Thursday, August 30, 2012

Will McAvoy pwns the Tea Party

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yGAvwSp86hY

I know we've talked about the TP before, but it's scary and shameful on all of us that we allowed a group of such hateful, delusional people to participate in gov't and even push it around (maybe now we know why corrupt Karzai isn't thrilled about a power-sharing peace deal with the Taliban?). I wish Anonymous or some other tech-savvy group would hack the GOP convention and play this during a big speech. You can start watching at 2:25 if you're pressed for time.

Again, shame on the MSM that I actually learned a lot of new things from the Daily Show and HBO's Newsroom during this campaign season. I know Sorkin can be over-the-top (and did he accidentally compare an old black lady to a stray animal, or accuse the TP of doing so?), but I think Newsroom is refreshing and you actually care about the characters' struggles (and admire them for it). Too bad it won't shame any of the current big anchors into being actual journalists.

Monday, August 27, 2012

Obama screwed over by current fundraising environment

...more like it's screwing everyone over but the rich donors.

http://www.npr.org/2012/08/23/159768245/jane-mayer-obama-in-impossible-bind-over-donors
http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2012/08/27/120827fa_fact_mayer

As we know, Obama got a lot of corporate money in 2008, but also got an unprecedented amount from small and/or online donations. Though what really won the fundraising battle vs. McCain was his success with "medium donors". His campaign got many people to donate the $5K max directly to Obama, and those people spread the word and got their friends to do the same. So it was really grassroots, viral fundraising - but of course the demographic that is able to give $5K and expect nothing in return (apart from a photo and a fancy dinner) is not your typical Democrat or American. Nevertheless, he won partly by "democratizing" the fundraising process more than any other candidate in our lifetimes.

But in 2011-2012, his base is less enthusiastic (also the curse of the incumbent with several unrealized expectations), and some of his corporate backers have fled because Romney and the GOP are just a more lucrative investment (with a better chance of victory than McCain). Plus Obama's "tough talk" on corporate excesses and financial reform (even if mostly toothless) didn't win over many fans in the business world. Obama is still heavily beating Romney on individual direct donations, but those $5K gifts here and there pale in comparison to the indirect, limitless giving enabled by Citizens United and other loopholes (casino magnate Sheldon Adelson has given $40M to pro-Romney superPACs and has offered to give as much as $100M total). Some nonprofit groups can also raise basically limitless donations and don't even have to divulge donor identities. Technically they just can't be under the "direct control" of the campaign or party, but their objectives are clearly aligned. And since the election will pretty much be decided by less-educated, less-informed swing voters in 7 states (6% of our population or less), having a ton of cash to blitz those folks with endless ads could be the key to victory.

Why haven't Obama and the Dems jumped on that bandwagon to fight fire with fire? Well first of all, Obama and the Dems of course opposed the CitUtd ruling, and did not participate as enthusiastically out of principle. Second, fewer rich people seem to favor Obama over Romney, for obvious financial reasons. Third, Obama isn't a social butterfly pandering to the big donors like some other candidates, either due to his personality or political philosophy. I am sure he and his team are holding the secret VIP retreat now and then, but not to the level of W Bush or Clinton (who was known to "rent out" the Lincoln Bedroom). Big Dem donors are a fussy bunch, so if they don't feel that the POTUS is showing them enough love, they keep their checkbooks at home. If they're not giving out of financial self-interest, then they have to give to a cause (or just hate the thought of a GOP victory like Bill Maher). Bezos gave a lot of money to support a pro-gay-marriage nonprofit that is also supporting Obama. But other liberal causes (green energy, civil rights, antiwar, organized labor, etc.) have pretty much suffered under Obama (though less than under Romney of course), so the rich people who care about those causes are probably less likely to give big to the president.

