Archive for the 'Economy' Category

Quick Hit: Drilling Is A Fraud!

Terri Whitehouse June 19th, 2008

I guess some people think that if you repeat a lie long enough, it becomes magically true. Click here to learn why the Bush/McCain/McConnell energy “plan” is a great big FAIL!

UPDATE: And Krugman for the TKO:

Mr. McCain has now aligned himself with an administration that, even aside from its blame-the-environmental-movement tendencies, has established an extensive track record as the gang that couldn’t think straight about energy policy.

Remember, they didn’t just insist that the Iraqis would welcome us as liberators; on the eve of the Iraq war, administration officials were also adamant that regime change in Iraq would add millions of barrels a day to the world oil supply, driving oil prices way down. (In fact, Iraq’s oil output took five years just to recover to preinvasion levels.)

So why would Mr. McCain associate himself with these characters? The answer, presumably, is that it’s a cynical political calculation.

How can anyone really delude themselves into trusting Bush/McCain/McConnell/and the ever-desperate Northup on energy policy? All the sugar in the world wouldn’t make that snake oil go down!

No Banker Left Behind

Terri Whitehouse March 15th, 2008

There is an excellent post on Greg Palast’s blog linking the Eliot Spitzer scandal with the recent bailout of Bear Stearns:

It was the night of February 13 when Spitzer made the bone-headed choice to order take-out in his Washington Hotel room. He had just finished signing these words for the Washington Post about predatory loans:

“Not only did the Bush administration do nothing to protect consumers, it embarked on an aggressive and unprecedented campaign to prevent states from protecting their residents from the very problems to which the federal government was turning a blind eye.”

Bush, Spitzer said right in the headline, was the “Predator Lenders’ Partner in Crime.” The President, said Spitzer, was a fugitive from justice. And Spitzer was in Washington to launch a campaign to take on the Bush regime and the biggest financial powers on the planet.

Spitzer wrote, “When history tells the story of the subprime lending crisis and recounts its devastating effects on the lives of so many innocent homeowners the Bush administration will not be judged favorably.”

But now, the Administration can rest assured that this love story – of Bush and his bankers - will not be told by history at all – now that the Sheriff of Wall Street has fallen on his own gun.

It looks like Gov. Spitzer wasn’t the only one getting screwed.

(h/t: Crooks and Liars)

Big Money Mitch Gets A Great Big F!

Terri Whitehouse March 13th, 2008

Sen. Mitch McConnell, 2008:

I doubt that couples with children who make $63,000 a year think that they’re rich.

Why, it seems like only yesterday that Sen. Mitch McConnell and his BFF, Pres. George W. Bush were arguing that such families were rich!

Of course, we all know that when it comes to giving a flying you-know-what about the middle class, Sen. Mitch McConnell gets a big fat F. For all the huffing and puffing he does, for all the scraps he tosses our way every once in a while, ultimately, Sen. Mitch McConnell has failed this state.

Does anyone really believe we are better off with this man as our senator? I don’t know about ya’ll, but this gal has had just about enough. DITCH MITCH!

Quick Hit: Welfare Kings At It Again

Terri Whitehouse March 12th, 2008

Dean Baker has an excellent commentary about the recent bailout of financial services companies, and the media’s lack of reporting on it, at The American Prospect:

There is one other issue that is extremely important that has been completely omitted from the media’s discussion of the Fed’s actions. There are people who have shorted the counterfeit notes (mortgage backed securities and related assets) because they recognized that these assets were in fact going to lose much of their value. While these short sellers were trying to make money, they were actually performing a valuable public service. They were pushing down the price of these assets towards their true level. If we had many such short sellers in the market we would not have seen the housing bubble grow to such dangerous proportions. The same holds true of the stock bubble.

However, if the Fed acts to sustain bubbles even after they have started to collapse under the pressure of their own weight, it makes it far more risky for short sellers. This means that even investors who realize that Citigroup has nothing but counterfeit currency will be reluctant to short its stock or other assets supported by counterfeit currency. As a result we can expect to see even bigger more dangerous bubbles in the future.

