Open Thread - Wednesday, August 19, 2015

There are many times when a single act kindness can make a lasting impression. But often you may not know it. It is not about the immediate feedback that you might get from an act of kindness, but how your acts of kindness affect someone else.

Every year when I was growing up, our family would make the yearly pilgrimage from our home in St. Pete, Florida to my parents' home town of Indiana, Pa. about 50 miles northeast of Pittsburgh. Indiana was a college town and in those days, also the home of the Rochester and Pittsburgh Coal Company. My grandfather and his father had both worked for the R & P Coal Co.

So we would make our yearly trek as part of my father's vacation every year during the first two weeks of July. It was without fail. In fact, every part of the trip was without fail. We would leave St. Pete very early in the morning and drive for eleven to twelve hours with just one pit stop until we made our halfway point in North Carolina just slightly north of the South Carolina border. Then we would do the same thing the next day until we got to my grandparents' home.

For my sister and myself, we loved this yearly trip. I found out later that neither of my parents were particularly excited about this, but that it was expected of them.

One of our fondest memories of these summer visits was Mrs. Couser. Mrs. Couser was a friend of my grandmother's and every year for many years when we went to Pennsylvania , she would take my sister and me out for lunch at a local tea room. We would get dressed up for her visit and for that afternoon it was just my sister and me with Mrs. Couser. What Mrs. Couser did for us is that she treated two elementary school girls like we were important young ladies. It was her wonderful act of unselfish kindness that both my sister and I recently recalled. It has been more than 55 years and we still remember her small gestures of kindness to two young girls.

So small acts of kindness can have a lifelong lasting impression on someone. I know that Mrs. Couser's did for both my sister and me.

Now on to some news tidbits.

All this war mongering by every single Republican Presidential hopeful who wants to send more troops to Iraq and Syria certainly is beyond the fiscal and logistical ability of the United States. Juan Cole takes a look at proposals by Jeb Bush and Lindsey Graham in his Monday post.

Lindsey Graham has something of the same plan as Bush but is far more frank about the numbers. As Barrow writes, the number is 20,000, some 10,000 for Iraq and a similar number for Syria. He said, “I am going to destroy the Caliphate. We are going to pull it up by its roots.”

Of course reality shows quite the opposite.

The problem with Graham’s position is that the US had at some points like 160,000 US troops in Iraq, and they could not stop the civil war of 2006, nor could they defeat Daesh or its predecessors. So why would 10,000 each for Iraq and Syria be able to pull this off?

Which leads us to an article at TomDispatch by William Astore regarding the performance of the US military and its incestuous relationship with the military industrial complex. This is a long read but one very much worth reading.

Authority without accountability means no one is responsible. And if no one is responsible, the system can keep chugging along, course largely unaltered, no matter what happens. This is exactly what it’s been doing for years now in Iraq, Afghanistan, and elsewhere.

Can we connect this behavior to the faults of the service academies? Careerism. Parochialism. Technocratic tendencies. Elitism. A focus on image rather than on substance. Lots of busywork and far too much praise for our ascetic warrior-heroes, results be damned. A tendency to close ranks rather than take responsibility. Buck-passing, not bucking the system. The urge to get those golden slots on graduation and the desire for golden parachutes into a lucrative world of corporate boards and consultancies after “retirement,” not to speak of those glowing appearances as military experts on major TV and cable networks.

Now on to a question that many people have been asking. Why does Black Lives Matter seem to be harassing Bernie Sanders? If you read the front page at another site, they would have you believe that it is because Bernie Sanders has a problem with black people. According to Jamelle Bouie of Slate, this may not really be the case, but something of a much more pragmatic nature.

Set those questions aside, however, and you have an easy answer for why Sanders gets the brunt of Black Lives Matter activity, at least among Democratic presidential candidates. Unlike his competitors, Sanders is simply the best available vessel for bringing activists’ concerns to the mainstream of the Democratic Party.

According to Bouie, Sanders is seen as being the most sympathetic and provides the easiest access of the main Democratic contenders.

In this environment, if you’re trying to make a splash, you go with Sanders, especially when he’s more open to change and adjustment than the alternatives. Disrupting Sanders gives you more bang for your buck: It keeps you in the news and puts indirect pressure on other campaigns that know they’ll have to answer to the movement’s questions.

