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An artist with local roots

If you have a copy of this morning's Times, take a gander at the front page, where you'll see a picture of a picture of outgoing (finally) Mayor Bloomberg., the depicted picture painted by one Jon R. Friedman. The name struck a chord with my wife and me, and a little googling led us to confirm our recollections.

When I first started working as a legal services lawyer I was paid with a CETA grant, at the princely sum of $9,500.00 a year. I worked in New London, but we had a Norwich office as well, where I went quite often. Jon R. Friedman was also working under a CETA grant (proof here), painting murals in Norwich. One of the murals adorned the walls of the legal services waiting room in Norwich, and we got to know Jon fairly well as he worked on it. It was good, but his Norwich masterpiece was the mural that briefly adorned the walls to the entry hall at the Norwich City Hall. Back in those days the Superior Court was in City Hall, with courtrooms scattered throughout the building. Most folks entering to go to court would pass through that hall, and thanks to John, for a while they got a valuable lesson in politics.

I don't remember the precise pictorial subject of the mural, though I do know it suited the Frederick Douglass quote emblazoned thereon:

Power concedes nothing without a demand. It never did and it never will.

The mural had a fairly brief shelf life, but I got a kick out of it every time I walked those halls. It is now gathering dust somewhere. Who knows, but Friedman's newfound (to me at least) prominence might retrieve it from oblivion. I wonder if he ever imagined that someday he'd be painting the portraits of arrogant billionairres (besides Bloomberg, he's got Bill Gates on his resume) who are living proof of the truth of Douglass's statement.

Krugman wrong again

I hate to disagree with Krugman, but disagree I must. In a recent post on his blog he made the outrageous claim that the right can't take (or make?) a joke, and that we on the left can. The proximate cause of his post was the reaction to a humorous attack on Bitcoin, which provoked an angry response from the suckers who will, blessedly, soon lose all their money.

And it’s not just BitCoin. When I think about the various debates I’ve been engaged in over the past five years, what’s striking is how furious and huffy the other side gets when people like me use picturesque language to get a point across — “confidence fairy”, “zombie idea”, and so on. As in other matters, this is not symmetric. I get called a lot of names, but so what? The argument’s the thing.

Or maybe not, for some people. As the old lawyer’s line says, if the facts are on your side, pound the facts; if the law is on your side, pound the law; if neither are on your side, pound the table. I’d add: and demand “civility.”

In other words, I think that when one side in a debate lacks all sense of humor, and gets deeply offended when the other side cracks a joke, it’s an indicator of intellectual insecurity.

via The Conscience of a Liberal

How wrong he is, and how soon he forgets. Right wingers are always making jokes that we lefties don't get. For instance, just recently, Meghan Kelly joked about Santa Claus being white. We know it was a joke because she told us so herself, the day after she made it. Or consider Anne Coulter, one of the greatest right wing comedians of all time. (Actually I've chosen her because it's just so easy to find examples) Liberals can never see the humor in her remarks about, for example, Arabs, gays, or murdering political opponents despite the fact that she patiently explains that her comments were jokes.

Now in our defense, there are some differences between lefty jokes and right wing jokes. Our jokes are generally “funny” and we usually know we are joking as the words leave our mouths or pens. Right wing jokes have a sort of ex post facto quality; they tend to become jokes a day or two after they are emitted, generally at about the time the jokester starts to take some heat, or, when they themselves (poor Meghan again) become the butt of real time jokes of the funny variety.

Nonetheless, and in the interests of maintaining the “both sides do it” journalistic meme, I must again state that Krugman is dead wrong about the humorlessness of the right and about the ability of the left to take a joke. I plead guilty myself. I've always believed that I can understand a good joke, but try as I might I haven't summoned up so much of a chuckle as a result of Meghan's joke, though I'm sure it must be funny.

Back from the Shadows Again

Well, our holiday guests have come and gone, and it is time for me to return to blogging. Don't ask me why. I do pay a modest yearly fee to my web hosting service, so I guess one answer would be that I have to get my money's worth, but I could solve that problem by pulling the plug on this exercise in self delusion.

As it's been a while since I posted, this post will involve a few of the week's events, all built around a common theme. So, off we go.

