Skip to content

Iraqi Justice for Women

This is what we have accomplished in Iraq (reported, of course, by a British newspaper, The Guardian), via Americablog:

Authorities in the southern Iraqi city of Basra have admitted they are powerless to prevent ‘honour killings’ in the city following a 70 per cent increase in religious murders during the past year.

There has been no improvement in conviction rates for these killings. So far this year, 81 women in the city have been murdered for allegedly bringing shame on their families. Only five people have been convicted.

The figures come despite international outrage which followed The Observer’s coverage of the death of 17-year-old Rand Abdel-Qader, who was murdered by her father last April in an ‘honour killing’ after falling in love with a British soldier in Basra. The 4,000 British troops stationed in the city since the invasion that toppled Saddam Hussein in 2003 withdrew to the airport last September.

Rand Abdel-Qader was killed after her family discovered that she had formed a friendship with a 22-year-old infantryman whom she knew as Paul. She was suffocated by her father then hacked at with a knife. Abdel-Qader Ali was subsequently arrested and released without charge.

Rand’s mother, Leila Hussein, who divorced her husband after the killing, went into hiding but was tracked down weeks later and assassinated by an unknown gunman. Her husband had told The Observer that police had congratulated him for killing his daughter.

Mariam Ayub Sattar, an activist in Basra, said that any woman caught speaking to a man in public who was not her husband or a relative was considered a prostitute and punished. A fortnight ago three women were burned with acid while walking through a market in Basra after stopping to speak to a male friend, Sattar said.

The going rate for “honour killing” hit men is $100.00.

We must exit Iraq, for a host of reasons. But we will leave behind a country that will become closely tied to Iran, and which will be in the grip of Islamic fundamentalists. Good work all around. But, as they say, who could have known?


Chavez donates to Alaska

It has been a rather hectic Thanksgiving weekend around the CTBlue household, which accounts for the paucity of recent posts. I am therefore doubly thankful to a regular reader who pointed me to this article from the wintry wastes of Alaska, which I herewith pass on to my other reader(s).

It seems that Alaska, the home of a certain governor who allegedly knows “more about energy than probably anyone else in the United States of America“, a state that is awash in oil, is also the home of $10.00 per gallon heating oil, and the recipient of charity from boogyman Hugo Chavez:

With heating oil prices approaching $10 a gallon in rural Alaska and reports of neighbors stealing fuel from neighbors to warm their homes, a Venezuela-owned oil company plans to supply free fuel to villages again this winter.

That’s what a Citgo executive who oversees the company’s free heating oil program told the Alaska Inter-Tribal Council earlier this month, said council director Steve Osborne.

Citgo has provided roughly 15,000 Alaska village households 100 gallons of heating oil each for the past two winters. If the company donates the same amount this year, some families will save as much as $1,000 on their fuel bills. It’s part of a program providing assistance to low-income communities in 23 states.

Some towns in Alaska are turning the assistance down. I would venture to guess that the folks making the decisions are not the ones needing the help.

One can’t help but wonder how the woman who is omniscient when it comes to energy policy can allow people to freeze in a state she claims produces 20% of domestically produced oil. Perhaps the problem is that in the real world, Alaska only produces 3.5% of that total. Maybe Sarah’s been sending the villagers the fantasy 16.5%, which, much to their misfortune, produces nary a joule of energy.

It is worth noting that Obama has made plans to meet with tribal representatives, to get their ideas for actually addressing their problems.

I should add here that I hope, or at least think I hope, that I am beating a dead horse here. Part of me thinks that over the course of the next few months Sarah will recede back into irrelevancy. Part of me thinks that she will remain the Great Female White Hope for the Republican right, which may very well lead to a fractured Republican party in 2012. But yet another part of me fears her as a potentially successful 2012 demagogue. We don’t know where we’ll be at that point, and there’s always the chance that the country will respond to her appeal to ignorance and resentment. So, until we are absolutely sure that the horse is dead, we should definitely keep beating it.


Friday Night Music-Paul Simon.

I perused the archives, and I see that though I’ve put up a couple of Simon and Garfunkels, I’ve never put up Simon all by his lonesome.

I think this is one of his best, and I’m guessing he agrees, as he featured this decades old song on his recent appearance on Colbert. This clip is from the old Dick Cavett show.

