An informed discussion about politics.
Hosted by a mathematician, a lawyer, and a political scientist.
Tuesday, June 30, 2009
Some Good News From Minnesota For a Change
Monday, June 29, 2009
More Idiocy from Michele Bachmann
Bachmann is forgetting, of course, that she does not believe in privacy rights.
She is quite adamant that there is no right to privacy in the constitution. That's because, in that context, the right to privacy entails a woman's right to make decisions about her own reproductive cycle, i.e., whether or not to use contraception or have an abortion.
Sunday, June 28, 2009
An Interesting Take on Iran
Freeze Settlement Growth in Occupied Territories
Nobody cares if Jewish people want to live in the West Bank. Or rather, Palestinians may dislike it but that's not the issue. The concern is that Jewish people want to build Jewish-only towns that then become part of a Jewish state, a state where non-Jews are defined as outsiders, whether or not their presence in small numbers is tolerated. If Palestine were to become a bi-national state, as many liberal and socialist Jewish groups favored in the 1930s (those who realized that Jewish nationalism was just another species of nationalism, which was as suspect as all nationalism) then anyone could live anywhere they wanted in Palestine. But so long as Israel defines itself as a "Jewish" state, planting settlements is not about Jewish people living where they want, it's about expanding the boundaries of the Jewish state and excluding non-Jews from either living there altogether or from being full members of the community. None of these right-wing Jewish communities would consent to live in an Islamic or Arab state, so defined.
This is why the "freeze" is so important, and why the Obama administration and the Quartet is demanding it. Because settlements are not about Jews freely living where they want, but about seizing land for a Jewish state, they are antithetical to the land-for-peace deal that the UN demanded in Res 242 nearly 40 years ago. So-called "natural growth" is an excuse to keep building and settling. Since the peace negotiations began in 1994, the number of Jewish settlers has doubled. Doubled. The idea is to make surrender of the land, by uprooting what is now close to 250,000 Jews, politically impossible. More settlers only makes it harder, which is the purpose.
Let's not spend any more time giving lip service to the argument that Jewish settlements in the West Bank are about the freedom of Jewish people to live where they want. Israel is building a wall around Israel that encompasses all the "settlement" land in an attempt to redraw the 1967 boundaries. Netanyahu is upset because the Obama administration is finally calling him on it.
Saturday, June 27, 2009
What Causes Regimes To Change
Friday, June 26, 2009
Why TV News Disgust Me Sometimes
Transformers: Revenge of the Neocons
By contrast, every member of the American military is a brave soldier with a heart of gold who understands what must be done. The latest aircraft, naval vessels, and automatic weapons--which magically harm only the bad guys--are given more screen time than Top Gun. Naturally, the movie ends in a desert battle that looks just like Iraq, except this time we win... the final scenes done in slow motion with angelic voices suspended over the battlefield. And for good measure, at some point the moviemakers destroy Paris.
Of course, Transformers is an adolescent fantasy franchise and pretends to be nothing else. The hero's parents are weak and clueless. The women are all unreasonably attractive and inexplicably attracted to the young hero. The seductress/dominatrix is, in fact, an evil alien in disguise who wants to kill the young hero. (Freud would have a field day.) And everyone else in the film is male... Even the alien robots.
All this aside, I still enjoyed the film because the action is quite well-paced, the sappy scenes are mostly kept to a minimum, and most of all because the Transformers are, as always, pretty cool to watch on the big screen. But you really have to ignore the swiss-cheese plot and try not to listen to the subtext. Even when it becomes actual text.