Those of you who regularly read this blog probably know that I am somewhat cynical. Not as cynical as one near and dear to me seems to think, but somewhat cynical. Yet even I was astounded to realize the extent to which Wall Street has gamed the bankruptcy system in its favor. While pensioners in Detroit may be taking a huge hit, despite a state constitution saying their pensions are sacrosanct, several banks that conned Detroit into a disastrous investment vehicle are well protected:

As Detroit struggles to come up with money to improve services for its residents, two large banks are poised to receive hundreds of millions of dollars to cancel a deal that helped push the city into bankruptcy in the first place.

The two banks, UBS and Bank of America, were the only creditors that managed to reach a settlement with Detroit before the city declared bankruptcy last July. They agreed to let Detroit out of financial contracts called interest-rate swaps for 75 percent of what the city owed, or about $230 million. They also agreed to give up some casino tax proceeds that Detroit had pledged to them as collateral for the swaps.

The 75 cents on the dollar is a far better deal than the city’s other creditors will probably get. And because of an unusual provision in the federal bankruptcy code, these two banks actually have a legal right to 100 cents on the dollar. The provision gives traders in swaps, options and other derivatives a so-called safe harbor, exempting them from the usual stay that blocks creditors’ efforts to collect debts.

The provision has turned on its head the meaning of safe harbor in bankruptcy. Bankruptcy proceedings are supposed to give debtors like Detroit a safe place to negotiate a way out their problems under the protective eye of a federal judge.

Bankruptcy law rests on the bedrock principle that the best outcome can be achieved if everybody shares equitably in the pain and losses. But in the brave new world of municipal bankruptcy, the law gives derivatives traders an even safer harbor than Detroit’s.

via The New York Times

As the article says, the bankruptcy act was “reformed” several times over the course of the years to declare more and more Wall Street debt protected.

This may be hard to believe, but there was a time when the Bankruptcy system actually looked out for the little guy. 1978 was not really that long ago. It was in that year that the Bankruptcy Act of 1978 was passed (you can tell by the title of the Act). That act actually reformed the system in a way that was friendly toward regular people. The only onerous provision (and it may have been added later) was the provision excepting student loans from discharge, which has, of course, led to student loan abuse, particularly by for-profit institutions, of massive proportions. But, other than that, the law was quite solicitous of normal people. For instance, it expanded the scope of exemptions available to debtors. Prior to its enactment, a debtor declaring bankruptcy could keep only so much as state laws allowed. A debtor in Connecticut would lose pretty much everything, while a Florida debtor could keep his or her home. The 1978 law allowed a debtor to chose the more generous of state law exemptions or a new package of federal exemptions. The Act actually put the debtor into a position where he or she had some leverage over creditors.

Wall Street and the creditor class, could not, of course, allow this situation to persist. “Reform” was needed, and “reform” is what we got. It is entirely okay for creditors to lure debtors into borrowing money on onerous terms that would have been considered usurious in any other day or age. The bankruptcy system is now punitive and expensive for individuals, but it remains quite business friendly. Just ask any worker who has had his union contract set aside by a bankruptcy court, or his pension eviscerated. Now we see that under our very noses the banks have “reformed” the bankruptcy code so that they can drive our cities into bankruptcy and then shove themselves into first place in line to get paid for their services.

Even a cynic has a hard time believing this sort of thing. However, my cynicism is strong enough to be absolutely sure that nothing will be done to rectify this abuse, no matter how much publicity it may get. (I should add that the banks settled for 43% of their money; still more than the other creditors will get, and you can rest assured they've come out winners overall)

Speaking of cynicism and Wall Street, is there any surprise here:

Providing additional evidence that the Obama Administration's Department of Justice (DOJ) is protecting “banks too big to fail,” Pulitzer Prize winning financial reporter David Cay Johnston has revealed that the DOJ has refused to force JPMorgan Chase to comply with an ongoing investigation into the bank's possible knowledge of Bernard Madoff's fraud scheme of a few years ago.

via Buzzflash

Perhaps the worst appointment Obama ever made was Little Timmy Geithner, who ran interference for Wall Street from his post at the Treasury Department for four years, though we can give Obama points for consistency as he may have matched Timmy with Jack Lew. Not to be outdone, however, Eric Holder has run a strong second or third, depending on how you rate Lew. Is there anything he's done as Attorney General that Obama can truly point to with pride? Maybe that's a bad way to phrase the question. Is there anything Holder has done as Attorney General that the rest of us Democrats can point to with pride? If so, it pales in comparison to the harm he's done as Wall Street's legal enabler.

