Police ordered residents from dozens of homes Tuesday as a spectacular wildfire pushed by 25 mph wind gusts threatened part of Oklahoma City. (Aug. 30)
Continue reading …An Arkansas man who wanted to capture aerial photos of his home during his first plane ride instead helped catch two men burglarizing it. Steven Lynn said he could see the two taking items from his house. (Aug. 30)
Continue reading …It’s hard to tell if the idea that Ron Paul cannot win in 2012 is more ignorant, in its complete lack of historical sophistication, or more arrogant, in its claim to certainty amid all the complexity of 300 million lives and the myriad issues that affect them. Sometimes, perhaps once in a few generations, a nation can undergo what a mathematician or physicist would call a “phase change.” The classic example of such a thing is a pile of sand. Every grain you add makes the pile slightly steeper and slightly higher without moving any of the other grains inside the pile, until eventually one grain is added that causes an avalanche of sand down the sides of the pile, moving thousand of grains and changing the shape of the pile. Such behavior can be exhibited by all complex systems, and a nation — it should be obvious — is much more complex than a pile of sand. The important point for those who would presume to make such grand predictions as “Dr. Paul cannot win” is that no examination of the pile of sand before the point of avalanche would tell you that, or when, the avalanche will eventually happen. But happen it does; indeed, happen it must. And there are numerous examples of abrupt and dramatic phase change in the politics of great nations. The U.K., the country of my birth, provides a compelling and closely relevant example. As every schoolboy knows, Churchill led Britain to victory in the Second World War. Indeed, he did as much as any man on Earth ever has to save civilization as we know it. Three months after the entire nation poured into the streets to cheer this great leader (the man a few years ago voted by Britons the greatest Briton of all time), Churchill went to the country in a general election to retain his position as prime minister. There was simply no way he could lose. The best slogan the Labour party, his opposition, could come up with was, “Cheer Churchill. Vote Labour.” And amazingly, that is exactly what the nation did. Churchill was defeated. No one anywhere — including the people of Britain who voted in the election — had even thought about the possibility. No newspaper had considered it. After all, the election was a foregone conclusion in Churchill’s favor. And yet an unseen, perhaps unconscious, will of the people caused a cultural and political phase-change in the British nation that they neither knew they wanted nor knew they had the power to cause. Many historians now say that the unseen sentiment that produced this result that shocked not just the British but the whole world was the idea that all the blood and treasure lost to maintain the freedom of the British empire and the Western world demanded something more than continuation of the old political settlement. After a huge crisis, the people wanted a whole new system. In 1945, the Labour Party, with its vision of state-delivered cradle-to-grave security of health and basic material well-being (welfare state), in some way met that national desire for a grand political change. Following what was in fact a landslide victory for the Labour party, the character of the nation changed massively, and more change rapidly followed in the British identity, as an empire was lost and the mantle of the world’s greatest power was handed to the U.S.A. Those who have noted that one of Ron Paul’s greatest qualities is his humility might also be interested to know that Churchill had put down Clement Attlee, who defeated him, with the words, “A modest little man, with much to be modest about.” Perhaps a more fanciful comparison, but nonetheless indicative: no one in China was predicting that the Long March of Mao, which began in defeat and despair, would end in Beijing with victory and the proclamation of a whole new nation under a whole new political system. And which newspapers were pondering the possibility of the First World War just a month before it happened? We cannot see past a phase change. I don’t know if the U.S.A. will have undergone one at the time of the 2012 election, but the necessary conditions for one are all in place, as far as I can tell. One has to reach back a good way in American history for a time of such rapidly rising sentiment that not only are our leaders unable even to think of real solutions to the problems of greatest concern (rather than just making expedient changes at the margin), but also that the prevailing political and economic system is structurally incapable of delivering any long-term solutions in its current form. The sheer range and interconnectedness of the problems that the nation faces are such that any permanent solution to any one of them will require profound systemic change that will necessarily