Neoconservatives Call for "Regime Change" in Iran
So let's all take a breather and recall how disastrous this same policy was when applied to Iraq. It resulted in thousands of American deaths and tens of thousands wounded. It resulted in the deaths of tens of thousands of Iraqi civilians, perhaps over 100,000 or more. Iraq is poorer and more violent than it was before. It has made Iran stronger and the USA much, much weaker. It has also hurt the world's oil supply, contributing to the spike in oil prices in 2008 and to the current recession that followed, in part, from the financial burden of those energy prices (fewer bankruptcies would have resulted if various companies and homeowners had not already been bleeding over energy prices). It may be true that we have salvaged something from Iraq, but let's be clear. Ex ante, knowing what we know now, we would not have waged that war. We should not do so in Iran. The American people don't want war with Iran. After spending something like a trillion dollars or more on the Iraq war, we literally cannot afford it. Iran is much, much more powerful, more populated, and more difficult to fight in than IRaq. Iraq was a flat, underpopulated desert. Iran is a mountainous country that has resisted most foreign invasions for 3000 years.
So when jackasses like Bolton or anyone at the Heritage foundation tells you that Obama is "weak" on Iran and that we should favor "regime change" understand this: Of course we all favor regime change. Our preferences on this subject are not in doubt. But we have to live in the real world. In the real world, the only way we stop Iran from acquiring nukes is to find a way to work with them. There is no military option.
Thursday, June 25, 2009
Too Bad
So it is all the more sad that, for all that fame, his life ultimately means so little to most of us. Perhaps, as NPR commented, he can be seen as something of a transitional figure or pioneer who helped mainstream African-American pop music. Maybe. But you might hope that a black American more famous around the world than Martin Luther King Jr., Michael Jordan, and Barack Obama put together might be more than just a singer, that he might have more to contribute than unfulfilled dreams of returning to childhood, pedophilia, and endless surgical attempts to become white. Some megastars seem to use the media for their own ends; he always seemed to have been the one used by it. Somehow he bought into the fake world he was supposed to be selling. After a bruising probate battle, I am not sure how much will be left behind. Michael Jackson's obituary was written twenty years ago. This is just the occasion for them to print it.
Some Rhetorical Questions and Comments for the Iranian Government
Palin's Philosophy: When you don't have ideas, lash out
Wednesday, June 24, 2009
Yet Another Republican Caught With His Pants Down
Big Bonuses at Goldman
I know that in any crisis, some will profit, especially as the failure of Bear Stearns and Lehman Bros. has concentrated the market. But it is still disgusting to me when everyone else is losing jobs, homes, and standard of living and they are bragging about record bonuses, especially after the fervor that hit following AIG's awarding of bonuses. If no one can pay huge sums, then no one will lose talent. That argument that they need huge sums to keep "good" people is bogus. No one is worth that much money.
I was also irritated by NPR this morning. They are running a series on how the economic crisis is stirring a Free-Market Debate Now I appreciate how NPR wants to educate the general public, but it struck me that this shouldn't really be such a big debate. We talk as if there is only free-market capitalism (no government) and government controlled economies, commonly called communism. But we all know that between these two extremes is really a spectrum. There is always some modicum of government intervention. Hello! We need someone to print money and charter banks!
There is no absolutely correct mix and the mix must change and adjust over time. All we have to do is compare European countries to the UK and the US to see the differences. There are varying degrees of government involvement in the economies of Europe, and the people are free, happy, and productive. Like democracy, each country chooses the mix that works for itself. Why talk in absolutes? Maybe NPR will get to this thinking going forward.
[Posted on behalf of USWest]
Tuesday, June 23, 2009
More about Tricky Dick
By the way, the tapes also reveal that Ronald Reagan wholeheartedly approved of the Saturday Night Massacre. What a Grand Old Party it is.
New York, New York
The Democrats have most of the stuff of the Senate body, including the gavel and the staff, but Espada has the keys to the chamber. Governor Paterson called a special session at 3pm today to work it out. The Republicans announced they would start the session at 2pm with their guy, the renegade Democrat, in charge. The Dems then sneaked in at 12:30pm, seized the chamber, and barred the doors. It's not clear why Espada couldn't use his key. When they opened the senate doors, the Republicans commenced to hold their session and the Democrats sat in silence, pretending it wasn't happening. The Republicans passed a slew of bills by unanimous consent, claiming the Dems weren't objecting. The Democrats then held their own session in the same place at the same time. Both groups were apparently shouting over one another tying to hold rival sessions at the same time. The Democratic-appointed sergeant at arms kept the Republicans from mounting the podium. One Democratic senator kept the gavel to herself away from the Republicans. When the Democrats proclaimed the session "at ease" (meaning not adjourned but not in formal session either, allowing members to chat on the floor), the Republicans kept calling them out of order when they would speak. Fistfights almost broke out at various times, but apparently the members worked to restrain the hotheads for a while.
