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Nov
23
2011
0

After the Supercommittee: Round Two

The supercommittee is down for the count, and everyone from the Tea Party to Occupy Wall Street, and even Grover Norquist is credited with throwing the knockout punch. It’s tempting to do a victory dance, but we’d better make it a short one.

Don’t get me wrong. We’ve earned it. As Van Jones wrote, it’s not often that progressives “battle the concentrated forces of corporations and their armies of lobbyists to a stalemate.” So go ahead and celebrate a job well done. But make it quick, because though we’ve just won this round, the bell signaling the start of the next will soon ring.

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Written by terrance in: current events,economy,politics |
Nov
22
2011
0

Republican Leaders In Clown Make-Up

Sure, you’ve seen it already. Yes, this is redundant. But nonetheless.

Written by terrance in: current events,humor,politics |
Nov
21
2011
0

Meet the One Percent .. And the 99 Percent

Being in the 99 percent, and living in Washington, DC, is to live and work in close proximity to the 1 percent. (Especially if you work in Capitol Hill.) When you do so on a daily basis, it’s easy to forget that — as F. Scott Fitzgerald once wrote — “The rich are different from you and me.”

Today, I came across two web campaigns that serve as a reminder of just how different we’re talking about here.

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Written by terrance in: current events,economy |
Nov
18
2011
0

Digest for November 18th

Here are some of the people writing about some of the stuff I wish I had time to write about, for November 18th from 14:38 to 16:39:

  • Priceless | Talking Points Memo

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  • Occupy: Out of Zuccotti Park and into the streets – The Washington Post

    "There is a central idea, by the way: Our financial system has been warped to serve the interests of a privileged few at the expense of everyone else.

    Is this true? I believe the evidence suggests that it is. Others might disagree. The important thing is that because of the activism of the Occupy Wall Street protests — however naive, however all-over-the-map — issues of unfairness and inequality are being discussed."

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  • Disenfranchise No More – NYTimes.com

    "Mississippi voters just approved a new law requiring voters to show photo identification at the polls. But that law will not go into effect immediately, thanks to the Voting Rights Act. Instead Mississippi will get in line behind Texas and South Carolina as the Department of Justice examines each state’s voter ID laws, in a process known as “preclearance.” The Justice Department will allow each law to go into effect only if the state can show its law will not have a racially discriminatory purpose or effect. Such proof may be hard to come by: a recent study by The Associated Press found that African-American voters in South Carolina would be much harder hit by that state’s ID law than white voters because they often don’t have the right kind of identification.

    But this important preclearance procedure may not be around much longer. Before the next election season rolls around, the Supreme Court could well strike down this provision of the law as an unconstitutional infringement on states’ rights, leaving minority voters essentially unprotected from efforts to diminish their voting power. Congress needs to act before then to protect voting rights everywhere."

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  • You Cannot Evict an Idea | The Nation

    "The raid of Occupy Wall Street by the NYPD did not come as a complete surprise. Ever since Mayor Bloomberg and the owners of Liberty Square, Brookfield Properties, threatened to toss out the Occupation on October 14 under the pretext of sanitary concerns, organizers have been preparing for this moment—canvassing other sites and drafting legal arguments defending the people’s freedom of assembly. But still, the military-style incursion into Liberty shortly after 1 am on November 15 came with a brutality and premeditation that literally took the Occupiers’ breath away. Given just minutes to vacate, protesters who peacefully resisted—as well as those who were just slow to act—were pepper-sprayed, beaten with billy clubs, shoved, cuffed and tear-gassed. In the end, around 200 were arrested, including City Councilman Ydanis Rodriguez, who was bloodied by a strike to the head. Along with sleeping bags and tents, the Occupation’s intellectual tools—laptops, posters and the 5,000 books in the People’s Library—were thrown into dumpsters and carted away. But the ideas contained in those books, in those computers, in the Occupiers themselves will not so easily be tossed aside."

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  • Bankers evicted from nation’s economy: The mayor’s statement. – Slate Magazine

    "STATEMENT FROM THE MAYOR

    At 1 o’clock this morning, on my orders, the New York City Police Department and Department of Sanitation removed the bankers from the U.S. economy.