upset many economic, political and cultural equilibria. And that is nothing more than a definition of a national phase change. The average American may not know what is to be done, but she can sense when the system has exhausted all its possibilities. At that point, not only does the phase change become reasonable; it becomes desirable — even if what lies on the other side cannot be known. As anyone can find out just by talking to a broad cross-section of Ron Paul’s supporters, his base is not uniform in its agreement on the standard issues of typical American party-political conflict. In fact, Paul supporters vary significantly even in their views of what in the old left-right paradigm were the “wedge-issues.” Rather, they are united around concepts that could almost be called meta-political: whether left and right really exist, and, if they do, whether they are really opposed; whether centralized government should even be the main vehicle for political change, etc.; and whether there are some principles that should be held sacrosanct for long-term benefit, even when they will hurt in the short-run. For those with eyes to see, such realignments and re-prioritization may even be glimpses of America after its next phase change. If Ron Paul has committed support from 10 percent of the adult population, and most of that 10 percent support him precisely because they believe he represents a whole new political system, an entirely new political settlement, then we may be close to critical mass — just a few grains of sand short of the avalanche. Another piece of evidence that the nation is close to a phase change and a gestalt switch is the very fact that the prevailing paradigm (from which the mainstream media, established political class, etc., operate) has to ignore huge amounts of data about Ron Paul and the movement around him to continue to make any sense. The studied neglect of data as “irrelevant” is invariably indicative that the neglected data are hugely important. If information doesn’t really matter, why go to all the effort of ignoring it? Specifically, on all the metrics that a year ago everyone accepted as useful indicators of political standing, Ron Paul is not just a front-runner but a strong one. First, and most directly, he does extremely well in polls. The organization of his grassroots support is not just excellent; it is remarkable, by historic and global measures. His ability to raise money from actual voters is second to none. His appeal to independents and swing voters is an order of magnitude greater than that of his competitors. Secondarily, he has more support from military personnel than all other candidates put together, if measured by donations; he has the most consistent voting record; he has the magical quality of not coming off as a politician; he oozes integrity and authenticity, and, as far as we know, he has a personal life and marriage that reflects deep stability and commitment. To believe that Ron Paul’s victory is a long shot in spite of all standard indicators that directly contradict this claim is to throw out all norms with which we follow our nation’s politics — and that is a huge thing to do. The only way it can be done honestly is to present another set of contradictory reasons or metrics that are collectively more powerful than all those that you are rejecting. I am yet to find them. If it is true that the studied neglect of data to hold tight to a paradigm is the best evidence that the paradigm is about to collapse, then the massive and highly subjective neglect of all things Paulian is specific evidence that the country is moving in Paul’s direction. Of course, none of this means that Paul will definitely win. But it does mean that a bet against him by a politician is foolhardy and by a journalist is dishonest. It is worth returning to Churchill’s career for an even more delicious example: just days before he became the great wartime leader, his career had been written off as that of a kook, and he was being discussed as someone who had extreme ideas and whose thinking did not reflect the mood of the nation. The House of Commons was abuzz with his decline and imminent fall. And then, rather suddenly, something he had been saying for many years — that there was something rotten in the state of Germany — became so obvious that it could no longer be avoided. Once the nation saw that he had been right all along, he became the leader of the free world in very short order. His career changed. Britain changed. The world changed. No one had seen that coming, either. In fact, everyone thought they knew what was coming: the kook was about to disappear into political backwaters, if not the political wilderness. Do I even need to draw the parallel? If Paul wins, it won’t be because he is the kind of candidate Americans have always gone for. It will be precisely because Americans have collectively decided on a dramatically new way of doing business — a new political and economic paradigm — and then he’ll not only have ceased to be a long shot; he’ll be the only shot.