Tuesday, August 21, 2012

Money troubles and humble living according to Ann Romney

You know what's annoying... when people who want for nothing try to make it sound like they struggled through money problems. Some rich people are so greedy, they want your sympathy too! Case and point Ann Romney: Marie Antoinette thinks she's Cossette! These quotes were taken from a Boston Globe article from 1994, when Mitt was making his US Senate run vs. Teddy K. The Romneys were not well known in MA at the time, so I guess this was Ann's attempt to endear themselves to the working-class New Englanders?

http://www.dailykos.com/story/2012/04/16/1083802/-Ann-Romney-s-tale-of-struggling-We-learned-hard-lessons-living-off-our-stock-portfolio

I'm sorry for harping on poorly chosen words uttered decades ago, but stuff like this is ignorant and disrespectful to the people who actually do have to live with hardships. That's one thing that money can't buy (in America at least) - no matter how much you exaggerate, lie, and reframe your own narrative, you can't pretend to be a self-made man if you're not. They could have given away all their assets and tried to make something from nothing to see what they were really made of. But that is just too hard and risky (though it's knows as "reality" for most humans). It must chafe them so much to have to campaign against an actual self-made man who is a better communicator to everyday Americans and is generally better liked by them (and he is the POTUS). That is the difference between a real rags-to-riches story and a poser. The real deal doesn't feel the need to shove his/her story down our throats until we shower them with admiration (we may forgive Obama's self-promoting books because he was trying to launch a national political career at the time). The real deal is grateful for his/her success, and wants to give back so others can have it too. Conversely, a poser feels entitled, egocentric, and superior. The rich love judging and psychoanalyzing the poor to make themselves feel better, so I am just trying to return the favor (not that I am or speak for the poor). I know I haven't struggled much financially in my life, so I don't act like I did.  It's not a difficult concept to grasp. And for one's biggest struggles, or triumphs for that matter, there is a certain dignity in keeping it private unless there is some edifying, inspirational purpose - and winning a campaign to "save America" (i.e. help rich people) probably isn't a valid reason.

I know that millions of poor people will end up voting for Mitt in November, but I hope not a single one of them votes because they truly believe that the Romneys care about their plight and will make their lives better. Well to be fair, I don't think the Romneys are cruel a-holes, and they probably do care about the suffering of the poor - to the extent that most Americans care about Darfur. We feel bad, but not enough to lift a finger about it, because we have higher priorities (like shopping and dressage). Also if you don't understand a problem, it's hard to truly care about it.  

So getting back to Ann's speech about their student days at BYU... I think most students are short on cash (plus it's not like the cost of tuition and living in UT back then was terrible). There's a certain romance to being a "starving student", and it can be liberating. But for millions of students now facing much more daunting costs, family constraints, and uncertain futures, it's a big deal. They take out loans with crappy terms or work several part-time jobs, but not the Romneys. They were so poor in their youth that Mitt needed to sell his American Motors stocks (gifts from daddy, probably bought at employee discount) to pay the bills! Ann recounted the story like a true out-of-touch aristocrat. And for the record, Ann is the daughter of a Michigan industrialist turned mayor. She first met Mitt at an exclusive private school. Les Miserables indeed!

Some highlights from the article:

- Neither one of us had a job, because Mitt had [stocks]. (Ah, so they didn't work because they didn't NEED to, not because they couldn't find a job like many of the 25M unemployed today whom Mitt claims to fight for)

- [Mitt's dad] invested Mitt’s birthday money year to year — it wasn’t much, a few thousand... (Aw what a meager bday gift, especially in 1960's dollars)

- Five years later, stock that had been $6 a share was $96 and Mitt cashed it. (I thought this was supposed to be a sob story! She just couldn't resist bragging about their capital gains - of course in those days they had to pay a 35% tax rate for long term)

- We were living on the edge, not entertaining. (They were so poor that Ann was too ashamed to host dressage parties)

- Right after Mitt graduated in 1975, we had our third boy and it was about the time Mitt’s first paycheck came along. So, we were married a long time before we had any income, about five years as struggling students. (Hm, 3 kids with no steady paycheck - is Ann a "welfare mom" who needs to learn, as Mitt said, "the dignity of work"?)

- ...I don’t even consider myself wealthy, which is an interesting thing, it can be here today and gone tomorrow. (this quote was uttered more recently. So how much net worth does it take to be wealthy then, a billion? And "interesting" is not the first word I would use to describe that comment)

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In the current campaign season she's changed her tone a bit:

"Look, maybe I haven't struggled as much financially as some people have," she said recently on Fox News. "[But] I can tell you — and promise you — that I've had struggles in my life, and Mitt and I have compassion for people that are struggling." -NPR

Does compassion for struggling people entail endorsing the most draconian budget in modern US history that slashes social services spending (that millions literally depend on for survival and social mobility) in order to fund tax breaks for the wealthy and big businesses? Yes, their humble roots at BYU certainly shaped their future values.