This is not a pretty story and there are economists who can make this point. The media should be talking to them, not just the cheerleaders for the housing bubble.

When it comes to personal responsibility, the rich need not apply. Go read the whole thing here.

Quick Hit: Recommended Reading

Terri Whitehouse March 10th, 2008

Law Student Jill Filipovic has two excellent posts up on Feministe this week, which follow up on that 1 in 99 statistic that was recently reported.

In “America Behind Bars”, Filipovic discusses the economic and social impact of the incarceration rate:

And entire communities depend on prisons for their economic stability. They have disproportionate political power — prison inmates count as residents, meaning that the areas are allocated greater resources that the inmates don’t benefit from and they’re counted in the population of Congressional districts. And inmates, of course, can’t vote — and in many states, they can’t vote once they get out, either.

Piggybacking on that post in “Judicial nominees, prison exploitation and discriminatory country clubs”, Filipovic takes a closer look at the prison-industrial complex and those who profit from it:

…like the private military contractors that the Bush administration pays to do our dirty work in Iraq, private prison employees were long not subject to the same laws that federal and state prison employees are…

Don’t Ya Rile ‘Em

Terri Whitehouse March 10th, 2008

I got the pre-coffee lazies, folks:


(Via Married To The Sea)

The Early Bird Gets the Turd

Terri Whitehouse February 7th, 2008

Sometimes, I wonder why I don’t just stick cotton in my ears every morning:

The Army blocked help for wounded vets and then lied about it.

Sen. Mitch McConnell and his ilk stopped legislation that would actually help people in this dear-God-whatever-you-do-don’t-call-it-a-recession.

We’re paying more and getting less for our national defense.

OPINION: MCCONNELLISM AT WORK. WHAT IS CONGRESSMAN ED WHITFIELD SMOKING?

Jim Pence February 7th, 2008

 

When I read the comment below by Congressman dubya Ed Whitfield, I realized this guy is out of touch with reality here in Kentucky. The fact is Kentucky has lost 2.3 percent of its manufacturing jobs, or almost 7,600, from September 2006 to September 2007 and 26,381 manufacturing jobs, in the previous 5 years, according to Manufacturers’ News. That amounts to 33, 981 manufacturing lost in Kentucky, in just six years.
When Ed Whitfield says “We have enjoyed a strong and robust economy, with impressive job growth over the past decade” I have to wonder what he is smoking!
Is it really a surprise to anyone other than Senator Mitch McConnell, Elaine Chao and Ed Whitfield, that when good jobs disappear and folks can’t afford to buy as much, the economy suffers? Yes Ed its the economy stupid and a stimulus package to give folks a little money to buy products made in China will not cure the mess you have helped put us in. You sir, along with your pal Senator Mitch McConnell, have helped put the United States of America in jeopardy with your never ending quest for cheap labor and your support of Corporate America moving the manufacturing base, with all of the good paying jobs, out of the United States of America to the lands of cheap and sometimes child labor. Mr. Ed sir, with all due respect, it seems you’re more concerned about horses than the stability of the United States of America!

Ed Whitfield:
“Over the years, the American economy has had its ups and downs. We have enjoyed a strong and robust economy, with impressive job growth over the past decade. Today, we are still creating jobs and our economy continues to grow but at a much smaller pace. The steps that are being taken by the government are designed to provide the necessary stimulus to give our economy a strong boost and prevent a recession.”
U.S. Rep. Ed Whitfield
First District
Kentucky

THE POLICIES OF GEORGE W. BUSH, SENATOR MITCH MCCONNELL AND ED WHITFIELD ARE PUTTING EVERY FETUS IN AMERICA IN DEBT.

Jim Pence February 5th, 2008

The right wing neocons are putting every fetus in the United State of America in debt with a borrow from Communist China and spend policy. They, the right wingers like Senator Mitch McConnell and dubya Ed Whitfield tell us they are the ones with moral values, but I suggest putting the least of these in debt is immoral and sick!!!!

fetusnationaldebt.jpg

Ooooooh! Buuuuurrrrn!