    The Constitution that created the economy requires that it be open to the public for the pursuit of their livelihood 24 hours a day. Ever since the occupation began, that law has not been complied with, as the economy has been taken over by bankers, making it unavailable to anyone else. "

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  • Anger Sowing Seeds of a New Consumer Movement

    As we all know, America is angry. Really angry. To put it in pop culture terms, we've moved from the vaguely inspiring agita of Peter Finch in Network to the wild-eyed, primal-scream rage of Sam Kinison in Back to School. When we pay attention to politics, we get peeved at Congress and the presidential candidates. When we tune into sports, we're annoyed with squabbling players and owners. When we turn on the news, we fume at the smug pundits. And when it comes to the economy, we're in a tizzy at big corporations. Most of this indignation is nothing new; it is atavistic fury expressed in the modern vernacular. Yet, one strand of our anger–the kind directed at big business–may be truly novel, as our chagrin is no longer just that ancient animosity toward excessive corporate power. Instead, it has also become a personal disdain toward firms we deal with on a daily basis.

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  • Not Heritage, Definitely Hate

    Insofar that I’m actually angry about the Confederate flag, it has less to do with the content of the symbol and more to do with the notion that it represents “heritage” and not “hate.” If the flag is a representation of Southern pride, then by definition, it excludes me from any membership in the tribe, so to speak. By virtue of our long history on the land —as slaves, sharecroppers, or otherwise — black Southerners have as strong a claim to Southern heritage as anyone else. Indeed, it’s simply true that the South wouldn’t actually be “The South” without the contributions of its countless black residents.

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  • Robert Creamer: Mayors Who Attempt to End Occupy Protests Are on the Wrong Side of History

    The one thing we know from history is that once a movement that is rooted in a demand for justice has taken root, attempts to destroy it with brute force almost always make it stronger. And those who attempt to destroy these movements almost always fail.

    This is a moment when mayors across the country need to look into their mirror, and decide which side they're on.

    Whatever their intentions, the mayors who have acted to end the Occupy protests around America over the last few days are on the wrong side of history.

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    The bottom line is that the Occupy protests are disruptive. That's the idea. That's the idea of any serious protest movement: to be disruptive — to stop business as usual — to force the media and the society at large to focus on a critical, fundamental problem.

      

    When Rosa Parks refused to go to the back of the bus in Montgomery she was being "disruptive." So was the bus boycott that followed.

      

    When the sit-down strikers that founded the United Auto Workers refused to leave the plants in Flint, Michigan in the 1930's, they were being "disruptive."

      

    When Gandhi led tens of thousands of Indians in the civil disobedience that ultimately toppled British Imperialism, he was being "disruptive."

      

    When thousands of Wisconsin workers refused to leave the State Capitol in Madison earlier this year, they were being "disruptive."

      

    When the people of Egypt occupied Tahrir Square in Cairo they were being "disruptive."

      

    The protesters who dumped tea into Boston harbor in 1773 were being "disruptive."

      

    The idea of the Occupy Movement is to occupy Wall Street and other public spaces to demand that American government and business pay attention to the elephant in the room — the exploding inequality in wealth and power between the 99% and the 1%.

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    Protest movements that change history are always "disruptive" of the status quo. The mayors who are so concerned that Occupy is "disruptive" should instead turn their attention to the level of disruption caused by Wall Street, when its greed and reckless speculation collapsed the world economy cost eight million Americans their jobs and caused a recession that has lasted over three years. Now that's "disruption." And that's exactly what the Occupy Wall Street Movement is demanding be changed.

      

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    The Occupy Wall Street Movement is not just a group of random protesters. They have spawned a critically important historic, worldwide movement that is born of the most fundamental problem facing American society — the future of the American Dream — the future of the middle class. The future of democracy.

      

    Years from now people will look back at video of police in riot gear rousting Occupy protesters, whom they will remember as heroes of American democracy.

      

    The question for these mayors is what they want their grandkids to think of them as they watch that video.

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    The one thing we know from history is that once a movement that is rooted in a demand for justice has taken root, attempts to destroy it with brute force almost always make it stronger. And those who attempt to destroy these movements almost always fail.

