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Universities in rush to charge to fees

Ministers taken by surprise as department is swamped by universities’ decision to charge new higher rates The government body responsible for monitoring “equal access” to universities charging £9,000 tuition fees has had to double its staff and appeal for more funds amid the chaos caused by the recent reforms. The number of universities declaring that they wish to charge students the highest amount from next year has caught ministers by surprise, with the majority of institutions planning to charge more than £7,500 a year. As a result the Office for Fair Access (Offa), which has responsibility for ensuring those universities recruit from all parts of society, has had to engage in emergency budget negotiations with the Department for Business, Innovation and Skills as an unexpected number of universities have informed them of their intention to charge the highest fees. David Barrett, Offa’s assistant director, admitted his “very small” organisation was still in discussions with the government over its budget and had to take on two additional permanent staff and two casual staff to cope with the work load. Friday was officially the day by which universities had to inform Offa if they intended to charge more than £6,000 for tuition, but Barrett said paperwork was expected to flood in over the coming week. He also admitted the 11 July deadline by which Offa is due to pronounce its satisfaction or otherwise regarding universities’ plans to ensure equality of access may need to be flexible. “The department has given us some additional resourcing and we have got some additional temporary resource from the Higher Education Funding Council for England (HEFCE),” Barrett added. “The 11 July deadline is still our intention. “If there were extremely long and protracted negotiations with lots of institutions, then it is possible that some won’t meet that decision date, but my firm belief is that we will be able to make that for all institutions. “We are taking on some more staff and have temporary support from HEFCE, who support us in a service-level agreement in any case. The extra support is set up to be in place early on in the process and was negotiated with the department recently. There are contingencies in place as well.” Offa has only three full-time staff plus a part-time director and a part-time office worker, but an additional two full-time and two temporary members of staff will soon be drafted in. The £500,000 budget set aside for Offa is expected to be doubled, adding to the spiralling costs to the Department for Business, Innovation and Skills. Ministers had claimed that maximum £9,000 fees would be the exception. Long-term financial modelling carried out by the Treasury was based on universities charging an average of £7,500. But it is feared a huge funding black hole will be created as the government struggles to provide student loans to cover the cost of higher fees. If this is exceeded, it is feared the loans bill will reach unsustainable levels. A BIS spokesperson said: “In our letter of guidance to the director of Fair Access, issued in February, we asked that he should be more challenging and demanding of universities seeking to charge fees above £6,000. “We have always made it clear to the director that, if he felt additional staff were needed to deliver the strengthened regime of access agreements, then we would support his request.” Shadow universities minister Gareth Thomas said: “This is just the latest sign of how badly the tuition fees fiasco has been handled. David Cameron and Nick Clegg failed to listen to independent experts who were warning even before the fees vote that allowing tuition fees to treble would cause problems they hadn’t properly thought through.” Tuition fees Higher education Students Education policy Daniel Boffey guardian.co.uk

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Huckabee twists Southern history by calling health-care reform a "modern-day poll tax"