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Politico ‘s piece by Jonathan Martin, “Is Rick Perry Dumb?” got them all in a tither today over at Fox News. Those gosh darn media elitists trying to get some attention by bringing up the obvious, that Governor Rick Perry of Texas is not the brightest bulb around. Megyn Kelly asks the questions only Fox can ask (with a straight face anyway), “Does it matter?” MEGYN KELLY: I want to ask you this—does it matter, should it matter, if somebody is dumb? Because you know, we’ve had—yes, there have been partisan attacks, no question, it does usually seem to focus on Republicans, is Michele Bachmann dumb, they’ve talked about, you know, her being on the House Intelligence Committee is a contradiction in terms, and they’ve anonymously sourced Republicans asking that question, now they’re asking this about Rick Perry, Sarah Palin—but is it unfair, just because it’s coming from some in the mainstream media? I mean, there were questions about the number of colleges Sarah Palin, you know, attended, there were questions about, you know Perry’s academic transcript and so on, does it make it illegitimate just because of who’s asking it? Michelle Malkin said of course it was an illegitimate question to ask, but not surprisingly didn’t bother to defend Perry’s intelligence, or lack thereof. The Politico piece began with: Another Texas governor who drops his “g’s” and scorns elites is running for president and the whispers are the same: lightweight, incurious, instinctual. Strip away the euphemisms and Rick Perry is confronting an unavoidable question: Is he dumb — or just “misunderestimated?” Doubts about Perry’s intellect have hounded him since he was first elected as a state legislator nearly three decades ago. In Austin, he’s been derided as a right-place, right-time pol who looks the part but isn’t so deep — “Gov. Goodhair.” Now, with the chatter picking back up among his enemies and taking flight in elite Republican circles, the rap threatens to follow him to the national stage. “He’s like Bush only without the brains,” cracked one former Republican governor who knows Perry, repeating a joke that has made the rounds. …and went on for five more pages of this. I suspect anyone who watches the entire six minute segment above will only feel a bit stupider afterward so my apologies in advance.
Continue reading …Burglars suspected of using sleeping gas to ensure they are not disturbed during break-ins on Sardinia’s Costa Smeralda Police in the billionaires’ retreat of Porto Cervo on Sardinia’s Costa Smeralda believe thieves who made off with €315,000 (£280,000) in cash and jewels used sleeping gas on their victims to ensure they were not disturbed during the break-in. Similar robberies have been reported this summer in France and Spain. The burglaries in Porto Cervo, which took place last week, were only disclosed by police on Tuesday. The thieves sneaked into the rented holiday villa of a Milanese pharmaceuticals tycoon and left with a haul worth around €300,000. The businessman’s 42-year-old wife, her mother and their daughter were all in the house, along with a servant, but no one heard the burglars, even though they took the windows off their hinges to get in. At the villa next door, two holidaymakers found a watch and €15,000 in cash missing. They told police they had woken up feeling weak and dazed. In July, “gassing gangs” were reported to be targeting caravans and camper vans in France. Thieves sprayed sleeping gas in through air vents before breaking in. Earlier this month, at least six houses on an estate at Rincón de la Victoria on Spain’s Costa del Sol were burgled by thieves thought to have used sleeping gas. One of the residents, José Luis Gómez, was quoted as saying the victims had woken “dizzy, with headaches, vomiting and stinging throats”. Porto Cervo was built in the 1960s by Prince Karim Aga Khan and it has long been a playground for the super-rich. Earlier this month,the sign at the entrance to the Costa Smeralda was altered, apparently by an insufficiently prosperous holidaymaker armed with a spray can. The “Smeralda” was deleted and replaced with the word “troppo”, so it now reads in Italian: “Costs too much.” Italy Europe John Hooper guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …House Republicans are introducing a bill today with hopes to force major changes on the United Nations. The bill would require the UN to allow member countries to fund the UN agencies of their choosing rather than according to a formula, end funding for Palestinian refugees, limit U.S. funding to be used only for purposes specifically outlined by Congress, and end contributions to peacekeeping programs until changes in management take place. With the United States contributing 22% of the UN's operating budget, the GOP believes there is enough leverage to force these changes in the UN. Led by the Republican chairwoman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, Ilena Ros-Lehtinen, the changes are designed to end corruption and inefficiency in the global organization. How involved do you think the U.S. should