This must have been even more hilarious to watch in person. Before we get all huffy about not doing the people's business, about fiddling while Rome burns, about wasting time and acting like children while the economy is in the crapper, let's at least be grateful that THIS is how we do power struggles in the USA. I'd take it over what's happening in Tehran any day.
Feminism Will Save the Muslim World
Monday, June 22, 2009
The Situation in Iran (Proxy Post for US West)
By now everyone has seen the video of the young philosophy student who was shot on Saturday. They say this was done by security forces, but that cannot be corroporated. Journalists are barred from reporting on Neda period. This afternoon on the Diane Rehm Show, when a journalist in
(This post was composed by US West and posted for her by Raised By Republicans because of computer problems.)
Voting Rights Act
This is a good example of what it means to be an "activist" judge and why Justice Thomas is no modest "umpire-like" judge. Although the Congress found that the act should be renewed, he would overrule the act based on his own ideological belief that we now live in a color-blind society. This is a pollyannish view of history also. The notion that we naturally progress somehow from racism to color-blindness is surprisingly teleological for a consetvative. Right now there is no public toleration for racial gerrymandering for the specific purpose of disenfranchising minority groups. But that can change. History shows that this current period of racial tolerance is the aberration in American history, something we must protect, not something we can just take for granted.
The English Are Best
Saturday, June 20, 2009
What President Obama Should Have Said About Iran
So what should Obama have said? Probably what he is saying now. That the people of Iran have to make their own destiny, and it is not for us to meddle in their affairs. Open support of the USA for the protestors would hurt their movement. So let's back off and give them what they really want and need: as much media coverage as possible.
Thursday, June 18, 2009
Demonstration in Iran-geles
Wednesday, June 17, 2009
Republican Health Care "Plan"
You're Pleased?
At least the UC bureaucrats know where their priorities are.
Obama Makes Progress on Equality for Homosexuals
Tuesday, June 16, 2009
Senator John Ensign
Another Republican Caught With Pants Down
Monday, June 15, 2009
The US and Iran
This is What's Wrong With the Republican Party
Sunday, June 14, 2009
Elections in Iran
Saturday, June 13, 2009
On Becoming a Feminist
I think one of the subjects most sorely neglected in this country is the struggle for women's rights. I didn't really learn about it until law school. Most Americans, if they know at all that women didn't earn the right to vote nationally until 90 years ago, assume that the second-class status of women was a matter of social custom. They do not imagine that there were Jim Crow laws for women. In fact, it was so much worse than Jim Crow. Most Americans also seem to think that earning the right to vote eliminated any legal subordination of women - it is this attitude that defeated the ERA as somehow unnecessary. It remains vital. It is resisted precisely because it will still wreak a revolution. The fact that suffragettes were not given the right to vote by nice progressive men, but rather were beaten for it in the streets, imprisoned, went on hunger strikes, and were vilified as whores and homewreckers - even that is just a small part of the story.
There is no room to summarize the story here, but let me make a few comments. Until shockingly recently, the law viewed women, sailors, and minor children as more or less the same class of persons who needed extra protection and lacked vital rights. I include the 'sailor' thing because it's true, but it's not all that relevant. Women could be, and were, married off before the age of majority by their parents' consent alone, whereupon they entered into coverture, the legal death of their personalty. As they used to say "man and wife become one flesh, and the man is the master of that flesh." This stuff may seem like ancient history, but dower and curtesy were good law well into the 1970s, laws that prevented a woman from bequeathing property, giving her instead a life estate only in her husband's property and vesting it in his heirs. Not only was divorce practically unavailable, but a married woman, being unable to own property, could scarcely provide for herself in the event of divorce. And it was both lawful and universal that women were barred from almost every decent profession and, when admitted, lawfully paid far less and discriminated against in every respect. Justice Sandra Day O'Connor, second in her class at Stanford Law Schoool in 1950s, was offered a secretary's job at a law firm; no better was to be offered. Abortion laws are an continuing expression of the notion of coverture, that a woman is not really competent to make decisions about what takes place within her own flesh.
