Crist to Join Lieberman Party – Maybe

If Chris Cillizza says it’s so, it must be true:

Florida Gov. Charlie Crist (R) will announce his future political plans today, a decision widely reported — by the Fix among many others — to be a stepping-away from the Republican party to run for the Senate this fall as an independent.

Crist, perhaps seeking to preserve his ability to change his mind in the final hours before making an official announcement today at 5 pm in St. Petersburg, denied Wednesday that the die was cast on an independent bid. But, sources familiar with the process insisted he had begun to inform people that he would pursue a third party candidacy.

Those same sources cautioned, however, that Crist is notoriously fickle — even on major decisions like this one — and that until he says the words “I am running as an independent” things could still change.

Oh please Charlie, just do it. Lonesome Joe needs a friend, and God knows the Republicans in Florida had been Rubioized beyond all recognition. Hell, I’ll bet Jeb Bush couldn’t beat Mr. Rubio in Florida’s US Senate Republican primary right now, that’s how crazy the Grande Olde Party of Florida has become.

Rubio’s credit card abuse scandal hasn’t done a thing to blunt his momentum; it probably just gives him street cred with all the wingnuts up to their ears in credit card debt. Rubio would have to admit to an affair with Tiger Woods for you to have any chance. I have to admit that these days nothing would surprise me, but I don’t think that one is very likely to surface.

Tiger has some standards after all.

Squares

I occasionally run into nice white men who think George Will makes an inordinate amount of sense. It’s a strange malady, but it can mostly be explained by their conventional success and isolated existence. They did what was expected of them; they went to good schools; they got excellent jobs, and they never got too far out of their comfort zone. It would almost be harmless except that we need nice people to support progressive policies and oppose reactionary bigots. Most of these misunderstandings could be solved by simple cultural exchange programs. Instead of sending your kid to France, have her work for ACORN. Two weeks working with real Americans in the inner city will cure anyone of the idea that George Will makes even the smallest iota of sense whatsoever. I can guarantee that. They might even meet a Latino that doesn’t mow lawns or work in food service. You never know.

Who ‘they’ are; where they’re taking us

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Thanks to the Daily Howler for pointing out the perfect portrait of the U.S. media/political elite, i.e., the ‘they’ that is the enemy of the rest of us:

NYT’s Mark Leibovich: On a recent Friday night, a couple hundred influentials gathered for a Mardi Gras-themed birthday party for Betsy Fischer, the executive producer of “Meet the Press.” Held at the Washington home of the lobbyist Jack Quinn, the party was a classic Suck-Up City affair in which everyone seemed to be congratulating one another on some recent story, book deal, show or haircut (and, by the way, your boss is doing a swell job, and maybe we could do an interview).

McAuliffe, the former Democratic National Committee chairman, arrived after the former Republican National Committee chairman Ed Gillespie left. Fox News’s Greta Van Susteren had David Axelrod pinned into a corner near a tower of cupcakes. In the basement, a very white, bipartisan Soul Train was getting down to hip-hop. David Gregory, the “Meet the Press” host, and Newsweek’s Jon Meacham gave speeches about Fischer. Over by the jambalaya, Alan Greenspan picked up some Mardi Gras beads and placed them around the neck of his wife, NBC’s Andrea Mitchell, who bristled and quickly removed them. . . .

Yes, that was former Fed Chief Alan Greespan, Ayn Randian most responsible for the deregulated crap storm we’re doomed to experience forever (i.e., until us average working people overthrow the neoliberal corporate-globalized market fundamentalists). And his wife, insider neo-journalist Andrea Mitchell.

And what are ‘they’ in an uproar about right now? No, not 10% official (near 17% unofficial) unemployment in the U.S. Nope, deficits; government deficits during a very deep recession when we desperately need economic stimulus have got elite knickers all in a twist:
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NPR’s Mara Liasson: Washington is gearing up for a big debate: What to do about the exploding national debt, the unsustainable annual budget deficits and what to do about the Bush tax cuts that expire at the end of the year. . . .

“The arithmetic is, unfortunately, quite clear,” [Greenspan’s successor, Ben] Bernanke said. “To avoid large and unsustainable budget deficits, the nation will ultimately have to choose among higher taxes, modifications to entitlement programs such as Social Security and Medicare, less spending on everything else from education to defense, or some combination of the above.

The Miami Herald: . . . the bipartisan National Commission on Fiscal Responsibility and Reform faces no easy task when it holds its first meeting on Tuesday, searching for a bipartisan consensus on ways to reduce the deficit to within 3 percent of the U.S. gross domestic product [yeah, the same stupid goal the European Union demands of its members; where do they come up with this crap?] by 2015.

Under Obama’s proposed budget, this year’s deficit is projected to reach $1.5 trillion, or 10.3 percent of the GDP, according to the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office. It’s expected to decrease slightly to $1.3 trillion next year, or 8.9 percent of the GDP, and to 4 percent of the GDP by 2014. The CBO says it will resume rising again after that, however.

This kind of thinking followed through on is potentially catastrophic, both for recovery from the recession and for the last strongholds of the welfare state in the U.S., health care for the aged and Social Security. And yet, how can we resist St. Obama, Nobel Peace Prize winner, Bipartisan-in-Chief?