be in the UN? Let us know your thoughts in the comments. As explained in Bloomberg , The U.S. pays 22 percent of the UN’s regular operations budget and is assessed 27 percent of the peacekeeping budget. The U.S. payments totaled $3.35 billion in 2010, of which $2.67 billion was dedicated to the 16 peacekeeping operations worldwide, from South Sudan to Haiti. Ros-Lehtinen’s aim in shifting the UN budget to a voluntary system is to encourage competition for funds and therefore elicit more effective performance from UN agencies, said a House aide familiar with the legislation. He wasn’t authorized to speak on the record. The bill’s timing runs counter to the emergence of the administration’s “Obama Doctrine” of working with others to address international issues, particularly those that don’t pose an immediate security threat to the U.S., said Jeffrey Laurenti, a UN analyst at the Century Foundation, a New York-based economic, political and social research foundation. The bill comes at a time when President Obama is increasingly building his foreign policy with multilateral institutions like the UN and NATO, which he uses to justify the U.S. involvement in indirect threats like Libya. For this reason, it is likely the bill will face opposition from the Senate. What do you think of the new legislation? Should the U.S. decrease its involvement in the UN?
Continue reading …National Public Radio has a bad habit of reporting from the White House like they're taking handouts from the press office. Take Monday night's All Things Considered , where the newest economic appointee only drew praise from experts. That's because White House correspondent Scott Horsley only quoted one expert: left-wing economist Dean Baker, who's written on economics for the radical-left media watchdogs Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting (FAIR) . “He's a very good pick,” insisted Baker. But new appointee Alan Krueger wasn't exactly described as a liberal who agrees with his Princeton colleague Paul Krugman on how the “stimulus” is always too small. No, we were told “NPR's Scott Horsley reports that Krueger is a student of the job market. And he is expected to advocate more aggressive government action.” Missing from this report: any notion that the Obama White House is wrong to be stubbornly proposing to fix the economic hangover with more stimulus booze. SCOTT HORSLEY: President Obama says he'll be looking to Alan Krueger and the other members of his economic team for unvarnished advice on how to get the U.S. economy growing faster. BARACK OBAMA: Our challenge is to create a climate where more businesses can post job listings, where folks can find good work that relieves the financial burden they're feeling, where families can regain a sense of economic security in their lives. HORSLEY: That sense of economic security has been shaken in recent months, as the pace of hiring has slowed sharply. New figures on August unemployment are expected at the end of this week. Dean Baker, of the Center for Economic and Policy Research in Washington, is among those who've been calling on the administration to do more to encourage job growth. Baker thinks Krueger will also push for stronger economic medicine. But he's not sure how much influence that advice will carry in the Oval Office. DEAN BAKER: How far he'll be able to turn the tide there is another question. Because clearly the administration at least, given what's leaked out there, doesn't look to be planning any big measures. HORSLEY: President Obama is expected to unveil a new package of jobs measures next week. But Baker says the ideas floated so far, such as increased financing for public works projects, don't go far enough. Still, Baker sees Krueger as a good choice. Krueger's academic career has focused on labor issues, including the slow pace of job growth throughout the last decade, and how government can raise the minimum wage without costing jobs. BAKER: He's a very good pick. And, you know, given the range of people that I think were plausible, probably, you know, at the very top, in my view. HORSLEY: Krueger is no stranger to Washington, having served as chief economist in the Treasury and Labor Departments. Mr. Obama hopes that will pave the way for a speedy confirmation. OBAMA: He's one of the nation's leading economists. For more than two decades, he's studied and developed economic policy both inside and outside of government. Then came one note of dissent: HORSLEY: Economic advisors to past presidents, George W. Bush and Ronald Reagan both praised Krueger's selection. But the Republican National Committee quickly attacked the nominee, noting that he once suggested a national sales tax and supports a cap and trade system to curtail greenhouse gases. NPR somehow couldn't drive about ten blocks from their headquarters over to the RNC to get an actual soundbite. Horsley then went on to talk about how Kruger's written about “rock-o-nomics” and loves Bruce Springsteen. Perhaps NPR can propose more funds for itself as a “stimulus.” It's certainly stimulating to left-wing listeners who like their propaganda neat.