Terri Whitehouse February 2nd, 2008

There is an excellent editorial in today’s Courier-Journal about Sen. Mitch McConnell titled, appropriately enough, “The Back Of His Hand“:

Millions of Americans are in economic trouble, while the Big Energy friends of George W. Bush and Mitch McConnell wallow in historic profits. Yesterday, Exxon Mobil Corp. posted the largest annual gain ever by a U.S. company — $40.6 billion. The rest of us are left to cower at the gasoline pumps.

Mitch McConnell feels he deserves re-election because he “does so much for Kentucky.” Never mind what he and his friend have done to America.

For real, though! Go read the whole shebang.

Quick Hit: The Southern Strategy

Terri Whitehouse February 2nd, 2008

Tell me again what it is that Republicans have done for us lately?

What’s more, go Giants!

Thanks. I Needed That.

Terri Whitehouse January 30th, 2008

Breaking news:

Members of Congress assured Americans that they have a definitive plan for reviving the slumping economy when they unveiled on Monday a bold new fiscal stimulus package that calls for the purchase of a pair of alpacas.

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) said the proposal, which is expected to solve the sub-prime mortgage crisis, boost consumer confidence, and pump much-needed liquid capital into the market, will be put into motion as soon as the first issue of Alpaca World magazine arrives and Congress has a chance to go through the catalog and select the perfect mating pair.

IT’S THE ECONOMY STUPID!!!!

A Word About McConnell’s Poll Numbers

Terri Whitehouse January 12th, 2008

A recent poll conducted by Voter/Consumer Research is being trotted out as proof that Sen. Mitch McConnell is invincible in 2008’s general election. I think some people are believing that “defeatocrat” nonsense way too much, that somehow a supposed 61% approval will doom any bids to defeat McConnell this fall. Well, as a few commenters at Bluegrass Report point out, this poll was commissioned by McConnell himself, and one has to wonder about the methodology.

While I’m sure that the general public is a bit gun-shy about pollsters, particularly after being so far off base in New Hampshire, the new SUSA poll shows McConnell’s approval at under 50%, which is more in-line with recent trends in his approval rating. We don’t doubt that beating a career incumbent politician with a lot of name recognition and a history of pork barrel spending will be a difficult task. But as the death toll in Iraq continues to rise with no end in sight, and as Kentuckians tighten their purse strings in preparation for a recession, Sen. McConnell has made it clear over and over again that he is completely out-of-touch with the majority of Kentuckians. We’re up to the fight. Is he?

Weekend Quick Hits Open Thread

Terri Whitehouse January 5th, 2008

Gov. Steve Beshear appointed Eleanor Jordan as executive director of the Commission on Women. Bill Stone, former Jefferson County GOP chairman, opined:

Stone said he does believe that a separate commission for women is part of “government silliness.”

“I personally, and I think conservatives think, the Commission on Women is another wasteful government department,” he said.

Stone, however, said that he knows Jordan and that if there has to be a commission she is a “probably a perfect fit for that job.”

I guess being in the bottom third in just about every indicator of stability, health, and well-being, is A-OK with some bourgie city folk.

Sen. Mitch McConnell has shitloads of money. I know our readers must find this absolutely shocking. The Public Campaign Action Fund gets it right:

No one in Kentucky ought to see McConnell’s fundraising as anything but his mastery of a corrupt political system that places the interests of donors ahead of all Kentuckians.

Finally, Rep. John Yarmuth puts his money where his mouth is, donating his whole first-year congressional salary to the Louisville community as he promised. MediaCzech provides the Republican response.

What other interesting things have you read in the last few days?

Next Republican economic debacle about to hit: Home equity loan crisis

Matt Gunterman December 17th, 2007

Dennis Jacobe, who’s the Chief Economist for Gallup, has a writeup about the nation’s next bit of economic turmoil: the coming crisis in the trillion-dollar home equity loan market.

Here’s Jacobe’s conclusion:

[...]

