Almost 9 months ago I wrote my first post calling for an end to the filibuster. Since then I’ve written many that have advocated ending it, all linked from this page. As the months have gone by, and apparently due to the obvious damage the institution of the filibuster has done to pending health care […]
Entries from December 2009
Drive A Stake Through Its Heart: Updated
December 28th, 2009 · 1 Comment
Tags: Knowledge Management · Politics
Bernie Caves and Explains Why
December 22nd, 2009 · 6 Comments
Bernie Sanders’ appearance on The Ed Show, was a sad one for me to see, because he tried to explain his joining the Democrats in voting for cloture on the Senate’s health care reform bill in two ways. First, of course, he waxes enthusiastic about the tremendous good that the measly $10 billion (about 0.1 […]
Tags: Politics
Kill the Bill: Nine Reasons
December 21st, 2009 · 1 Comment
Here are nine reasons the Senate health care reform bill should be killed: 1) The bill gives almost no real help ’til 2014. In the short term, the bill does nothing about the fatalities, bankruptcies, and foreclosures that come from lack of insurance. Therefore, the very title of the bill — “The Affordable Health Choices […]
Tags: Politics
Expose Him To Reality, Now!
December 20th, 2009 · 2 Comments
Bill Moyers hosted an interesting conversation the other day among Robert Kuttner, Matt Taibbi, and himself about health care reform, the performance of the Administration to this point, and the relations of progressives with the President. The conversation focused in part on how Taibbi and Kuttner would vote on the Senate’s pending legislation, if it […]
Tags: Politics
For Chrissake, If You Really Care About America, Tell Harry Reid “No”
December 19th, 2009 · 1 Comment
This is an appeal to all Progressive Senators, whom I, perhaps mistakenly, list as including: Bernie Sanders, Sherrod Brown, Russ Feingold, Pat Leahy, Al Franken, Sheldon Whitehouse, Tom Harkin, Ron Wyden, Patty Murray, Dick Durbin, Barbra Boxer, Byron Dorgan, Barbara Mikulski, Ben Cardin, Jay Rockefeller, Chuck Schumer, and Paul Kirk. My apologies to Amy Klobuchar, […]
Tags: Politics
Why They Don’t Want To Use Reconciliation
December 17th, 2009 · Comments Off on Why They Don’t Want To Use Reconciliation
The solid front of Democratic Party progressives supporting the Senate’s health care form bill, has now cracked wide open with Howard Dean’s call to kill the Senate bill and start over in the House with reconciliation. Dean’s call hasn’t cracked open the floodgates among the Senate and House Democrats and in recent days people like […]
Tags: Politics
The Return of The Jello Man
December 17th, 2009 · Comments Off on The Return of The Jello Man
When I was young the United States had some liberals of courage in the Senate. People like Estes Kefauver, Paul Douglas, Hubert H. Humphrey, Herbert Lehman, Wayne Morse, Richard L. Neuberger, Maurine B. Neuberger, Eugene McCarthy, Mike Mansfield, Ernest Gruening, Pat McNamara, Phil Hart, Frank Church, George McGovern, Albert Gore, Sr., Ralph Yarborough, Warren Magnuson, […]
Tags: Politics
Myths, Scares, Lies, and Deadly Innocent Frauds: Part Three
December 10th, 2009 · Comments Off on Myths, Scares, Lies, and Deadly Innocent Frauds: Part Three
In the previous two posts in this series I’ve examined four ideas that Warren Mosler has called “deadly innocent frauds,” (difs) and that others have variously referred to as myths, scares, and lies. Three of the difs — that Government deficits create a debt burden for future generations, take away non-governmental sector saving, and that […]
Tags: Politics
Myths, Scares, Lies, and Deadly Innocent Frauds: Part Two
December 9th, 2009 · 1 Comment
In my last post I introduced Warren Mosler’s notion of “deadly innocent frauds,” (difs) and discussed the idea of fiat monetary systems and its implications for the first dif: “in order to spend money, the Government must first raise it through taxation, or borrow it.” In fiat monetary systems, that idea is false, which is […]
Tags: Politics
Myths, Scares, Lies, and Deadly Innocent Frauds: Part One
December 8th, 2009 · 2 Comments
One characteristic of modern political and economic discourse is frequent asserting of beliefs about economics and money that have been variously described by some observers as ‘myths’, ‘scares‘, ‘lies’, ‘innocent frauds’, and ‘deadly innocent frauds’. ‘Innocent frauds’ was the courteous labeling of such beliefs by John Kenneth Galbraith in his last book, The Economics of […]
Tags: Politics