Shades of Occupy and nearly every other popular movement, this news should come as no great surprise. The police are spying on and infiltrating Black Lives Matter. We continue to see an ever increasing infringement upon our Constitutional rights and it does not seem to be abating at all.

This appears to be the first documented proof of the frequent presence of undercover police at Black Lives Matter protests in the city of New York, though many activists have suspected their presence since mass protests erupted there last year over a grand jury’s decision not to indict Daniel Pantaleo, a police officer involved in the death of Eric Garner.

The protest surveillance and use of undercover officers raises questions over whether New York-area law enforcement agencies are potentially criminalizing the exercise of free speech and treating activists like terrorist threats. Critics say the police files seem to document a response vastly disproportionate to the level of law breaking associated with the protests.

The Atlantic has an interesting look at Jeremy Corbyn, the democratic socialist who is the front runner in Britain's Labour party and who may become the next prime minister of Great Britain. Some of his programs sound very familiar to those who have been paying attention to Bernie Sanders campaign speeches.

So what exactly is Corbyn’s worldview, and how might he govern if elected prime minister of the United Kingdom? Corbyn is a self-described “socialist” or “democratic socialist,” an old-school tax-and-spend left-winger who believes government spending—not austerity—is the key to economic stimulus. He wants to close the U.K.’s budget deficit by, in part, raising taxes on the rich and ending corporate subsidies.

Domestically, he wants to re-nationalize the country’s much-maligned railways, scrap university tuition, and introduce rent controls. Many of these positions enjoy widespread support, though another—his support of mass immigration to the United Kingdom—does not.

And finally, I never thought I would be linking an article about Donald Trump, but but even a blind squirrel.

There is, however, one major issue that both Sanders and Trump have been exposing in their own unique ways: The endemic corruption of America’s political system. Sanders has been critical of money in politics and corruption throughout his career, while Trump has been a corrupter of politics throughout his career. The New York billionaire has quite literally been bragging about how he has bought politicians on both sides of the aisle, which is absolutely true. Since 1989, he has contributed $584,850 to Democrats and $961,140 to Republicans, according to the Federal Election Commission and state election offices. Since 2012, it has almost all gone to Republicans — including, yes, many of his competing candidates.

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smiley7's picture

Enjoying your act of kindness reminiscence. Thanks for sharing.
I see that Trump is closing on Clinton in the latest polls as is Sanders. I'm certainly not following the advise of those who promised for almost a year that Democrats would retain control of the Senate in 2014. Smile

Here's a cutie:

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gulfgal98's picture

I am still shocked at how Trump's campaign is gaining ground. There is an awful lot of anger out there towards the establishment politicians. Love the Bernie wig! Smile

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

I laughed at first and agree with huffpo attitude of treating him as entertainment news.

But for some years now, my friends and acquaintances on both sides of the aisle, are in a throw the bums out mood.

There are a lot of angry people in this country. It will be very interesting how this election plays out.

It may well be as a local anchor opined this week, that showing the deep discontent with government, that it will be Sanders vs Trump.
(if that will be the case, let's hope that Sanders wins in November) ;0)

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mimi's picture

your memories of small acts of kindness made me think of my father, who was liked by his employees, because he took care to visit everyone of his around 100 employees on Dec. 23rd each year to leave some kind words and a little gift. This was more appreciated than he knew, we learned later in life.

Just wanted to point out that today in Democracy Now there is a great clip about Trump with revelations of his past dealings that were quite stunning to me.
I wouldn't have thought it be that bad. It's not yet transferred or clipped out on youtube, but you can watch for yourself.

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gulfgal98's picture

Sometimes small acts of kindness come back in ways you never expect. In our office, we had a young college kid, Dwayne, who worked for us part time as a runner and doing general things like making copies and such for the rest of us. I thought Dwayne was great because whenever I asked him to do something for me, he did it right away and perfectly. Not everyone in our office felt the same about him, particularly one supervisor who acted above it all. But I always made sure to tell him "thank you" in person. Later, when Dwayne got a full time job at another place, he told me that I was his favorite planner and the reason for that was that I always appreciated what he did and I always thanked him. A small thing like telling someone thank you in person goes a long way. It is something I learned from my father who never failed to go out of his way to thank people.