Click here to view this media What is it with Southern Republican candidates and their impulse to whitewash history? First we had Haley Barbour trying to whitewash the history of the old White Citizens Councils. Now we’ve got Mike Huckabee, trying out some new talking points yesterday on Fox News with Stuart Varney, while discussing the latest Fox fake scandal, this time involving the White House supposedly shipping unions money through the health-care reform law. First, he tried claiming that union supporters of Democrats are actually a form of “forced labor”: HUCKABEE: Stuart, they can’t win if they don’t have the unions’ support. Unions are declining as a part of the overall American workforce, and yet the Democratic Party knows — and it’s not just the money, they get hundreds of millions of dollars from unions, but as important as the money is the manpower. Because the union workers will go out and they will work the polls and they will get people to the polls, and they will put up signs and they will staff rallies. And the Democrats know they’ve got to have that sort of forced labor, which is what it is. The historical revisionism came a little later in the segment, while discussing their shared enthusiasm for repealing the health-care reform act: HUCKABEE: I hope, if it doesn’t die its death one way, it dies it the other. You know, it really doesn’t matter. I think the courts will ultimately rule that it is unconstitutional — that it is forcing people to buy a product in the private-sector marketplace in order to really be citizens. It’s the equivalent of a modern-day poll tax. So I think they’ll throw it out. Just so everyone understands the analogy he’s making — as well as the absurd claim about the health-care law, here’s Wikipedia on the Poll Tax : In U.S. practice, a poll tax was used as a de facto or implicit pre-condition of the exercise of the ability to vote. This tax emerged in some states of the United States in the late 19th century as part of the Jim Crow laws. After the ability to vote was extended to all races by the enactment of the Fifteenth Amendment, many Southern states enacted poll tax laws which often included a grandfather clause that allowed any adult male whose father or grandfather had voted in a specific year prior to the abolition of slavery to vote without paying the tax. These laws, along with unfairly implemented literacy tests and extra-legal intimidation,[1] achieved the desired effect of disenfranchising African-American and Native American voters as well as poor whites who immigrated after the year specified. Initially, the United States Supreme Court, in the case of Breedlove v. Suttles, 302 U.S. 277 (1937), found the poll tax to be constitutional. The 24th Amendment, ratified in 1964, reflecting a political compromise,[citation needed] abolished the use of the poll tax (or any other tax) as a pre-condition in voting in Federal elections, but made no mention of poll taxes in state elections. In the 1966 case of Harper v. Virginia Board of Elections the Supreme Court overruled its decision in Breedlove v. Suttles, and extended the prohibition of poll taxes to state elections, declaring that the imposition of a poll tax in state elections violated the Equal Protection Clause of the 14th Amendment to the United States Constitution. In Arkansas, it was a cornerstone of Jim Crow , and led to the disenfranchisement of 80 percent of its voting population. Is there even the slightest whiff that failure to buy health insurance will lead to any citizen’s disenfranchisement under the new health-care law? That it would even hint at enhancing a system of racial segregation? Ah, no. No one believes that, and no one has previously claimed that. Though there has been talk about 16,000 new IRS agents descending upon an unsuspecting populace. I guess it’s a lot easier to just make stuff up when you also also believe the President was raised among Mau Maus in Kenya.

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C&L’s NCAA 2011 March Madness: Final Four

enlarge Credit: C&L NCAA C&L’s NCAA March Madness 2011 Today is the Final Four and then comes the Championship game so we’re nearing the end of our tournament. I was done by the Sweet Sixteen. There’s only a handful of people that have a shot at winning the Ipod Nano which goes to the winner so make sure you check your results here. We had a really great turnout this year so thanks to everyone who participated. It’s all fun and for free.

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You keep using that word… I do not think it means what you think it means: Transocean Ltd. had its “best year in safety performance” despite the explosion of its Deepwater Horizon rig that left 11 dead and oil gushing into the Gulf of Mexico, the world’s largest offshore-rig company said in a securities filing Friday . Accordingly, Transocean’s executives received two-thirds of their target safety bonus. Safety accounts for 25% of the equation that determines the yearly cash bonuses, along with financial factors including new rig contracts. The payout contrasts with that for 2009, when the company withheld all executive bonuses after incurring four fatalities that year “to underscore the company’s commitment to safety.” In a filing on executive pay, Transocean said, “Notwithstanding the tragic loss of life in the Gulf of Mexico, we achieved an exemplary statistical safety record.” Based on the total rate of incidents and their severity, “we recorded the best year in safety performance in our company’s history.” A spokesman for Transocean said, “The statements of fact in the proxy speak for themselves, but they do not and can not adequately convey the extent to which everyone at Transocean is keeping the families of the men who lost their lives at Macondo in their thoughts and prayers as we approach the first anniversary of the incident.” Nine of the 11 dead worked for Transocean. Transocean uses two safety criteria to calculate executive bonuses: the rate of incidents per 200,000 hours that employees work, and the potential severity of those incidents. In 2010, the rate of incidents dropped by 4% from 2009. Four whole percent? Wow. For the record, 11 people died and 17 others were injured at the Deepwater Horizon explosion, which seems like kind of a rather significant black mark on Transocean’s safety record, but maybe I’m just a nit-picker for details. At best, this is one of those classic blunders of hubris and tone deafness on appearance. Of course, if you really only want to be human-centric, maybe 11 deaths over the hours worked on Deepwater Horizon is an acceptable calculation. However, when you factor in sea life, the impact is far, far greater : The death toll of animals that perished as a result of the Deepwater Horizon/BP oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico may be 50 times higher than presently believed, according to a new study in the latest issue of Conservation Letters. Until now, fatality figures have primarily been based on the number of recovered carcasses. Data on this varies depending on the source and the date of the count, but the authors report that as of Nov. 7, 2010, 101 whale, dolphin, and porpoise carcasses had been detected across the Northern Gulf of Mexico. Past numbers of carcasses reflect just 2 percent of actual animal deaths, according to the study, so the true number of fatalities for cetaceans alone as a result of the spill could be in the thousands.

