Home Blog Page 2824

Three Revelatory Passages from the Pundits (Will, Krugman, and Krauthammer) and Comments from Me

8

( – promoted by lowkell)

George Will writes:

For the indefinite future, a specter is haunting progressivism, the specter of {energy} abundance. Because progressivism exists to justify a few people bossing around most people and because progressives believe that only government’s energy should flow unimpeded, they crave energy scarcities as an excuse for rationing – by them – that produces ever-more-minute government supervision of Americans’ behavior.

Andy Schmookler:

Does anybody who has been involved in progressive politics recognize in Will’s portrait anything they’ve ever seen about progressivism or progressives? I for one do not. I cannot think of a single person of the progressive persuasion who aspires to have a country with “a few people bossing around most people.” They want a society that works, a society where all the important values get served. Where no regulation or supervision works fine, that’s OK with them. Does George Will actually believe the nonsense he says here?

*******************

Paul Krugman writes:

[T]he economic ‘experts’ on whom much of Congress relies have been repeatedly, utterly wrong about the short-run effects of budget deficits. People who get their economic analysis from the likes of the Heritage Foundation have been waiting ever since President Obama took office for budget deficits to send interest rates soaring. Any day now!

And while they’ve been waiting, those rates have dropped to historical lows. You might think that this would make politicians question their choice of experts – that is, you might think that if you didn’t know anything about our postmodern, fact-free politics.

Andy Schmookler:

I often lament how it is these days in America that “the lie defeats the truth.” Surely, one of the factors that makes this possible is the strange lack of respect for evidence that Krugman here alludes to (our “fact-free politics”). After centuries of human knowledge and understanding growing exponentially through an epistemology based on evidence sifted by reason to yield reliable findings, American public discourse has descended into a place where predictive failures do not call into question the assumptions on which the failed predictions were predicated. Where know-nothingism is triumphant, a nation is imperiled.

*********************

Charles Krauthammer published a piece yesterday in the Washington Post entitled “Are We Alone in the Universe.” In it, he presents an argument that goes like this: Given how many planets there evidently are, our failure yet to have heard from other intelligent life seems to suggest that intelligence is dangerous. In other words, he imagines that intelligent species elsewhere have done themselves in with the destructive powers they developed (as humankind came close to doing during the Cuban Missile Crisis of 1962). I am not ready to endorse his reasoning process, but I do think the thoughts on which he closes the piece contain a vitally important piece of truth.

Krauthammer writes:

[L]et’s put the most hopeful face on the cosmic silence and on humanity’s own short, already baleful history with its new Promethean powers: Intelligence is a capacity so godlike, so protean that it must be contained and disciplined. This is the work of politics – understood as the ordering of society and the regulation of power to permit human flourishing while simultaneously restraining the most Hobbesian human instincts.

There could be no greater irony: For all the sublimity of art, physics, music, mathematics and other manifestations of human genius, everything depends on the mundane, frustrating, often debased vocation known as politics (and its most exacting subspecialty – statecraft). Because if we don’t get politics right, everything else risks extinction.

We grow justly weary of our politics. But we must remember this: Politics – in all its grubby, grasping, corrupt, contemptible manifestations – is sovereign in human affairs. Everything ultimately rests upon it.

Fairly or not, politics is the driver of history. It will determine whether we will live long enough to be heard one day.

Andy Schmookler:

The subtitle of my first –and principal-book is “The Problem of Power in Social Evolution.” It is about how the free play of power has warped how civilization has developed and, correspondingly, about how controlling power enough to allow human choice to rule is the major challenge confronting humanity. Politics is about power, and so I concur with Krauthammer on this (even if I’ve agreed with him on little else for years): our well-being as a nation, and as a species, depends upon how well we’re able to conduct our “politics.”

**********************

Andy Schmookler is running for Congress in the 6th Congressional District of Virginia, challenging the incumbent Congressman, Bob Goodlatte.  An award-winning author, political commentator, radio talk-show host, and teacher, Andy moved with his family to Shenandoah County in 1992.  He is a graduate of Harvard University and holds a PhD from the University of California at Berkeley.  

*****************************************************

To learn more about Andy, please go to his website. You may also follow Andy on Facebook and on Twitter.  