I will have to go watch Democracy Now! Nothing about Trump surprises me.

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

janis b's picture

Thank you gulfgal for including this explanation to the question "Why does Black Lives Matter seem to be harassing Bernie Sanders"? This explanation makes so much more sense to me then any other of the valid or imagined (often disingenuous) reasons I've read; and it's so simple.

Thank you also for relating your experience of the significance of a single act of kindness.

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gulfgal98's picture

And WELCOME to caucus99%! Biggrin

I hope you will continue to participate here by commenting and posting content of your own too. The formatting here is very easy. So easy that even a technically challenged person such as myself has learned how to do it! Wink

The article you referred to is one person's take on it, but it makes the most sense of any explanation I have seen yet and one I can easily accept.

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

janis b's picture

I'm happy to be here.

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smiley7's picture

A hearty welcome to c99; so happy to see you here!

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janis b's picture

I'm happy to share this space with you.

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MarilynW's picture

It's good to see you here.

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To thine own self be true.

janis b's picture

I'm happy to be in your company and look forward to meeting you here more often.

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great to see you posting here, welcome!

Signed: Johnny Cakes

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janis b's picture

When joe announced the end of the evening blues I just had to follow you all here. Thank you Johnny for providing the place and attracting such a fine following of people and writers. I so much enjoy the knowledge and perspective from everyone here and the extraordinarily welcoming nature of everyone.

I’m glad the name Johnny Cakes followed you here. It fits you so well.

[video:https://youtu.be/hIJBgxYot5k]

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janis b's picture

Did you catch the monkey calls at the end of the song Wink

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janis b's picture

I ended my comment with a wink, which I always thought was done with the eye. This translation is winking with its mouth. I guess I have much to learn here.

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where you write your comment, scroll down a ways and you'll see a link "textual smiley", click it and you'll find a plethora of balloon animation thing-a-ma-bobs.

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Cool song, thanks janis.

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joe shikspack's picture

great to see you here.

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janis b's picture

I couldn't possibly have not followed you all here without losing something I value.

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joe shikspack's picture

i'd be sad if some of the bluesters couldn't make the click.

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MarilynW's picture

much attention was focused. I don't remember any of the heroes of the civil rights movement doing things like that, not to their allies. But times change.

Now those acts have become a flash point on DKos. I guess they needed a flash point to keep the fighting going. Yawn.

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To thine own self be true.

gulfgal98's picture

I think in the end, Bernie will come out of this very well.

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

gulfgal98's picture

Yesterday morning, it rained, but there was still a little left to do. The rain stopped early and the supervisor and one crew member came to finish up and install flashing. Less than one hour after they finished, it rained again. The rain gods were with us and it is complete. No more leaks. Smile

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

Big Al's picture

"No one votes on foreign policy (3+ / 0-)
at least in the general, unless there's a deeply unpopular war. It's always, always, about the economy."

It was in a discussion about the foreign policy positions of Sanders versus the Republicans. I find it interesting because it's
somewhat true. When you see the lists going around of the top priorities for Americans, you rarely see foreign policy even in
the top ten. It's obvious that Americans are prodded in that direction so they don't start questioning the Empire. And most
Americans can't seem to put it together that the economy and foreign policies are intertwined and connected. How can spending
over $1 trillion per year on essentially one program (military, homeland security and intelligence) not be considered an important
aspect of the U.S. economy? And then there's the benefits Americans have received from being an Empire. It's not coincidence that
we've enjoyed the best standard of living over the last 100 years or so while also becoming the preeminent Empire on the planet.
Even though the rich take the lion's share, it has trickled down to the serfs, although that appears to be at an end.
And then there's the matter of killing people, destroying countries, and stealing resources. Basically what most Americans are saying
is they don't care about killing people as much as they care about their own money train, the U.S. economy. That's most important, it
doesn't matter what countries we ruin, what genocides we cause, or how many people we kill, the top priority when electing our
so called representatives is the economy.
Typical American attitude.