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Long Wait for Operation Fells UK Health Director

James Taranto at the Wall Street Journal editorial page caught this story about Britain's National Health Service. “A former NHS director died after waiting for nine months for an operation–at her own hospital,” London's Daily Mail reports: Margaret Hutchon, a former mayor, had been waiting since last June for a follow-up stomach operation at Broomfield Hospital in Chelmsford, Essex. But her appointments to go under the knife were cancelled four times and she barely regained consciousness after finally having surgery. Her devastated husband, Jim, is now demanding answers from Mid Essex Hospital Services NHS Trust–the organisation where his wife had served as a non-executive member of the board of directors. He said: “I don't really know why she died. I did not get a reason from the hospital. We all want to know for closure. She got weaker and weaker as she waited and operations were put off.” It would be cruel to put this down to karma, so instead we'll just note that it can't possibly be true. After all, as New York Times star columnist Paul Krugman has observed, “In Britain, the government itself runs the hospitals and employs the doctors. We've all heard scare stories about how that works in practice; these stories are false.”

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UK Uncut says arrests were political

Campaign group claims police are trying to disband it following arrests at Fortnum and Mason sit-in Protest group UK Uncut signalled its intention to continue occupying high street stores as police released images of individuals wanted in connection with violent disorder. A spokesman for the tax avoidance campaigners insisted they would not be cowed, despite concerns that the Met is intent on disabling the group’s command structure and has “politically targeted” its ringleaders. The Met has charged 138 people – practically the movement’s entire leadership – with aggravated trespass after a UK Uncut occupation of Fortnum & Mason in central London during the anti-cuts march. A meeting of UK Uncut supporters heard that those charged have had their phones confiscated. The mobiles contain details of the group’s secure networks and email accounts used to mobilise and organise its actions. The group believes the decision to charge all those inside Fortnum & Mason was an attempt by police to crush the movement. Only two of its chief ringleaders were outside the store at the time. “Practically the entire UK Uncut was inside, but it’s definitely not the end of that tactic because most people can see that this is political policing,” said the spokesman. The group is baffled why Scotland Yard, which rejects claims of politically motivated policing, decided to charge its members while previous peaceful occupations had seen officers take no action. Video evidence reveals a senior police officer assuring protesters on the day that they would not be detained upon leaving the store. Meanwhile, Scotland Yard has released 18 images of protesters, unconnected to UK Uncut, that they are keen to identify in the wake of the disorder. The investigation, Operation Brontide, is expected to publicise more images, mainly from CCTV. The Met is eager to disrupt those engaged in “black bloc” tactics, and is believed to have footage showing anarchists removing black clothing, bandanas and scarves before changing into civilian gear to evade detection. Detective chief superintendent Matthew Horne, leading Operation Brontide, said: “A significant minority came to London to cause violence and damage. There is an extensive operation to identify these people.” Fresh claims of politically motivated policing have also surfaced in a report alleging that officers prevented Muslims from attending counter demonstrations against a major English Defence League rally. Leicester constabulary operated a policy of stopping elements of the Muslim community protesting against the EDL during a high-profile march in the city last October, according to the Network for Police Monitoring (Netpol). It said that the force attempted to dissuade Muslims through mosques and schools from protesting against the EDL demonstration at an authorised protest by Unite Against Fascism (UAF) on the same day, and issued leaflets advising that young people could be picked up and held in “safe areas”. Val Swain of Netpol said: “This is a strategy that we have seen up and down the country, and it appears to have been sanctioned at the highest levels. “The way in which the police are interfering in communities to deter people from organising and participating in lawful, legitimate protest is deeply disturbing. It is not for the police to decide which sectors of society are allowed to protest and which are not.” Saqib Deshmukh, a youth worker in the East Midlands, said it appeared that officers were willing to facilitate the EDL’s right to protest at the expense of the Muslim community, adding: “Certain groups of people are being denied the right to protest. It seems that the government is far more worried about the mobilisation of Muslim people than they are about the EDL.” Police in Lancashire adopted another tactic, imposing a limit of 3,000 on both an EDL march and one by counter-demonstrators in Blackburn to reduce the possibility of violence. The report by Netpol claims the reaction by Leicester constabulary could breach articles 10 and 11, the freedom of assembly and expression, of the European convention on human rights. It also reveals widespread disquiet over why the EDL was allowed to congregate in city centre pubs before the march and move close to Muslim areas. One community worker described their treatment as a “policy of appeasement”. The Leicester force has previously stated that it adopted polices to reduce the risk of public disorder and that it engaged with the Muslim community and acted in its interests. UK Uncut Police Protest Public sector cuts Mark Townsend guardian.co.uk