An American Tune


Arlo

My wife and I split up the Thanksgiving duties. She prepares most of the food (though I make a mean onion soup, for the first course). I do the dishes. Since we have no dishwasher, it’s a formidable job, usually lasting just shy of two hours. So I actually do pull my weight.

Tradition is important this time of year, and my tradition, while washing the dishes, is to listen to Alice’s Restaurant while scouring the dishes. If you haven’t watched or listened yet this Thanksgiving Day, you have about 35 minutes less to do so, and you need go no further than where you are right now, for here’s Arlo, forty years removed from those storied days.


An obvious solution that will go untried

I couldn’t agree more with this from Firedoglake:

It’s not hard to rein in executive compensation, all you have to do is decide what the maximum pay you want someone to be able to receive is and tax most of the rest of it away. The simplest thing is to just count all income equally, tax it all at the same rate, don’t allow deductions beyond a certain level (50K or so) and tax all income above, say 1 million at 90%, 95% for all income above 5 million. Don’t allow too much income deferral and there you go. Slap on some “in kind” rules for corporations (yes, if your corporation pays for your car, that’s salary) and while there will always be loopholes, you’ll still rein in the worst excesses.

And that’s the bottom line. As long as executives know that in 5 years they can make so much money they’ll never need to work again, they won’t take care to make sure that their business is long-term viable. Rule #1 of designing incentive systems isn’t “more money equals better performance” it’s “match incentives to the behaviour you want.” If you want an economy that doesn’t have bubbles, don’t pay people for creating bubbles, pay them for long term steady growth, paying high salaries and creating new jobs.

In fact, I’m absolutely sure I’ve made the same argument, but I can’t find an example. Too many posts, too little memory. Anyway, this would be a return to the system of taxation we had in the fifties and sixties. Limiting income in this fashion would, in fact, force executives to concentrate on the long term advantage of the company, rather than focus on the short term quick kill. We are not going to embarrass these people into limiting their looting of the corporation and shareholders, whose interests they supposedly protect. They are beyond embarrassment. Just tax almost everything above a set threshold.

Unfortunately, Democrats have been well trained to Republicans. They are afraid of the “T” word, and are also afraid of the charge that they are engaging in class warfare, something that the Republicans and the corporate chiefs have been waging for years. Unfortunately, to date, only one side has been fighting, while the other side takes all the casualties.


A third way

For the life of me I really can’t understand how people like David Sirota can deal with complete idiots like Grover Norquist:


The man is a one trick idiot.

I would like to suggest, however, that there is a third alternative to Obama either sticking with his original tax plan or keeping the Bush tax cuts for the rich in place until 2011. His original plan was designed to be revenue neutral. If he delivers on his promised cuts for the middle class, and leaves the rich alone, that would not be revenue neutral. Presumably that’s okay, given the crisis we are in. Since we are abandoning the revenue neutral aspects of the plan, why not figure out how much of a “deficit” we would be running if we didn’t raise taxes on the rich. Then, raise them anyway and give the middle an even bigger tax break, taking care to see that the “deficit” remains the same. The stimulative effects of putting more money in the hands of lower earners will be much greater than the like effects from preserving the rich people’s tax cuts. In other words, tax the rich and give the middle an even bigger break.


Block that meme

“A lie gets halfway around the world before the truth has a chance to get its pants on.”

Winston Churchill

Right now the left wing of the blogosphere is trying to put the pants on a bit of truth about union workers at GM, so I thought I’d do my share.

This particular lie started its journey in the pages of the New York Times, a week ago today. Dean Baker explains:

The New York Times told readers that GM’s autoworkers are paid $70 an hour (including health care and pension). This is not true. The base pay is about $28 an hour. If health care cost per worker average $12,000 per year, that adds in another $6 an hour. If the pension payment takes up 25 percent of base pay (an extremely high pension), that gets you another $7 an hour, bringing the total to $41 an hour. That’s decent pay, but still a long way from $70 an hour.

How does the NYT get from $41 to $70? Well the trick is to add in GM’s legacy costs, the pension and health care costs for retired workers. These legacy costs are a serious expense for GM, but this is not money being paid to current workers. The person on the line in 2008 is not benefiting from these legacy costs.

This particular lie is doubly outrageous, because the fact is that those legacy costs have largely been contracted away. If GM manages to hold on for a few years, the actual average pay for GM workers will be less than non-union workers. From Jonathan Cohn, at the New Republic (via digby):

In 2007, the Big Three signed a breakthrough contract with the United Auto Workers (UAW) designed, once and for all, to eliminate the compensation gap between domestic and foreign automakers in the U.S.