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gulfgal98's picture

but like you posted, they do not connect their pocket book issues with the vast amounts of money spent on war.

One of the things I try very hard to do with our Peace vigil conversations is to make the connection of just how much money has been wasted on war. One of my favorite things I use and I have used enumerable times over a dkos too is quoting the real costs of just the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan by citing Linda J. Bilmes studies on these costs. We often see a quote of $1 to $1.5 Trillion, but those are just the hard costs to date and do not include all the long term costs. I have not see an update since early in 2013 when Bilmes estimated the total costs of these two wars to be $4.5 to $6 Trillion. That is an enormous amount of money that has been pissed away into a black hole.

And now we see the entire Republican party and some Democrats wanting war with Iran which will lead to WW III, without a doubt. And in the linked article, they want to send more troops to Iraq and Syria. It is insanity. But because these wars are being fought on foreign soils and with a volunteer military, very few Americans have a personal interest in them. The media does not really cover the cost of lives that have been lost due to our war of aggression in Iraq. The most conservative estimate has been 1/2 million innocent civilians have lost their lives in Iraq. I am now seeing estimates of one million civilians killed in a war that should have never happened in the first place.

The real sin is not upon the American people but upon the press which has operated as the propaganda machine for the MIC. Those of us who know the real story did not read it in the MSM, but had to search to get the truth. When people are worried about paying their monthly bills and whether or not they will have a job that will allow them to keep their heads above water, researching how wars in far away places is the last thing on their minds.

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

Big Al's picture

insidious and damaging our press and mass media is to the people of this country. Once you become aware, the
constant lies and false narratives become astoundingly obvious and criminal. Just flat out lie after lie. It's
impossible to know the truth by just following the MSM. Even in the so called alternative media, it's been taken over
with what originally looked like alternative media but they're anything but, places like Vox and VICE and Huffington
Post all spout the same lies and false narratives.
I still say there should be a concerted boycott of the MSM just as there should be one against the two major political
parties. Comes a time when the people are going to have to say enough is enough.

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hecate's picture

don't let the people of the United States off so easily. For instance, everything that needed to be known about Abu Ghraib was out there before the 2004 elections. They returned George II and his merry men to office anyway. They chose, to embrace that.

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Big Al's picture

every damn time.
There is and has been an understood meme for as long as I can remember.
"Don't trust everything you read in the newspapers". Old as dirt and people know it
applies to all mass media. I think excuse time is over.

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gulfgal98's picture

I can only speak from my personal experience at our small local Peace vigil, so take this anecdotally.

What I have learned is that most people who say they are against these wars are really saying that they do not want to send Americans over there to be killed or wounded. However they have bought into the fear that was generated by 9/11 and thereafter. For this reason, many of them still do not see brown Muslim people as being the same as they are. They view Muslims as people who are hell bent on killing us all. Which leads to why so many Americans turned a blind eye to the torture at Abu Ghraib and why so many of these same people support drone strikes.

In my own experience, moralizing does not work in general. People do not want to be sent on a guilt trip, even if they deserve to be. My approach has been to appeal to the practical side first. Because afterall, we want to keep the dialogue open.

The issue of fiscal costs is always a great opener and most people are really shocked at how much money we have thrown away on these wars. The other tact I often use is to try to turn it around on them and ask them how they would feel if someone invaded our country and started a war under false pretenses or started droning people randomly based upon cell phone meta data, instead of actually targeting a specific individual. I also talk about how fast terrorism has risen world wide since we invaded Iraq and Afghanistan. One other thing that most people do not know is that Afghanistan and Iraq are now the two longest wars in US history with no real end in sight for either.

Once we can engage people, maybe some of them will spend some time researching for themselves.

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

So what happened to the anti-war movement in this country?

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Shahryar's picture

imminent danger helps fuel resistance.

Now the ones who are likely to go to peace rallies are the ones who remember what it was like back then. Kids are constantly being told that soldiers are heroes who are protecting us. Some must believe it, some must scoff, few, apparently, are outraged.