Friday, August 17, 2012

The GOP's disenfranchisement efforts

http://www.npr.org/2012/08/15/
158869947/do-voter-id-laws-prevent-fraud-or-dampen-turnout
http://articles.cnn.com/2008-
04-28/politics/scotus.voter.id_1_voter-impersonation-voter-id-laws-voter-fraud?_s=PM:POLITICS
http://www.npr.org/blogs/
itsallpolitics/2012/08/17/158982853/federal-court-reinstates-early-voting-days-in-parts-of-florida?ft=1&f=1014

Of all developed democratic nations, the US is probably the one where it's hardest to vote. In the last few elections, conservatives have tried to make that process even harder (presumably for some voting blocs that lean Democrat). They claim that it's meant to prevent fraud and tampering, but there is pretty much zero evidence of in-person voting fraud in the last couple decades (most fraud cases have involved mail-in ballots). They respond to that by saying one fraudulent vote is one too many. But in order to stop that one fraudulent vote, how do you justify disenfranchising dozens or even thousands of legit voters? Faux News and others have done a great job implanting the idea in Americans' minds that voter fraud by the left is rampant. Dead people, illegals, and felons are on the voter rolls, etc. Well as we saw in FL 2000, that wasn't the case at all, and in fact authorized voters were being mislabeled as felons.

What are they so afraid of? If their candidates are better, and their ideas are superior, then no need to play games - the voters will validate their cause. Or if they think the voters are dumb and don't know what's best for them, then spend the corporate billions to blitz the airwaves with propaganda and get out the vote as insurance. Both parties are doing that plenty. But now they have to go one step further and block unfriendly voters from exercising their American rights? That is unacceptable. The GOP is supposedly the party of freedom, liberty, and small government. Then why are they so hardcore about enacting these new bureaucratic laws that undermine some people's liberty? They want to be the populist party instead of the elitist party, but moves like this reveal their true colors. Heck we have so much gerrymandering and don't even allow winner-by-popular-vote in many cases, precisely to be undemocratic. But is  this a gov't "of the people, by the people, and for the people" - or something else? By the way, that quote was from a certain Republican president during the Civil War.

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Can you imagine who would be elected of we didn't have a system that disenfranchised voters? That's why the Republicans are so afraid. They complain about fraud and want to require govt issued ids but they can't point to any cases where this has been a problem.

Also, why not vote on Sundays (like in France which has much higher turnout) or make election day (at least for presidential) a holiday?

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Yeah I agree. Voting is already so inconvenient here (and many Dem-leaning voters like students and the poor don't participate as it is), that the voter ID stuff is almost a joke. In some nations voting is mandatory (that probably wouldn't fly here). But at least in other places, the voting window is like a month, and/or voting day is on a weekend as you said. There is NO good reason voting should occur on a Tuesday (in the winter) here, with so much at stake. I know there is some law stating that employers must give workers unpenalized time off to vote, but that is probably not practical for many hourly lower-wage jobs (again, poorer minorities who may lean Dem). So the system is already so whack and undemocratic as it is, these new laws are just salt on the wound. I don't understand why there isn't more outrage over this. If only the ACLU and NAACP speak out, then the issue appears liberal and partisan, not a matter of rights and liberty that it truly is.  

Tuesday, August 7, 2012

Madeleine Levine on successful parenting

“The cost of this relentless drive to perform at unrealistically high levels is a generation of kids who resemble nothing so much as trauma victims,” Levine writes. “They become preoccupied with events that have passed — obsessing endlessly on a possible wrong answer or a missed opportunity. They are anxious and depressed and often self-medicate with drugs or alcohol. Sleep is difficult and they walk around in a fog of exhaustion. Other kids simply fold their cards and refuse to play.”

...as parents and as a society, we’ve reached a tipping point, in which the long-dawning awareness that there’s something not quite right about our parenting is strengthening into a real desire for change. Families, their fortunes tracking the larger economy that encouraged so much of their excess, are crashing after bubble years in which they spent their every penny, and then some, on cultivating competitive greatness in their kids. Now exhausted, often disenchanted and (conveniently enough) broke, they’re reconsidering whether the mad chase was worth all the resources that sustained it.