Has Santorum had his “Macaca moment”?

1

(Ah, Republicans, gotta love ’em. Or not. – promoted by lowkell)

by Paul Goldman

“Santorum targets blacks in entitlement reform” is the headline in a current CBS news story.

At a campaign stop in Sioux City, Iowa on Sunday, Republican presidential hopeful Rick Santorum singled out blacks as being recipients of assistance through federal benefit programs, telling a mostly-white audience he doesn’t want to “make black people’s lives better by giving them somebody else’s money.”

Say what? This type of bigoted view didn’t work in the last century, much less this one, for President.

Santorum continues:

It just keeps expanding – I was in Indianola a few months ago and I was talking to someone who works in the department of public welfare here, and she told me that the state of Iowa is going to get fined if they don’t sign up more people under the Medicaid program…They’re just pushing harder and harder to get more and more of you dependent upon them so they can get your vote. That’s what the bottom line is.

I don’t want to make black people’s lives better by giving them somebody else’s money; I want to give them the opportunity to go out and earn the money.

Santorum’s “Macaca moment?” If Santorum becomes the GOP presidential nominee, this quote could become one of the best known in history.

Yes, he can still go on to win the GOP nomination if things break his way. But how does he explain this comment to the swing voters of America who don’t want to go backwards? Why would anyone who voted for Obama in 2008 switch to this kind of intolerant attitude guy in 2012? As for all the new voters, mostly young, why would they cast their first vote for this guy?

Santorum seemed a fresh face for about 48 hours. I am sure he will try and walk the comment back. But is it too late now?

For a guy who preaches family, he seems to have little appreciation for the American family. I don’t see how he explains away the mind set required for such a comment by someone running to be President of all the people.  

Bowl Season Reminder: The NCAA is a Corrupt Cartel

0

As college football bowl season gets into full swing, New York Times columnist Joe Nocera reminds us that the games will generate millions in revenue for the schools and coaches – and almost nothing for the kids actually playing:

The hypocrisy that permeates big-money college sports takes your breath away. College football and men’s basketball have become such huge commercial enterprises that together they generate more than $6 billion in annual revenue, more than the National Basketball Association. A top college coach can make as much or more than a professional coach; Ohio State just agreed to pay Urban Meyer $24 million over six years. Powerful conferences like the S.E.C. and the Pac 12 have signed lucrative TV deals, while the Big 10 and the University of Texas have created their own sports networks. Companies like Coors and Chick-fil-A eagerly toss millions in marketing dollars at college sports. Last year, Turner Broadcasting and CBS signed a 14-year, $10.8 billion deal for the television rights to the N.C.A.A.’s men’s basketball national championship tournament (a k a “March Madness”). And what does the labor force that makes it possible for coaches to earn millions, and causes marketers to spend billions, get? Nothing. The workers are supposed to be content with a scholarship that does not even cover the full cost of attending college. Any student athlete who accepts an unapproved, free hamburger from a coach, or even a fan, is in violation of N.C.A.A. rules.

This glaring, and increasingly untenable, discrepancy between what football and basketball players get and what everyone else in their food chain reaps has led to two things. First, it has bred a deep cynicism among the athletes themselves. Players aren’t stupid. They look around and see jerseys with their names on them being sold in the bookstores. They see 100,000 people in the stands on a Saturday afternoon. During the season, they can end up putting in 50-hour weeks at their sports, and they learn early on not to take any course that might require real effort or interfere with the primary reason they are on campus: to play football or basketball. The N.C.A.A. can piously define them as students first, but the players know better. They know they are making money for the athletic department. The N.C.A.A.’s often-stated contention that it is protecting the players from “excessive commercialism” is ludicrous; the only thing it’s protecting is everyone else’s revenue stream. (The N.C.A.A. itself takes in nearly $800 million a year, mostly from its March Madness TV contracts.) “Athletes in football and basketball feel unfairly treated,” Leigh Steinberg, a prominent sports agent, says. “The dominant attitude among players is that there is no moral or ethical reason not to take money, because the system is ripping them off.”

I’ve never understood why progressives aren’t more outraged by the NCAA. Want a perfect example of a corrupt system that protects the profits of the 1% at the expense of the 99%? This is it. And if you haven’t read Taylor Branch’s The Shame of College Sports, go do it right now.