The agreement sought to do so, first, by creating a private trust for financing future retiree benefits–effectively removing that burden from the companies’ books. The auto companies agreed to deposit start-up money in the fund; after that, however, it would be up to the unions to manage the money. And it was widely understood that, given the realities of investment returns and health care economics, over time retiree health benefits would likely become less generous.

One can debate the propriety and wisdom of these steps; two-tiered wage structures, in particular, raise various ethical concerns. But one thing is certain: It was a radical change that promised to make Detroit far more competitive. If carried out as planned, by 2010–the final year of this existing contract–total compensation for the average UAW worker would actually be less than total compensation for the average non-unionized worker at a transplant factory. The only problem is that it will be several years before these gains show up on the bottom line–years the industry probably won’t have if it doesn’t get financial assistance from the government.

It is a staple argument of our opinion leaders that Detroit’s woes can be laid at the feet of the unions. Until union members return to a proper level of destitution, Detroit deserves no bailout. The same rules don’t apply to the bankers, of course. As Barney Frank observed, “There is apparently a cultural condition that’s more ready to accept aid to a white-collar industry than the blue-collar industry, and that has to be confronted.” Detroit must show us a plan to mend its ways or we can not give them their $25 billion. That amount is thrown at the banks like chump change, and they are not required to reform their practices at all. Nothing the Bush Administration has done (or that Obama has yet proposed) will stop these same banks from doing the same thing once conditions are right.

Since this lie started its journey it has gone quite a distance. A by now partial list of the media outlets and politicians who have helped it on its way can be found here.

Meanwhile, the truth is getting dressed. The folks at Media Matters are doing their best to help it along (I’ve linked to several of their articles above). I’m doing my bit to get the word out about this. The times are too serious. We can’t let the right wing hijack this situation and force us to make economic policy in the Obama administration like we did foreign policy under Bush. This time we need to be a bit more reality based. Our futures really do depend upon it.

UPDATE: A Study in contrasts. While the people who know are busily blaming unions for GM’s mess, and consigning the US auto industry to the dustbin of history, they are totally silent about the shortcomings of the Citibank get out of jail free card. Media Matters reports that:

On their November 24 broadcasts, all three network evening news programs included reports on the bailout of Citigroup that included interviews with supporters of the deal. The report on NBC’s Nightly News, for example, featured clips from interviews with Citigroup CEO Gary Crittenden and with “[o]ne of Citi’s biggest investors,” Saudi Prince Al-Waleed bin Talal. However, only the CBS Evening News‘ report included any criticism of the bailout, and that criticism came from Egan-Jones Rating Co. founding principal Sean Egan, who said that the bailout was not large enough. None of the reports featured criticism of the bailout on the grounds that it is a poor deal for taxpayers, even though several economists have strongly criticized the bailout on those grounds.


I’ll go out on a limb

For some reason, this Washington Monthly post only came to my attention today. Steve Benen speculates about William Kristol’s tenure at the New York Times. Embedded in his post are some thoughts of George Packer from the New Yorker, the gist being that Kristol should lose his job not because he’s dumber than shit, not because he’s always wrong, but because his columns suck, because in addition to all the aforementioned, they are badly written.

I don’t read Kristol. I rely on others to do that for me. I do think it would be interesting to annotate his Times columns. How many facts does he get wrong? How many predictions does he get right? Is he ever right? The statistics would be interesting. Is someone worth keeping as a columnist as a sort of canary in the mine? Is past performance predictive. Can we count on Kristol always being wrong, thus giving us a reliable inverse guide to future events? These are difficult issues, but a statistical analysis of his columns might just provide some valuable insights.

As to his job, I feel no hesitation in saying it is quite secure. Being a conservative, he is entirely within his rights to bash the Times without fear of retribution. Being a pundit, of whatever political stripe (but certainly as a conservative) his past performance is no impediment to future employment. If I lost every case I ever handled, I would be an ex-lawyer. If a doctor kills every patient, he or she will quickly be an ex-doctor. But pundits, at least those in the upper stratosphere of punditry, can screw up as often as they like. Their predictions are tossed into the memory hole long before they are proven wrong. Kristol is a good example. Always wrong, yet always in demand. Only one thing dooms a Washington pundit to irrelevancy: getting it right. That involves challenging beltway dogma, and we can’t have that. Ask all the folks who tried to tell us that Saddam had no WMDs, and the war wouldn’t be a cakewalk. Where are they now?