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US winds down air strikes in Libya

Rebels and pro-Gaddafi forces appear to be losing their way amid growing concern in the west over the revolution’s end game For weeks, Libya’s revolutionary leadership has spoken almost in awe of the soldiers who defected from Muammar Gaddafi’s army and who would lead the rebel assault to bring him down. And for weeks, the disorganised civilian volunteers who have rapidly advanced and almost as swiftly retreated along a few hundred miles of desert road have awaited the arrival of these professional soldiers to turn around the revolution’s fortunes. Finally, some made an appearance for the first time at the frontline near Brega. They appeared disciplined, well armed and under command – a stark contrast to the free-for-all of the civilian rebel militia. But there were no more than a few dozen of them and the question still remained: where were the thousands of experienced soldiers that the revolutionary leadership had so often invoked to bolster morale? Did they exist? While the revolutionary governing council has appealed to foreign governments for larger weapons to confront Gaddafi’s tanks and artillery, it has become increasingly apparent that the real issue for the rebels is a lack of discipline, experience and tactics. Even where they have had the advantage, they have been outmanoeuvred in large part because there has been no plan for attack or defence. Instead, the young rebels, full of bravado, charge forward only to turn and flee when they come under fire, often conceding ground. Some of the rebels have been crying out for leadership. The revolutionary government’s de facto finance minister, Ali Tarhouni, was confronted by civilian members of the rebel militia demanding to know who was going to take charge of military strategy on the ground after claiming that there are 1,000 trained fighters among the rebels. On Friday, two of the senior rebel defectors from the Gaddafi regime, Abdel Fattah Younes, the ex-interior minister, and Khalifa Haftar, the former head of Libya’s armed forces, made an appearance at the front to be greeted like heroes. Wearing sunglasses and a red and green scarf around his neck, Younes toured the frontline near the port of Brega, shaking hands with the crowd of volunteers who formed around him firing their weapons in the air. While their visit boosted morale at a time when the rebels have been in retreat once again, a more important question remains – whether these men, who have avoided the frontlines for their own reasons, can turn the war around. And from this weekend it is not who is fighting that is the question but who will no longer be fighting, with the US announcement that its warplanes will no longer carry out bombing raids. Even before the American decision, the number of air strikes, mandated by the UN security council resolution 1973, had been sharply diminishing. On Friday, Nato announced that coalition aircraft had flown 74 strike missions the previous day, down almost a quarter from earlier in the week. Of those missions, US aircraft flew only 10. And that number of strikes looks likely to decline as responsibility passes largely to the UK, France and Canada. Among the aircraft being withdrawn are the A-10 Thunderbolts and AC-130 gunships which have been used with such devastating impact against Libyan armour. The slowing of the coalition mission has only helped to contribute to a growing sense that the conflict in Libya is stumbling into a new and uncertain phase, marked not by the strengths of the opposing sides but by a realisation of their weaknesses. On the rebel side, a familiar scenario has been played out repeatedly as their poorly armed and ill-disciplined fighters have advanced chaotically to occupy towns briefly vacated by Gaddafi’s troops, only to be driven back through scores of miles of desert at the first salvo of rocket or tank fire despite the bravado of their rhetoric. On Gaddafi’s side, his armour and aircraft harried by coalition jets, the momentum similarly has faded since his forces were driven back from the edges of Benghazi by the entry of international forces into the conflict. And the coalition, too – so optimistic at first behind the scenes about being able to lever Gaddafi out of power with a limited air campaign – has also run out of steam as the US has quickly moved to limit its involvement in the war, ruling out ground troops, and its participants have come to realise the limitations of the UN resolution that authorised force in the first place. Instead, what has begun to emerge is what many feared in the first place – a stalemate, defined by two sides playing a kind of lethal tag in the desert over deserted oil towns. By last week it had led one of America’s most senior officers, General Carter Ham, head of US Africa command, to warn publicly for the first time of what Washington, London and Paris regard as the nightmare scenario. “I do see a situation where that could be the case,” he said. “I could see accomplishing the military mission which has been assigned to me, and the current leader would remain the current leader.” Ham’s prognosis has been underscored by US intelligence analysis, which has come to the same conclusion. Officials