Category Archives: Politics

Healthcare

As storytelling is in the bones at the moment, I haven’t been keeping up with news. But, I do wonder why any Congress person could argue an ideological position against a subsidized system. I think we have a pretty good handle on cost benefit. But why the politics? How can one enjoy a meal and at the same time rail against the chef?

Black Days, Part 3

Now we have The Los Angeles Times’ Miller and Barnes writing

Senior Bush administration officials signed off on the CIA’s use of waterboarding and other harsh interrogation measures in July 2002 after a series of secret meetings that apparently excluded the State and Defense departments, according to information released Wednesday by the Senate Intelligence Committee.

The Senate report indicated that then-national security advisor Condoleezza Rice, then-Atty. Gen. John Ashcroft and other officials gave the CIA’s interrogation plan political backing even before the methods had been approved by the Justice Department.

The writers go on:

“The program was developed by the CIA, and the director of central intelligence — who was the president’s primary foreign intelligence advisor — recommended the program to the White House as necessary, effective and [one] for which there was no alternative,” the official said.

The verbal assurances from members of President Bush’s National Security Council were backed up the following month in a lengthy memo from the Office of Legal Counsel, one of the documents that Obama released last week.

Report downloads can be found here.

Black Days

Information has been swirling around about the torture memos.

We have Dick Cheney pressing his typical case:

“I haven’t talked about it, but I know specifically of reports that I read, that I saw, that lay out what we learned through the interrogation process and what the consequences were for the country.

“I’ve now formally asked the CIA to take steps to declassify those memos so the American people have a chance to see what we obtained and what we learned and how good the intelligence was.”

Other big narratives have to do with the Harmon case.

We have this in this morning’s Times

Others pushing for more investigation included Philip D. Zelikow, the former State Department counselor in the Bush administration. On his blog for Foreign Policy magazine and in an interview, Mr. Zelikow said it was not up to a president to rule out an inquiry into possible criminal activity. “If a Republican president tried to do this, people would be apoplectic,” he said.

Frederick A. O. Schwarz Jr., who was chief counsel to the Church Committee, the Senate panel that investigated C.I.A. abuses in the 1970s, said Mr. Obama was “courageous” to rule out prosecutions for those who followed legal advice. But he said “it’s absolutely necessary” to investigate further, “not for the purpose of setting blame but to understand how it happened.”

The same article provides this:

The decision to promise no prosecution of those who followed the legal advice of the Bush administration lawyers was easier, aides said, because it would be hard to charge someone for doing something the administration had determined was legal. The lawyers, however, are another story.

On Sunday, Rahm Emanuel, the White House chief of staff, said on the ABC News program “This Week” that “those who devised policy” also “should not be prosecuted.” But administration officials said Monday that Mr. Emanuel had meant the officials who ordered the policies carried out, not the lawyers who provided the legal rationale.

I interpret a number of significant ideas here. One goes to the question of “fault,” the other to what goes unsaid in the language and the implications of distractions. Placing fault on the “lawyers” is a type of red herring, in that “the legal rationale” distracts from the bigger picture of who was behind the direction and decision making. Anyone can ask for advice about a decision. I can ask if a decision is “legal” and then move to the next critical thinking level and ask whether it’s right to do. It’s childish to assume “right” from a legal argument without considering ethical continuities.

The judgement to torture, whether deemed legal or not, is precisely the point. If this administration does not go after the heart of the matter, we are left as Americans in a situation of moral and ethical complicity in that torture. “The lawyers, however, are another story” is beside the point. In truth, prosecutions should go where the law requires not as a question of political card games but because, as Obama has said, we should follow the “rule of law.” Because it’s the right thing to do.

Permission Slip Logic

One of the larger issues I see coming out of the “reluctance” to investigate with serious intention is the potential for arbitrary actions and judgments.  It’s one thing to protest a tax, quite another to rationalize in the context of “greater good arguments.”  If indeed woman A knows when the annihilation bomb is going to go off and woman B is assigned by C to get the information from A.  B goes about a program of waterboarding and case 1 learns when the bomb will go off and thus prevents it or case 2 does not learn when the bomb will go off and it does or malfunctions we have a demanding and interesting  dilemma.  But, in either case, a law may be on the books that makes B’s  and C’s actions out of bounds.  Whether case 1 or case 2, C and B must be treated inside the framework of the circle in which they work.  To what extent should we probe responsibility in the case of B and C?

Anger

This business with AIG and the bonuses is troubling. People are angry, but people were angry about monster bonuses long before swaps hit the helpless news. I read the initial TARP language.