Bush pardons a turkey

From the Onion:



Memo to Peace & Justice Organizers and Activists

My friend Bob Roth has been an occasional contributor to these pages. He is definitely not your typical blogger, in that he doesn’t think it easily digested bite size pieces like some people I could mention, such as-well…me.

Bob passed the following along to me for publication on this backwater site. I am happy to oblige, for two reasons. First, Bob’s stuff is usually thought provoking, and second, it saves me the trouble of writing something myself. The only thing missing is the footnotes, which I can’t easily reproduce.

“If you want peace, work for justice.” – Pope John Paul IV

There are literally thousands of organizations in the United States alone working for peace and justice. I would probably think of them as constituting a movement but for Alexander Cockburn’s occasional but repeated and for me, telling remarks to the contrary. A couple of recent developments lead me to think there may be an opening for an appropriate catalyst to move these disparate groups and their activists, and those of us who comprise their membership and support, in the direction of becoming a movement. Or perhaps more than one.

What is a movement? While I invite help with my working definition, it seems to me a movement is a humongous number of people able to move collectively, more or less together, and thus magnify exponentially the impact of their actions, because they are motivated by a common vision, comprised of common values, goals, and perceptions of reality. Not only do they hold this vision and its integral components in common, but they also articulate these things to themselves and each other in common terms. They not only share them, but are aware that they do.

Noam Chomsky says to produce change we need understanding, organizing, and action. We arrive at understanding by research and other means of perceiving and analyzing reality – and learning to ignore the ubiquitous disinformation, including the overload of irrelevancies, dispensed by the instruments of propaganda. Moving from understanding to organizing is a process of sharing that information and analysis, disseminating them to others who share our values, so that collective action becomes possible. That’s what those thousands of organizations already are: groups of people with a common understanding of one or several problems and issues, organized by mutual understanding and shared values so as to be able to act together for their common goals.

Anyone with a mailbox who has ever made a donation to a few organizations dedicated to peace and/or justice has some idea what I have in mind. Resist, Inc., alone has funded literally thousands of small organizations in its 40-year history, and receives hundreds of new grant applications every year. And we all know of the big organizations. They’re working for peace, or on environmental problems, or for social equity, for human rights, and so on. But can we tie all this together? And where to begin? As Chomsky once remarked, in essence, in reply to someone who asked that question: Anywhere is a good place to begin. What we have been hearing for years now is that we have no interests in common, and that our own interests are best served by seeking wealth, ignoring all but self. So any action that affirms that we have interests in common is a move against the spirit of the age and the machine, and for the common good.

As for how we might begin to move together, recent events have included several over-arching developments of enormous scale that may be making popular consciousness more receptive than usual to the idea that we have interests in common, and may even facilitate agreement on common goals and actions we might take, by defining the elements of a program as well as illustrating how it might be achieved.

In an extraordinarily illuminating and useful article in the November issue of Z Magazine (“Bush’s Ten Toxic Economic Legacies”), Jack Rasmus remarks that in the wake of the staggering expenditures occasioned by the global financial crisis, critical programs like health care reform, student loans, sustainable environmental initiatives, jobs creation and protection, mortgage foreclosure relief, retirement systems reform and funding, etc., will all likely be sidelined more or less permanently. However, viewing this differently – and as I see it – Rasmus has outlined many of the core components of a comprehensive program. And if you add tax reform, extended unemployment benefits and food stamp eligibility, plus funding to state and local governments to continue increasingly needed social welfare and other programs and at least slow down the process of contraction now accelerating throughout the economy, you have an agenda that would serve the needs and interests of young people, older people, workers, women, people of color, people with disabilities, people who breathe, eat food and drink water – all of whom the media and political elites call “special interests” – that is, the general population.

How is this comprehensive agenda a plus, without the funding? Well, another key insight was provided in a recent column in CounterPunch, when Chris Floyd pointed out that perhaps the most striking fact revealed by the reaction to the global financial crash is the “staggering, astonishing, gargantuan” amounts of money that the governments of the world have at their command. As Floyd points out, this revelation gives the lie to the argument that’s been made nearly ad infinitum and certainly ad nauseam over the years, that “we” simply can’t afford programs that meet the needs and serve the interests of the general population, because there just isn’t enough money.