Marshall Auerback: President Obama has long decried our “out of control” government spending. He clearly gets this nonsense from the manic deficit terrorists who do not understand these accounting relationships that we’ve sketched out. As a result he continues to advocate that the government leads the charge by introducing austerity packages – just when the state of private demand is still stagnant or fragile. By perpetuating these myths, then, the President himself becomes part of the problem. . . .

Governments that issue debt in their own currency and do not promise to convert their currency into anything else can always “afford” to run deficits. Indeed, in this context government spending financially helps the private sector by injecting cash flows, providing liquid assets and raising the net worth of some or all private economic agents.

Unfortunately for Greece, Spain, and the other EU countries now and forever (or until us average working people yada yada . . .) victimized by global financial wealth suckers, they can’t issue debt in their own currency, having ceded that sovereignty for the borderless, deregulated, neoliberal dream.

So, okay, on the flip side what are the media/political elite celebrating now? That would be the recovery/’recovery’ of GM, which, responding to St. Obama demands that it cut wages and benefits and fire people in exchange for a government bailout – GM Bailout: Billions to Put People Out of Work – fired people and cut wages and benefits.

GM had 217,000 employees at the end of 2009, down 11 percent from the prior year.

Industry dropping wages and benefits and increasing unemployment, governments cutting deficits and the welfare state – the media elite celebrating the former and urging on or shouting TINA about the latter – how does all this produce anything except an ever-worsening spiral of economic misery?

I don’t know and they don’t care.

P.S.A good read, from the Irish front:

Who is shouldering the burden of the recession? The Irish Congress of Trade Unions has this month released a report which seeks to answer this question.

The report argues that at the heart of government policy is a `determination to load the full cost of the collapse onto working people and the poor.’

The consequence of this strategy, argues ICTU, `could turn Ireland into a social and economic wasteland for a decade or more.’

In support of their argument ICTU examine the impact of recent budgets on wages, social welfare and pensions. The report outlines the loss of real income experienced by workers and the unemployed while highlighting those sectors of society who are gaining from the recession.

In 2009 300 individuals held a person wealth of €50 billion. Despite this, the total tax take from these millionaires was just €73 million. In the same year the budget took €760 million from social welfare claimants in cuts.

In 2009 the share of national wealth going to wages fell by €5billion while profits from trade, farming and rents are expected to rise by €3 billion.

These figures, and the disparities they highlight argue ICTU, are the consequence of a government policy that is determined to lower the cost of labour. And there is more to come. . . .

Oh yeah, they have much more in store for us. Unless the average working people yada yada yada.

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GOP Caves

I hear several reports that the Republicans will cave on their Wall Street reform obstruction. There is some talk that a concession was made by the Democrats, but it’s not really clear WTF the Republicans are talking about. In any case, it smells like victory to me. We’ll have to see what the landscape will be on amendments. Will they need 50 or 60 votes to pass? I’d like to see the Brown-Kaufman Safe Banking Act adopted. And the Merkley-Levin amendment would be huge. Anyone aware of other important amendments floating out there?

Cashing in on Broken Dreams

For those of us trying desperately to wrap our heads around the Security and Exchange Commission’s allegations against Goldman Sachs, the Wall Street Journal’s recent article on the alleged fraud is a real boon.  The article is clear and concise (or at least as clear and concise as can be expected when a describing multi-stage transaction that involved more than 500,000 mortgages in 48 states), and, perhaps just as importantly, it frames the events in a way that recognizes that the economic collapse was a fundamentally human event—caused by human greed at the cost of human suffering, and leading to even greater human suffering.

According to the article, the allegations involve a massive bet, booked by Goldman Sachs and placed by hedge fund manager John Paulson, that would pay off if people across the country could not pay their mortgages.  He allegedly took a particular interest in adjustable rate subprime loans issued to people with poor credit scores, rightly believing that the people who had taken out these shady mortgages didn’t really understand how big their monthly payments would eventually become.  As we all now know, Mr. Paulson was all too right, and he profited to the tune of more than $1 billion as foreclosure rates shot up.
The Wall Street Journal does not explicitly question the stomach-turningly cynical notion at the core of the deal—believing that people had been fooled by unscrupulous lenders, the already obscenely wealthy Mr. Paulson looked for a big score rather than a way to help—but they do include the stories of several of the owners of these mortgages, including Gheorghe Bledea, a Romanian immigrant who spoke limited English and claims he was refused a more straightforward mortgage and lied to about the terms of the mortgage he did take, and Stella Onyeukwu, a nursing home assistant who took out a loan where the interest rate nearly doubled, jumping from 7.55% to 13.55% in its first two years.  People like Mr. Bledea and Ms. Onyeukwu are too often ignored in the conversation about toxic assets and collateralized debt obligations, but they are the heart and soul of the economic collapse.

Another choice that the Wall Street Journal makes in the article is to use the term “bet” in reference to Mr. Paulson’s transaction.  The term is an important one, because it brings the transaction, and the similar transactions that may be regulated by the financial reform bill currently being debated, into the world of regular people.  Most of us don’t understand derivatives and if or how they should be regulated, but we do understand that the Nevada Gaming Commission has a role in making sure that casinos don’t rip people off.  We’re happy that three-card monte games aren’t going on on city corners anymore, and, if we think about it for a minute, we wouldn’t want three-card monte rules being applied to our homes and personal savings.

