News Dump Friday: Fear of a Peasant Uprising Edition
Submitted by gjohnsit on Fri, 04/15/2016 - 2:51pm
Better to build an Apocalypse bunker than share the wealth?
Your entire pay raises went to rent
The cost of rent rose 3.7% compared to a year ago in March, the Labor Department said Thursday. That was the fourth straight month with such a strong gain, the highest since before the financial crisis.
On the 2015 median income of $56,746, a 1.4% gain would translate to about $66 more a month, before taxes. Across the nation, the median rent for a two-bedroom apartment is $1,300, according to Apartment List. A 3.7% rent rise, or about $48, would swallow up pretty much all of that salary gain.
Actually it would swallow up all of it after taxes.
I've got a great idea. Let's start a war with China.
US Secretary of Defense Ash Carter today announced the US will be escalating its “regular rotations” of troops and warplanes into the Philippines, though despite a growing number of troops in the country at any given time, he insisted this was not an increased “permanent footprint.”
300 Air Force commandos, along with a number of additional US combat aircraft are heading to the Philippines this go around, with an eye on escalating tensions with China over maritime claims in the South China Sea.
Last high-ranking Sunni ejected from Iraqi government
After delaying the vote on a new cabinet from Tuesday to Thursday, Iraq’s parliament cancelled the vote entirely today, following up a fist-fight dominated Wednesday session with one in which they fired the speaker of parliament, Salim al-Jabouri.
Jabouri’s ouster was seen primarily as a move against Prime Minister Hayder Abadi, but also riled the nation’s Sunni Arab minority, as he was materially the last high-ranking Sunni Arab government figure left...
Abadi’s position is seen as extremely tenuous, with most of his own bloc predicting his ouster for months, and his faction’s real leader, former PM Nouri al-Maliki, seeking to have him replaced.
Asher Edelman is an art collector and financier. He worked on Wall Street from 1962 to 1988 and taught a course at Columbia University School of Business titled Corporate Raiding: The Art of War. He is one of the inspirations for the Gordon Gekko character in the film Wall Street.
Banking is the least understood, and possibly most lethal, of all the myriad issues at stake in this election. No candidate other than Bernie Sanders is capable of taking the steps necessary to protect the American people from a repeat of the recent debacle that plunged the nation into a recession from which we have not recovered.
The potential for a depression looms heavily on the horizon. As a trained economist who has spent more than 20 years on Wall Street – and one of the models for Gordon Gekko’s character – I know the financial system is in urgent need of regulation and responsibility. Yet Hillary Clinton is beholden to the banks for their largesse in funding her campaign and lining her pockets. The likelihood of any Republican candidate taking on this key issue is not even worthy of discussion.
The biggest blackhole of taxpayer funds
In 1990 Congress passed the Chief Financial Officers Act, which required every federal agency to be auditable. Since then every agency has complied—except for the Department of Defense. Instead, there’s been a saga of audit readiness plans and billions spent to upgrade out-of-date financial systems—plans and upgrades the Government Accountability Office (GAO) estimated in 2010 wasted nearly $6 billion. After significant pressure from Congress, particularly then-Senator Tom Coburn (R-OK) and Senator Joe Manchin (D-WV), then-Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta set a 2014 deadline for all components and the DoD as a whole to have auditable records of incoming budget resources, referred to as Statements of Budgetary Resources (SBR).
In its guidance to agencies on auditing SBRs, the GAO highlighted auditing SBRs as key to making sure that the Pentagon is spending money as authorized by Congress. “The SBR and related disclosures provide information about budgetary resources made available to an agency as well as the status of those resources at the end of the fiscal year,” said the GAO. Auditing the SBR, along with other budget information, “provides a means to help assess the reliability of budgetary data reported in the President's Budget.”
At the beginning of 2014 it looked like the Department had made significant progress after the Department of Defense Inspector General (DoD IG) gave the Marine Corps a clean audit opinion, making the Marine Corps the first and only branch of the military to receive an unqualified audit opinion. But the DoD IG rescinded that opinion last spring. A Reuters investigation into that decision found that IG leadership had pressured its auditors to support an outside accounting firm’s clean audit opinion, despite the auditors believing that the Marine Corps had actually not been qualified to receive it. A subsequent review by the GAO also found the IG’s process for issuing that opinion was deeply flawed. In a Floor speech on the GAO’s report, Senator Chuck Grassley (R-IA) argued that the political pressure led to a process that rushed to declare victory without adequate documentation to show the clean audit opinion was “worth the paper it was written on.”
The Department failed to meet its goal for 2014, and as it stands, no DoD component is likely to meet it in the next year. “I think we are on the right track,” DoD Comptroller Mike McCord said last winter. “[But] it will take a couple more years.”
Victory over ISIS will be temporary
An organization like the Islamic State can kill and destroy. It can create fear. It cannot create a viable, sustainable and appealing state....
Yet even if the Islamic State’s unraveling continues and the organization is defeated on the battlefield, that will not end the problem, because there is little chance that the Iraqi government will engineer a sustainable, long-term solution to the political and economic problems that fueled the group’s rise....