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Big Al's picture

were two or three military stands, one with a fancy hummer with Marines plastered across it.
There was a couple Marines in full dress blues, a number of others standing around challenging the
young men to pull-up contests.
You don't know how hard it was for me to not go over there and rain on their parade. But I had my
granddaughter and a nice big corn dog so I let it go.

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why waste a pretty good corn dog.

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gulfgal98's picture

Nearly every family had the potential to be affected by the draft.

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

Shahryar's picture

there are some social justice protests but foreign wars? Not that I know of. It would mean dropping Obama.

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hecate's picture

don't know that such songs need to be so grounded in such particulars of who, what, when, why, where, how. Songs that are so grounded, it seems to me, run the real risk of veritably glowing in the dark as trite, dated, embarrassing, banal. As in, for instance:

Let's impeach the President for lying
And misleading our country into war
Abusing all the power that we gave him
And shipping all our money out the door

Cindy Sheehan, in one of her last posts on Daily Kos, wept, in inconsolable pain, over "Zombie." A song originally written as a primal scream against the serial killing in the six northern counties of Ireland. Sheehan wept, because she felt the song covering her world, too. Because the song had transcended. As all real art will do.

[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Egb3YTkFAWI]

Similarly, Jim Malcolm, in this century, set words, that he pulled from the ether, to a tune, come way back the mists of time; words, on surface, cabined to a battle that occurred more than 200 years ago; but words, in truth, sounding from the mouths of every soldier, dying, anywhere, everywhere, in this minute.

(cited song starts in video below at 3:27)

[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fJx3M-AQPV0]

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Big Al's picture

Good to see you here.
The antiwar movement is currently just getting up from a nap then he's going to have lunch. The hope is
it only grows from there.

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Good to see you also

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snoopydawg's picture

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Which AIPAC/MIC/pharma/bank bought politician are you going to vote for? Don’t be surprised when nothing changes.

Big Al's picture

What's it sound like to you?

"Helping All Workers Save for Retirement – Millions of working Americans lack access to a retirement savings plan at work. Fewer than 10 percent of those without plans at work save in a retirement account on their own. In 2015, retirement security will be one of the key topics of the White House Conference on Aging. The Budget would make it easy and automatic for workers to save for retirement through their employer – giving 30 million more workers access to a workplace savings opportunity. The Budget also ensures that long-term part-time employees can participate in their employers’ retirement plans and provides tax incentives to offset administrative expenses for small businesses that adopt retirement plans."

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Big Al's picture

how it almost sounds like the U.S. is running Central America. I wonder how many countries have budget line items
that say the same things about helping us Americans?

"Promoting Prosperity, Security and Good Governance in Central America – The Budget provides $1 billion to support a long-term, comprehensive strategy for Central America designed to contribute to the evolution of an economically-integrated Central America that is fully democratic, provides greater economic opportunities to its people, promotes more accountable, transparent, and effective public institutions and ensures the safety of its citizens, addressing the challenges that have resulted in an influx of migration from the region."

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Big Al's picture

Imperialism and Empire constitute much more than just war, particularly in this day and age when the wars are
disguised by using proxy terrorists like ISIL to do the dirty work. We need to end all imperialism to ever hope to
have peace on earth.

Thus budget item sounds a lot like the $5 billion that Nuland bragged about being spent to overthrow the elected
government of Ukraine.

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shaharazade's picture

My heart goes out to the Central American people as it sounds like their going to get screwed by the US again. I don't like the sound of that one bit.

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gulfgal98's picture

It also sounds like another way for the banks to enrich themselves. The state of Florida lost $62 billion from the state employees pension fund during the 2008 crash. Most of the losses were due to Wall Street investments.

The decline — the steepest in the agency's 65-year history — reflects both big investment losses in the global financial crisis and the decision by hundreds of local and state agencies to withdraw money from shaky SBA accounts.

In both cases, the SBA plowed money into higher-risk investments with the potential for bigger profits. But in the ongoing financial meltdown, they generated big losses instead.