Even if Goldman Sachs is found guilty, Mr. Bledea and Ms. Onyeukwu won’t get their houses back.  But, if we can redesign the rules and enforce them more rigorously, we may be able to ensure that next time people like Mr. Paulson won’t be able to put all their chips on human suffering and walk away a winner.

Read more at The Opportunity Agenda website.

GOP Still Blocking Financial Reforms

For the third straight day, the Republicans have refused to allow the Senate to debate the Wall Street reforms bill. In fact, things are getting worse. On Monday and Tuesday, we got 57 votes for cloture (58, really, because Reid changed his vote for procedural reasons). Today we got only 56 votes (because Byrd didn’t vote). There will be another cloture vote tomorrow. I have no idea where we go from there. Despite CNN’s report that Sen. Voinovich of Ohio will eventually vote to take up the reforms, he chose not to do so today. And despite TPM’s reporting that Minority Leader McConnell was resigned to defeat, his caucus stayed with him again.

One reason we’re seeing this rancid display is that Republicans continue to be more threatened by challenges from their right than they are in the general election. John McCain, for example, has seen his public approval numbers plummet 27 points since last September, but he still leads his likely Democratic opponent 49%-33%. As I mentioned yesterday, Sen. Bob Bennett of Utah is probably going to lose his job on May 8th when the state GOP has their convention and votes on who to put on the primary ballot. We’ve seen Gov. Charlie Crist of Florida get absolutely routed by a right-wing challenger in his bid to become a U.S. Senator. Under these circumstances there just isn’t much appetite among even modestly moderate Republicans to cooperate with Democrats on anything. It’s comforting to at least see members like John McCain lose support from Independents and Democrats as he lurches to the right, but the overall picture is beyond depressing.

Maybe the Results Party will prevail in November over the Party of Hell No, but I’m not seeing any signs of it, yet.

I guess I can console myself that whatever happens we won’t have Sam Brownback to kick around anymore.

Halliburton Implicated in Gulf Oil Spill

The worst oil spill in the history of the Gulf of Mexico is occurring as we speak. This 600 mile oil slick may very quickly rival the Exxon Valdez tanker spill as the greatest disaster in US oil industry history.

And at the center of this ecological and economic disaster created when the oil rig owned by British Petroleum a/k/a BP Petroleum drilling in 5000 feet of water exploded, and which has taken the lives of at least 11 oil rig workers (that we know about) is a company with whom we are all too familiar: Halliburton or as most of us like to refer to it, former Halliburton CEO Dick Cheney’s retirement fund.

NEW ORLEANS – The widow of a crew member killed in last week’s oil platform explosion in the Gulf of Mexico has filed a lawsuit accusing the companies that operated the rig with negligence, court documents showed Tuesday.

The suit was filed by Natalie Roshto against Transocean Ltd, British Petroleum and Halliburton after the blast that killed her husband Shane, a seaman on the Deepwater Horizon oil drilling rig.

According to Rear Admiral Mary Landry of the US Coast Guard:

I am going to say right up front: the BP efforts to secure the blowout preventer have not yet been successful,” Rear Admiral Mary Landry told a press conference Tuesday, referring to a 450-tonne machine that could seal the well.

Asked to compare the accident to the notorious 1989 Exxon Valdez oil tanker disaster, Landry declined but said: “If we don’t secure the well, yes, this will be one of the most significant oil spills in US history.”

What did your teacher tell you in school when you were a small child nearly every day? Safety Comes First! What message does business try to drill into their employees (their low level employees anyway) on a regular basis? Safety is Job 1. What auto company desperately apologized to its customers worldwide when a manufacturing defect led to the deaths of a 34 people and accident damage to hundreds of vehicles(out of tens of millions sold) over the course of the last ten years? Toyota.

Yet here we have Halliburton, with its unparalleled record of success at screwing the pooch when it comes to worker and environmental, once more firmly entrenched (no pun intended) in another environmental nightmare. Here are some examples of Halliburton’s record of concern for human beings (as opposes to corporate earnings) for your elucidation:

It tends to lose highly radioactive material:

For the second time in two years, hazardous radioactive material owned by Halliburton has gone missing. The material, known as americium, is used for drilling oil. It disappeared last October while being transported from Russia to Houston. Although it was lost for four months, Halliburton and the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) insisted the public was never in any danger. The material was found this week at a Boston freight facility after an exhaustive search by the NRC, the Department of Homeland Security and the Federal Bureau of Investigation.

In December 2002, Halliburton reported the disappearance of two radioactive devices from its Nigerian operations, sparking fears of a terrorist attack. The devices later turned up at a steel recycling plant in Bavaria, Germany, but nobody knows how or why they were shipped there. The Nigerian government was dismayed over Halliburton’s refusal to return the devices or explain the disappearance. So, the government banned the firm from receiving new contracts, citing a “negligent” safety record.