Even more importantly, Iraq has not transcended the idea that leaders hold political power to benefit themselves and their affinity group—defined in Iraq by ethnicity and sect. Politics is a spoils system, where winners use the government to impose their will on the losers, rather than to reconcile differences and build consensus. Some brave Iraqis have attempted to move beyond this, but they face intense resistance from their countrymen who benefit from the current system. To take one example, Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi’s attempt to reshuffle his government’s Cabinet to address corruption and mismanagement generated intense opposition from the entrenched political parties and leaders who have developed a vested interest in both practices.
Most Iraqis who have been ruled by the Islamic State despise the extremists but fear the Iraqi government and, particularly, the Iranian-backed Shiite militias that the government relies on as much or even more. Like most people do when they are caught up in internal war and insurgency, Iraq’s Sunni Arabs seek the lesser evil, knowing that both the Iraqi government and the Islamic State will prey on them. But even if it can defeat the Islamic State on the battlefield, the Iraqi government will be unable to break the power of the Shiite militias.
Nor is there any sign that Baghdad is serious about addressing the political and economic grievances of Iraq’s Sunni Arabs despite being implored to do so by U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry and high-ranking officials from many other nations. Even if it was, Baghdad does not have the resources to repair and rebuild the great damage done by the Islamic State or provide jobs in the Sunni Arab areas, particularly in the face of a national economic crisis driven by mismanagement and the low global price of oil. Kerry and others are attempting to raise global interest in providing reconstruction support, but the world’s response is likely to be tepid given the Iraqi government’s disinterest in Sunni Arab regions.
REfugee influx shifts from Greece to Libya
Almost 6,000 migrants and refugees have sailed from Libya to Italy in the past three days in what appears the start of a wave of at least 100,000 and "possibly many, many more" this year, the International Organization for Migration said on Friday.
The report may fan fears of a huge resurgence of migrant numbers reaching Europe via Italy by sea from Libya now that a shorter, safer route via Greece has been blocked, with Austria preparing to stop unhindered travel over its border with Italy in anticipation of more migrants bound for the heart of the EU.
Only a few hundred of the people who crossed the Mediterranean to Europe in the past three days entered via Greece, a massive reversal from the pattern seen until a March deal between the European Union and Turkey to stop the flow.
The voyage by boat from Libya is far longer and associated with much higher death rates than between Turkey and Greece, though Libya's lack of functioning government and lawlessness make it easy for people traffickers to operate with impunity.
Comments
Did you see those bunkers?!
they're gonna close the doors on the unicorns.
Just remember, when they come out,
No bacon and eggs for gold!
Seems to me we're on the verge of a world wide genocide.
Did you see those bunkers?!
With their hearts they turned to each others heart for refuge
In troubled years that came before the deluge
*Jackson Browne, 1974, Before the Deluge https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7SX-HFcSIoU
ha, they will all drown
bc climate disruption. anthropogenic that is.
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Interesting Times
This level of paranoia and illusion seems rather pathetic. The two women who are featured in the article are quite good at dissecting the disconnect from reality of these people. It's as if some people with more money than good sense suddenly decided to live in a disaster film.
Of course, as gjohnsit points out, they have reason to feel threatened: unaffordable housing for much of the world's people; wars everywhere and no sign of them diminishing; another financial apocalypse on the horizon; ineptitude of the Department of Defense in so many ways besides the budget and waste of money and the paralysis of Congress; religious fanaticism in the Middle East and the U.S. (hello Cruz and fellow Republicans); and migrant flows in many areas beside Syria.
Almost all of the problems listed are solvable if we can pry the cold, greedy fingers of the 1% off the levers of power. If they pay their taxes and if their unfair economic policies and laws are rescinded, then we can put people to work on infrastructure and in other productive ways; we can eject the warmongering fools in Congress with a level political playing field; we can force the various government entities to do their jobs; we can probably mute some of the homegrown religious frenzy if enough of us get interested and, if we stop blowing up everyone's homes around the world, we will be able to let locals in other countries pacify their own radicals; finally, we might be able to deal with climate change and ameliorate the need for population exodus/shifts.
This last point is one not too many people seem to grasp. People are leaving Syria because of the war of course, but much of the exodus is due to desertification of formerly fertile areas. Their scarce water supplies are diminishing further. Much of the immigration we see is the same as that which occurred in ancient times. That is, forced immigration from population pressure and lack of resources. This geographical/geopolitical situation is also happening in the area around the Caspian Sea, Turkmenistan, Kazakhstan, western China, Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, Kyrgyzstan, which is experiencing drying conditions. The Ferghana Valley which is one of the few important fertile parts of the area is beginning to look like a new powder keg as the surrounding countries begin to covet it. Nothing new except that now it may be crucial to their survival and may not even be viable if climate change worsens there.