-NYT

Another best-selling child psychologist chimes in about the dangers of obsessive, hyper-expectations parenting leaving even "successful" kids feeling burnt out, worthless, and unable to cope with adult challenges. I guess it's natural, but privileged US parents seem more concerned with the external indicators of their kids' success vs. harder-to-measure internal. The guest likens it to building a house, but being more concerned about the home decor instead of making sure the structure can actually stand. They love their kids and want them to do well, but they're taking the wrong approach and doing a disservice instead (a common theme for America in recent years - we mean well but we end up making it worse). And at least Levine dares to ask the obvious root question: are you doing all this crap for your kids, or yourself?

http://www.nytimes.com/2012/08/05/opinion/sunday/raising-successful-children.html?_r=1&src=me&ref=general (seriously one of the best article's I've ever read, and not just because I'm in agreement with her - it's amazingly written)

http://www.nytimes.com/2012/07/29/books/review/teach-your-children-well-by-madeline-levine.html?pagewanted=all
http://www.kqed.org/a/forum/R201208071000

The 1% are outliers, and not something we should all aspire to (and clearly not something we will all achieve). Yes that life has a lot of benefits and opens many doors, but what does that person (and their loved ones) sacrifice, often permanently, in order to get there? To some it's worth it, and to others maybe not - especially since attainment is not guaranteed regardless of how much extracurriculars/tutoring you do, what your degree says, and how great you think you are. All parents think they and their kids are "above average", but of course that is impossible. Most of us and our kids will be sub-rich and "normal". There is nothing wrong with that, as long as you are at peace with yourself. Easier said than done I know, and I feel inadequate about my professional and personal development almost every day (sometime justified, sometime foolish based on dumb social influences). I just hope those feelings don't lead me to bad behaviors described by Levine. And I would say that my control-freak dad was edging towards being a helicopter parent ahead of his time, but not that I blame him for all my issues. It's not the "losers" who are messed up, but this world's value system and economics that are perverse in my view (yes a critic would say, "of course a loser would blame the system to explain his failure"). Winners love and praise the systems that enabled them to thrive (Romney), and the opposite for the losers. What does that say about the system? Clearly it works for some but not all, though hard to judge its merits since we haven't really experienced a viable alternative, because those who profit from the system will resist reforms.

Wednesday, August 1, 2012

Romney's disastrous foreign tour

MITT actually stands for "totally not presidential material." He might have some business smarts, but if his worldview, reasoning, and understanding of history are so out of whack, then he is probably a more dangerous candidate than a total business-economics novice with a better "personality" (for lack of a more descriptive term at the moment).

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/07/30/mitt-romney-palestinians_n_1718496.html?utm_hp_ref=tw

I seriously think that you or I would have more foreign policy credibility and competence. I can't imagine what he'll pull on his final leg of his foreign tour, "dumb Polack" jokes? And the sad part is his campaign chose the UK, Israel, and Poland precisely because they are totally uncontroversial pro-America (and pro-GOP values) states - low-hanging fruit for Romney to build up his foreign policy chops. Or maybe it was just an overseas donation tour overshadowed by the Olympics?

For him to make those Israeli-Palestinian comments without historical context (and context is not exactly one of his strong points) is lower than grade school. It's the opposite of the "Guns, Germs, and Steel" argument by Diamond, who did extensive research to disprove the telologists who suggested that Eurasians came to dominate the globe simply because they are superior races/cultures (in actuality, they had massive geographical and environmental advantages, i.e. luck). Romney totally doesn't get the thesis of the book, even though he cited it to support his bizarre claim (I doubt he read it, and I really doubt Diamond is going to vote for him). Diamond does refer to culture, but only in a later and less important chapter. He basically wrote that geniuses and visionaries are about evenly distributed among peoples, societies, and eras. But effective cultures have institutions and norms in place to allow those great people to reach their full potential (which obviously helps their societies), while other cultures squander such human capital for various reasons. Diamond didn't even talk about wealth gaps or median incomes. But when a culture is under foreign occupation, obviously that's a different story and it's hard for the Einsteins and Pasteurs to fulfill their destinies. Like I said before, would Romney be Romney if he grew up in inner-city Detroit instead of his parents' suburban palace?