People who work for it tend to die because it plays fast and loose with the lives of its employees in war zones:

Government contractor Halliburton and its subsidiaries used a fuel delivery convoy as a decoy on an Iraqi highway resulting in an attack by insurgents that killed several civilian employees, according to a wrongful-death suit filed in California federal court.

A complaint by plaintiff April Johnson, the daughter of truck driver Tony Johnson, who died in the attack, accuses Halliburton and subsidiaries Kellogg Brown & Root and Service Employees International Inc. of knowingly and intentionally deploying her father’s fuel delivery convoy as a decoy in a hostile area.

The suit alleges the ploy was used to ensure the safe passage of another convoy traveling to the same destination, the Baghdad International Airport.

It tries to keep its own female employees who were raped by other company officials from having their day in court:

The Los Angeles Times reports that Halliburton is asking the Supreme Court to reverse a ruling by the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals that allowed Ms. Jamie Leigh Jones’ Halliburton KBR rape case to go to trial. Ms. Jones claims that she was raped while she was working for the company in Baghdad. KBR was Halliburton’s subsidiary until 2007. They are now two separate corporate entities that are currently involved in this case.

Halliburton claims that the contract signed by Ms. Jones and other workers hired by the company indicated that claims must be resolved through arbitration, not trials. However, the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans ruled in Ms. Jones’ favor in September. They ruled that she can proceed with a court trial of her case. […]

This is not the first time that an employee has had a rape claim against the company. Halliburton KBR came under fire for another case that involved Ms. Tracy Barker, who was allegedly raped while working as a civilian contractor for the company.

There are literally so many examples of this type of mistreatment of its employees and other “civilians” as a result of Halliburton and its subsidiaries’ shady (and shoddy) business practices that I could compile a list that would take weeks to complete.

But all of those examples are unrelated to Halliburton’s oil drilling business you say? All right then, let us examine that record, shall we? here’s one case that went to the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals (based in Texas) where Halliburton was adjudged guilty of gross negligence in the blowout of test stem drilling of a natural gas well:

After the third test was completed [by Halliburton personnel] and as the IPO valve was being removed from the test string, pressure in the Well created a kick. The drill crew brought the Well under control by tightening the connections on the IPO valve, thereby shutting in the Well. During this time, the IPO valve acted as a blowout preventer, a purpose for which it was not intended. Over the next one and a half hours, completion fluid was pumped into the well, causing the pressure to rise. As a result, the single pin in the IPO sheared unexpectedly, causing its ports to open and allowing a blowout of natural gas into the atmosphere. All personnel were safely evacuated from the rig.

It is undisputed that if the IPO had been pinned as intended, the blowout would not have occurred. After 19 days, the blowout was brought under control and the Well was placed into production.

Fortunately for Halliburton, that time the 5th Circuit reversed a factual finding of the trial court (a rare instance indeed, as any attorney can tell you) and it was only found to have committed “ordinary” negligence, not gross negligence. Thus Halliburton was able to enforce an indemnity contract to protect itself from all liability. Lucky boys, indeed.

Halliburton is also a leading proponent, promoter, developer and employer of hydrofracking, a drilling process whereby “a fluid is injected at high pressure into an oil or a natural gas deposit to fracture the rock and release the liquid or gas below.

This process is highly dangerous as it uses toxic chemicals, large amounts of water and “releases radioactive materials and other hazardous substances” into the fractured rock formations where the chemicals can leach into the local groundwater. It is a process considered by many to be dangerous to the environment and to the quality of water supplies used by human populations with attendant risks to their health and well being.

Fracking chemicals are escaping into groundwater, critics say, and in several states there have been reports of fouled water and increased illness since drilling began. In addition, naturally occurring toxic substances such as arsenic are released from underground by fracturing and have been found at elevated levels near some drilling operations.

There are more than 200 “introduced” chemicals used in fracturing but details of how they are used are not published by energy companies. They are not required to disclose it because of an exemption to a federal clean water law granted to the oil and gas industry in 2005. That exemption has made it hard for critics to prove their case.

Drilling chemicals may cause many illnesses including cancer, fertility problems and neurological disorders, critics say. […]

… The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency found 14 “contaminants of concern” in 11 private wells in the central Wyoming farming community of Pavillion, an area with about 250 gas wells. The August report did not identify the source of the contamination but is conducting more tests and is expected to reach a conclusion by spring 2010. In Pennsylvania, at least two privately conducted water tests near gas drilling have also found chemical contamination. One set of tests is being used in a lawsuit by a landowner against the gas company. […]

Residents complain of water that is discolored, foul-smelling, bad-tasting, and in some cases even black. Some say drinking it causes sickness and bathing in it causes skin rashes. In a few cases, water has become flammable because methane has “migrated” from the drilling operations to water wells, a fact that has been confirmed by regulators in Pennsylvania. Many low-income people who live near gas rigs drink bottled water, and some have their water supplied by the gas company.

So how did Halliburton get around the Safe Drinking Water Act to use “fracking” to contaminate water supplies with known carcinogenic compounds and other dangerous chemicals? Thanks to Dick Cheney and his friends in Congress, that’s how. He got what is known as the “Halliburton loophole” to the Safe Drinking Water Act passed through Congress in 2005 (you know, back when the Republicans controlled Congress and all was right with the world?) which permits hydrofracking to occur today, perhaps in a community near you.