Continue reading …Tensions between Pakistan and the US often made life tricky for Matthew Barrett, a young man from Alabama living in Islamabad, but when he was arrested in May, things went from bad to worse, as he has revealed in a letter smuggled from his jail cell Plagued by old resentments, accusations of infidelity and violent squabbles that end in the diplomatic equivalent of plate-smashing, Pakistan and the US have long been compared to a crisis-stricken married couple. It is a forced marriage, officials like to say, or an unhappy Catholic one:
Continue reading …There are two ways to read the much-anticipated words Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke issued this morning in Jackson Hole, Wy., and both of them are bad. In the terse and inscrutable language of Fed-speak, the Fed chairman said that he has tools left in his tool kit that could be employed to spur the economy, but he isn’t going to use them now. In plainest English, that’s either not true, or it’s troubling in the extreme. If the Fed really could be taking measures to add vigor to a dismal economy, than what are we waiting for? Joblessness remains at epidemic proportions, housing prices are falling, and homeowners keep sinking into delinquency. Manufacturing seems to be retreating anew, and Europe and Japan are both in distress, snuffing out hopes that exports can lead us out of the ditch. The only impressive growth is found in the production of dreary economic forecasts and worries that we are headed for a double-dip recession. Indeed, Great Recession no longer seems an adequate term to describe what has happened to our economy in recent years, with nearly half of unemployed people out of work for six months and longer and roughly one in three homeowners owing the bank more than his or her house is worth: Depression has reentered the contemporary lexicon. In everyday conversation, ordinary people now speak about the demise of the middle class as a done deal. These are not times to be thinking about conserving what is left in the arsenal if you possess authority that allows you to take a shot at changing the situation — particularly not if you are Ben Bernanke, whose impressive academic career has centered on the lessons of the Great Depression. Then, as now, wrong-headed politicians in Washington embraced austerity as the cure for what ailed the economy, turning a difficult situation into a full-blown disaster. Among the academic set, debate now centers over what exactly Bernanke’s Fed could do if it felt inclined to reach for the strongest medicine. Friday’s speech disappointed those hoping to hear that we would get another round of so-called quantitative easing, in which the Fed buys up assets — government savings bonds and other forms of investment — to inject money into the economy and spur activity. Some economists say we ought to go still further, with the Fed publicly embracing inflation, pouring as much money into the economy as needed to make it happen. Inflation is not to be welcomed, as anyone old enough to remember the 1970s can attest, but it beats the alternative now taking shape: Years of stagnation and retrenchment, with no engine for economic growth. This pretty well describes what happened in Japan following the collapse of real estate prices in the 1990s. There, deflation took control — falling prices eliminated incentive for companies to invest and hire. As Paul Krugman points out Friday, as recently as 2000, Bernanke was prescribing inflation and potent quantitative easing for Japan. Does Bernanke no longer believe in that regimen? Is there in fact nothing left for the Fed to do to try to spur the sputtering economy? The chairman steered right around that question in his speech, implicitly dismissing such considerations as moot. Never mind what he might or might not be able to do, he said, because things are getting better. If we just hang on, stay the course, then everything will get fixed up of its own accord — a hopeful message that is tough to square with the lives of people who are not currently enjoying the crisp mountain air in Jackson Hole. “Although important problems certainly exist, the growth fundamentals of the United States do not appear to have been permanently altered by the shocks of the past four years,” Bernanke said. “It may take some time, but we can reasonably expect to see a return to growth rates and employment levels consistent with those underlying fundamentals.” We have already learned the dangers of accepting false assurances from Bernanke. Back in the spring of 2007, when troubles began emerging in a lesser-understood part of the financial system known as subprime mortgage lending, Bernanke told the world not to worry. “The impact on the broader economy and financial markets of the problems in the subprime market seems