      

    This is a moment when mayors across the country need to look into their mirror, and decide which side they're on.

      

    Whatever their intentions, the mayors who have acted to end the Occupy protests around America over the last few days are on the wrong side of history.

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    </li>

    </ul>

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  • Why We Need Occupy Wall Street

    "Today—the same day that New York’s Mayor Bloomberg had his cops clear Zuccotti Park—Richard Fisher, the president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, called for breaking up America’s biggest banks, calling them “too dangerous to permit.” Also today, Warren Buffett, in an interview posted on the Business Wire of Berkshire Hathaway, his company, continued his criticism of American plutocracy. “Through the tax code, there has been class warfare waged, and my class has won,” Buffett said. “It’s been a rout. You have seen a period where American workers generally have gone no place, and where the really super rich as a group increased their incomes five for one in this rarified atmosphere.”

    All of which suggests that Occupy Wall Street has already been a stunning success in changing the nation’s public discourse"

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    Today—the same day that New York’s Mayor Bloomberg had his cops clear Zuccotti Park—Richard Fisher, the president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, called for breaking up America’s biggest banks, calling them “too dangerous to permit.” Also today, Warren Buffett, in an interview posted on the Business Wire of Berkshire Hathaway, his company, continued his criticism of American plutocracy. “Through the tax code, there has been class warfare waged, and my class has won,” Buffett said. “It’s been a rout. You have seen a period where American workers generally have gone no place, and where the really super rich as a group increased their incomes five for one in this rarified atmosphere.”

     

    All of which suggests that Occupy Wall Street has already been a stunning success in changing the nation’s public discourse. Not that Fisher and Buffett hadn’t criticized our economic policies well before OWS set up shop in Zuccotti Park, but they are now not just rich and powerful voices crying out in the wilderness. As the following post from Politico’s Ben Smith illustrates, OWS really has altered what the media talk about—the chart measures a Nexis search of print stories, Web stories, and broadcast transcripts that used the term “income inequality,” measured by week:

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    <div><div>In other words, we need Occupy Wall Street to keep on keeping on and to inspire us to lean on our elected representatives to stop cosseting the rich and start rebuilding the nation.</div></div>

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Written by terrance in: daily digest |
Nov
18
2011
0

Well-Behaved Movements Seldom Make History

Almost since the Occupy Wall Street movement began, everyone from pundits to the person-in-the-street have offered their $0.02 on what the OWS movement “should” do next. The number of columns and blog posts offering such advice naturally increased after the midnight sweep of Zuccotti Park, complete with media black-out. And they will probably not subside even after the OWS movement’s successful nationwide day of action.

The advice is almost always the same: Do something else.

(more…)

Written by terrance in: current events,economy,politics |
Nov
16
2011
0

Digest for November 16th

Here are some of the people writing about some of the stuff I wish I had time to write about, for November 16th from 16:32 to 16:40:

  • Putting Marriage Rights to a Vote

    "The country's gradual movement toward marriage equality took a step further last week. Democrats in Iowa won a closely contested special election, which allowed the party to maintain their senate majority and essentially assured that no amendment to overturn same-sex marriage will be put to a vote until 2015 at the absolute earliest. That followed a New Jersey court's decision to hear a case that might replace the state's civil unions provision with full marriage rights."

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  • Why We Need Occupy Wall Street

    "Today—the same day that New York’s Mayor Bloomberg had his cops clear Zuccotti Park—Richard Fisher, the president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, called for breaking up America’s biggest banks, calling them “too dangerous to permit.” Also today, Warren Buffett, in an interview posted on the Business Wire of Berkshire Hathaway, his company, continued his criticism of American plutocracy. “Through the tax code, there has been class warfare waged, and my class has won,” Buffett said. “It’s been a rout. You have seen a period where American workers generally have gone no place, and where the really super rich as a group increased their incomes five for one in this rarified atmosphere.”

    All of which suggests that Occupy Wall Street has already been a stunning success in changing the nation’s public discourse"

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  • The Class War is So Over – OtherWords

    "You may have noticed the collateral damage. While CEO and Wall Street pay have soared, median family income, employment, and home ownership have all either flatlined or plummeted. College loans and mortgages alike are in default, along with Gross Domestic Spirit.