Send in the Clowns: Iowa Caucuses are a Sick Joke (and a Waste of Our Time)

15

I have no predictions about the Iowa Caucuses because they do not matter, not to me, and not to the matter of who will win the GOP nomination.  Tradition notwithstanding, the Iowa Caucuses are one of the biggest bad jokes ever foisted upon Americans.  An atypical electorate (Iowa Caucus goers are considerably more conservative than the population as a whole, even in Iowa) is so unrepresentative of Americans that it almost unAmerican to vest Iowa with so much clout in our electoral process. But here we are again, with the supposed Republican “presidentials” giving Iowans far more attention than nearly any other state gets. And nowhere else, but Iowa and New Hampshire do the candidates go door-to-door, routinely drop by diners in towns of any minor consequence and give voters such access. They give that kind of attention to voters who would turn on a dime.  It would be laughable, as this article suggests, if it weren’t so undemocratic.  Send in the clowns (again).

If the Iowa caucuses have ever gotten it “right” (defined by voting for the one who actually got elected), prior to 2008, you had to go all the way back to 1976 to find Iowa predictive, in a Democratic caucus, not a GOP one. So bereft of any thinking capacity or any real conviction, person-on-the-street interviewees (and opinion poll responders) cannot make up their minds.  They claim to be values voters and yet have so little conviction they keep moving their support with each new gust of political wind. As just one example, read the rationale in the article I link above.  Yeh, I know, a single case does not an electorate make.  But polling shows how very malleable are the Iowa voters who warm up to one and then another and then another candidate in a manner only ditzes would.  Anyone can change his or her mind and do so reasonably–no question about that.  BUT, this year Iowa has brought new meaning to the word “indecision.”  They are indecision on steroids.  When that happens, voters no longer shape their own vote.

Essentially, the media are in charge and Iowa caucus goers are only too happy to dumb it up for them and allow the so-called mainstream media to influence them.  Of course, they are then more susceptible to negative ads as well.

Which brings me to another point. If the media are in charge, why feed them with our paying attention? Please, join me in NOT watching any of them the next couple for days, while they try to feed their overblown egos and their sponsors’ wallets.

But perhaps the worst thing about the caucus is how they are run. Unlike voters in a voting booth, you have to publicly chose which side of the room you will stand on and face pressure both social and sometimes physical over your decision. Where else does peer pressure play so visible a role and personal decison-making so little? In previous years caucus goers have gotten downright pushy (in a literal sense). The voting context should be the opposite.  What wouldn’t be tolerated in primaries is OK at the Iowa Caucuses.

But it is worse than that. There has been  considerable mischief regarding the locations of the caucuses, some of which are in homes. During the 2004 Democratic Caucus in Iowa, shenanigans included the last-minute moving of locations so supporters of a certain candidate (Howard Dean) could not find them.

In numerous ways the Iowa Caucuses make a mockery of the democratic process. It makes one wonder how we dare lecture other countries about “spreading democracy.” So, this week, I’ll take my news online and bypass caucus-related articles in the so-called MSM. And I’ll stop tuning in in the future unless and until we have a more equitable and democratic process.  

Corporate Front Group Influencing Virginia’s Legislature

7

American Legislative Exchange Council writes bills legislators pass off as own work

A new report released by ProgressVA details the disturbing level of influence exerted on Virginia’s legislature by a secretive, corporate front group. The American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC), which is funded by corporate contributions, has been writing bills that Virginia legislators are passing off as their own work on everything from education to health care to voting rights. The report was written and researched by ProgressVA, a progressive advocacy group.

Key findings in the report include:

  • At least 50 bills introduced in the Virginia General Assembly that were drawn from ALEC model legislation
  • Over $230,000 in taxpayer money spent on sending legislators on junkets to ALEC conferences to meet with corporate lobbyists behind closed doors
  • Over 100 current and former legislators with ties to ALEC, including Speaker of the House of Delegates William Howell, Governor Bob McDonnell, and Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli

Sign the petition to demand an end to ALEC’s influence in Virginia.