Fed Needs to Change the Consumer/Investor Psychology

As the so-called “subprime”-related losses have been felt worldwide, structured financings and even the securitization process have come under increasing stress. But today’s financial market stress, and the volatility it has generated on Wall Street, has yet to be fully reflected on Main Street. More importantly, the anemic response of public policy-makers to the potential for widespread mortgage foreclosures and housing price declines unseen for many decades leaves much to be desired. Now, we can add a Fed that seems more interested in econometric analysis and geopolitical globalization than current investor/consumer psychology.

Currently, lenders are tightening their underwriting standards to the old norms in response to their “subprime”-related losses and the mortgage lending excesses of recent years. These are much-needed changes, but the current tightening reflects past excesses in the mortgage and housing markets much more than conditions in the consumer lending markets. But these are just the beginnings of the consumer credit crunch set to unfold in the months ahead.

What the Fed should have done was to take every action possible — cut the federal funds rate by more than 50 basis points, reduce the discount rate even more, and make it clear that it would continue pumping liquidity into the system as necessary to free up the credit markets — to get out ahead of the “other shoe to drop” in response to falling housing prices and poor underwriting standards: the coming home equity lending debacle and its effect on consumer credit availability. Unfortunately, as was the case with the so-called “subprime” mess, the nation’s monetary authorities are now positioned to be reactive as events unfold in the credit markets — often not a winning strategy.

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It’s not a pleasurable thing to see the economy go into steep recession (and that’s where it’s headed). It negatively affects all Americans of whatever political ideology. However, a longterm benefit of that near-term, mutual pain is that, once again, Republican economic policy will be revealed to the latest generation as the snake oil that it is. And the end result will be marginalization of Republicans and their return to national minority status for the better part of a generation.

In fact, after 2008, it’s likely that by the next time the Republican Party has a chance to dominate the federal government as it has between roughly 1994 and 2004, same-sex marriage will be a social norm. So, yes, we’re talking a long time before Republicans regroup and find their ideological footing.

Likewise, whatever the result at the ballot box against Sen. McConnell in 2008, the project to place him in the proper context of the severe detriment to American democracy that he represents is a generation-long affair. The monstrous career of money-grubbing, influence-mongering, and hyper-partisanship of Mitch McConnell will be to the history of the early 21st century United States what Sen. Joseph McCarthy (R) is to the second half of the 20th century.

Just as today we still hear the term McCarthyism lobbed around, there will come a day when, in remarking on tactics of legislative obstruction, Senators accuse one another of McConnellism.

And when that day comes, Mitch McConnell will have inherited the legacy he rightly deserves.

Scientists Urge Congress to Quit Funding Ignorance

Terri Whitehouse December 2nd, 2007

A group of scientists sent a letter to Nancy Pelosi and Harry Reid encouraging them to discontinue federal funding of abstinence-only sex education. Some highlights:

Withholding lifesaving information from young people is contrary to the standards of medical ethics and to many international human rights conventions...Governments have an obligation to provide accurate information to adolescents and adolescents have a right to expect health education provided in public schools to be scientifically accurate and complete.

The large-scale Mathematica evaluation of the Section 510 program, released in April 2007, found no measurable impact on increasing abstinence or delaying sexual initiation among participating youth or on other behaviors such as condom use…One of the few measurable impacts of the programs was a decrease in adolescent confidence regarding the ability of condoms to prevent HIV and other sexually transmitted diseases.

A spring 2005 longitudinal study by Bruckner and Bearman found that abstinence pledgers, when compared to non-pledgers, experienced similar rates of sexually transmitted infection. Pledgers did delay sexual intercourse for a limited period, but when they did start having sex, they were less likely to use condoms. They were also less likely to seek reproductive health care compared to non-pledgers.

Importantly, the emphasis on abstinence-only programs and policies appears to be undermining critical public health programs in the U.S. and abroad, including comprehensive sexuality education and HIV prevention programs.

We also note that a December 2004 Congressional report on federal abstinence programs from the U.S. House of Representatives’ Committee on Government Reform - Minority Staff found that 11 of the 13 most frequently used curricula contained false, misleading or distorted information about reproductive health - including inaccurate information about contraceptive effectiveness, purported health risks of abortion, and other scientific errors.