Still speaking of cynicism and Wall Street, is there any surprise here:

Signs of the energy business are inescapable in and around Houston — the pipelines, refineries and tankers that crowd the harbor, and the gleaming office towers where oil companies and energy traders have transformed the skyline.

And in a squat glass building on the University of Houston campus, a measure of the industry’s pre-eminence can also be found in the person of Craig Pirrong, a professor of finance, who sits at the nexus of commerce and academia.

As energy companies and traders have reaped fortunes by buying and selling oil and other commodities during the recent boom in the commodity markets, Mr. Pirrong has positioned himself as the hard-nosed defender of financial speculators — the combative, occasionally acerbic academic authority to call upon when difficult questions arise in Congress and elsewhere about the multitrillion-dollar global commodities trade.

Do financial speculators and commodity index funds drive up prices of oil and other essentials, ultimately costing consumers? Since 2006, Mr. Pirrong has written a flurry of influential letters to federal agencies arguing that the answer to that question is an emphatic no. He has testified before Congress to that effect, hosted seminars with traders and government regulators, and given countless interviews for financial publications absolving Wall Street speculation of any appreciable role in the price spikes.

What Mr. Pirrong has routinely left out of most of his public pronouncements in favor of speculation is that he has reaped financial benefits from speculators and some of the largest players in the commodities business, The New York Times has found.

via The New York Times

There is nothing new about academics acting as whores for various industries. Lots of scientists do it as well, but it works particularly well for economics professors, as they can never be proven wrong, at least not the way the game is currently being played. Sooner or later a scientist that shills for industry will be found out. But in this day and age there is absolutely no penalty for being wrong in the economics profession. In fact, nothing enhances your reputation more. Just ask Alan Greenspan, the man who has never been right. Still it takes a special kind of guy to brazenly deny the truth of something that is so obviously true.

What I always find interesting is how cheaply people like Pirrong can be bought. I remember when our three term governor got caught with his hand in the cookie jar it turned out that he really didn't get many cookies considering the goodies he was handing out. Pirrong won't say what he's been paid, and his employer isn't curious in the least about it, possibly because the school itself is being handsomely bribed, but another academic discussed in the article rented his soul for a mere $50,000. Admittedly, he can keep renting it so the money may pile up, but that kind of money is merely the crumbs off the crumbs from the table of the folks for whom he shills. In defense of Pirrong and his ilk, the price of a college professor really should pale next to the cost of the governor of a state, even a state as small as Connecticut. Every governor has a monopoly for the length of his or her term, but there are undoubtedly scores of professors who'd be only too happy to step up and take Pirrong's place if he upped his price. As economics professors other than Pirrong would undoubtedly point out, it's a simple question of supply and demand.

By the way, if you guessed that the common theme of this post was cynicism, you were right.

Having gotten all that off my chest, I hereby acknowledge that I am in arrears on my good news post, but only because I haven't been posting. I'll find something by tomorrow.

Stopped clocks and Obama haters

Yesterday a lot of us on the left were pleasantly surprised that a federal judge in Washington had ruled the NSA surveillance program not just merely unconstitional, but really quite sincerely unconstitutional. I know I was pleasantly surprised, though when I read the judge's name, something tugged at my not so mystic chords of memory. The good folks at Consortium News brought it all back:

U.S. District Judge Richard Leon is winning kudos across the political spectrum for a ruling that rejects the constitutionality of the National Security Agency vacuuming up the metadata on virtually every phone call made in America. Leon clearly possesses a libertarian streak, but he earned his place on the bench by running a partisan cover-up of a historic crime.

Leon was appointed to his lifetime judicial post by George W. Bush in 2002 after Leon won the gratitude of the Bush Family by protecting its interests as an aggressive and reliable Republican legal apparatchik on Capitol Hill. There, the heavy-set Leon gained a reputation as a partisan bully who made sure politically charged investigations reached a desired outcome, whatever the facts.