Fracking’s long term effects are still not well known, but I sure wouldn’t want to live anywhere near where this process is being used to drill for oil and gas, would you? Not when I saw this:

Not that Halliburton ever waited for Congress to act in order to use illegal drilling methods to contaminate groundwater in pursuit of profits, as Henry Waxman recently discovered:

In an earlier investigation, Waxman had already learned that Halliburton had violated a 2003 nonbinding agreement with the government in which the company promised not to use diesel fuel in the mix when extracting from certain wells. Halliburton pumped hundreds of thousands of gallons of toxic, diesel-containing liquids into the ground, potentially contaminating drinking water.

According to the Department of Energy, there were more than 418,000 gas wells in the U.S. as of 2006. Since the Environmental Protection Agency lacks authority to investigate and regulate fracking, the extent of the pollution is unknown.

I don’t know how much blame can be laid at the feet of Halliburton for the disaster occurring in the Gulf of Mexico, but UI do know what the widow of one Halliburton worker is alleging in her lawsuit about the role it played in the explosion that killed her husband:

Her lawsuit charges that Halliburton, an oil services industry firm which prior to the explosion “was engaged in cementing operations of the well and wellcap… improperly and negligently performed these duties, which was a cause of the explosion.”

Those are pretty bold and stark allegations of wrongdoing. Yet given Halliburton’s track record, can we dismiss them out of hand? Hardly. On the contrary, I suspect the more we learn in the coming days, the more Halliburton will be implicated as one of the principal responsible parties for this catastrophe of unprecedented proportions which may shape the future lives of millions of Gulf Coast residents for decades to come.

Race & Reality, Pt. 1

Tim Wise says what I was thinking a few weeks ago: What if the tea party was black?


Activists Take Part In Second Amendment March In Washington

Let’s play a game, shall we? The name of the game is called “Imagine.” The way it’s played is simple: we’ll envision recent happenings in the news, but then change them up a bit. Instead of envisioning white people as the main actors in the scenes we’ll conjure – the ones who are driving the action – we’ll envision black folks or other people of color instead. The object of the game is to imagine the public reaction to the events or incidents, if the main actors were of color, rather than white. Whoever gains the most insight into the workings of race in America, at the end of the game, wins.

So let’s begin.

Imagine that hundreds of black protesters were to descend upon Washington DC and Northern Virginia, just a few miles from the Capitol and White House, armed with AK-47s, assorted handguns, and ammunition. And imagine that some of these protesters – the black protesters – spoke of the need for political revolution, and possibly even armed conflict in the event that laws they didn’t like were enforced by the government? Would these protesters — these black protesters with guns — be seen as brave defenders of the Second Amendment, or would they be viewed by most whites as a danger to the republic? What if they were Arab-Americans? Because, after all, that’s what happened recently when white gun enthusiasts descended upon the nation’s capital, arms in hand, and verbally announced their readiness to make war on the country’s political leaders if the need arose.

Imagine that white members of Congress, while walking to work, were surrounded by thousands of angry black people, one of whom proceeded to spit on one of those congressmen for not voting the way the black demonstrators desired. Would the protesters be seen as merely patriotic Americans voicing their opinions, or as an angry, potentially violent, and even insurrectionary mob? After all, this is what white Tea Party protesters did recently in Washington.

Actually, a coworker and I played that game a week ago. when hundreds of gun activists came to D.C.

Except our version went something like this: What would happen if we took, say, a couple hundred nicely dressed black men, to a gun show out in rural Anywhere, U.S.A.? What if we came in a couple of busloads, legally purchased firearms and left in a quiet and orderly fashion, just as we’d come. What kind of news coverage, if any, would we get?

Now, what if what if hundreds of angry and armed black protesters descended on Washington D.C.? What if there was even a movement of African Americans almost entirely based on and driven by anger?

The answers to these questions aren’t difficult: “No,” “No,” and “None.”

So, why is that true of the tea party movement?

There is no one simple answer, and certainly not one that can be summed up in one blog post (which is why this one will likely be a series of two or three). But we can start with the anger exhibited by some in the movement.

Whatever its causes are (and there are many arguably legitimate causes), there are two things that distinguish the tea partier’s anger from that of any other group, and account for media attention that it’s actual numbers don’t seem to justify. One is that the importance or significance afforded the tea partiers’ anger is directly related to their demographics.

Tea Party supporters are wealthier and more well-educated than the general public, and are no more or less afraid of falling into a lower socioeconomic class, according to the latest New York Times/CBS News poll.

The 18 percent of Americans who identify themselves as Tea Party supporters tend to be Republican, white, male, married and older than 45.

They hold more conservative views on a range of issues than Republicans generally. They are also more likely to describe themselves as “very conservative” and President Obama as “very liberal.”

And while most Republicans say they are “dissatisfied” with Washington, Tea Party supporters are more likely to classify themselves as “angry.”

The other, as I wrote during the 2008 election, is that anger is a privilege in our culture.

I’ve noticed something. No one seems to seems to question whether the angry white men that swept Newt Gingrich and the Republican majority into power in 1994 were justified in their anger. It’s assumed that whatever they’re angry about they have a right to be angry about.