who spoke anonymously to the Washington Post have cautioned against the idea that Gaddafi may be toppled quickly, despite the high-profile defection to London last week of his foreign minister and long-time intelligence chief, Moussa Koussa. “Neither side seems capable of moving the ball down the field,” a US official told the paper. “It is also true that neither side has endless resources.” If Ham’s message was pessimistic, that delivered to the House armed services committee by Ham’s boss, defence secretary Robert Gates, was bleak, not least for those in the opposition listening to his message in Benghazi. Despite reported ambiguity on Barack Obama’s part over the issue of arming and training the rebels, Gates made clear that the Pentagon firmly opposed it. Repeating that it was a “certainty” that no US ground troops would be authorised by Obama, he laid into the rebels’ capabilities, describing the opposition as a faction-ridden and disparate “misnomer” whose forces lacked “command and control and organisation”. If the opposition needed training and weapons, he said, “someone else” would have to provide it, a declaration that would seem to slam the door on the rebels’ hopes of being armed by the West. And it has not only been US officials who have been speaking their mind. Last week a collection of former British defence chiefs – perhaps reflecting the views of serving senior officers – used the stage of the House of Lords to warn of the dangers of “mission creep” and taking sides in a civil war if it were decided to use ground troops to break the impasse. What is also true, however, is that in being weakened by the conflict both sides may be forced into new positions suggesting that, ultimately, negotiations rather than military force might bring the crisis in Libya to an end. On Friday, after weeks of refusing to negotiate with the Gaddafi regime, the head of the opposition’s National Council based in Benghazi laid out its terms for a ceasefire, demanding that Gaddafi withdraw all his forces from Libyan cities and allow “peaceful protests” – the latter condition they hope would lead to his ousting. While Gaddafi officials quickly rejected the offer as “a trick”, it is clear, too, that members of Gaddafi’s own regime – weakened by defections, including that of Koussa, and damage to the country’s economy – have also been attempting to find an end to the crisis, no matter how cynically motivated. Libya’s former prime minister, Abdul Ati al-Obeidi, confirming remarks by US secretary of state Hillary Clinton that regime figures were trying to get in contact, said on Friday: “We are trying to talk to the British, the French and the Americans to stop the killing of people. We are trying to find a mutual solution.” His comments followed the disclosure that a senior aide to Gaddafi’s powerful son, Saif al-Islam, had met British officials midweek on a visit to London. While David Cameron and some of his allies in the coalition are hoping that Gaddafi may be forced out by more defections from his inner circle following the example of Koussa, as yet – despite rumours – the most important figures, including the powerful military intelligence chief Abdullah al-Senussi, have shown no real signs of budging. All of which has raised the increasing prospect that any solution for the crisis in Libya – as things stand now – is more likely to be political than military, a view strongly endorsed by Italy’s foreign minister, Franco Frattini. “It is not through actions of war that we can make Gaddafi leave, but rather through strong international pressure to encourage defections by people close to him,” Frattini said. Indeed, Italy is understood to be involved in a search for countries that might be prepared to welcome Gaddafi and his family if he agrees to leave. This all opens a number of possible scenarios. Gates last week provided one – much wished for by the opposition – that a member of Gaddafi’s military “takes him out”, then cuts a deal with the opposition. But despite persistent rumours of a failed attack last month by a group of soldiers on Gaddafi’s Tripoli compound, this seems like wishful thinking. Another scenario – suggested by some analysts and officials – is that the regime’s attempts to reach out and engage in negotiations are a kind of stalling strategy designed ultimately to split the opposition, which the regime has been doing in any case, trying to separate tribal leaders from the rebels through its own process of “national dialogue”, although so far without much success. Least likely is one of a number of scenarios allegedly most favoured by Gaddafi and family, which would see Gaddafi (or one of his sons) overseeing a transitional period of reform. It is precisely this proposal – which the Turkish media was reporting before the onset of the coalition’s air strikes – that Ankara was attempting to broker: envisaging that Gaddafi would cede power to one of his sons ahead of elections. Whatever the outcome, what seems most unlikely is that the rebels’ newly visible generals will be leading their troops into Tripoli any time in the near future. Libya Muammar Gaddafi Arab and Middle East unrest Middle East Nato US military United States United Nations Peter Beaumont Chris McGreal guardian.co.uk