The Trillions that are being thrown at Wall Street and other investor servants and interests on a daily basis gives the lie to that argument. Moreover, the general public is keenly aware of it, as evidenced by the veritable tsunami of opposition that arose overnight to the Bush-Paulson bailout plan – to the point where it was even defeated on the first go-round in Congress, before new, improved disinformation undermined the opposition.

Of course, some of these Trillions remain to be borrowed, and questions are being raised in some quarters as to whether foreign central banks and others who have thus far financed the already staggering US budget and current account deficits may throw a monkey wrench into the proliferation of bailout plans by withholding their cash. In that case, the Treasury could wind up printing the money, leading to hyperinflation. None of this is to be too easily denied, but I think there are no less than several plausible answers to it.

First, it’s becoming increasingly clear that at least near-term and for the foreseeable future, investors worldwide have become loathe to put their cash anywhere else but in government bonds, despite the massive pending supply and persistently low yields. Financial Times 11/14/08, p. 25. Second, perhaps investors being asked to finance continuing US deficits – I have in mind here foreign central banks in particular – might have less disincentive to do so if the payoff is to be a rebuilt America whose consumers can go back to buying their products. After all, a major reason for the global impact of our current slow-motion train wreck is that US consumers are totally tapped out, and thus no longer able to buy the foreign stuff, our purchase of which has been helping to keep the economies of Europe and emerging countries such as China going and growing. Throwing Trillions down a rat hole in a vain effort to re-inflate the global bubble economy might well be an unwise investment. On the other hand, genuinely rebuilding the US middle class, manufacturing base and infrastructure – in the process fostering the growth of community and a more equitable society – would be a much wiser use of capital, apart from its immediate benefits to Us the People.

Will that approach fly? Well, it remains to be seen, of course. But I think it has a lot more going for it than much of what is presently being done, which both serves the interests of no one but Wall Street and appears to be in the process of failing on a truly grand scale.

But there’s yet another place to look for the hundreds of billions it will take to rebuild our country (and of course, the two are not mutually exclusive): the defense (sic: empire, hegemony and war; in a word, military) budget. Granted, hundreds of organizations working to promote peace have been making this point for years. But the general public wasn’t staring into the abyss of what may become the Really Great Depression until now. Recent events should – with the right focus – throw a spotlight of a somewhat new and different hue on the $600 Billion we spend each year on goods and services that are wholly unproductive from an economic viewpoint, and indeed contribute massively both to our national decline and the destruction of “the environment,” aka planet Earth and the only home we have. That’s where the hundreds of peace organizations come in: There are many ways to promote peace, but perhaps right now a concerted focus on the military budget, on its gargantuan size and its utter uselessness (and worse), is the most productive approach and one on which there might be substantial agreement among peace organizers and activists. There is also a natural potential symbiosis between peace and environmental preservation and restoration.

Finally, we have the promise of Change in which so many people came to believe that they almost seem to constitute a movement. Perhaps they were, but it’s a movement that will not maintain coherence or momentum of its own accord, and I haven’t seen signs the Obama campaign that facilitated its creation is working to keep it intact. Others have made the point that if the Obama administration is to achieve the potential its supporters among the general population (as opposed to elite interests) desire, those who supported Obama’s election will have to stay focused and active. That means, in part, organized.

There you have it: The power structure has disclosed it has access to truly vast amounts of capital. Very recently, there was a mobilization of enormous popular opposition to a bailout focused on Wall Street, and more bailouts continue to unfold. Pretty much the entire population has some understanding and considerable fear of the economic catastrophe in process of unfolding, and there is seemingly universal recognition of the need for massive government intervention to minimize its severity and duration. Enter the thousands of organizations already working for peace and justice, who might – possibly? – perceive these events as the occasion for concerted focus and action on a common theme, and in particular, the hundreds of organizations specifically devoted to peace whose organizers and activists can highlight another source of funding for such programs. Could we build a movement or two from these components, under these circumstances?

If we don’t do it, who will? And if not now, when?

Robert Roth is a retired public interest lawyer who worked on civil rights for institutionalized people, antipoverty energy policy, and financial fraud and consumer protection during his 35-year career. He can be reached at Robert.roth99@gmail.com.