You can't just look at the end result from a particular set of circumstances, then make an overall value judgment. Phelps did not with the 200 fly recently - does that mean he's not a very good swimmer? If the Israelis were poor, persecuted, and plagued by inept government, embargo, air strikes, infighting, and being used as a proxy war pawn for 60 years, and the Palestinians got massive Western support and diplomatic cover, their histories would be quite different. It's pretty sad that a presidential candidate doesn't already get this. Actually it's kind of an interesting reflection on our times that Obama and Romney are even presidential candidates. The fact that America would seriously consider, and even elect, a person of Obama's background is a credit to our open-mindedness and tolerance today (as well as major Bush and DC fatigue). We're not post-racial and harmonious, but it's at least improving in some ways. And the fact that the GOP would nominate a guy like Romney (plus he has a decent chance to win) is a travesty, and may be an indication of our economic desperation and Washington dysfunction. Also contributing to that is of course backlash from all the groups that feel threatened by Obama's rise. These two men would have been inconceivable as candidates just 10 years ago, for better and worse.   

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http://www.huffingtonpost.com/peter-s-goodman/mitt-romney-israel_b_1721396.html?utm_hp_ref=tw

To simpleton conservatives, the narrative is just so much cleaner and palatable if you try to explain the inequalities in the world as purely based on merit and just consequences. Of course poor minorities are doing worse because they are lazy, and of course WASP and Jewish people are rich and powerful because they are just superior people with superior culture and a superior god. Obama's disruptive, compelling narrative is obviously incompatible, which is maybe why they hate him so much. Race is part of that, but I think it's also about a sense of order of the world - their traditional unjust order. Some people realize that there are many causes of inequality, and several are due to foul play, so we may want to enact reforms to try to ameliorate those problems - but of course the establishment forces will push back and cry socialism and treason. Inequality is inevitable, and maybe it can be beneficial. I forget the actual source, but someone on the right recently went so far as to say that a big wealth gap is good and motivating because it gives the poor a "role model" in the super rich, to aspire to and emulate. Maybe that is what US capitalism is, but it is not a recipe for a healthy society. Inequality may have its benefits, but it should not be achieved through cheating and injustice. I think we learned that in kindergarten (and I know it is part of the Church of LDS teachings). But if these "winners" are just so genetically and culturally superior, and destined for greatness anyway, then why the need to cheat your way to the top and keep others down? Though for Romney types, I guess the ends justify the means and he won't "apologize" for his success. How about Saddam and Escobar - they were among the richest people in the world for a time. They don't have to apologize either? Romney made his TV rounds and accused Obama and the Dems of being envious of people like him, and therefore wanting to tarnish his business reputation. When a football player injures his opponent with a dirty play and the referee issues a penalty, I don't think he's doing it out of envy or vendetta (well, maybe for everyone but James Harrison). For the good of the game (and the safety of the players), there has to be some order, respect, and standards of conduct. But people like Mitt just can't understand that it's not always about him. 

The Republican nominee must feel perpetual temptation to stimulate white discomfort with Obama while subtly celebrating white superiority -- a message that surely appeals to a core segment of voters.


Obama's rise (which inspired and emboldened some marginalized groups: minorities, immigrants, and the youth), plus the recession and erosion of the American Dream for many whites, has really upset some Americans out there. They feel like the "wrong people" are getting ahead. They're right, but they should be targeting their ire at other folks. The Tea Party tended to attack greedy, corrupt business at first, but then when the movement got corporatized and backed by the Kochs and such, then of course it's the federal gov. and unions at the heart of all those problems - those poor Fortune 500 firms are just like Blue Collar Joe, under Obama's jackboot. And for all their hating on "welfare moms" and "nanny government", isn't it comically hypocritical that some conservatives whites have a sense of entitlement that only they are allowed to succeed in America?

This ties back to Romney's Israel-Palestine comments. He believes it's the system and culture that make societies succeed or fail. If so, then why do he and conservatives want to gut the modern US system that, despite its warts, has created unprecedented prosperity for millions, as well as huge technological and intellectual advances since WWII? Why does he espouse policies that will make it harder for more Americans to realize their potentials (I know he doesn't feel that way, but sorry it's still voodoo economics)? Culture and system are the key, yet Romney wants to make it tougher for regular people to afford college, wants to make it harder for average people to access critical social services that will enhance their productivity and contributions to society, and such. I really hope Obama, the Dems, and the press call him out on this blatant contradiction.