who shall remain nameless for reasons that will become obvious, entered into a spirited bidding with the wife of a local blogger. She made her intentions clear: if she won, she was going to use the tie to throttle Dan, as she is not a happy camper after his treatment of the unions. Most of us suspected (hoped?) that she was engaging in hyperbole. Happily, we shall not find out, as her hopes were frustrated by determined counter bidding. It was for her own good. The tie will be among my Christmas presents, though I am assured that it won’t “count” against my proper ration of Christmas booty. I do not now, nor have I ever, considered a tie to be a proper Christmas present. Toys for Christmases past, toys for Christmas present, toys for Christmases yet to come. Meantime, Dan is safe.

Friday Night Music

Well, I’m really scraping the bottom of the back catalogue here, though I actually like both of these songs, and both of them were giant hits back in the long ago. They seem similar, in a way. Arrived at through some youtube stream of consciousness browsing. I always wrote these women off as one hit wonders, but at least according to youtube they went on to post one-hit careers of a sort. In fact, Merrilee Rush is apparently still at it, or was recently, singing the (for its time) risqué Angel in the Morning. I’m informed by Wikipedia that this song was offered to Connie Francis, who turned it down because she was afraid it would hurt her image, and since Merrilee’s first hit version, it’s been recorded countless times. My recollection is that it spent a lot of time on the charts. Looks like she’s still having a good time singing it.

The video quality on this one is poor, and it may be lip synced (against the rules, normally), but it’s the best I could find. Gale Garnett singing We’ll Sing in the Sunshine.

Rick Perry comes close to speaking

I know this is unfair to the girl from South Carolina, who after all is not running for president, but I couldn’t resist.