So I urge everyone here to go to the library or Amazon and get a good book on the struggle for women's rights. Even most women are likely to be shocked at how much has changed. Then think about how much is left to do. At my law firm, a bunch of old men stood up two years ago at the all-firm meeting and announced that they were very interested in "women's issues," which they then ticked off: things to do with childcare, pregnancy, time off. I was appalled, as were others. That is 1980s talk, what Reagan-era conservatives call women's rights. Note that Condoleeza Rice never had a family. Today these things are "family issues." Imagine the shock of my employer were I to announce as candidly as I practice it that I absolutely intend as best I can to be a co-caregiver for my child along with my wife. Men are still presumed to be able to outsource all these "women's issues" to (female) housekeepers, nannies, spouses. Success in the legal profession, to name just one, is almost impossible for any man who would seek to follow what is derisively known as the "mommy track." Feminist activists have been about in securing the right to have a "mommy track" at all, although you can't really expect to be promoted unless you are willing to "work hard" - i.e., to be available 24/7 and willing to work a schedule totally incompatible with family life. For this they are callse feminazis and socialists. Men who try to take this path are considered lazy, not team players, or have their sexual orientation questioned.
Conservatives universally consider accomodations for breastfeeding women or men who want to take care of kids as socialist intrusion on their absolute right to design a work schedule and expectations that can only be performed by men who outsource all childcare responsibilities or women who have no children. That is where the fight is now. And nobody is taking it on.
Being a feminist is still very important, for both men and women, because we have still a lot of work to do. I guess I'm just getting a little tired of the idea that I'm being "nice to my wife" by picking up the kid from daycare if she is sick once in a great while. Or that I am "babysitting" when I take care of my kid. Feminism, it has been said, is the radical proposition that women are human beings. This is still a big deal.
Are we turning the corner?
What are your stories out there? Any "green shoots" to be seen, as Bernanke put it? We know that jobs come back last in a recovery, although except for corporate insiders, nothing much matters except jobs.
Thursday, June 11, 2009
Public Option or Bust! (revised)
The problem is that the Republicans - who are funded by insurance companies that spend some 20-40% of their income on administration and profit - are terrified. These are real figures, btw. Medicare, by contrast, spends less than 7% on administration and doesn't have to find profits.

(reprinted without permission from the Kaiser family foundation - no relation to Kaiser Permanente - which probably won't mind its research being part of the public discussion since it posts it on its website)
This chart shows the dramatic rise in administrative expenditures (the 20-40% figure came from a Washington Post piece I can't find again).
Here's more important information about the cost of private insurance (which shows why the $5,000 tax credit proposed by McCain and still proposed by the GOP is asinine):
And as long as I'm stealing charts. Here's some indication of how inequitably the US spends its health care dollars. Note just how almost half the population survives on just 3% of the health care money. This shows either (1) how much uninsurance and underinsurance there really is (2) how much money is wasted at the top end - or a combination of both. You think we can't find savings if 1% of the population spends almost a quarter of all health care dollars? I bet we can. Just think of how much better life would be for 50% of Americans if we raised the total spent on them from 3% to 4% - a 33% increase.
Conservatives and their insurance company backers know that a public option insurance will be as popular as medicare is and much cheaper. They also know that people will find public insurance to be a better product in other ways. The public knows that the various tricks of private insurers to drop coverage retroactively for sick patients ("rescission" in the terminology) will not be repeated for a public plan, and that alone will persuade many people to choose the public plan. Anyone who has dealt with private insurers know that federal bureaucrats can't hold a candle to them in terms of obstructionism and nastiness.