“Simply put, a secretive, corporate front group is writing Virginia’s laws,” said Anna Scholl, Executive Director of ProgressVA. “Even worse, Virginia taxpayers have shelled out over $230,000 for the privilege of our representatives having exclusive access to corporate lobbyists behind closed doors. Our legislators were elected to represent Virginia families, not corporate bottom lines. Legislators who kowtow to a corporate agenda are nothing new in Virginia, but secretly copying and pasting legislation from corporate lobbyists is a step too far. This is an egregious violation of the public trust.  If our representatives are so desperate for legislative ideas, they should consult the people they were elected to represent. We’ll even give them the advice for free.”

ProgressVA encourages citizens to access the online report to see if their legislator is working for their constituents or corporate lobbyists.

The full report may be obtained electronically at http://progressva.pnstate.org/alec.

Sign the petition to demand an end to ALEC’s influence in Virginia.

LG Bolling the one changing the rules: Has he forgotten the Voting Rights Act?

0

by Paul Goldman

Lt. Governor Bill Bolling criticizes  former Attorney General Tony Troy, former Attorney General Steve Rosenthal,  myself, and hundreds of thousands of Virginians who believe in the rule of law. He says we  want to “change the rules in the middle of the game” according to the Virginian Pilot. [For purposes of full disclosure, after writing a piece on Blue Virginia discussing some of the legal and other problems with the current Virginia ballot access system, a non-partisan conservative group first established by future President Ronald Reagan called, discussed stuff, and then hired me to help clean up the Virginia primary mess. Some in the media suggested I was hired by former Speaker Newt Gingrich’s campaign or a Super Pac backing him. Citizens for the Republic is none of those things. And there is no prohibition on my talking to anyone of the lawyers for any candidate who might want to pick what is left of my brain.]    

Actually, it is Mr. Bolling who wants to change the rules in the middle of game.

In fact, Mr. Bolling not only wants to change the rules in the middle of the game, he insists on new rules which he would readily concede benefit his candidate for President.

Has he forgotten the Supreme Court case of Morse v. Republican Party of Virginia, 517 U.S. 186 (1996)?

As former Presidents Ronald Reagan, George H.W. Bush, and George W. Bush – all Republicans – have said in supporting the Voting Rights Act, it is important for political parties to abide by the rule of law.

The Voting Rights Act – supported I thought by Mr. Bolling – is aimed at preventing the LG and his supporters, indeed any similar official or group backing any candidate in any political party, from changing the rules in the middle of the game.

FACT: In 1981, I sued the Democratic Party under the Voting Rights Act [VRA], and got a seminal ruling, In a nutshell it said in certain circumstances, rules or procedures adopted by a state party and impacting in a meaningful way on the potential outcome of their nomination process could not go into effect until such rules or procedures had been approved by the lawful authorities. Reagan-Bush-Bush realized this was the only way to insure a fair election and protect the rights of all voters.

Why? As Reagan, Bush41 and Bush43 pointed out, it was important to make sure no one in political power could change the rules in the middle of the game to the detriment of the voters.

The lawful rules, as they pointed out, where the rules/procedures/laws in effect at the start of the election cycle at issue: today this means the 2012 the Republican and Democratic presidential primary processes which end with a vote this coming March. The candidates started running back in 2010 really.

As the Morse case – which the VA GOP lost I might remind Mr. Bolling – made clear,  a primary election process falls under the Reagan-Bush-Bush rubric of not allowing the GOP or the DEMS to change the rules in the middle of the game. Thus the rules/procedures must abide by the VRA.

As we discovered yesterday in Andrew Cain’s great piece in the Richmond Times Dispatch, the Republican Party of Virginia had a different rule/procedure for reviewing access to their presidential primary ballot in 2008. We know this from no less a source than the Chairman of the GOP at the time, John Hager, a former LG like Mr. Bolling.

As the Morse case makes clear, changing the rules in the middle of the game on which candidates get to compete in the primary – and thus whether Virginians supporting said candidate can effectively exercise their franchise come March – is a classic circumstance, a reason the VRA was backed by Reagan-Bush-Bush. .

Why? As the Morse case explains, the ability of GOP Chairman Pat Mullins and his staff to change the rules in the middle of the game is derived from state action, that is to say the passage of Section 24.2-545 of the Code of Virginia. Under the U.S. and state constitution, the responsibility for conducting fair, and transparent elections, consistent with the Civil War Amendments and such principles as “equal protection”, “due process” rests with the State Government of Virginia.