In the 1990s, Leon served as special counsel to the House Banking Committee as it transformed President Bill Clinton’s minor Whitewater real estate deal into a major scandal that eventually led to the House vote to impeach Clinton in 1998 and thus set the stage for Bush’s disputed election victory in 2000.

But Leon’s most important work for the Bushes may have come in the 1980s and early 1990s when he helped construct legal justifications for Republican law-breaking and sought to intimidate Iran-Contra-related witnesses who came forward to expose GOP wrongdoing.

via Consortium News

Read the whole article. This paragraph, which sums things up, is particularly interesting:

So, one could say that Richard Leon was there at the birth of what became George W. Bush’s imperial presidency, which gave birth to the NSA’s massive spying operation which Leon declared unconstitutional on Monday (although Leon stayed his ruling to give the government time to appeal).

It is impossible to believe that Leon would not, prior to his appointment, have avidly and wholeheartedly defended the NSA program were it being run under a Republican president. We must, therefore, conclude that one of two things is happening here.

One, which Robert Parry of Consortium News mentions, is the possibility that Leon, safely ensconced on the bench with a lifetime appointment, is now exercising “intellectual independence”. In other words, he would rule as he had even were George Bush still president. To give Parry his due, he mentions this possibility, but he doesn't endorse it.

The other possibility is that Leon ruled as he did because he is a partisan Obama hater. Nothing seems more likely. Were I a believer, at this point I'd say something about God working in mysterious ways. In any event, while this reflexive Obama hating on the part of Republicans has done this country a world of hurt, every once in a while it works to our collective advantage. When Obama wanted to destroy Social Security, the Republicans would have none of it; not because they didn't want the same thing, but that they simply could not bring themselves to agree with him. We may find that Obama hatred may get us a few votes on the Supreme Court to uphold good Judge Leon's decision. You never know.

I would like to believe that in this instance Obama has been playing the Republicans, manipulating them into demanding the end of a program he doesn't like, but could not get rid of unless it appeared that he was being forced to do so against his will. I'd like to believe that, but I don't.

Fighting inequality in the passive voice

I understand that Obama gave a speech about inequality recently. Some say it marks a departure from his middle of the road course, while others…well, they have their doubts.

It certainly is frustrating that Obama is able to recognize and give voice to the problem, and yet also give the distinct impression of being a man with no intention of actually doing anything about it.

The best reaction I've seen is a column I read recently in the Boston Globe, though I know it appeared elsewhere. One Anat Shenker-Osorio, examines Obama's language and finds it wanting in a way that is all too common among those who manage our national discourse.

In summarizing highlights of America’s economic past, Obama used declarative sentences that made clear what various leaders accomplished. “It was Abraham Lincoln, a self-described ‘poor man’s son,’ who started a system of land grant colleges all over this country….A rich man’s son named Teddy Roosevelt fought for an eight-hour workday….FDR fought for Social Security….LBJ fought for Medicare and Medicaid.”

But as he turned to characterize the Great Recession, Obama’s speech pattern changed: He shifted to a sentence structure that excludes human actors from the subject position. “The deck is stacked” against the working class, Obama said. Why? Because “taxes were slashed,” he said, and “growth has flowed to a fortunate few.” His language gave no indication of who brought about these disparities.

Instead, his words suggested abstract ideas were capable of independent action. “Because of upward mobility,” Obama said, “the guy on the factory floor could picture his kid running the company.” And, he went on, “jobs automated or headed offshore.” In a nearly hourlong speech, only rarely did we get any glimpse of who-did-what-to-whom: “Businesses lobbied Washington to weaken unions and the value of the minimum wage.”