We would note that all of the mainstream organizations of health professionals that focus on the health of young people have strongly criticized federal support for current abstinence programs. These include the American Public Health Association, the American Medical Association, the American Academy of Pediatrics, the American Psychological Association, and the Society for Adolescent Medicine. We have also attached the weblinks to the policy statements from each of these groups.

The full letter, along with valuable links to sources, can be found at RH Reality Check.

And, while we’re on the subject of pound foolishness, WIC funding is in danger of being cut.

You know it’s bad when reality hits Wall Street

Matt Gunterman November 26th, 2007

I think the opening sentence of the analysis accompanying this new poll from Gallup says it all: you know the economic reality is harsh when the people for whom money and the want and lack thereof is merely an abstraction are actually taking note of the hard times that have been evident to average Americans for months.

Investor Optimism Plummets in November
Worries grow as investors turn pessimistic about future of U.S. economy
By Dennis Jacobe

PRINCETON, NJ — Normally, most U.S. investors pay little attention to the value of the dollar and seem to think that no matter what happens to energy prices and housing values, the U.S. consumer will continue spending. All of that may be changing, according to the new UBS/Gallup Index of Investor Optimism poll, conducted in November. Investors have turned pessimistic about the outlook for the U.S. economy over the next 12 months, and overall investor optimism has taken a plunge just as the crucial holiday sales period for the nation’s retailers is beginning. This may signal the initial effects of a significant change in U.S. investor/consumer psychology.

Investors Turn Pessimistic About the Economic Outlook

Investor optimism fell sharply in November as the UBS/Gallup Index of Investor Optimism tumbled 26 points; it now stands at 44, or less than half its January level of 103. The Index has declined steadily since May and has now reached its lowest point since September 2005, when it fell to 34 in response to Hurricane Katrina. The Index is conducted monthly and had a baseline score of 124 when it was established in October 1996.

Most of the decline in the overall Index came in its Economic Dimension, which measures investors’ feelings about the direction of the overall U.S. economy. It plunged 20 points, from +8 in October to -12 in November, indicating that investors as a group went from being somewhat optimistic in October about the direction of the U.S. economy over the next year to somewhat pessimistic about it in November. Right now, 79% of investors describe the current U.S. economy as being in a slowdown or recession — the highest percentage since November 2001, when 87% of investors reported feeling this way.

Investors’ optimism about their individual investment portfolios also declined, as the Personal Dimension of the Index fell six points in November on top of its eight-point decline in October. It is now at 56 — its lowest point since August 2006, when it stood at 54.

Investor Confidence.

Worries About the Dollar

Many on Wall Street have been concerned about the declining value of the dollar for some time. Similar concerns have now reached the average investor, as the percentage of investors saying the value of the dollar is hurting the investment climate “a lot” surged to 47% in November. This is the highest level of concern registered about the value of the dollar since monitoring began in March 2004.

Concerns about the dollar

A Significant Change in Investor/Consumer Psychology

Sometimes a highly unusual major event takes place, such as Hurricane Katrina, that sends investor and consumer confidence plunging. The impact of this tends to be stunningly sharp in the immediate term but then tends to dissipate fairly quickly. History has shown that there has been a lot of money to be made when contrarian investors buy on these dips in the equity markets. It also has shown that the U.S. consumer has maintained an incredible resiliency in the face of these short-term challenges.

The current decline in investor and consumer optimism is something significantly different. It seems to be the result of a growing number of economic challenges coming together to create what may be a “perfect storm” in terms of investor/consumer psychology. Many Americans are now experiencing a real housing debacle for the first time and thereby seeing that people can actually lose their homes when they become financially overextended. At the same time, they are seeing another surge in energy prices, with oil nearing $100 a barrel and gas prices at the pump surging past the $3-a-gallon mark. Add in all the talk of the dollar reaching new lows against various international currencies, not to mention what seem to be endless worries about the Iraq war and federal budget deficits, and a breaking point in consumer psychology may be approaching.