Thus, the GOP has no inherent right to hold a primary, much less have their Chairman – and this is of course true on the DEM side too – decide who is on the ballot and who isn’t. This power only comes if delegated by the General Assembly, thus making them in essence agents of the state for this purpose. Thus the “state action” rubric.

The GA, in its wisdom, decided to pass 24.2-545, which took the State Board of Elections [SBE] out of the loop : and delegated to the Chairman of the two major parties the responsibility of deciding which presidential primary hopefuls could earn a place on their respective primary ballots. Neither the Statute nor the SBE provides guidance on the proper way to review the signatures of voters collected by candidates and submitted for review in hopes of their making the ballot.

As the Supreme Court has said many times, such delegations of public power to a private group is fraught with danger. As Reagan-Bush-Bush made clear by support of the VRA, these grants of political power have to carefully reviewed whenever they try to change the rules in the middle of the game.

We can presume the state pre-cleared the statute in general: however, this doesn’t end the lawful responsibility of either the party or the state to pre-clear any changes in how the party implements it’s power under 24.2-545. The Morse case is clear on that: Any changes in party rules/procedures which have a practical impact on how the party exercises it’s powers can’t go into effect until okayed under the VRA.

In layman’s terms: Whatever the rules at issue were in 2008, they are, to use Mr. Bolling’s words, the “rule of the game” in 2012 unless the GOP has received the okay to change them under the VRA. .

THE BOLLING MIDDLE OF THE GAME RULE CHANGE # 1:

There is nothing in 24.2-545 which says the GOP Chairman had the right to automatically certify Mitt Romney to the March 2012 presidential primary ballot on the grounds his campaign submitted petitions with more than 15,000 signatures. By the GOP’s own admission, they never checked any of  the former Bay State Governors petitions in the manner contemplated by the grant of state power in 24-2-545.

Moreover, not did Mr. Mullins follow the plain meaning of the statute in making the required “certification” of Mitt Romney to the state ballot, such certification under Mr. Mullins’ name communicated to the State Board of Elections. As the SBE told me, that state agency has no power to review Mr. Mullins’ certification or denial of certification: they just accept whatever he says, and they don’t inquire about how he made it.

As Mr. Hager made plain in the newspaper yesterday, Mr. Mullins changed the rules in the middle of the game, since the way he reviewed petitions in 2012 – Romney got a free pass but Gingrich, Paul and Perry got their petitions checked voter by voter – is not the way it was done in 2008.

Remember: The “rules of the “game” as Mr. Bolling calls them are what the party did in 2008 assuming as I am they got VRA okay for any changes. If they didn’t –  no way to know right now – the Virginia Primary mess just got a lot messier. But for right now, we have to assume the 2008 primary was lawful, so the rules used in 2008 must be the same as in 2012 unless lawful approval to make changes has been received.

Question: Has the Reagan-Bush-Bush procedure been followed, or have Mr. Bolling/Mr. Mullins “changed the rules in the middle of game” illegally?

Answer: The VA GOP and LG Bolling are saying they cleared everything since otherwise they know they are blowing a lot of smoke right. But did they? I have not seen any proof one way or the other. Have you? Doesn’t Mr. Bolling or someone at the GOP, or the State Board of Elections have an obligation at this point to inform the public whether the VRA has been followed?

BOLLING RULE CHANGE IN THE MIDDLE OF THE GAME # 2:

LG Bolling and VA GOP want to use what they call a “loyalty” oath as a precondition for voting in the presidential primary.

The GOP DIDN’T NOT USE such a loyalty oath in the 2008 presidential primary. So once again, the Supreme Court decision in the Morse case becomes crucial.

24.2-545 permits a  “loyalty” oath, indeed the very wording of the one SBE just approved at the request of the VA GOP. Again, I will presume the statute itself was pre-cleared by the DOJ. But again, this doesn’t end the inquiry.