    Meanwhile the wealthy are taking a victory lap."

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  • The Paradigm Shifts — In These Times

    "The establishment is worried not about the absence of clarity of message, as media elites insist, but rather the movement’s potentially broad reach. Occupy is a vessel for a spectrum of grievances that could unite heretofore divided struggles.

    Though the Occupy movement is only a starting point, it has already animated our political discourse. It is now common knowledge that in 2010, 400 individuals possessed more wealth than 155 million of their fellow citizens.

    Given such reality, Americans are weary of the stultifying obsession with deficits—a canard embraced by a Democratic leadership tone-deaf to popular will—and want strategies to revive the economy by taxing the rich and ramping up public investment."

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  • After the Zuccotti Park Raid

    Driven from its iconic encampment in Lower Manhattan, the Occupy Wall Street movement struggled to recover its political footing – and find a new geographical center – but its success in changing America’s economic discussion can’t be doubted, says Danny Schechter. By Danny Schechter It was strange, after all these weeks, to be on the outside looking in at a new set of occupiers who were there because they have the guns and we don’t. When Mao said that “power grows out of the barrel of a gun,”…

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  • Robert Creamer: Mayors Who Attempt to End Occupy Protests Are on the Wrong Side of History

    The one thing we know from history is that once a movement that is rooted in a demand for justice has taken root, attempts to destroy it with brute force almost always make it stronger. And those who attempt to destroy these movements almost always fail.

    This is a moment when mayors across the country need to look into their mirror, and decide which side they're on.

    Whatever their intentions, the mayors who have acted to end the Occupy protests around America over the last few days are on the wrong side of history.

    Tags:

  • Occupy Wall Street protesters have a point

    It’s about bringing economic fairness to America so that we can live up to our claim of being the land of opportunity.

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Written by terrance in: daily digest |
Nov
16
2011
0

Flat Tax: Back in the USSR

After labeling Barack Obama a “socialist,” you wouldn’t think conservatives would be taking their cues from socialists, right? You’d be wrong. From the “flat tax” to the ideal capitalist system, Republican presidential candidates seem to be getting their ideas and inspiration from current and former socialist regimes.

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Written by terrance in: current events,economy,politics |
Nov
16
2011
0

Digest for November 14th through November 16th

Here are some of the people writing about some of the stuff I wish I had time to write about, for November 14th through November 16th:

Written by terrance in: daily digest |
Nov
15
2011
0

Digest Posts Are Dead. Killed By Google

I’ve already bitched about Google’s decision to force Google Reader users into using Google Plus, and the many ways it’s made my life more difficult. Well, I can now chalk up another complaint.

Long ago, I started publishing digest posts to this blog. They were basically collections of links I’d gathered and wanted to share. (Or, as I summarized it, “Here are some of the people writing about some of the stuff I wish I had time to write about.”) They were also a way of posting some new content even on days when I didn’t have time to write. It kept the blog from looking utterly dead for days on end.

Well, digest posts are dead. Google killed them.

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Written by terrance in: tech stuff |
Nov
11
2011
0

Stand With Veterans: The Worthy 1 Percent

 

OWS Occupy Wall Street Rally, Times Square, New York CityThis year, veterans day should be a day for all of us — all 99 percent of us — to stand with the 1 percent. Not, as Jim Hightower writes, the “corporate CEOs and hedge fund billionaires,” but the “extra-special 1 percent of our society” who are also part of the 99 percent — the veterans of our most recent, most misguided wars, as well as those before. As Hightower said, let it not be a day to merely salute our veterans, but to stand with them and rally with them, as they have already done for us.

Across the country, veterans of our wars in Iraq and Afghanistan are standing with the joining the 99 percent. Scott Olsen, the 24-year-old former Marine who served two tours or duty in Iraq, and Sgt. Shamar Thomas, another Marine who served in Iraq, are probably the most well known. Olsen, who was critically injured by a police projectile during the attack on Occupy Oakland, became the newest face of the movement, inspiring nationwide rallies. Thomas, in a video viewed more than 2 million times on YouTube, confronted police members of the NYPD over violence used against peaceful and unarmed protesters. Yet they represent countless veterans who served their country, often paying a great physical and psychological price, only to find themselves abandoned by their country in the midst of a recession and an unemployment crisis, and who are moved by what they have seen and experienced to join the movement of the 99 percent.

