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More bad news from the Gulf

Nowadays, one has to take anything the folks at FIredoglake have to say with a grain of salt. It’s a bit of a Jane Hamsher cult, and she seems to be a bit over the top in her criticisms of Obama. Even allowing for that, this post appears to be cogently argued. If it’s true, or even close to true, the Gulf Coast is in for big trouble.

Senator Nelson of Florida, who should know, implies that the well casing and well bore are compromised. This may make stemming the leak impossible until the relief wells are dug, and its a direct result of BP’s use of substandard materials, all of which must be known by the Administration.

If, in fact, BP used so many shortcuts in the drilling process, and who can doubt it at this point, it does seem rather strange that the Obama administration, as the Firedoglake post points out, is so willing to put the best face on what they are doing out there. They seem to be buying into failure, to the point where BP’s eventual failure will be their’s as well, even though their actual responsibility for the disaster, and the failure to stem it thus far, is almost non-existent. It would seem that from both a PR and policy standpoint, it would make more sense to take a hard line with BP, publicize its failures, past and present, distance yourself from them at the same time you ride herd on them with regard to the present efforts to stop the leak, and be brutally frank about the likely results. It only makes sense to get out in front of the bad news and keep blaming BP in advance of actual events There is no logical reason why the Administration needs to cover up for BP in order to get their best effort out of them; in fact, it may be the case that adopting a critical position might work better.

Yet another example of Obama’s tendency to unnecessarily align himself with the loathed (see, e.g. Goldman Sachs). Bush was an oil man through and through, but he was ready to throw one under the bus when it was politically convenient (e.g., “I didn’t know Kenny-Boy Lay“). Obama could do the same with more political consistency, but he seems constitutionally unable to draw blood.


Well, that’s better

Finally , someone does something right in Arizona.

A few days ago I linked to a story about a school principal in an Arizona town that ordered the faces whitened on a mural. The mural depicted actual children in the school system. He did it in reaction to racist telephone calls he received, which were encouraged by a right wing city councilman who had a radio show.

The artists refused to whiten the faces, the councilman lost his radio show, and the principal has apologized. Maybe Arizona has hit bottom.


Is she trying to tell me something?

Sent to me by my sister (should get bigger if you click on it):


Your tax dollars at work.

Must avoid Nazi comparisons.

Bush-era CIA medical personnel conducted experiments on detainees in CIA custody to provide legal cover for torture as well as to justify and shape future torture techniques, a just-released report from the Physicians for Human Rights alleges.

“The CIA appears to have broken all accepted legal and ethical standards put in place since the Second World War to protect prisoners from being the subjects of experimentation,” said Frank Donaghue, the CEO of PHR, a nonprofit organization of health professionals.


Weekend events

Yesterday I was attending reunion activities at Swarthmore, my wife’s alma mater. She was there in the halcyon days of the sixties. Just after lunch the class met with a retiring philosophy professor, who had over the years, transformed from a fire breathing SDS advising radical to a far more conservative and clearly conflicted individual.

According to him we had, in the sixties, been trying to destroy all institutions, and he has since learned that some institutions are good, even if we can’t always understand why. He was making an essentially Burkean argument about tradition, some of which makes sense, but for the most part he was destroying a straw man. Of course we want to preserve worthwhile institutions. The heavy lifting comes in figuring out which are worthwhile and which need reform, alteration and yes, sometimes destruction. In any event, I don’t recall being all that interested in destroying institutions-I just wanted to end the war.

He lost the crowd for good when he came out against gay marriage, using the classic slippery slope argument, universally condemned by the better courts, and, one would hope, by the better philosophers. It ran somewhat as follows: Gay marriage leads ineluctably to polygamy, polyandry (which he seemed to imply was worse than polygamy), and some sort of group marriage for which there is presently no name. Thankfully, he didn’t see us rushing toward marriages with animals, at least not that I heard. This all seemed grounded in the assumption that the “institution” of marriage had hitherto been static, an ahistorical assumption of the first order.