Why? Several reasons. First, since this rule/procedure/election law  is self-evidentially a change that can affect voting rights – it stops people from voting who refuse to sign the “loyalty” oath – the fact it wasn’t used in the 2008 GOP presidential primary raises serious issues. The party did use one in 2000, but the wording of the oath was different. So this is A CHANGE IN THE MIDDLE OF THE GAME ENDORSED BY MR. BOLLING WHO SAYS HE IS THE GUY AGAINST SUCH THINGS!

It is possible the DOJ pre-clearance of such specific wording might be interpreted as authority to use it at any time in the future. That’s a tricky legal question above my pay grade.

However, even if the pre-clearance of the statute is considered the authority to enact at any time the specific working of the oath contained in the statute, there is the question of whether the SBE approval was given in accordance with 24.2-545. If the approval process differed from the one in the statute, then clearly there can be no “free pass” from the VRA.

The statute seems to say that the SBE has to approve such a “loyalty” oath no later than 90 days before the date of the primary. Their approval was made last December 28, which is less than 90 days from the date of the primary. However, the AG’s office – legal advisor to the SBE – and the GOP are saying the 90 day time limit only applies to the date the GOP formally requested the SBE to approve the use of the  “loyalty” oath at the polls. They read the statute as allowing the SBE to approve the request any date prior to the election.

Thus, even if the DOJ pre-cleared the use of the specific “loyalty” oath in the statute at any time in the future, this free pass depends upon their view of whether the 90-day time period also applies to SBE action.

The interpretation of the AG’s office and the GOP – and of course the SBE – that the 90-day time bar only applies to the formal request for a “loyalty” oath – as opposed to the formal approval of it’s use by the SBE – is open to serious question. I have had several top lawyers read the language and they disagree with the AG and GOP’s view. Here is the relevant language of 24.2-545

If the party has determined that it will hold a presidential primary, each registered voter of the Commonwealth shall be given an opportunity to participate in the presidential primary of the political party, as defined in § 24.2-101, subject to requirements determined by the political party for participation in its presidential primary. The requirements may include, but shall not be limited to, the signing of a pledge by the voter of his intention to support the party’s candidate when offering to vote in the primary. The requirements applicable to a party’s primary shall be determined at least 90 days prior to the primary date and certified to, and approved by, the State Board.

By the AG/GOP/SBE interpretation, the SBE could approve the “loyalty” oath two weeks before the primary, they say the 90-day time bar only applies to the GOP deciding to use such an oath, not the action by the SBE to approve it.  This makes no practical, not to mention, legal sense, under any of the normative rules we use to insure fair, transparent elections since it would allow the SBE to approve it say 2 weeks before the primary.

Accordingly: a Voting Rights Act review of the “loyalty” oath as contemplated by Reagan-Bush-Bush seems in order to determine the meaning of 24.2-545 as it had been approved under the VRA.

CONCLUSION: LG Bolling is the one supporting, indeed demanding, that the rules be changed in the middle of the game to favor his candidate for President.

I get that as a matter of politics. But as a matter of law, the standard isn’t loyalty to a candidate but to the laws of the commonwealth and the country.

As I say: Given the facts he and others in the GOP have presented to the public, there is no way for the public to know, one way or the other, as to whether the Reagan-Bush-Bush requirements of the VRA have been followed.

Based on the best available evidence, Mr. Bolling is advocating – as Reagan-Bush-Bush would point out – changing the rules in the middle of the game.

Mr. Bolling says that’s not true.

When do the people get to know the truth?  

Eric Cantor Tries to Disprove Combative Image with Combative 60 Minutes Interview

0

House Majority Leader Eric Cantor (R-VA) invited 60 Minutes into his home to prove he’s not combative … where Cantor then couldn’t cite even one example of an area in which he’s willing to compromise and his press secretary shouted to interrupt the interview to dispute the true statement that Ronald Reagan compromised on his tax principles. But hey, Cantor’s kids sure are cute!

Virginia News Headlines: Monday Morning

2

Here are a few Virginia news headlines for Monday, January 2.