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

joe shikspack's picture

Jeb Bush Got $1.3M Job At Lehman After Florida Shifted Pension Cash To Bank

For Florida taxpayers, the move by the administration of then-Gov. Jeb Bush to forge a relationship with Lehman Brothers would ultimately prove disastrous. Transactions in 2005 and 2006 put the Wall Street investment bank in charge of some $250 million worth of pension funds for Florida cops, teachers and firefighters. Lehman would capture more than $5 million in fees on these deals, while gaining additional contracts to manage another $1.2 billion of Florida's money. Then, in the fall of 2008, Lehman collapsed into bankruptcy, leaving Florida facing up to $1 billion in losses.

But for Jeb Bush personally, his enduring relationship with Lehman would prove lucrative. In 2007, just as he left office, Bush secured a job as a Lehman consultant for $1.3 million a year, Bloomberg reported.

Weeks after Bush took the Lehman job, the Florida State Board of Administration (SBA) -- a three-member body that makes investment decisions about state pension funds and whose ranks had recently included one Jeb Bush -- gave Lehman additional business: SBA purchased $842 million worth of separate investments in Lehman’s mortgage-backed securities. Over the course of the year, the SBA would shift an additional $420 million of pension money into the same fund in which the state had begun investing under Bush.

In short, during Bush’s first year working for Lehman, his former colleagues in Tallahassee, the state capital, moved vast sums of Florida pension money into the doomed Wall Street investment bank, even as warnings about its financial troubles began to emerge.

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gulfgal98's picture

the state of Florida pension plan includes not just state of Florida employees and retirees, but also county employees and teachers, so a lot of people were affected by the poor decisions made by the SBA.

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

Shahryar's picture

we all remember those 401Ks that went from hundreds of thousands of dollars to zero. What could possibly go wrong with this fine plan?

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joe shikspack's picture

now that he's rewarded the banksters and the real estate sector with impunity, then went on to reward the insurance industry with obamacare, well, it's the banksters turn again, isn't it?

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Unabashed Liberal's picture

plans."

Sounds like a neoliberal corporatist Democratic Party plan for Americans to "pull themselves up by their bootstraps" by funding their own retirement.

Wink

(Listen to the Senate Finance Committee Hearings on this, if you think I'm kidding.)

Seriously, this will be another boon to the FIRE sector. And, if adopted (Harkins' proposal, that is), the resulting retirement/investment vehicle will be considerably more risky than a defined benefit plan.

No one--the employer, or the government--will be required to step in to 'bail out' these plans.

Harkins' plan is a 'hybrid' plan--and a giveaway to Wall Street. Unlike my excellent defined benefits retirement plan (and our fixed annuities), the money continues to 'float' in the market.

IOW, under Harkin's plan, a pensioner could actually suffer a "cut" in their monthly pension benefit.

Whew!

[Full disclosure: Our family financial services/insurance business, established by my Father, greatly benefits from the various Dem Party neoliberal policy solutions. But, it doesn't stop me from disagreeing with them on a policy/political level.]

I figure that once everyone is enrolled in a "mandatory" retirement plan, Social Security will be rendered 'unnecessary,' and will either be 'deep sixed,' or 'progressive price indexing' will be implemented for the Program--resulting in a flat universal stipend.

BTW, employers will not be required to contribute to this plan.

Employer's only mandatory responsibility will be setting up the payroll deduction for this benefit. IOW, they are monetarily rewarded with 'tax incentives' for that minimal contribution, even if they don't choose to make an employer contribution/match.

Thanks for posting this blurb.

I'm "hoping" that Dem Presidential Candidates will be forced to take a stance on this proposal.

~ ~ ~ ~ ~

Thanks for the excellent OT, Nancy. I'm going to swing back by later to relate a recent 'act of kindness' extended to me--by a federal government employee, no less.

Mollie


"The best and most beautiful things in the world cannot be seen or even touched. They must be felt with the heart."--Helen Keller

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Everyone thinks they have the best dog, and none of them are wrong.

gulfgal98's picture

I really wish you would be able to find time to write a diary on this. You have a great start here with this comment. Good

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

mimi's picture

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hecate's picture

A 12-hour journey with but one pit-stop. Your family had impressive bladder control. An evolutionary adaptation to long car-trips. ; )

A tea-room opened up here for a short while. I was in my 30s then, but it was still pretty cool. I had a Mrs. Couser-like neighbor lady, when I was a kid, Mrs. Brown, who loved to play canasta. I'm not sure she had enough people, or even anyone else, to play with, so she taught me, and I'd go over there every week to play. I remember now nothing about the game, but the memories of the experience are pleasant.