But not so for the so called “angry black women.” Their anger is somehow less “real” and less justified. Perhaps that that’s because being angry is a privilege in this culture. Anger, if you are a minority, is dangerous. If you are a woman, or a person of color, gay, etc., your movements must be calm, your voice must be modulated, and your anger must ever show.

Joy is permitted. You may sing, dance, and celebrate in your joy. It is a performance, sometimes a command performance, demanded of you even in the midst of despair. Suffering is permitted. It, too, is familiar and non-threatening. It can even be reaffirming to those looking upon it; reaffirming their power and privilege. Sadness is permitted. You are allowed to mourn, and to moan, keen, and cry in your mourning. Fear is permitted. Your fear — wide-eyed screaming of stunned silence — is familiar, and recognizable.

You are allowed all of the above, especially in response to another’s more “real” anger, but not your own anger. Anger implies entitlement — to material goods, to power and privilege, or a certain kind of treatment. Anger implies a right to expect something, and is a justifiable response to not receiving one’s due. And you aren’t due that which you’d have a right to be angry about having been denied.

It is, in part, about who gets to be angry and whose anger matters, and it’s an American reality that neither candidate- nor President Obama can even escape.

But if Obama wants to get elected president of the United States, getting mad is the last thing he can afford to do. He may be the Democrats’ standard bearer, but he is still—as the McCain camp consistently points out with their unsubtle “not like you” messaging—a black man.

This is a struggle that black men—especially those of us who work in professional settings and want to remain there—grapple with daily: Showing our anger, no matter how justified, is a death sentence. We feel outrage. We want to say and demonstrate our daily frustrations, but we don’t dare because we know that the release of our pent-up emotions can’t ever be explained after the fact.

And so it goes for Obama in his quest for the highest prize in all of America. We won’t know whether the nation is ready to cast aside enough historic prejudices to elect a qualified, smart, articulate and family-oriented black president until after all the votes are cast. For the first time in U.S. history, the possibility exists.

But, let me assure you, there’s no need to hold the vote if Obama blows his stack before then. It might satisfy some Obama supporters to see him put McCain-Palin in their places, call them out John Wayne-style and pummel them into submission. For a quick, exhilarating minute, it would feel like the 21st century equivalent of Joe Louis’ 1936 knockout of Nazi Germany’s Max Schmeling.

But it would be political suicide.

Most Americans, about 98% of us, can’t escape or insulate ourselves from the financial crisis. And most of us, about 98% of us, are waiting for this recover we keep hearing about to pay us a visit. Thus, at least 92% of us are unhappy with the economy and our declining standards of living.

Two recent studies by the Pew Research Center — “Health Care Reform — Can’t Live With It Or Without It” and “A Year Or More: The High Cost of Long-Term Unemployment” paint the picture. [Via Hiram Lee.]

  • 85% of us say jobs are difficult to find locally, up from 80% in 2009
  • 54% of us report that someone in our household has been jobless this past year
  • 21% of us have lost our jobs or been laid off, up from 18% in 2009
  • 15 % of us have dealt with reduced hours and/or pay, up from 11% last year
  • 24% of us report problems paying rent/mortgages
  • 70% of us have had one or more of these job problems in the past year, up from 59%
  • Most of us are more worried about jobs (45%) than the deficit (22%), even among Republicans (39% economy/ 35% deficit)
  • 15 million of us are unemployed, and 3.4 million (23%) of that number have been jobless for a year or more

So, if the tea partiers are riled up about that reality, well, so are most of us.

But to hear the tea partiers — who make up about 4% of the population — tell it, there’s still been far too much attention paid to minority concerns, and not enough paid to, well, them.

Now, what if what if hundreds of angry and armed black protesters descended on Washington D.C.? What if there was even a movement of African Americans almost entirely based on and driven by anger?

The answers to these questions aren’t difficult: "No," "No," and "None."

So, why is that true of the tea party movement?

There is no one simple answer, and certainly not one that can be summed up in one blog post (which is why this one will likely be a series of two or three). But we can start with the anger exhibited by some in the movement.

Whatever its causes are (and there are many arguably legitimate causes), there are two things that distinguish the tea partier’s anger from that of any other group, and account for media attention that it’s actual numbers don’t seem to justify. One is that the importance or significance afforded the tea partiers’ anger is directly related to their demographics.

Tea Party supporters are wealthier and more well-educated than the general public, and are no more or less afraid of falling into a lower socioeconomic class, according to the latest New York Times/CBS News poll.

The 18 percent of Americans who identify themselves as Tea Party supporters tend to be Republican, white, male, married and older than 45.

They hold more conservative views on a range of issues than Republicans generally. They are also more likely to describe themselves as “very conservative” and President Obama as “very liberal.”

And while most Republicans say they are “dissatisfied” with Washington, Tea Party supporters are more likely to classify themselves as “angry.”

The other, as I wrote during the 2008 election, is that anger is a privilege in our culture.

I’ve noticed something. No one seems to seems to question whether the angry white men that swept Newt Gingrich and the Republican majority into power in 1994 were justified in their anger. It’s assumed that whatever they’re angry about they have a right to be angry about.