*Cuccinelli backtracks on ballot access issue

*Some Virginia GOP leaders cool to emergency primary changes

*McDonnell targets Virginia background checks for guns

*Doomsday forecasts aside, changes coming in 2012

*Va. politics: The top developments of 2011

*Cantor: Jewish tendency to vote Democratic ‘bane of my existence’ (It’s ok, Eric, you’re the bane of OUR existence too! As for tikkun olam, Can’tor is doing the exact opposite as a Republican’t — harming the world, making it worse, etc. — and thus betraying core Jewish values, at least the ones I was taught at my Conservative Jewish synagogue growing up. Unlike me, Can’tor probably slept through Hebrew School…)

*The Majority Leader: Rep. Eric Cantor (The full interview with the bane of our existence, Eric Can’tor, on 60 Minutes. I just watched it and Can’tor comes off really, really badly – either profoundly ignorant or a shameless liar.  Also, his press secretary should be fired, immediately, for wildly unprofessional behavior.)

*Botched abortion makes case for more regulation (A typical example of the Washington Examiner’s extremism and nuttiness.)

*New directions (Ward Armstrong “added that he will make a decision on running for governor, lieutenant governor or attorney general probably by the second quarter of 2012.”)

*Fairfax keeping eye on uranium mining (“For Fairfax Water in Northern Virginia, the uranium question isn’t just a Pittsylvania County issue.”)

*Proposal to allow Va. localities to exclude prisoners may pass this GA session

*Monday closings, restrictions and transit

*Despite federal holiday, school’s open in Alexandria, Maryland

*The year ahead for D.C. commuters

UPDATE: Also, check out Public Policy Polling’s latest on Iowa, which has a “photo finish” potentially between racist/conspiracy wacko Ron Paul, flippin’ Willard “Mitt” Romney, and Rick “Google the Name” Santorum. What a party!

On Republican Primary Ballot Access, Cuccinelli’s “Compass” Has Sudden Change in Direction

7

Ken Cuccinelli is nothing if not bizarre. Now, after politicizing the AG’s office and demonstrating a significant degree of disrespectful to Judge Gibney, who had specifically ordered Cuccinelli to produce a “three page statement of authorities regarding any conflict that may exist given his public declarations about the subject matter of this case,” Cooch has apparently reversed course. Check this out, from his latest “Cuccinelli Compass.”

January 1, 2012

Dear Friends and Fellow Virginians,

As many of you read yesterday in the news (link here for the story) I was considering supporting an effort to change the rules to allow the full range of presidential candidates on Virginia’s ballot on March 6th.

I obviously feel very strongly that Virginia needs to change its ballot access requirements for our statewide elections. However, after working through different scenarios with Republican and Democratic leaders to attempt to make changes in time for the 2012 Presidential election, my concern grows that we cannot find a way to make such changes fair to the Romney and Paul campaigns that qualified even with Virginia’s burdensome system. A further critical factor that I must consider is that changing the rules midstream is inconsistent with respecting and preserving the rule of law – something I am particularly sensitive to as Virginia’s attorney general.

My intentions have never focused on which candidates would be benefited or harmed, rather I have focused on what is best for Virginia’s citizens, as hundreds of thousands of Virginians who should have been able to make their choices among the full field of presidential primary contenders have had their number of choices reduced significantly.

My primary responsibility is to the people of Virginia, and how best to fulfill that responsibility in these particular circumstances has been a very difficult question for me. I believe consistency on the part of public officials is an important attribute. And I believe that Virginians are best served by an attorney general who consistently supports the rule of law. That leads to my conclusion that while I will vigorously support efforts to reduce the hurdles to ballot access in Virginia for all candidates, I will not support efforts to apply such changes to the 2012 Presidential election.

I do not change position on issues of public policy often or lightly.  But when convinced that my position is wrong, I think it necessary to concede as much and adjust accordingly.

Sincerely,

Ken Cuccinelli II

Attorney General of Virginia

I actually agree with this analysis, that the Virginia Attorney General should consistently follow the rule of law in everything he or she does. Unfortunately, as we know, Ken Cuccinelli has NOT done that since becoming AG, but has been arbitrary, capricious, political, unprofessional, and above all hyper-ideological in just about everything he’s done, from his persecution of climate scientists to his expensive (and superfluous, as he could have just joined the multi-state effort) crusade against “Obamacare,” to his insertion of his own prejudices into public policymaking when it comes to GLBT citizens, etc, etc. Now, Cuccinelli has reversed course — for whatever reason(s) — on yet another matter he should have kept his mouth shut about. I guess we should be glad about that, given how out of control this clown is, but we also should make damn sure said clown never becomes Virginia’s governor, and in fact is never elected to any office in Virginia (or elsewhere) again.

