The Commentariat -- March 11, 2013
Please sign the White House petition "Save Social Security." If you think means-testing is a good idea, see my argument as to why it is not -- it's the 12th comment in the Comments section. ...
... Bernie Sanders: "Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) today introduced legislation cosponsored by Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) to strengthen Social Security by making the wealthiest Americans pay the same payroll tax that nearly everyone else already pays. Rep. Peter DeFazio (D-Ore.) introduced the companion bill in the House. He joined Sanders at a news conference in the Capitol to discuss their bill to bolster Social Security without raising the retirement age or lowering benefits." Thanks to contributor Dave S. for the link. ...
... Michael Fletcher of the Washington Post: "Research tying longer life expectancy to a higher income has profound implications for battles over trimming entitlement programs and raising the retirement age.... Even as the nation's life expectancy has marched steadily upward, reaching 78.5 years in 2009, a growing body of research shows that those gains are going mostly to those at the upper end of the income ladder.... 'People who are shorter-lived tend to make less, which means that if you raise the retirement age, low-income populations would be subsidizing the lives of higher-income people,' said Maya Rockeymoore ... of Global Policy Solutions." CW: isn't that the idea? ...
... Flippity-Floppity, Flippity-Flop. Sahil Kapur of TPM: "When he unveils his budget plan this week, Rep. Paul Ryan (R-WI) will complete a 720-degree flip on President Obama's cuts to Medicare providers in the Affordable Care Act. As he revealed on 'Fox News Sunday,' Ryan's upcoming budget will sustain the cuts.... Ryan ran for vice president last year against Obama's cuts to Medicare, which don't target beneficiaries but instead lower reimbursements for hospitals and private insurance companies under Medicare Advantage.... [Ryan's] new position is a return to an earlier stance. His House-passed blueprints in 2011 and 2012 also assumed the same level of Medicare savings as the Affordable Care Act, while repealing the rest of the law. But even that was a reversal after Ryan and his GOP colleagues strenuously objected to the Medicare cuts before Obamacare passed." P.S. Ryan's budget also repeals ObamaCare. CW: so when are the MSM going to start calling this guy out as Not a Serious Very Serious Person? ...
... Actually, Chris Wallace of Fox "News" did so yesterday, if only a tiny little bit. ...
... Ed Kilgore on deja vu all over again, via the MSM's phony narrative of what's happening in partisan politics. ...
... Charles Pierce picks up on Kilgore's theme: "The Pod People have taken over Tiger Beat On The Potomac [a/k/a Politico].... They come when you sleep, and they leave behind the Pod People, all of whom look like Reince Priebus.... the stories get even more podworthy as you read through them, the harmonies quite startling on the general theme that the president has failed to make nicey-nice enough to the Republicans, who lost that election last fall that didn't really count because Nate Silver might be gay or something."
** Prof. Katherine Newman, in a New York Times op-ed: "While the federal government has largely stuck by the principle of progressive taxation, the states have gone their own ways: tax policy is particularly regressive in the South and West, and more progressive in the Northeast and Midwest. When it comes to state and local taxation, we are not one nation under God. In 2008, the difference between a working mother in Mississippi and one in Vermont -- each with two dependent children, poverty-level wages and identical spending patterns -- was $2,300.... The relationship between taxing the poor and negative outcomes like premature death persisted.... We all pay a huge price for this shortsightedness." (Emphasis added.)
Paul Krugman: "Fiscal fearmongering is a major industry inside the Beltway, especially among those looking for excuses to do what they really want, namely dismantle Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security. People whose careers are heavily invested in the deficit-scold industry don't want to let evidence undermine their scare tactics; as the deficit dwindles, we're sure to encounter a blizzard of bogus numbers purporting to show that we're still in some kind of fiscal crisis. But we aren't. The deficit is indeed dwindling, and the case for making the deficit a central policy concern, which was never very strong given low borrowing costs and high unemployment, has now completely vanished."
... Here's what Krugman was trying to get across to Zombie Ron Johnson (RTP-Wisconsin), but Johnson, who is too stupid, arrogant & rude to listen, kept talking over him: "You can't say that for the last 25 years, when Social Security ran surpluses, well, that didn't mean anything, because it's just part of the federal government -- but when payroll taxes fall short of benefits, even though there's lots of money in the trust fund, Social Security is broke." ...
... More Austerity Now. Phil Izzo of the Wall Street Journal: "7.1%: What the unemployment rate would be without government job cuts. While most industries have added jobs over the past three years, the recovery has largely bypassed the government sector. Federal, state and local governments have shed nearly 750,000 jobs since June 2009.... No other sector comes close to those job losses over the same period." Via Greg Sargent.