I, for example, am being billed $3,000 for *covered* emergency room services last Fall even after an appeal (where they granted me an extra $700), and I get no explanation whatsoever, and no choice but to hire a lawyer if I want to. No ombudsman or anything. No due process. And trust me, I know how to do appeals. This is Anthem Blue Cross, btw, and it's a platinum PPO plan. ( The good news is that the hospital itself is being reasonable with me). Any federal plan will give you notice and an opportunity to be heard about denials of coverage.
So the reason the Republicans are afraid of the public plan is that they know that it will be very popular and that private insurance will have to adapt (smaller profits, less cheating and stealing from their customers) or die. It's not true that most Americans like their current health insurance. Most Americans barely tolerate their current insurers, and those that are at all happy are usually those that haven't had to use it for anything.
If there's no public option, all we will get is a mandate to buy overpriced private insurance that doesn't work. It will be a mandate to fill the coffers of bloated private insurance companies that will provide the same poor swiss-cheese plans they do now. See Medicare Part D for more details...
Tuesday, June 09, 2009
Palin in 2012
Despite her inexperience, Palin has refused to let the usual clique of Republican operatives manage her affairs and has resisted the temptation to cozy up to the Republican establishment. Indeed, she has become somewhat infamous for snubbing various organizations and individuals associated with the party. Palin remains a political maverick. Although some of her apparent missteps are simply missteps, I suspect Palin instinctively recognizes that the old Republican establishment is incompetent, irrelevant, and politically poisonous for her future.
Of the possible contenders for the 2012 Republican nomination, I believe Palin alone has the potential to challenge Obama on his own turf. She is a fresh face for the Republican party and her personal life story is an inspiration to many. She appeals to the fiscal conservatives, the libertarians, and the evangelicals. Most of all, Palin is a celebrity-in-waiting. There is a certain breathless anticipation with which the press watch her. Whenever Palin attends some national dinner--or fails to--it merits coverage just below the fold. Huckabee and Romney can do all the political maneuvering and schmoozing they want, but they labor in obscurity.
It is possible that Palin has no desire to run a grueling primary campaign and would prefer simply to make some money on the lecture/book circuit and stay in Alaska with her family. But she scares me. She has made a career of unseating incumbents with ruthless campaigns--the charming nastiness she brought to the 2008 race was no accident. With more savvy and more control, she will be a very formidable candidate. If she decides to run for President in 2012, I believe Sarah Palin will be the Republican nominee.
Monday, June 08, 2009
New York as Messed up as CA?
Saturday, June 06, 2009
Death to America vs. America is the Great Satan
What Iranians of most political stripes probably do not want is a return to the 1980s, when Iran was a pariah state within the middle east as well as the rest of the world. It's not that the "hardliners" (so called) are no longer Islamic radicals. But they see that, without Bush as a foil, the role of agent provacateur may be more costly than beneficial. Why? Cynically, they are looking forward to the expansion of their power in Iraq (with US departure imminent). Why not enjoy the expanded power and influence in the region? Why encourage an anti-Iranian alliance throughout the region? Perhaps it has occurred to them that their neighbors feel as threatened by the possibility of nukes as the USA, and that they would have more influence if they didn't go down that route. Also, they are now treated to the prospect of the might of US force finally being brought down against their archenemy, the radical Sunni Taliban in Afghanistan and Pakistan. Put another way, in large part due to the Bush administration's ineptness, Iran has been handed the possibility of being a powerful regional player. It may just prefer that role to being an oriental version of Castro or, worse, Hugo Chavez.
Still, it is worth remarking on the fact that this is a political process with rules of a sort, not democratic to be sure, but not merely despotic or dictatorial either. Iran is more politically developed in terms of competitive or transparent political institutions than China. Think about that for a minute. Unlike the Arab states that languished for centuries under foreign rule (Ottoman or European), Persia had and has a stronger and more robust political and civic culture. There is some reason to hope that Iran can transition to a more stable and more agreeable political system over time, and I applaud this administration for returning to the Clinton-era policy of limited engagement, not merely containment.