We’ve got it all wrong…

3

(Interesting analysis. – promoted by lowkell)

Conventional economic wisdom is that the reason why we do not have economic growth is that we do not have enough private (non-governmental) investment.  Under this “conventional wisdom”, we need to encourage “job creators” by reducing taxes on them, not by encouraging consumption.  A brief digression here — those seeking to reduce taxes on job creators ought to want to reduce payroll taxes on the employers, not on the employees (as Obama has done).

The “conventional wisdom”, combined with electoral realities driven by this conventional wisdom, has led everyone from Tea Party Republicans to Bill Clinton (much as I admire Bill Clinton, he’s wrong on this one) to embrace the idea that the cure for our economic ills is to extend the Bush tax cuts to encourage private investment.  

The problem, as economic historian James Livingston discusses in his new book Against Thrift, is that it is based on a flawed assumption.  The reality is that the United States has not had net private investment since 1919.  For the last 90+ years, our economic growth has been driven by government investment and private consumption enabled by income redistribution programs like Social Security.

Citing such diverse economic thinkers as Karl Marx, John Maynard Keynes, Milton Friedman, Alan Greenspan and Ben Bernanke, Livingston notes that the problem of the last century has been surplus capital, not a lack of capital.  Greenspan, among others, has noted that since the Bush tax cuts — supposedly needed to stimulate investment — industry has re-invested less than its retained earnings.  If that money isn’t being re-invested in the business, where is it going?  Into housing bubbles, or into investment in Collateralized Debt Obligations and Credit Default Swaps, and other things that the investors didn’t even understand.  

There is historical precedent for this.  Citing Friedman and Keynes, Livingston notes that the real estate and stock market bubble that helped trigger (or at least extend) the Great Depression was caused by surplus capital that capitalists didn’t want to reinvest in their manufacturing companies because they knew that the demand for their products was not great enough to require reinvestment.  Efficiencies in modern manufacturing facilities had made each worker so much more productive that if they built new plants and hired new workers, they would quickly make more of their product than they could possibly sell.  So they invested in real estate, or stock, driving up their values beyond reality.  And when the bubble burst — as all bubbles do — the resulting economic contraction was worse than it needed to do be.

Every bubble can be attributed to surplus capital — too much capital chasing too few good investments.  The dot.com bubble of the 1990’s is another example — with billions and trillions of dollars in IRA’s trying to find good places to invest, investors were bidding up companies to share prices of hundreds of dollars each, when some of the companies didn’t even have a business plan that could possibly lead to making a profit.  

So why are we so determined to encourage investment, when what we really need to do is to stimulate consumption (so that business owners will know that they can sell their goods)?  

Part of the problem, Livingston notes, is that we have this Protestant work ethic that tells us that consumption is bad and investment is good, so as a moral matter, we should condemn consumption and encourage investment.  

But if we insist on making economic decisions based on this morality rather than reality, we condemn ourselves to failure.

In essence, Livingston argues, we are engaging in faith-based policymaking, not reality-based policymaking.

And the worst part is that the Democrats have bought the logic and the rhetoric, and have given up on trying to argue the contrary position.

Livingston’s book is, to me, somewhat annoying — I wish that he documented the economic history more thoroughly, because he just quotes Friedman, Greenspan, et al. almost in passing rather than making a big deal of it.  And I frankly just kind of skimmed past his discussion of how we should come to embrace “consumer culture.”  You can catch more of his argument at his website, in a piece that he wrote for Salon.com or in an interview on NPR’s Marketplace.

But what interests me at this point is how we can get Democrats to understand the basic economic reality that this focus on increasing retained earnings of corporations and the 1% is harmful to our economic growth prospects.  It has become an article of faith — meaning that there is no evidence to back it up — among virtually every Democrat to the right of Bernie Sanders that we need to encourage private investment.  How can we get Democrats to listen to Milton Friedman instead of Bill Clinton?

Right now, the only candidate pushing back against this “conventional wisdom” is Elizabeth Warren.  

As long as our political/economic debate is based on the wrong factual premise, we will stay mired in economic stagnation.