Unpleasant, as ever, is "news."

—Inspector Clouseaus on the intertubes falsely identified an Australian actor as the Bangkok temple-bomber. Before he could be mobbed by Dudley Do-Right intertubinal vigilantes, he turned himself into a police station, complete with CCTV footage showing him about other things, at the time, than bombing.

—The racist killer George Zimmerman is now selling paintings featuring the slavery diaper, "honoring" some knuckledragging yeehaw who has declared his killing-machine shop a "Muslim-free zone." Since George II now also paints, I figure he and Zimbo can collaborate on a mural. Featuring George II merrily strumming a guitar, as below his feet flow in muddy water the corpses of black people killed by Katrina; on a bridge in the background, there stands Zimbo, alongside craven backshooter Gomer Kyle, the two of them laughingly pumping bullets into the bodies, as they float by.

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gulfgal98's picture

We would leave at about 3 am in the morning, so my sister and I slept in the back seat for a long time. But I really do not remember it being bad. We always stayed at a motel with a pool, so when we got in, we got to go swimming. Smile The second day was much shorter.

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

Just read that earlier.

I am hopeful that Springsteen will come out in support of him also. I just can't see him endorsing Clinton, can you?

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hecate's picture

A PPP poll has found that Lindsey Graham has "literally no supporters" in the state of North Carolina.

Furthermore, in that state a candidate named Deez Nuts is, at 9%, outpolling Carly Fiorina, Mike Huckabee, Scott Walker, Rand Paul, Chris Christie, Rick Santorum, John Kasich, Rick Perry, Jim Gilmore, Bobby Jindal, and George Pataki. And Graham of course.

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Pay raises may be very small, but they are even less than reported

The lightly followed Department of Labor’s quarterly Employment Cost Index (ECI) is Janet Yellen’s favorite wage indicator for good reason: it most accurately reflects the true cost of labor to businesses.

Well… the ECI increased by 0.2% in the second quarter of 2015. That was not only way below what Wall Street was expecting, it was also the slowest pace of wage growth since 1982 when ECI record keeping started!

Those are bad numbers, but it is really worse if you dig below the headlines:
Devilish Detail #1: Government Worker Wages, Not Private Sector.

The overall ECI was up by 0.2%, but that is only because compensation for government workers increased by +0.6%.

What about the private sector? Change in compensation: 0%. Yup… ZILCH… NADA… ZERO… not a penny.
Devilish Detail #2: Benefits, Not Wages, Are Rising.

In the past 12 months, the ECI is up 2%. Sure, that kind of increase is nothing to shout about, but 2% is better than a sharp stick in the eye.

Hold on… not so fast!

Remember, there are two components of labor costs: (1) wages and (2) benefits like paid vacation, Social Security, workers’ compensation, and health insurance. Wages are roughly 70% of ECI, and benefits make up the remaining 30%.

Over the last 12 months, the cost of benefits has increased by +1.7%. My guess is that the lion’s share of that increase can’t be attributed to higher health insurance costs.

Moreover, the trend these days is for employers to pass on some or all of the higher costs of health insurance to employees, thus reducing take-home pay.

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mimi's picture

I wonder how an employer can justify that. Was after eight weeks in the probationary period. How does that make sense as they can fire anyone anyhow from one day to the next.

With these kind of labor law conditions, how can people expect "building communities"? Some people make several thousand miles trips to get a full time job at a somewhat decent hourly rate and you are promised honey and milk all over the place, to just be replaced by pay cuts and potential fire.

Can't you fire some of the milllionaires and billionaires, who buy out the politicians and write "employer friendly" legislation?

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Unabashed Liberal's picture

missed seeing the good folks at EB--who hadn't migrated over here--since I've been embroiled in my own blog project (misadventure?).

I echo Nancy in saying that this blog couldn't be more 'user friendly.' And the 'company' here is hard to beat.

Look forward to seeing you . . .

Wink

(Music City) Mollie


"The best and most beautiful things in the world cannot be seen or even touched. They must be felt with the heart."--Helen Keller

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Everyone thinks they have the best dog, and none of them are wrong.