But I think the question of taxing employees’ bonuses is childishness. And I have to agree with any political entity that seeks to stop the targeted tax. Yes, I believe Krauthammer is correct to bring up Common Law in this (but the same idea should be applied to all contracts, including union contracts). All this is troubling. But the language was there for everyone to see. Congress needs to be smarter.

Plainly, a counterproductive narrative is accumulating and it has nothing to do with what may or may not be real. From the start, politicos have been playing a zero sum game. The Dems want to win and the Reps want to win–there is no real compromise. All or nothing. Future narratives are being written so that candidates can claim wins in their races. “See, I told you the Obama budget was a bad idea or hat the Republican’s have no ideas. All I had to do was oppose it or ignore it and then work behind the scenes to make sure that the other person’s ideas fail.” In my mind, either the cynicism goes, or potential gains and good ideas will get lost. Dodd, as have many politicos, has been trapped in his own vortex.

Meanwhile, the universe keeps expanding.

Senses

From Dean Baker

The fact that Senator McCain could make such an incoherent complaint about younger generations being mistreated, after they have just seen a transfer of close to $16 trillion in wealth from older generations, warrants attention from the media. It is far more newsworthy than President Obama’s comment’s about “bitter” working class voters that received so much attention during the primaries.

On the Right

John Derbyrshire writes in The American Conservative:

I repeat: There is nothing wrong with lowbrow conservatism. Ideas must be marketed, and right-wing talk radio captures a big and useful market segment. However, if there is no thoughtful, rigorous presentation of conservative ideas, then conservatism by default becomes the raucous parochialism of Limbaugh, Savage, Hannity, and company. That loses us a market segment at least as useful, if perhaps not as big.

Conservatives have never had, and never should have, a problem with elitism. Why have we allowed carny barkers to run away with the Right?

Via Doc Searls.

Ignorance

What a wonderful display of ignorance on Morning Joe this morning. All talking heads admitting little understanding about banks and how someone should explain it all, please. Oh, how all of them were tricked and did not see the crisis coming (while reporting for years on proper power tie colors).

Little is required other than some research. Then some further digging. And there were plenty of people who saw the crisis coming.

Twenty Five

I’m not sure what the notorious $25 to the unemployed has to do with relief, stimulus, or economics, while AIG gets billions, but I’m reading HR1 anyway. The billions to Citigroup is taxpayer money but it boggles me why the “common share” question is just an easy decision (see second to last paragraph below). The shares will either be preferred or common, right? This money goes to shareholders.

ARRA is, as most bills are, a tangle and weave of complicated relationships and references to places in the world that are as obscure as the moon’s surface, written in the language of “WLLEBI” (what looks like English but isn’t). In addition, it’s a little scary because if it has veracity then we are in a pretty doomed state to start (what gets lost in political arguments). What the bill appears to do is lay the ground work for more to come and provides a path way for making things move more efficiently or, probably better, at least move. It appears to argue that hefty infrastructure dumps can’t happen until some sort of “new communication and information infrastructure” is in place. Maybe I’m incorrect, but this is how the bill reads. In addition to pumping money into items I have no clue how to understand, the monster reads as lots of thumbs in the dike and as a floor plan.

The politics that surrounds the bill is naked, however. Some are scripting for how, in a few years, they can claim that they fixed their own problems despite the legislation, while using most of its funds; others are arguing that future generations will pay for HR1, which is false, as the future has already lost trillions in “valuations.” Above, money will flow to Citigroup but not to what matters: actual investment.

I’m going to take a practical position and try to help as I’ve leapt to conclusion before about how Obama’s mind works and learned better.

And the cranky economics talk show hosts: that’s all about rating boosts. Not good.

Politics and the Air

I watched a lot of news on Friday, following votes and commentary on the “stimulus,” tweeting reactions Over the past couple of weeks the waves have been filled with statements against, with two primary arguments: too much spending and not enough jobs and tax cuts. And in the shakier regions: socialism and big government. But mood and reality are not congruent here, whatever the CEO of Caterpillar claims.

Today, the papers herald the passing, forgetting the last two weeks. We had dire predictions: such a bill will “nail” big government into place, forgetting the last year of billions flowing out, and will turn us all into socialists. How the idea of yesterday has changed. Not a “jobs bill.” Good grief.

Not much went about about the “context” of the bill and the situations of others in the world, such as the UK. Our situation is pretty dire. But the meaning context of government involvement in decisions is, today, beyond authoritarianism. As Krugman writes:

Why do we need international cooperation? Because we have a globalized financial system in which a crisis that began with a bubble in Florida condos and California McMansions has caused monetary catastrophe in Iceland. We’re all in this together, and need a shared solution.

“The honorable gentleman cannot guarantee that this bill will work,” claimed a detractor yesterday. Right.