It’s no surprise that Obama’s not naming names—throughout the economic collapse and its aftermath, that kind of avoidance has been commonplace among politicians. What makes this speech stand out is that even as it attempts to put forth deliberate remedies to inequality, its language undermines the notion that we are confronting a problem humans made, not a hurricane or nasty flu, and suggests that the problem is out of human hands. It’s a perfect example of why English teachers admonish us to avoid passive constructions.

via The Boston Globe

It's an irony of amazing proportions. Obama's political opponents are quick to blame him for all manner of things, yet he is reluctant to assign blame to anyone. It's important because we cannot deal with a problem unless we recognize its causes. If we talk as if inequality is caused by impersonal forces that are simply working in accordance with some natural law, then we will seek out solutions that attempt to deal with those forces, or, more likely, ameliorate the effects of those forces (leading to rightwing claims that amelioration is welfare, and the ameliorated are “takers”). If we recognize, instead, that we are dealing with deliberate policy choices made by human beings with names, faces, agendas and party affiliations, then different, usually simpler and more effective, solutions present themselves. Those solutions may not be within our reach at present, but they will never be attempted if they are not properly articulated in a fashion every bit as aggressive as that currently employed by the right to stir up resentment against the powerless. Unfortunately, the obvious solutions are perceived as contrary to the interests of the people who control the purse strings of both parties. It does no good to argue that extreme inequality is not in the long term interest of the affluent. As Keynes said, in the long term we'll all be dead, and in the short term they are getting very rich.

Sooner or later, someone will come along who will see the political advantage of appealing to the frustrations of the lower 99 and who will, in fact, point fingers and name names. Unfortunately, it is far more likely that it will be a fascist than a leftist, and that fingers will be pointed at all the wrong people.

I do disagree with Shenker-Osorio about one thing, however. We now live in an age when we can no longer assume that even hurricanes are the result of forces over which we have no control. They too, are now, as often as not, the result of deliberate policy choices.

Excellence in Education

I've mentioned the concept of “rent seeking” before. Here's a handy definition:

The expenditure of resources in order to bring about an uncompensated transfer of goods or services from another person or persons to one's self as the result of a “favorable” decision on some public policy. The term seems to have been coined (or at least popularized in contemporary political economy) by the economist Gordon Tullock. Examples of rent-seeking behavior would include all of the various ways by which individuals or groups lobby government for taxing, spending and regulatory policies that confer financial benefits or other special advantages upon them at the expense of the taxpayers or of consumers or of other groups or individuals with which the beneficiaries may be in economic competition.

via A Glossary of Political Economy Terms

Not to put too fine a point on it: rent seekers use government policy to divert money to themselves for providing services (or no services) for amounts that far exceed what it would cost to provide them more efficiently. It's not only bankers that do it, though they dominate the field. The term comes readily to mind when the subject of education privitization is under discussion. It doesn't take much imagination to figure out what will happen if we hand the system of public education over to private hands. We will soon find out that it is absolutely necessary that the CEOs of such company get six or seven figure salaries while, at the same time, we will be told that we can get high quality education while simultaneously paying our teachers close to nothing. If you don't have even a little imagination, maybe this will help you see our future:

Eric Parms enrolled at an Everest College campus in the suburbs of Atlanta in large part because recruiters promised he would have little trouble securing a job.


But after completing a nine-month program in heating and air conditioning repair in the summer of 2011 – graduating with straight As and $17,000 in student debt – Parms began to doubt the veracity of the pitch. Career services set him up with a temporary contract position laying electrical wires. After less than two months, he and several other Everest graduates also working on the job were laid off and denied further help finding work, he says.

Even that short-lived gig wasn't secured on the strength of Parms's degree. The college had paid his contractor $2,000 to hire him and keep him on for at least 30 days, part of an effort to boost its official job placement records, according to documents obtained by The Huffington Post. The college paid more than a dozen other companies to hire graduates into temporary jobs before cutting them loose, a HuffPost investigation has found.

Everest College's $2,000-per-head “subsidy” program in Decatur, Ga., stands among an array of tactics used for years by the institution's parent company, Corinthian Colleges Inc., to systematically pad its job placement rates, according to a review of contract documents and lawsuits and interviews with former employees.

More than a marketing tool to lure new students, solid job placement rates allow the company to satisfy the accrediting bodies that oversee its nearly 100 U.S. campuses, while enabling Corinthian to tap federal student aid coffers – a source of funding that has reached nearly $10 billion over the last decade, comprising more than 80 percent of the company's total revenue.

via The Huffington Post

Check out the linked article, and take a look at the contract between the school and the employers. It's a masterful work of legal prose, dressed up with all kinds of protestations about the school's concerns for its students, yet devoid of any obligation on the part of the contractor to employ the student for more than 30 days.