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Written by terrance in: current events,economy,iraq,politics,war on terror |
Nov
10
2011
0

Time To Retire the “Greedy Geezers” Myth

By now you've probably heard about the new supplemental poverty measure produced by the Census Bureau, which says 49.1 million Americans are living in poverty, compared to 46.2 million under the official measure. But did you know that the supplemental measure blows a big hole through the right's favorite "greedy geezer" talking point?

Coming as it does on the heels of a Pew Research Foundation report on wealth gap between younger and older Americans — which is already being spun by the right as "proof" that we "spend too much" on grandma, at the kids' expense — the new supplemental poverty measure is a reminder that what we're spending is keeping grandma, and a whole lot of kids, out of poverty.

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Written by terrance in: current events,economy,politics |
Nov
09
2011
0

Mesmerizing Murmurmation

I stumbled across this while going through my RSS feeds, and found it rather hypnotic.

They’re starlings, and their murmurating. (more…)

Written by terrance in: current events,video |
Nov
08
2011
0

Someone Like You

I havne’t been able to get this song out of my head all day. Not that that’s a bad thing, at all.

Written by terrance in: music,video |
Nov
07
2011
0

Why George Will Thinks Losing 24,000 Jobs is a Good Thing

I am beginning to understand George Will. Normally, that realization would worry me in too many ways to count, and would be cause enough for my progressive friends to stage an intervention. But let me be clear, before I find myself facing just such a situation, I did not say I am beginning to agree with George Will. I would voluntarily submit to an intervention if that were the case. Fortunately, it’s not. But I do understand why George Will and other conservatives think the loss of 24,000 jobs is a good thing.

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Written by terrance in: economy,politics |
Nov
04
2011
0

Policing the 99 Percent, Pt 2

The spread of the Occupy movement, and its increasing popularlity, shows that not only do Americans want Wall Street held accountable for its role in the economic crisis and ensuing recession, but it’s painfully clear to that there has been no acountability — and more and more Americans are beginning to understand why. Glenn Grewald explained in a post that’s be republished all over the web that the wealthy subverted the legal system, resulting in what Robert Scheer called “thirty years of unleashed greed”.

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Written by terrance in: current events,politics | Tags: ,
Nov
03
2011
1

Owned By Google, Again

Warning: Geek venting about to ensue.

Google Plus logo

Can I just say how much I hate — really, truly hate — Google latest update to its Reader?

No, I don’t mean the new look.

I mean the decision to do away with shared items and force everyone into using Google+. Yes, I and countless others have been “owned” by Google, again.

(more…)

Written by terrance in: current events,tech stuff |
Nov
02
2011
1

What Would Adam Smith Say?

Elizabeth Warren really hit a nerve among conservatives with her winning message about the the social contract and America’s economy. What I didn’t know is that she did it with an assist from the right’s favorite philosopher on economic policy. (more…)

Written by terrance in: current events,economics,politics |
Nov
02
2011
0

Twitter Updates for 2011-11-02

Written by terrance in: tweets |
Nov
02
2011
1

Policing the 99 Percent, Pt. 1

This entry is part 1 of 1 in the series Policing the 99 Percent

Much has already been written and said about violence police used against unarmed OWS protesters in New York, Chicago, Boston, and now Oakland. From using pepper spray against peaceful protesters to lobbing flash bombs at unarmed protesters rushing to help an injured man, the police tactics are chilling enough by themselves. When considered in the context of what really motivates the protesters, the policing of the 99 percent by the 99 percent on behalf of the 1 percent is truly ominous. (more…)

Written by terrance in: current events,economy,politics |
Nov
01
2011
0

Digest for October 30th

Here are some of the people writing about some of the stuff I wish I had time to write about, for October 30th from 19:51 to 21:19:

 

 

 

 

Written by terrance in: daily digest |

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