But not so for the so called “angry black women.” Their anger is somehow less “real” and less justified. Perhaps that that’s because being angry is a privilege in this culture. Anger, if you are a minority, is dangerous. If you are a woman, or a person of color, gay, etc., your movements must be calm, your voice must be modulated, and your anger must ever show.

Joy is permitted. You may sing, dance, and celebrate in your joy. It is a performance, sometimes a command performance, demanded of you even in the midst of despair. Suffering is permitted. It, too, is familiar and non-threatening. It can even be reaffirming to those looking upon it; reaffirming their power and privilege. Sadness is permitted. You are allowed to mourn, and to moan, keen, and cry in your mourning. Fear is permitted. Your fear — wide-eyed screaming of stunned silence — is familiar, and recognizable.

You are allowed all of the above, especially in response to another’s more “real” anger, but not your own anger. Anger implies entitlement — to material goods, to power and privilege, or a certain kind of treatment. Anger implies a right to expect something, and is a justifiable response to not receiving one’s due. And you aren’t due that which you’d have a right to be angry about having been denied.

It is, in part, about who gets to be angry and whose anger matters, and it’s an American reality that neither candidate- nor President Obama can even escape.

But if Obama wants to get elected president of the United States, getting mad is the last thing he can afford to do. He may be the Democrats’ standard bearer, but he is still—as the McCain camp consistently points out with their unsubtle "not like you" messaging—a black man.

This is a struggle that black men—especially those of us who work in professional settings and want to remain there—grapple with daily: Showing our anger, no matter how justified, is a death sentence. We feel outrage. We want to say and demonstrate our daily frustrations, but we don’t dare because we know that the release of our pent-up emotions can’t ever be explained after the fact.

And so it goes for Obama in his quest for the highest prize in all of America. We won’t know whether the nation is ready to cast aside enough historic prejudices to elect a qualified, smart, articulate and family-oriented black president until after all the votes are cast. For the first time in U.S. history, the possibility exists.

But, let me assure you, there’s no need to hold the vote if Obama blows his stack before then. It might satisfy some Obama supporters to see him put McCain-Palin in their places, call them out John Wayne-style and pummel them into submission. For a quick, exhilarating minute, it would feel like the 21st century equivalent of Joe Louis’ 1936 knockout of Nazi Germany’s Max Schmeling.

But it would be political suicide.

Most Americans, about 98% of us, can’t escape or insulate ourselves from the financial crisis. And most of us, about 98% of us, are waiting for this recover we keep hearing about to pay us a visit. Thus, at least 92% of us are unhappy with the economy and our declining standards of living.

Two recent studies by the Pew Research Center — "Health Care Reform — Can’t Live With It Or Without It" and "A Year Or More: The High Cost of Long-Term Unemployment" paint the picture. [Via Hiram Lee.]

  • 85% of us say jobs are difficult to find locally, up from 80% in 2009
  • 54% of us report that someone in our household has been jobless this past year
  • 21% of us have lost our jobs or been laid off, up from 18% in 2009
  • 15 % of us have dealt with reduced hours and/or pay, up from 11% last year
  • 24% of us report problems paying rent/mortgages
  • 70% of us have had one or more of these job problems in the past year, up from 59%
  • Most of us are more worried about jobs (45%) than the deficit (22%), even among Republicans (39% economy/ 35% deficit)
  • 15 million of us are unemployed, and 3.4 million (23%) of that number have been jobless for a year or more

So, if the tea partiers are riled up about that reality, well, so are most of us.

But to hear the tea partiers — who make up about 4% of the population — tell it, there’s still been far too much attention paid to minority concerns, and not enough paid to, well, them.

(To be continued…)

Sarkozy: Netanyahu’s Foot-dragging Is Unacceptable

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Sarkozy: Netanyahu’s foot-dragging on peace process is unacceptable

(Haaretz) – French President Nicolas Sarkozy has told his Israeli counterpart Shimon Peres that he is disappointed with Benjamin Netanyahu and finds it hard to understand the prime minister’s diplomatic plan. Sarkozy made his comments at the Elysee Palace two weeks ago.

The latest criticism follows the diplomatic crisis between Netanyahu and U.S. President Barack Obama and the subsequent fallout between Netanyahu and German Chancellor Angela Merkel.

High-level Israeli officials briefed on the Peres-Sarkozy meeting called it “very difficult”. The officials, who asked to remain anonymous, said Sarkozy began criticizing Netanyahu at the start of the discussion and continued for around 15 minutes.

Sarkozy’s remarks were only slightly more measured than the condemnation he expressed over Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman last summer. “You must get rid of that man”, Sarkozy told Netanyahu at the time.

Sarkozy met with Obama the week before in Washington; the effect of the encounter was evident in the French leader’s discussion with Peres. Sarkozy expressed frustration at the continuing stagnation of the peace process and assigned much of the responsibility to Netanyahu.

“I’m disappointed with him,” he reportedly told Peres. “With the friendship, sympathy and commitment we have toward Israel, we still can’t accept this foot-dragging. I don’t understand where Netanyahu is going or what he wants.”