Now, why doesn't the party that is always condemning “takers” take aim at welfare cheats like Corinthian? Inquiring minds want to know.

Friday Night Music, being rich is the best defense edition







I've been sporadic about this lately, I know, but when I read this article, an old Bob Dylan song came to mind. First, the gist of the article:

16-year old Ethan Couch was driving drunk at THREE times the legal limit and had Valium in his system. He plowed into four people going 70 miles per hour in a 40 mile per hour zone, killing them. Other victims are severely injured; one has severe brain damage. Even after he killed and maimed those people, he was uncooperative and combative with the emergency services and walked away from the police saying "I'm outta here".

He pleaded guilty, of course. But Ethan's parents are very wealthy. (We are talking the 1%.) They hired an attorney that brought on a psychologist to say Couch was "a product of wealth" and was used to getting "whatever he wanted". Because he was so affluent and accustomed to never having consequences, the attorney argued that he should get therapy as opposed to jail.

This was the argument, mind you, used in the defense:

He said Couch got whatever he wanted. As an example, Miller said Couch's parents gave no punishment after police ticketed the then-15-year-old when he was found in a parked pickup with a passed out, undressed 14-year-old girl.
Miller also pointed out that Couch was allowed to drive at 13. He said the teen was emotionally flat and needed years of therapy. At the time of the fatal wreck, Couch had a blood alcohol content of .24, said Tarrant County Sheriff Dee Anderson. It is illegal for a minor to drive with any amount of alcohol in his or her system.

Prosecutors tried to get 20 years. The Defense argued for therapy and probation.
Texas State District Judge Jean Boyd bought the inane "I'm too rich for consequences" defense and actually sided with the Defense and gave him probation.

It occurred to me that while we've come a long way on some issues, on some we've regressed. When Bob Dylan sang about William Zanzinger, he documented a similar injustice, but at least Zanzinger didn't get off by pleading affluence.

Unfortunately, no decent live videos of Dylan performing this song exist. There's one of him in his later years, in which he gives the impression that he is going through the motions. So, I must settle for this recording from a live performance in England in 1965.


Yet more on “free trade”

Here's an example of what we'll be seeing more of, if the U.S. gets what it wants in the TPP “free trade” talks.

Tobacco companies are pushing back against a worldwide rise in antismoking laws, using a little-noticed legal strategy to delay or block regulation. The industry is warning countries that their tobacco laws violate an expanding web of trade and investment treaties, raising the prospect of costly, prolonged legal battles, health advocates and officials said.

The strategy has gained momentum in recent years as smoking rates in rich countries have fallen and tobacco companies have sought to maintain access to fast-growing markets in developing countries. Industry officials say that there are only a few cases of active litigation, and that giving a legal opinion to governments is routine for major players whose interests will be affected.

via New York Times

The gun manufacturers must be drooling at the prospect of loosening anti-gun laws by corporate fiat. Imagine what a wonderful world it would be if people everywhere were forced to enjoy “second amendment rights”. But, of course, that's not the only possibility for abuse of the masses by the upper classes; the possibilities are endless.

Someone should be “candid” with Bill Gates

When Bill Gates decided to take his billions and go home, he also decided to inflict his philosophy, such as it is, on the rest of us. One target was our teachers.

Gates solution to our non-existent educational crisis was to inflict the same regimen on our teachers that he inflicted on workers at Microsoft, something called “stacked ranking”, which put Microsoft employees in constant competition with one another for continued employment. According to Gates it was the key to Microsoft's success. Some might argue that Microsoft's innovation peaked in the 80s, when Gates had the prescience to realize that it was the operating system that mattered (had IBM not outsourced its PC operating system to Microsoft, Gates might be teaching high school himself) and was well positioned to get Microsoft Office on the first crop of business PCs where, despite the fact that the software has gotten progressively shittier, it remains to this day. One might go on to argue that Microsoft has coasted ever since on the wings of antitrust violations and corporate resistance to change (no one ever got fired for buying Microsoft Office). One might observe that enthusiasm for Microsoft's recent offerings has been non-existent (ever spent time in one of those empty Microsoft stores while waiting for your turn at the Genius Bar?). Apparently, someone has noticed:

Bill Gates foisted a big business model of employee evaluation onto public school, which his own company has since abandoned.
“At Microsoft, we believed in giving our employees the best chance to succeed, and then we insisted on success. We measured excellence, rewarded those who achieved it and were candid with those who did not.”