While many on Wall Street look to another Fed rate cut in December to save both the equity markets and the economy, they might want to step back a minute and ask themselves what it might mean if the U.S. consumer actually becomes more fearful of spending and taking on new debt. This is what happened during the last deep recessions of the 1970s and 1980s.

[...]

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Americans more pessimistic about nation’s economy than ever before

Matt Gunterman November 20th, 2007

Check out the dismal numbers on American economic perceptions from the newly released Gallop poll that I’ve highlighted below.

The Republicans have sorely mismanaged the U.S. economy. Pres. George W. Bush (R) and his chief Capitol Hill-enabler Sen. Mitch McConnell (R) have warred and earmarked our nation into record national debt and a weak, weak dollar.

Moreover, their anti-government, anti-consumer protection, anti-regulation schemes have directly led to the current housing bubble, the presence of lead paint in our children’s toys from China (but McConnell never met Chinese money he didn’t like), and the gutting of economic security for the American middle class.

Some economists are warning that we’re headed for a recession like we’ve not seen since the Great Depression. Let’s hope not, but no matter the severity of the next Bush recession this generation of Americans is learning a painful lesson that’s been repeated throughout the nation’s history: the greater power given Republicans, the more systemic harm is done to the economy.

And, of course, in Kentucky we’re now finding out the terrible condition that Gov. Ernie Fletcher (R) has left the state’s economy and fiscal condition in. Not only did the state lose a major business expansion opportunity because of Fletcher incompetence, but several state offices and departments are in budgetary crisis.

Regarding this poll and what it could indicate for the electoral fortunes of Democrats and Republicans in 2008, notice this line: “The all-time low point on this measure [of economic health] is 10% excellent or good measured in August and September 1992.” We could be rivaling or beating that low figure by September 2008, and you know what that will mean for Republicans in November 2008.

Americans’ Economic Pessimism Reaches Record High
Seventy-eight percent believe economy is “getting worse”

PRINCETON, NJ — Americans have become even more deeply pessimistic about the economy than they have been in recent months. Almost 8 out of 10 now say that economic conditions in the United States are getting worse, the highest such level of pessimism since Gallup began asking the “getting better”/”getting worse” question in this format in 1991. Only about a quarter of Americans rate the current economy as excellent or good, and over half say now is not a good time to be looking for a quality job.

The Economy

According to Gallup’s November update on the economy (based on the results of a survey conducted Nov. 11-14), 27% of Americans rate current economic conditions as either “excellent” or “good,” while 44% say they are “only fair” and 28% say they are poor.

This assessment is down slightly from last month, and is considerably lower than economic ratings as the year began. In January, 52% rated the economy as excellent or good.

Americans’ appraisal of current economic conditions — while low — is not as low as it has been at other points this decade. At one point in 2003, for example, just 18% rated the economy as excellent or good. The all-time low point on this measure is 10% excellent or good measured in August and September 1992.

Optimism and Pessimism

Americans’ negative mood about the economy is most evident when they are asked this question: “Right now, do you think that economic conditions in the country as a whole are getting better or getting worse?”

An extraordinary 78% of Americans now say the economy is getting worse, while a scant 13% say it is getting better. Gallup has been asking this question since 1991, and these are the most negative responses Gallup has ever recorded.

ditchmitch-economy.jpg

The most negative measure on this question prior to this poll was recorded in August of this year, when 72% said the economy was getting worse. Back in January 1992 — the year incumbent president George H. W. Bush was denied his bid for re-election, in large part because of perceptions of a bad economy — 71% said the economy was getting worse.

Traditionally, those who identify with the party controlling the White House are more optimistic about the economy than those who identify with the opposition party. But at this point even Republicans are having a hard time expressing positive sentiments about the economy’s direction — nearly two-thirds say it is getting worse.

ditchmitch-economy-2.jpg

The Job Market

There are a number of proximate and probable causes for Americans’ deep economic pessimism, including the recent drop in the stock market, the subprime mortgage crisis that has roiled the housing market, and the rapidly increasing price of gas. Americans also appear to be concerned about the job market.

Only 38% of Americans say now is a good time to find a quality job, while 55% say it is not. This is roughly in line with what Gallup has found over the past two months, and down from more positive views of the job market earlier in the year.