Whatever shall we do for entertainment?

I think I have had enough of dkos pie fights to last for a long time.

Grown people acting like children, and when you find yourself acting just like them - you realize just not the best use of your time.

There are so many important issues, that require energy, to waste it.

I am gratified that Sanders is running, that he has so much momentum. I watched his speech at UNR last night.

He gets the people inspired, to actually hope for a better government than what we have had over the past 15-20 years.

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gulfgal98's picture

It is so good to have you here! Biggrin

No pie fights, but we do disagree on some issues. We just try to do it respectfully.

Plus we have emoticons too! Wink

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

Imitating the Clinton campaign, are we?

Do we have Clinton supporters here, lasing out at Hillary Haters? God, I hope not.

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he hates all politicians. Can't really blame him for that though.

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he hates all politicians. Can't really blame him for that though.

Few inspire confidence, too few to mention.

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gulfgal98's picture

Al keeps us all honest. Wink

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

smiley7's picture

We also have fun on c99. Great to see you here!

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gulfgal98's picture

we even get some much needed culture. I loved the Mozart smiley used in his Open Thread recently.

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

janis b's picture

It's good to see you again also. I hope you're enjoying the summer.

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Shahryar's picture

There seems to be a brouhaha about a cheating on your spouse web site being hacked and the names released to the public. Whatever someone else does is there business but it's sort of fun to tsk tsk.

But the point of this particular post isn't to be pro or con looking for an affair. I want to point out one little item in this article that made me laugh at what I see as government lying and "journalistic" enabling of that lying.

http://www.reuters.com/article/2015/08/19/us-ashleymadison-cybersecurity...

Here's the gem:

It's not clear how many of the clients are legitimate - users don't have to verify their email when they sign up.

A British parliamentarian whose email address was included on the list said it had been stolen and used without her knowledge, adding weight to the argument that inclusion does not necessarily implicate individuals.

Adding weight? How about she's lying? This is like saying "a 4th grader claimed his dog ate his homework, adding weight to the argument that neighborhood dogs are eating school assignments." Or "'What? like with a cloth?', adding weight to the argument that Hillary doesn't know how servers work." Or "'What kill list?', adding weight to the argument that such a list does not exist."

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lotlizard's picture

This is like saying "a 4th grader claimed his dog ate his homework, adding weight to the argument that neighborhood dogs are eating school assignments." Or "'What? like with a cloth?', adding weight to the argument that Hillary doesn't know how servers work." Or "'What kill list?', adding weight to the argument that such a list does not exist."

Yes, in the late 1950s Robert Louis Stevenson Intermediate School in Honolulu did indeed have a 9th grade elective called "Newswriting" … we were responsible for putting together the monthly school newspaper Tusitala.

The next year my parents transferred me to private school, President Obama's alma mater Punahou. And at Stevenson, the whole newspaper and newswriting-class setup was abolished in the name of the public school system "eliminating frills" to save money.

But while it lasted, we all were inculcated with way more professionalism and way higher standards than the practicing so-called journalists nowadays.

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mimi's picture

I read that over at dkos and people are speculating what this will do to Edwards and van Hollen.

I would appreciate some input of Baltimorians and other people in the know about Cummings. I like to support Cummings and Edwards as well, but know nothing much and do that just out of my guts. And I have not much knowledge about van Hollen's record either.

Would be nice to hear something from you about it.

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joe shikspack's picture

cummings is a decent, liberal representative for his district, but edwards would make a better senator.

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dkos?

And what can we (or I, should say) do to help this website?

If I had not found joanne's morning series there, years back, I would have left then.

It was joanne and the group there (which is all of you here, I think) that kept me posting there.

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gulfgal98's picture

the Tuesday Morning Open Thread. It can be a little or as much as you wish.

I used to agonize over doing mine, but it seems to come easier the more I do it.

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

joe shikspack's picture

i am pretty busy for the next couple of weeks, but things should clear up in early september.

i have been talking with jtc about what form eb will take here. its current format makes sense for daily kos, but this site is different and i'm thinking about whether to retool the format to better fit in here.

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