My only attempt to join the conversation came when someone in the audience said it was time to start means testing Medicare. The philosopher immediately agreed that Medicare was an institution that should definitely be changed, and means testing was a good idea. Anyone who follows this issue knows that these suggestions come from the folks who are actually interested in destroying Medicare. The same argument is made about social security. My perspective was purely political-a means tested Medicare transforms a program with wide public support into a “welfare” program, that is immediately politically vulnerable. Anyone who doesn’t see that is naive. But I never got to speak, because someone from the back began giving a detailed and cogent rebuttal to the notion, from an economist’s perspective. That someone turned out to be Dean Baker, who blogs here, class of ’80, to whom I have often linked. He’s one of those Krugman-like economists to whom no one listens because he’s almost always right. I decided at that point to keep my mouth shut, but also to get a picture with him, which appears below.

So, that was sort of cool, and somewhat made up for having to sit there and steam while the professor bloviated.


Truly Sick

A school in Arizona orders the faces of real HIspanic and black kids on a mural painted white.

We appear to be heading into an era when racism is once again considered respectable; or, perhaps even worse, where offending racists is considered unacceptable behavior.

Intelligence test

This post at firedoglake pretty much sums it up. Apparently 22% of the American people have warm and fuzzy feelings for BP. Whoever could these folks be? There shouldn’t be that many delusional people in the country, should there?

Well, surprise, it’s the usual suspects.

Those most likely to view BP favorably are, respectively: Republicans, Conservatives, American Over Age 65, Whites and Males. Those least likely to view BP favorably are, respectively: Liberals, Blacks, Democrats, Americans Between the Ages of 18-29 and Females.

Seems to be the story of our political lives.

Friday Night Music-Cab Calloway

I came upon this while free associating on youtube, and I set it aside for some future time, which time has now arrived.

Reefer Man:


Drinking Liberally tomorrow

A reminder that the storied SE CT chapter of Drinking Liberally will meet again tomorrow night at 6:30 at the Bulkeley House, Bank Street, New London.

So far as I know, there will be no top drawer special guests tomorrow, although there is a slight chance that Denise Merrill might stop by. If she does, she gets extra points for coming round even after she no longer has to suck up to the delegates among us. Some of the folks in charge of Ned Lamont’s efforts in the locality will be there as well.

All good liberals are invited.

By the way, this blog may be shut down for a few days. Tomorrow I’ll be out imbibing and talking, and on Friday my wife and I are heading to Swarthmore, PA for her college reunion. I will restrain myself from divulging the number of years it has been since she graduated from that storied institution. By way of experiment, I’m leaving the computer home and just taking my Ipad and a bluetooth keyboard, but regardless, I doubt I’ll have much time to blog, and even less inclination.

Well, aren’t we lucky

It is a fairly common dodge for corporate con artists: whatever they are doing to garner huge sums of money is actually in the larger public interest. That’s why, for instance, it’s important that hedge fund managers pay lower tax rates than those of us who get to live with the results of their malfeasance.

But I think this one wins the chutzpah award in this category, and that’s saying something. Here’s Moody’s Chief Executive Raymond McDaniel explaining why the present conflict of interest riddled security rating system is good for you and me. He was testifying before the sham Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission, about the abysmally poor record of the rating agencies and the fact that they are paid to rate securities by the very entities that issue the securities-hardly an incentive for objective reporting.

“We believed that ratings were our best opinion at the time that we assigned them,” McDaniel testified. “The regret is genuine and deep.”

He also said there is an “important public good” served by the current issuer-pays model, saying that ratings are later released publicly for free. McDaniel blamed the financial crisis mainly on weakened housing and tightened credit.

Well, that changes everything. It’s so nice to know that I don’t have to pay for the privilege of being bilked. Maybe BP should try a similar argument and point out that all those Florida coastline communities are getting all the oil they want for absolutely nothing.