Adopting the Microsoft model means public schools grading teachers, rewarding the best and being “candid”, that is, firing those who are deemed ineffective. “If you do that,” Gates promised Oprah Winfrey, “then we go from being basically at the bottom of the rich countries [in education performance] to being back at the top.”

The Microsoft model, called “stacked ranking” forced every work unit to declare a certain percentage of employees as top performers, a certain groups as good performers, then average, then below average, then poor.

Using hundred of millions of dollars in philanthropic largesse Bill Gates persuaded state and federal policymakers that what was good for Microsoft would be good for public schools (to be sure, he was pushing against an open door). To be eligible for large grants from President Obama’s Race to the Top program, for example, states had to adopt Gates’ Darwinian approach to improving public education. Today more than 36 states have altered their teacher evaluations systems with the aim of weeding out the worst and rewarding the best.

“So let me get this straight. The big business method of evaluation that now rules our schools is no longer the big business method of evaluation? And collaboration and teamwork, which have been abandoned by our schools in favor of the big business method of evaluation, is in?” Some states grade on a curve. Others do not. But all embrace the principle that continuing employment for teachers will depend on improvement in student test scores, and teachers who are graded “ineffective” two or three years in a row face termination.

Needless to say, the whole process of what has come to be called “high stakes testing” of both students and teachers has proven devastatingly dispiriting. According to the 2012 MetLife Survey of the American Teacher, over half of public school teachers say they experience great stress several days a week and are so demoralized that their level of satisfaction has plummeted from 62 percent in 2008 to 39 percent last year.

And now, just as public school systems have widely adopted the Microsoft model in order to win the Race to the Top, it turns out that Microsoft now realizes that this model has pushed Microsoft itself into a Race to the Bottom.

In a widely circulated 2012 article in Vanity Fair award-winning reporter Kurt Eichenwald concluded that stacked ranking “effectively crippled Microsoft’s ability to innovate. “Every current and former Microsoft employee I interviewed—every one—cited stack ranking as the most destructive process inside of Microsoft, something that drove out untold numbers of employees,” Eichenwald writes. “It leads to employees focusing on competing with each other rather than competing with other companies.”

This month Microsoft abandoned the hated system.

On November 12 all Microsoft employees received a memo from Lisa Brummel, Executive Vice President for Human Resources announcing the company will be adopting “a fundamentally new approach to performance and development designed to promote new levels of teamwork and agility for breakthrough business impact.”

Ms. Brummel listed four key elements in the company’s new policy.

•More emphasis on teamwork and collaboration.

•More emphasis on employee growth and development.

•No more use of a Bell curve for evaluating employees.

•No more ratings of employees.

via Common Dreams

If you think Gates, Congress, or Obama will change their prescription for our public schools, think again. It's far too convenient to blame teachers for conditions created by government policies that shovel money at the Bill Gateses of the world while impoverishing the rest of us. Just as it took the world about 30 years to realize that Microsoft was coasting on a couple of lucky breaks it got in the 80's combined with illegal behavior in the 90s (for which it got a slap on the wrist), it will take at least that long for the politicians to accept the fact that the “race to the top” is destroying the American public educational system. But that's the point, really, isn't it? Time for the for-profits to come to the rescue. Ultimately, the answer to every problem involves creating a few more billionaires and a lot more paupers.

A bit more on “free trade”

A bit of a follow up to a recent post on the proposed Trans-Pacific Partnership pact. Dean Baker, who I mentioned in my post, takes issue with Paul Krugman's comments that the trade pact is no big deal. Baker agrees that as a trade deal it's a nothing, but that is not the point:

Anyhow, Krugman is on the money in his assessment of the impact of the TPP on trade. But the point is that the TPP is not really about trade, it's about changing the regulatory process in ways that would almost certainly be opposed by the people in most of the countries included in the deal.

via Beat the Press

In short, its about handing legislative and judicial power over to the corporations. Here's Mussolini on that subject:

Fascism should more appropriately be called Corporatism because it is a merger of state and corporate power.