New York Times Editors: "The State Department's latest environmental assessment of the controversial Keystone XL oil pipeline makes no recommendation about whether President Obama should approve it. Here is ours. He should say no, and for one overriding reason: A president who has repeatedly identified climate change as one of humanity's most pressing dangers cannot in good conscience approve a project that -- even by the State Department's most cautious calculations -- can only add to the problem."
Bill Keller thinks Bradley Manning would have been better off to leak directly to the New York Times, something Manning said he tried to do. ...
... Kevin Gosztola of Firedoglake, who has covered the Manning case more extensively than anyone, comments on Keller's piece.
Lisa Rein of the Washington Post: sequestration cuts will force cutbacks in services at Yellowstone National Park ...
... AND Charles Pierce: "It turns out that a lot of those self-reliant, keep-yer-dead-hands-off-mah-sagebrush Western galoots out in Wyoming don't like it much when their pet ideology starts biting them in the regions where they keep their wallets." ...
... CW: see, that's because the Western galoots & their ingrained ideology just assume that deep government cuts mean only that socialists in Washington won't be "handing out free stuff" to "those people."
Amy Davidson of the New Yorker on Chuck's Excellent Adventure in Afghanistan., a reminder that Melville's Ishmael got the headline right 150 years ago: "Bloody Battle in Affghanistan."
... Benjy Sarlin of TPM has a timeline of how Jeb (Not His Real Name) "Bush pulled a 360 on immigration reform."
Brian Bennett of the Los Angeles Times: "Eight senators who have spent weeks trying to write a bipartisan bill to overhaul immigration laws have privately agreed on the most contentious part of the draft -- how to offer legal status to the nation's 11 million illegal immigrants. According to aides familiar with the closed-door negotiations, the bill would require illegal immigrants to register with Homeland Security Department authorities, file federal income taxes for their time in America and pay a still-to-be-determined fine. They also must have a clean law enforcement record."
Nicole Belle of Crooks & Liars takes a look at misogyny & racism on the Internet.
Somebody Will Mess with Your Stuff. Mary Carmichael of the Boston Globe: "The resident deans sit on Harvard's Administrative Board, the committee charged with handling the cheating case. They were not warned that administrators planned to access their [e-mail] accounts, and only one was told of the search shortly afterward. The dean who was informed had forwarded a confidential Administrative Board message to a student he was advising, not realizing it would ultimately make its way to the Harvard Crimson and the Globe and fuel the campus controversy over the cheating scandal." ...
... Richard Perez-Pena of the New York Times: "Bewildered, and at times angry, faculty members at criticized the university on Sunday after revelations that administrators secretly searched the e-mail accounts of 16 resident deans in an effort to learn who leaked information about a student cheating scandal to the news media. Some predicted a confrontation between the faculty and the administration."
For those few of you who haven't yet dropped everything to listen to 13 hours of "Rand Paul & Friends Monopolize the Senate," Driftglass has kindly posted an abbreviated version: "The Rand Paul Filibuster in 36 Seconds":
Congressional Race
Ruby Cramer of BuzzFeed: "Although [Ashley] Judd has yet to start the process in earnest -- she will reportedly declare herself a candidate for the Kentucky Senate race in May, 'around Derby,' according to a report in The Huffington Post -- the actress and longtime political activist might have what it takes to beat Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, say former staffers to celebrities who made the transition in decades past." Cramer suggests s path to success that was followed by other celebrities-turned-successful-politicians. ...
... Steve Kornacki of Salon, on the other hand, has a reality check for Judd.
News Ledes
Wall Street Journal: New York City "Mayor Michael Bloomberg was dealt a stinging blow on Monday when a state Supreme Court Judge quashed his plan to ban the sale of large sugary drinks in the city's restaurants and other venues. At a late afternoon news conference, Mr. Bloomberg and the city's top lawyer, Michael Cardozo, said they believed the judge erred in his ruling and vowed to appeal."
AP: "Former Detroit Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick was convicted Monday of corruption charges, ensuring a return to prison for a man once among the nation's youngest big-city leaders. Jurors convicted Kilpatrick of a raft of crimes, including a racketeering conspiracy charge. He was portrayed during a five-month trial as an unscrupulous politician who took bribes, rigged contracts and lived far beyond his means while in office until fall 2008."
AP: "She was one of the better kept secrets of Sweden's royal household: a commoner and divorcee whose relationship with Prince Bertil was seen as a threat to the Bernadotte dynasty. In a touching royal romance, Welsh-born Princess Lilian and her Bertil kept their love unofficial for decades and were both in their 60s when they finally received the king's blessing to get married. Lilian died in her Stockholm home on Sunday at age 97." The BBC News video story is here.
Reuters: "Cardinals held final discussions on the troubled state of the Roman Catholic Church on Monday, the day before they seclude themselves from the world to elect a new pontiff, with no clear frontrunner in view."