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The Disconnect

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I will be celebrating (mourning?) my twentieth year since coming to work in Washington next year. I came here with the Clinton team, and even though I was President Clinton’s liaison to the progressive community, I still came to town with a bunch of moderate Democrats. Given my banging away on so many topics in my blog posts, I do get asked from time to time whether I have moved to “the left” over the years. The answer is absolutely not. I still believe virtually the same things about politics and the economy I believed a couple of decades ago, including: 1. That the America I grew up in during the 1960s and ’70s, which had a broad and prosperous middle class and a sturdy safety net for those down on their luck or too old to work, was a great country to live in for most Americans, but that the middle class had been squeezed right and left by big corporate interests and the conservative movement. 2. That the growing extremist conservative movement, which had taken over the Republican Party, blindly worshiped the free market along with the wealthiest and most powerful among us, and was determined to roll back social progress of all kinds. 3. That the Democratic Party was deeply flawed because too many Democrats were not willing to fight for progressive policies that would help the middle class and poor, but that they sure were better than the scary extremists who controlled the Republican Party. 4. That party politics alone would never win the progress we needed; that we need a strong progressive movement to fight the good fight. 5. That the New Deal and Great Society policy victories of the 1930s through the early ’70s were what moved this country forward more than any other set of policies. Social Security and Medicare gave senior citizens a measure of economic security they never had before. Labor unions were able to grow and expand, ensuring that middle-class incomes would rise, and that more working class people would get a secure foothold in that middle class. Banks were strongly regulated and kept to a reasonable size, ensuring that the financial crises that periodically wracked the country’s economy in the decades before and after those years didn’t happen. The minimum wage, the end of child labor, OSHA, and the 40-hour work week ensured more dignity and safety on the job. A wave of school building, the GI Bill, Pell Grants, the development of community colleges, and other educational initiatives meant that more Americans got good educations than ever in history. Civil rights, voting rights, and new anti-discrimination laws for women meant far more fairness and equality of opportunity for all Americans. Unemployment compensation, Medicaid, school lunch programs, food stamps, Head Start, and legal services meant that even low-income Americans had a modest amount of financial security in the hard times. The Clean Air, Clean Water, and Superfund acts made our environment far cleaner for all citizens. All of these new policies helped create the wealthiest economy, and most prosperous middle class in world history, and that our goal in politics should be to build on that success rather than tear it down. I believed all that the day I moved to Washington to be part of the Clinton administration, and I believe it still, so I don’t feel like I have moved to the left at all. I feel very certain that I am solidly within the mainstream of the Democratic Party and progressive thought in America. But I do think something important has changed. The corporate stranglehold on our media, government, and ideological parameters has shifted, and the Bob Rubin wing of the Democratic Party has grown steadily stronger. When we Clintonites came to town, Rubin and protégées like Larry Summers came with him, and they won more battles than they lost. But us crazy populists inside the administration, with the help of some key Democrats in Congress, the labor movement, and other progressives in the party, still won some battles, too. The concentration of power (both economic and political) in several industries, banking especially, has grown — exponentially and dangerously. Let me turn to several examples of articles that have come out in recent days to make my point. Check out this really scary article by Bill Greider on “How Wall Street Crooks Get Out of Jail Free.” This is one of several articles that has come out in recent months, most prominently by former S&L prosecutor Bill Black , about the complete failure of the justice system to prosecute a very fundamental crime called “control fraud”:, the crime where executives of the company use their control of the company to commit fraud against their customers, investors, shareholders, and/or fellow employees. That is exactly what happened with the S&Ls in the 1980s, and it is a big part of what happened in the financial collapse of the last few years. But as Greider explains, our system has become so warped by power and money that none of the many crooks who were at the heart of the economic crisis of the last few years has gone to prison — and the implications of that for society as a whole are deadly. Another tremendous piece that is a must-read is a new article by Richard Eskow . I am very biased on this score, because I have written a couple of pieces myself on the topic of how big the mortgage crisis is versus the budget issues in the headlines, but Eskow lays down some great charts that really do a great job of summarizing the numbers on this. The difference we could make in terms of economic impact by actually standing up to the Wall Street bankers and writing down underwater mortgages is so much bigger than anything going on in the federal budget fight (as important as that it is). Here’s another thing to check out: Neil Barofsky’s powerful and stunning indictment of where we went wrong on TARP. The big banks did get rescued, and things came out great for them, but all the promises made about protecting home values and preserving home ownership did not. Finally, let me strongly urge you to read Stephen Lerner’s terrific rejoinder to Glenn Beck’s ridiculous attacks on him. In a country where bankers commit blatant fraud on their own shareholders, investors, customers, and fellow employees, thereby crashing the entire economic system; where middle-class homeowners get (sometimes illegally) foreclosed on by bankers who don’t bother to keep their paperwork in order; where those same fraudulent bankers who crashed the world economy not only don’t get prosecuted but actually get to keep their jobs and get to pay themselves record bonuses… in that kind of country, it is only right and natural that organizers like Lerner want to try and take to the streets and disrupt things. So, no, I am not one iota more radical than I was when I came to D.C. with the Clinton administration two decades ago. I still believe in helping elect good Democrats, and working within the system to make change. But if the system itself becomes more and more corrupted by concentrated power, it is up to all of us to take to the streets, do whatever we can to take on these banks, and raise hell.