likely to be contained,” he told Congress that March. “In particular, mortgages to prime borrowers and fixed-rate mortgages to all classes of borrowers continue to perform well, with low rates of delinquency.” That quote is famous now, included on any Greatest Hits album of unfortunate utterances by people who should have known better, and who could have taken action to avert catastrophe. But the part that seems just as troubling now is the seemingly ordinary sentence that came after: “We will continue to monitor this situation closely.” Bernanke said pretty much the same thing Friday about the debt crisis in Europe and the vulnerability of spillovers to the American banking system, about the sluggish pace of growth in the United States. Yet the monitoring system of this Fed chairman failed miserably during the tail end of the housing bubble, to the detriment of millions of would-be workers and savers and taxpayers. There is ample reason to fear that it is failing again, for the simple reason that Bernanke believes in the Confidence Fairy. He would rather lay out a nice scenario and bet that it will happen than scare the markets with dire talk and risk panic. Friday’s speech was — as is typical of Fed pronouncements — open to multiple interpretations. The trouble this time is that most of the available interpretations are awful. You can either buy into the happy talk: that contrary to the metrics at work in most of the economy — affordability of gasoline, ability to pay mortgage, existence of paycheck — prosperity is indeed right around the corner. Or you can engage in the parlor game of debating why, given the perilous state of the economy, the Fed Chairman opted to hold off on further intervention: either because his tool kit is empty, or because he lacks the conviction to use what he’s got. Krugman, who has been right about an awful lot in recent years, chose the second option. Bernanke now confronts dissenters in the Fed itself who are fearful of undermining the value of the dollar, which would happen if they printed bills up by the trillion to inject into a flagging economy. Bernanke understands that further Fed intervention will inflame the lunatic fringe of the Republican party, which only a few weeks ago was threatening to provoke a sovereign default if it did not get its way on spending cuts to shrink the government — the source of all evil, according to this perverse ideology. Bernanke underscored his concerns about this dynamic with a couple of sentences in Friday’s speech that stuck out for their unusual directness in the form of political judgement: “The country would be well served by a better process for making fiscal decisions. The negotiations that took place over the summer disrupted financial markets and probably the economy as well.” It seems fair to assume that Bernanke does feel boxed in to a degree. If he uses the power of monetary policy to try to stimulate the economy, he stirs up the hornet’s nest of extreme anti-government opposition that now rules the Republican party, and thereby makes it even harder for Congress to stimulate it by other means. He makes it easier for Republicans to oppose extending unemployment benefits and finance infrastructure projects. He emboldens the dismantling of government to cater to those enraged at what they see as Fed overreach. Plausible, but I don’t think that’s the whole explanation for why Bernanke is standing pat and telling us not to worry. Bernanke was plenty smart enough to have understood that once people with lousy credit began to fail to make their mortgage payments in 2007, their defaults posed risks for the broader financial system, with the ripples reaching everywhere that home loans had been distributed — to Wall Street and around the world. But he offered soothing words instead, presumably in the hopes those words would instill confidence in the markets, and that confidence would become its own reality, preempting panic. These days, anxiety runs high again — high enough that every new development and pronouncement can be fit into a narrative of crisis, for those so inclined. Had the Fed Chairman laid out a scenario for fresh quantitative easing Friday, the markets would surely have rallied on the news that help is on the way. Yet markets would also have been handed the story that Bernanke is worried enough about the economy to intervene: By addressing the fears of another recession, Bernanke also would have affirmed them. Instead, Bernanke essentially tried to make us feel better by witholding treatment and telling us we don’t really need it. It’s a dangerous course, and includes a litany of dangers in multiple directions. We all better hope that hollow reassurance as curative plays better this time than it did four years ago.
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