The low point on this measure since Gallup began asking it regularly in 2001 has been 16%, measured in March 2003.

Implications

The American public is highly pessimistic about the direction of the U.S. economy at this point in time — in fact, as pessimistic as Gallup has measured over the past 16 years during which this particular measure has been in use.

There are several possible implications of this high level of pessimism. Clearly there is concern about how worries about the economy will affect consumer spending, although Gallup’s initial projections of holiday spending this year do not indicate a sharp drop-off — at least not as of this point in the shopping cycle.

There are also definite political implications. The party in control of the White House is usually held accountable for a poor economy at the time of a presidential election. Both Jimmy Carter and George H. W. Bush were defeated in their bids for re-election to a significant degree as a result of a negative economic environment. The current President Bush cannot run for re-election, of course, but some have concluded that his party will suffer next November for the same reason. If Americans are highly disgruntled with the economy at this time next year, it is reasonable to expect that the Republicans will have a difficult time holding on to the White House. More generally, these data suggest that the economy has the potential to play an important role in deciding the outcome of next year’s presidential vote.

[...]

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Quick Hit: Bush Has Landed

Terri Whitehouse November 13th, 2007

Pres. George W. Bush has landed. He will be in New Albany, IN, talking about how freakin’ awesome the economy-n-shit is.

The Courier-Journal has ongoing coverage, and it’s unbelievable that their readers seem to be even more cynical than I am about the President’s visit.

UPDATE: C-J columnist Bob Hill gets it right:

It’s not that the Democrats have done themselves proud in this Congress either, sir. They are a major disappointment to many who voted for them. Clearly tax-and-spend is not the answer to all our problems, but what makes you and your party believe borrow-and-spend is any better?

Frankly, Mr. President, if the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan required so much American blood and courage to fight, then why didn’t you have the courage to ask Americans to pay for it? If you could explain that to me, sir, I’ll be glad to buy the second cup of coffee.

UPDATE: An excellent play-by-play of the speech at First Draft.

Quick Hit: Do I Smell A Veto Coming?

Terri Whitehouse October 25th, 2007

Jim Abrams of the AP, via Yahoo, writes:

The House’s top Democratic tax writer on Thursday unveiled a $1 trillion plan to repeal the alternative minimum tax and lower the tax burden of most lower- and middle-income people.

The proposal would be paid for by requiring the wealthy and some corporations and investors to pay more.

I just can’t *wait* to see what tactics the GOP will use to block this legislation!

I’ll Give You A Nickel if You Wiggle My Trickle

Terri Whitehouse September 10th, 2007

In today’s New York Times, Pal Krugman sheds some light on the true impact of the Bush economy:

It’s true, as the Bushies never tire of reminding us, that the U.S. economy has added eight million jobs since that 2003 tax cut. That sounds impressive, unless you happen to know that a good part of that gain was simply a recovery from large job losses earlier in the administration’s tenure — and that the United States added no fewer than 21 million jobs after Bill Clinton raised taxes on the rich, a move that had conservative pundits predicting economic disaster.

What’s really remarkable, however, is that four years of economic growth have produced essentially no gains for ordinary American workers.

Wages, adjusted for inflation, have stagnated: the real hourly earnings of nonsupervisory workers, the most widely used measure of how typical workers are faring, were no higher in July 2007 than they were in July 2003.

Meanwhile, benefits have deteriorated: the percentage of Americans receiving health insurance through employers, which plunged along with employment during the early years of the Bush administration, continued to decline even as the economy finally began creating some jobs.

And one of the few seeming bright spots of the Bush-era economy, rising homeownership, is now revealed as the result of a bubble inflated in part by financial flim-flam, which deceived both borrowers and investors.

Now you know why 66 percent of Americans rate economic conditions in this country as only fair or poor, and why Americans disapprove of President Bush’s handling of the economy almost as strongly as they disapprove of the job he is doing in general.

Yet the overall economy has grown at a reasonable pace over the past four years. Where did the economic growth go? The answer is that it went to the same economic elite that received the lion’s share of those tax cuts.