Peres and Sarkozy met in Paris for talks (AP)

After listening to his host’s remarks in full, Peres reportedly replied: “I’m aware that trust between Israel and the Palestinians has been undermined, but Israel has reached out its hand in peace and adopted the two-state principle, and Israel is working to strengthen and develop the Palestinian economy. There is no alternative to returning to the negotiating table as soon as possible.”

The Israeli officials described Sarkozy’s remarks as part of a broader trend among Israel’s European and American allies amid the lack of diplomatic progress in the region.

STAUNCH SUPPORTER ANGELA MERKEL CONDEMNS ISRAEL’S POLICY

Amid the tension with the U.S. administration, even Israel’s European allies have begun criticizing the Netanyahu administration. Merkel, widely viewed as one of Israel’s most solid supporters in Europe, recently issued a public condemnation of Netanyahu and Israel’s wider policy vis-a-vis the Palestinians.

Last month Merkel accused Netanyahu of distorting the nature of a telephone discussion they had had following the uproar over Israel’s authorization of construction in the East Jerusalem neighborhood of Ramat Shlomo.

Meanwhile, Italian diplomats have said Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi’s unqualified support for Israel on the Palestinian issue has also begun to wane. “Netanyahu spoke with Berlusconi twice recently by phone, and each time said he would surprise him on the Palestinian issue, but this doesn’t seem to be in the offing,” one of the diplomats said.

In Washington, Obama continued to assert this week that his administration aims to push both parties back to the negotiating table. On Monday, he told a Washington summit of entrepreneurs from Muslim-majority countries that “So long as I am president, the United States will never waver in pursuit of a two-state solution that ensures the rights of both Israelis and Palestinians.”

In an op-ed yesterday in the New York Times, Roger Cohen quoted U.S. special envoy George Mitchell as saying, “There has never been in the White House a president that is so committed on this issue.”  

Internal Likud struggle with a marginal, extreme minority

(Ynet News) – Netanyahu spoke at a Likud Central Committee meeting in Tel Aviv’s Exhibition Grounds. Most of the conference was dedicated to the internal Likud struggle with the supporters of party hardliner Moshe Feiglin.

Netanyahu reiterated the message that “the last thing we need right now is to enter an internal battle inside the Likud. We must not divert our attention from handling the State’s problems.”

Netanyahu said he would like to convene the Likud’s Central Committee in 20 months. “Unfortunately,” he added, “there is a marginal, extreme minority which does not want this, which is trying to frighten elected representatives and choose a way which is alien to us and does not represent the Likud.

“We are not a radical, messianic movement, but a national, liberal movement. We do not support refusing orders and do not oppose the rule of law. There is a marginal, extreme movement trying to shatter the unity and preach to me and to (Ministers) Benny Begin and (Moshe) Bogie Yaalon.

“They are telling us, you are not protecting Jerusalem. The entire world knows exactly how much we are protecting Jerusalem. Soon they will try to teach us about heritage sites, about the Bible,” the prime minister said.

Covenant between the State of Israel and Keren Kayemeth LeIsrael (KKL-JNF)

"But I will not let myself be reduced to silence."

FANRPAN: Working to connect farmers, researchers, and policy makers in Africa

This is the first in a three-part series about the Food, Agriculture, and Natural Resources Policy Analysis Network. Cross posted from Worldwatch Institute’s Nourishing the Planet.

The Food, Agriculture, and Natural Resources Policy Analysis Network (FANRPAN) lives up to its name by linking farmers,  businesses, academia, researchers, donors, and national and regional governments. “One thing that we {Africa} fail to do is form coalitions for a common cause,” says Dr. Lindiwe Sibanda, the CEO of FANRPAN. But by connecting rural farmers directly to the private sector, to policy-makers, and to the agricultural research community, they’re trying to build a food secure Africa.

FANRPAN’s has national nodes in thirteen countries that help bring its members together, with a national secretariat hosted by an existing national institution in each country that has a mandate for increasing agricultural research and advocacy.

Another problem that plagues Africa, according to Dr. Sibanda, is that “we don’t know how to learn from the local.”  But she says “farmers know what to do” when it comes to dealing with climate change and other issues that impact agriculture in sub-Saharan Africa. As a result, FANRPAN works to create dialogue and allow exchange of ideas directly between farmers in the field, researchers in laboratories, and policy makers in conference rooms and parliaments throughout Africa.

FANRPAN’s projects include everything from helping improve access to markets for women farmers through its Women Accessing Realigned Markets (WARM) project to helping develop and strengthen the Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa (COMESA) Regional Comprehensive Africa Agriculture Development Programme (CAADP) Compact (See In Eastern and Southern Africa, Improving Trade and Identifying Investment Opportunities and Creating Game Plans for Investment and Policy to Improve Food Security.) They also recently completed the Africa-Wide Civil Society Climate Change Initiative for Policy Dialogues that brought together African NGOs and farmers groups at the United Nations Conference on Climate Change last December. And the Strategies for Adapting to Climate Change in Rural sub-Saharan Africa, to help the most vulnerable populations deal with climate change.

And while Dr. Sibanda says investment in research is important, “it’s not the panacea. For me, it’s about people driving investments.”

Stay tuned for more about FANRPAN’s projects later this week.

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