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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.


Some promises shouldn’t be kept

There’s been a lot of speculation about whether Obama will keep all his promises, usually from the perspective of those who are afraid that Obama won’t do what he has promised to do, e.g, end torture or exit from Iraq. After all, Obama is a politician, and although he appears to be an extraordinarily honorable politician, the fact is that all politicians fudge at least a little to get themselves elected.

But, let’s face it, for every thinking Obama supporter, there were at least a few of his promises that one hoped he wouldn’t keep, or some part of his campaign image that one hoped he would jettison.

There’s at least a glimmer of hope on one front. Obama is an apostate from the cause of secular humanism. He was raised by a good honest atheist, but somewhere along the line he lost his way. He repeatedly professed his faith in Jesus Christ, etc. For those of us who can’t quite understand belief in fairy tales, this was disappointing, but where else could we go? At least it seemed clear that he didn’t believe in burning the non-faith based among us. And, as Bill Maher said, we could always hope he was lying about his religious convictions. So it was with some pleasure that I learned today that Obama has not gone to church a single time since election day. Now, that’s change we can believe in.

More seriously, at least in the short term, we can only hope that Obama’s campaign season sabre rattling about Afghanistan will be tempered now that he has the election safely won. Juan Cole, who knows of what he speaks (and is therefore universally ignored) cautions against ratcheting up our military presence in Afghanistan. Obama’s macho posturing on Afghanistan always made me cringe during election season. I hoped, but dared not believe, that he was just saying that stuff in order to establish his credentials as an American politician who, like all other red blooded American politicians, was willing to go to war somewhere to prove his, and by extension, our manhood. The truth is that the war on terror (a stupid phrase, by the way; one does not declare war on a strategy) cannot be won with military force. In fact, it’s far easier to lose such a war with force than to win it that way. If Obama doubles down in Afghanistan it will become his Iraq. Better to find a way to gracefully withdraw. Again, we can only hope he was lying.


Thanksgiving Warmup

My brother in law is staying with us for an extended visit, and today we went to have lunch with one of his sons, who lives in upstate New York. It seemed more convenient to meet halfway, and what better place, in this season, than the site of the second most famous Thanksgiving Dinner in the history of the US. I refer, of course, to that dinner which led more or less directly to the Alice’s Restaurant Massacre, five part harmony and all.

For the untutored among you, and they do exist, I refer to Stockbridge, Massachusetts. Sad to say my nephew and his wife had no idea what we were talking about when we said that this time (we have met them there before) we were going to positively locate the fabled restaurant, and make a pilgrimage to the church. Born in the 70s, they had no idea what we were talking about.

The folks in Stockbridge, even in this Thanksgiving season, pay little heed to this piece of their history. The fellow running the bookshop allowed as how he had eaten at Alice’s (the restaurant) but it wasn’t very good. There are Norman Rockwell memorabilia everywhere (Stockbridge was one of the many New England towns where the peripatetic Rockwell resided), but nothing to memorialize, Alice, her restaurant, Arlo, or even Office Obie.

We were not deterred. Well, my wife was deterred, she thought the whole thing was silly, but my brother-in-law and I soldiered on. He had done research in advance, so we knew where to look, more or less.

First order of business: find the restaurant. As you may recall it was around the back about a half mile from the railroad track, which, truth be told, doesn’t really narrow the location down that much. You would think this sign might help:


Not only does it seem fairly clear, but it definitely points around the back of a building our research stated was the very building. Unfortunately, it appears that Theresa’s too is long gone. We went around the back, but no plaque adorned the wall to confirm that we were indeed on hallowed ground. The railroad tracks, being, as you might recall, a good half mile away, were not to be seen, and therefore of no help. There was a posted bill, however, marking the beginning of the garbage walk, which contained some information about Huntington’s Chorea, so we knew we had found it. We concluded that this is the very door, or the successor to the very door, that Arlo would have entered to visit Alice at work:


Having ascertained with some certainty that we had located the restaurant we proceeded to the Red Lion Inn, where we had a pre-Thanksgiving Dinner that couldn’t be beat (well, I may be exaggerating there), and proceeded to locate the church in which Alice, Arlo and the rest of the gang resided on that fateful day.

Arlo is now the proud owner of the church. He founded the Guthrie Center, an interfaith spiritual center, which operates from this very quiet corner of Stockbridge (actually Great Barrington). It’s a beautiful New England style church, as shown below.


A closer view of the steeple. Yes that’s a peace sign up there.


And while Stockbridge may ignore Arlo at Thanksgiving, the Guthrie Center does not ignore Thanksgiving.


So, our mission was complete. We never made any serious attempt to find the fifteen foot cliff off the side of the side road from which Arlo dumped one of the most famous piles of garbage in history. No doubt no memorial marks the spot.

Stockbridge is not without its other historical locations, and there’s one that stands in stark but silent contrast to the message of peace, and now tolerance, associated with the Massacre. On Main Street, just a half mile from the site of the old restaurant, stands this beautiful old structure.


This is the Mission House. It was originally built by a fellow named Sedgwick, who inflicted Christianity on the Indians from this location. He was followed by the famed Jonathan Edwards (like George Bush, a product of Yale), who unsuccessfully attempted to infect the Indians with his rancid brand of Christianity after he had been run out of Northampton by the locals, who couldn’t stomach his insistence that only the saved could take communion. His religious philosophy is perhaps best summed up in the title of his most famous sermon, Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God.