Is anyone surprised at all by this? Here at DM-KY, we’ve highlighted several items which illustrate the hostility with which regular working Americans are treated by the GOP. McConnell and Co: we’re on to you and you should be very afraid.

Novel Idea for Kentucky: Education & Economic Growth

Terri Whitehouse September 5th, 2007

Dan Klepal, in today’s Courier-Journal reports on gubernatorial candidate Steve Beshear’s plan to create economic growth and educational attainment within Kentucky:

“My goal is to double the number of degree-holders by the year 2020,” Beshear said, adding that would bring the total to about 800,000. “To do this, we must make higher education more affordable.”

Beshear, a former lieutenant governor and attorney general, also has a plan to keep college graduates in the state. It’s called the Kentucky First Scholarship Program and would forgive one year of state loans for every year a graduate works in Kentucky.

The program would cost about $27 million in its first year, a Beshear spokeswoman said.

Those state loans would be granted only after all other available assistance — such as scholarships, grants and student loans — are used. The program would apply to all students, whether from Kentucky or out of state.

Though some data suggests that Kentucky is experiencing a “brain gain,” there is a general consensus that the state, along with others in the region, ranks quite low when it comes to education. Poverty here remains high. (More on reasons why here.) Meanwhile, our sitting governor advocates phony science and appeasing his fellow neocon hypocrites above making real progress in the state.

Big Government? Big Lie! (And Other Matters of Note)

Terri Whitehouse August 1st, 2007

The Courier-Journal today ran an insightful piece written by E.J. Dionne Jr. on the myth of “big government.” Big government is, of course, a scare tactic used to justify lots of awful things, from lax gun control laws to not providing for the nation’s poor. Just exactly how big our government has actually gotten under the leadership of a Republican president, however, is worth a closer look.

In slightly unrelated news, Mark Hebert reports that nearly two-thirds of Kentuckians want some sort of U.S. troop withdrawal in Iraq.

Also, I’ve been meaning to blog about abstinence-only (mis)education for a number of weeks now, but Mary Q. Burton at the LEO does such a first-rate job in “Sex, lies and abstinence” that I’ll just quote in part:

Teri Lloyd was surprised when the sex education books her children brought home from school seemed woefully incomplete. The books omitted certain parts of the female anatomy — specifically, the clitoris.

“That’s got to be a shame, fear-based thing,” says Lloyd, 49, whose daughter, now 23, attended school at Myers Middle. “We just failed to educate them about their own bodies. What we leave out can be shaming, too. I wondered why that part wasn’t mentioned. I’m not opposed to teaching abstinence; what I’m opposed to is pairing it with shame or with lack of information about birth control and the human body.”

They can give enough of my tax money to fund religious anti-choice pregnancy centers, but can’t find a few hundred bucks for an accurate scientific rendering of the female anatomy? Nice.

Republican-Ruled Kentucky plummets in Forbes business rankings

Matt Gunterman July 11th, 2007

So, you know that whole spiel about how Republicans are the party that’s favorable to business? Well, in case you hadn’t noticed, President George W. Bush has brought the U.S. economy and the dollar to the point of possible meltdown and free fall, and now we learn from Forbes.com that Kentucky — thanks to the bold and effective leadership of Republican Governor Ernie Fletcher — is plummeting in its “The Best States for Business” rankings (here’s the table of rankings).

Notice that Kentucky fell from 33rd to 41st place in the last year.

Kentucky plummets in Forbes 2007 rankings

Do you know what the essential problem is here? The problem is that Republicans in Kentucky have empowered rednecks for their short-term political gain, and the end result of the empowerment of rednecks is that redneck priorities consume the politics of the state. While other states pass meaningful and fully funded education reform, while other states promote progressive taxation plans and seek to develop infrastructure that will benefit generations to come, while other states move to improve quality of life and access to health care — Kentucky is stuck decades behind debating the intricacies and merits of God, gays, and guns.

Yes, because working out all those problems with God, gays, and guns is going to provide one hell of a foundation for the future generations of Kentucky.

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