I can go on and on with the litany of looming disasters, but the important point is that running and hiding, no matter how posh your hideout, isn't going to work. OUR problems can't be solved by digging hidey holes because they are OUR problems and not just something for the hoi polloi to suffer with. If the 1% don't wake up to what is happening, then we are all in for a dystopian nightmare. Dennis is right "there will be no bacon and eggs for gold" for any of us.
Thus, we must fight for Bernie first, then for others down ballot, then for sensible local people while all the time fighting the crazy god-botherers and dull witted ideologues and the greedy neo-liberals. There are so many problems that it seems overwhelming until one realizes that there are a lot of us. There is a chance we might pull it off.
(nb: I edited for a couple of grammatical errors, no substantive change I promise.)
-Greed is not a virtue.
-Socialism: the radical idea of sharing.
-Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable.
John F. Kennedy, In a speech at the White House, 1962
What a terrific reply! Thank you.
I have but one quibble.
I believe the 1% believes they can ride out the coming storm, as evidenced by their preparations.
Further, I think they may be right.
The driving forces behind climate change, are how we meet the needs and wants of the masses.
Eliminate the masses, eliminate those forces.
If I was really rich and really smart and morally bankrupt.
I very well may decide that I'll take care of me and mine and the lemmings can run off the cliff.
And I would justify it as survival of the fittest.
I may even encourage climate change to save the human species from itself by culling the herd, drastically.
Of course, I'm not any of those three things so I don't really know.
PS. I lied a little. I AM really smart.
PPS. Depending on who else is in the room.
With their hearts they turned to each others heart for refuge
In troubled years that came before the deluge
*Jackson Browne, 1974, Before the Deluge https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7SX-HFcSIoU
Yeah. I Noticed the Smarts.
Smart seems to permeate this place.
You are probably right in thinking they believe they can ride out any storm in their bunkers. The old feudal boys used to sit in their castles while the banditti roamed free on the plains. They lasted quite some time. Until gunpowder and the long bow taught them different. We don't have to wait. We have gunpowder already.
One aspect of their preparations they may have overlooked is that they are only good for about a year. When they have to surface, they have a problem--us. There are plenty of us and not all will pop off in a year. They won't be popular and I doubt if they are some master race even if they think so. Look at their representatives such as Trump, Cruz, Dimon, or any of the Bushes. Not very prepossessing.
Then there are the problems of food, water, medicine, and repair of their luxurious gizmos. They may think they are special but hard times pay no attention to pedigrees or regal attitudes. I suspect they would be looked upon as opportunities not as leaders.
It just shows that the 1% are so limited in their thinking and skills. All they really know is greed, selfishness, financial math, legal verbiage, and egotism. That won't be worth much compared to electrical/mechanical skills, organizing ability, and husbandry plus, above all, a willingness to cooperate with others. It already is a time where we either hang together or hang separately. Climate change just makes it all more desperate. Strangely enough, they simply aren't equipped for success, .
-Greed is not a virtue.
-Socialism: the radical idea of sharing.
-Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable.
John F. Kennedy, In a speech at the White House, 1962
National Rent Control... An idea that should be voiced.
Seeing as the current problem of rent rising is due to the corporate slime who are more and more taking over the rental business, it's time to start thinking about monopoly prosecution/serious controls.
Housing is a basic human need. Charging over 2/3rds of income for it is just downright immoral. Add to that, stupid occupancy laws that are haphazardly enforced, and you have a situation where far too many are only a paycheck away from the street.
Of course, if I were a politician, that'd be my main policy platform. Socialized HOUSING.
I do not pretend I know what I do not know.
^^^^ Yes, right on! /nt
https://www.euronews.com/live
The workers are uniting.
http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/two_weeks_into_a_major_uprising_fren...
La Femme needs to give us a first-hand take on what's happening in Paris. It looks pretty significant.
F**k all those people.
Just fuck them.
Its not enough to have a bunker to escape the consequences of your actions - it has to be a LUXURY bunker? Just fuck off, pardon my French.
Why we need to leap to a just
Why we need to leap to a just green economy
April 15, 2016 - 10:05am
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"Assault on Wall Street" is one of my friend's favorite movies.
He's a union carpenter, salt of the earth, most reliable and fair stand-up guy around. Doesn't really pay attention to politics, but can smell bullshit anywhere and has become more politically interested in the last few years. Occupy really interested him.
He's watched this film a few times, and relates to it big-time.
"If I should ever die, God forbid, let this be my epitaph:
THE ONLY PROOF HE NEEDED
FOR THE EXISTENCE OF GOD
WAS MUSIC"
- Kurt Vonnegut
DAAAAMMMMMNNNN.... n/t
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“I did stand up to the banks!"
“I did make it clear that their behavior would not be excused!” She exclaimed...
And yet, no one who was THERE remembers that...
Release of Clinton’s Wall Street Speeches Could End Her Candidacy for President
04/15/2016 09:31 am ET | Updated 8 hours ago
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Isn't there someone out there who has those transcripts?
They would be doing the Lord's work by releasing them...
Yes, they have them....
I would BET Trump has them.... and is just waiting to use them....
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Of course there is...
But they are invested in her...they will never do the Lord's work.