Who are the sinners? Pretty much everyone. Where are they all going? Hell. (Where else?) Why is God angry? Why not?

Edwards was the very intellectual forebear of the decidedly non-intellectual fundamentalists who afflict us today.

Yet, in one of the little ironies that make history so interesting, he was the actual forbear of a very different type of man: Aaron Burr. The purported traitor was Edwards’ grandson. Burr was, in fact, an adventurer, but no traitor. As he pointed out, he was put on trial for the same sort of stuff for which Sam Houston was revered and Crockett and Bowie canonized. More to the point, unlike his narrow minded grandfather, Burr was a true progressive, a true abolitionist, a believer in equality of the races and the sexes, and a friend of the working man. As to religion, he wasn’t much interested.

The arc from grandfather to grandson, in some way, replicates the longer historical arc extending from Puritan to modern New England. Who could have guessed that the New England of Jonathan Edwards would evolve into the New England of today, which boasts the only two states (including our own) that greeted the institution of gay marriage mostly with yawns (take that, California), and can now proudly boast of being the least dogmatically religious (and, I would argue, the most intellectual) section of the country.


Friday Night Music-Pat Benatar

A search of my past blog posts indicates I haven’t put up a Pat Benatar video, unless I did so on my old blog. One of the mysteries of youtube is the fact that some artists are well represented, while with others there’s slim pickings. There’s only one decent video of Hit Me With Your Best Shot, so here it is:


Crazy

What were these judges thinking?

A state appeals court has ruled that a newspaper can be sued for libel for reporting allegations from a lawsuit before any court proceedings have taken place.

The ruling reversed a lower court ruling that dismissed a libel claim against The Record of Bergen County brought by Thomas John Salzano, who alleged the newspaper defamed him in 2006 by reporting a federal bankruptcy court complaint that he misappropriated money from a Newark telecommunications company.

The court said The Record was not privileged to “republish alleged defamatory statements within a bankruptcy court complaint” and that the newspaper did not demonstrate the allegations were true or non-defamatory.

If Ted Stevens gets off on appeal can he sue every paper in the land for reporting on the allegations against him? Hopefully the NJ Supreme Court will reverse this case.


Second most important election of the year

Henry Waxman beat John Dingell in a secret ballot among House Democrats. Waxman will now chair the House Energy and Commerce Committee. Dingell has been a pawn of the auto industry for years, and is as much responsible for Detroit’s shortsighted approach to its business as were the managers that flew their private jets to Washington to be for taxpayer cash.

It is now not only possible, but likely, that the House will take some meaningful steps to combat global warming.


Gil Shasha prevails

This is a little different, and is of no particular political interest, but I must register my delight upon reading this story (Shasha prevails at ‘last trial’) in the New London Day.

Gil is no longer practicing, for reasons that are fairly murky, as the article states, but whatever the reason, he’s gone out in style:

Veteran attorney Gilbert Shasha, who retired from practicing law eight months ago and surrendered his license after more than 40 years, was back in court this week, representing himself against a fraud claim brought by another local lawyer.

Shasha’s voice broke as he told the jury it would be his last trial, and after about two hours of deliberating Wednesday, the six-member panel found in his favor, delivering him a victory with which to cap his courtroom career.

Gil was being sued by a lawyer who claimed that Gil and a client had reneged on an agreement not to lien or convey the client’s home. The lawyer, John Asselin-Connolly, was suing a former client for a fee.

Now, I could have saved that lawyer a lot of money. It was not a good idea to sue Gil. Gil never heard of a case that didn’t belong in front of a jury, and there wasn’t much he couldn’t talk a jury into doing. We can only be thankful he never used his powers to do evil.

And in his final case, he ran true to form. He did no evil. I won’t express my opinion of his opponent, but I’ll simply reproduce the following from the Day:

Shasha said he was relieved and grateful to the jury and that he hopes other divorce clients Asselin-Connolly has sued would get courage from this case.

”A person comes to him in a turmoil in a divorce case and he considers that a commercial opportunity,” he said of Asselin-Connolly during closing arguments. “It’s like selling socks to him.”


Compassion for the downtrodden

My wife told me about this. She is an honest person, as everyone knows, but I couldn’t help think that she was delusional:

The governors of Connecticut, New York and New Jersey are asking the federal government for a $48 million emergency grant to help thousands of financial industry workers who are losing their jobs.

The governors say the emergency grant would allow the states to give each laid-off worker $12,500 to help them find jobs and relocate, and provide them with other services.

Now, I’m a compassionate guy. I might even support this sort of assistance for laid off workers, but is there precedent for simply giving cash to laid off workers? I assume these folks are eligible for unemployment compensation, so this has to be in addition to that. Why the special treatment? Is there something about the plight of laid off financial sector people that these folks find especially easy to relate to?

These are folks who toiled in the vineyards of an industry in which they were most likely to, or at least had resources to, salt some money aside against the lean years. That’s something precious few of the rest of us can do.

Maybe the details of the proposal are not as bad as the AP summary, but judging by this article it looks like our government leaders just can’t get enough of bailing out anyone who works in that sector of the economy which has brought this country to the brink of destruction.