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As NewsBusters reported last month, ABC, CBS, MSNBC, NBC, and NPR totally ignored Wisconsin Republicans receiving death threats as a result of their support for Gov. Scott Walker's budget repair bill. Although the following report concerning a woman being charged for emailing such threats was published by the Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel at 5 PM Thursday, almost no major media outlets thought it was newsworthy: A 26-year-old woman was charged Thursday with two felony counts and two misdemeanor counts for allegedly making email threats against Wisconsin lawmakers during the height of the battle over Gov. Scott Walker's budget-repair bill. Katherine R. Windels of Cross Plains was named in a criminal complaint filed in Dane County Criminal Court. According to the criminal complaint, Windels allegedly sent an email threat to State Sen. Robert Cowles (R-Green Bay) March 9. Later that evening, she allegedly sent another email to 15 Republican legislators, including Senate Majority Leader Scott Fitzgerald (R-Juneau). The subject line of the second email was:

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Family debt burden is set to soar

• Households bear the impact of deficit cut • Average family debt to reach £77,000 by 2015 Families will be hit by a spiralling debt crisis over the next four years that will see average British households plunge further into the red as the government austerity programme bites, official figures reveal. The Office for Budget Responsibility has raised its prediction of total household debt in 2015 by a staggering £303bn since late last year, in the belief that families and individuals will respond to straitened times by extra borrowing. Average household debt based on the OBR figures is forecast to rise to £77,309 by 2015, rather than the £66,291 under previous projections. Economists say the figures show that George Osborne’s drive to slash the public deficit and his predictions on growth are based on assumptions that debt will switch from the government’s books to private households – undermining his claims to be a debt-slashing chancellor. Labour accused the government of piling agony on to hard-pressed families and storing up long-term problems of personal indebtedness. At last year’s budget the official forecast from Osborne was that household debt – which includes mortgages and credit card debt – would be £1,823bn. But in a recent adjustment not highlighted in last month’s budget, the OBR has raised the figure to £2,126bn. A Treasury spokesman said Osborne put the adjustment down to “higher-than-expected inflation driven by higher than expected rises in commodity prices”. The Treasury also attempted to head off criticism by saying the OBR had also produced figures showing that the level of household savings was “holding up”. But experts expressed alarm. The Nobel prize-winning economist Paul Krugman, writing on his blog, said: “People have been digging into the details of the government forecast and finding that it relies on the assumption that household debt will rise to new heights relative to income. “Why? Because the only way the economy can avoid taking a hit from government cuts is if private spending rises to fill the gap – and although you rarely hear the austerians admitting this, the only way that can happen is if people take on more debt.” Ed Balls, the shadow chancellor, said: “George Osborne says the only thing that matters is getting government borrowing down. But while he is cutting further and faster than any other major country in the world, borrowing by hard-pressed families is now forecast to rise every year. “And to make things harder still, George Osborne’s VAT rise is looking like an own goal as it pushes up inflation which threatens higher interest rates for mortgages and household borrowing.” In the Commons, Labour MP Chuka Umunna raised the issue of the hidden household debt figures with Osborne, accusing him of transferring debt to the overdrafts and credit cards of ordinary families. Last June, OBR forecasts showed that household debt would rise from an average of £58,000 in 2010 to £66,291 by 2015. Now its projections show it expects it to rise to £77,309. For the country’s 27.5 million households this means an average increase of

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