European Parliament Elections
Thursday, June 04, 2009
A personal reflection on Tiananmen Square
I came to realize later that these events in China had a profound effect on me, because that was when I first really began thinking about what it would mean for something to be worth dying for. This was my context for understanding when I saw an old interview with Martin Luther King Jr. who said that if a man hasn't found what he is willing to die for, he does not know what to live for.
This had other consequences. I admit it seems ironic to some, but I think I could not have later become a Christian if I had not begun at some point in my political and philosohpical thinking to ponder it would mean to give one's life for a cause. The passion is meaningless - the way Mel Gibson's movie was meaningless - if there is not appreciation for what John says: No greater love hath a man than this, to lay down his life for his friends.
In some ways, 1989 was bookended by moments that resonated strongly with me. At the end of the year, there was the Velvet revolution in Czechoslovakia, where a million people crowded into Vaclav square and the government fled without firing a shot. The Berlin wall was taken down. All without a shot being fired. But more amazing was the adrenaline rushing through the people of Eastern Europe who, though one might have thought them for so long crushed in spirit, were taking their future into their own hands in this dramatic way. I like to say that I believe in miracles because I saw them on the streets of Prague. History is a long series of slow causes and processes. But sometimes in human history there are moments when it is as if the world stops and the sun totters on its axis. We saw several of them in 1989. 9/11 was another such moment.
Obviously this is only very remotely related to what happened in China. That's kind of my point too. We can only see events through our own eyes. I'm not really asking for comments on this post, although you are free to make them. Just thought I'd share a bit about the moments that shaped me politically and philosophically. The Tiananmen square massacre was one of them.
Obama on Iran
Wednesday, June 03, 2009
Thanks, New Hampshire!
It occurs to me that this state-by-state battle for civil rights may be shaping up to be similar to the struggle for women's suffrage a century ago. By the time the nineteenth amendment finally granted women the right to vote everywhere in the U.S. in 1920, nearly a third of the states had already recognized full voting equality while another third had granted women some degree of suffrage.
Romancing the Car
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Jim Cramer is an idiot
Tuesday, June 02, 2009
A little insight into our President
Mr. Obama is not a foreign policy expert. Apparently he didn't know that "linkage" is an incredibly loaded word both in nuclear negotiations and particularly in the context of Arab-Israeli negotiations. I think by his second term, Bill Clinton would have known that "linkage" was a code word. Obama didn't. I'm surprised I didn't see this remarked upon elsewhere, but I may just have missed it. So this showed me about Obama's lack of foreign policy experience.
At this White House meeting, I thought I could see Netanyahu realizing that Barack Obama could easily go "off the reservation." If an American president were to begin thinking afresh about US-Israeli relations, it could indeed by quite disturbing for Israeli expectations. The rhetoric of the past fifty years has served to ensnare and entrap all the participants into webs from which they do not extricate themselves. When every word is fraught with meaning, real communication stops.
But his answer, broad and theoretical, yet turning on the use of a word, was also telling. He really does think like a trained legal scholar. I am not projecting too much when I say it was pretty obvious to me that he was taking the question as if he was at oral argument. That's also interesting to me. I suspect he reponds well to that sort of discourse.
What surprised me the most was this: Had the word linkage been a legal term of art, like "standing" or "jurisdiction," he would not have blithely used it without a host of caveats. Yet out of his field, he lumbered in verbally where angels fear to tread. I get the impression that Obama thinks he's capable of understanding things such as foreign policy without specific training or expertise. This may run to other kinds of policy areas as well, and likely does. Now, it is a bad thing for a President to lack intellectual curiosity and simply defer to experts (see Reagan, Bush I, Bush II). It is a good thing to be open to thinking, debating, and being willing to examine timeworn customs afresh. It is a very good thing to propose reimagining policy, indeed the whole world, from first principles. That is the great virtue of youth.
But it is also a bit dangerous to assume that superior intellect and reasoning capacity is a substitute for learning and experience. That is the hubris of youth. Most of the time, I see that President Obama is wise in knowing how and what to learn from wiser people. But he still has this greenness about him. Second-term Obama will have gray hair.