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Harriet Fraad

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Harriet Fraad

There’s a reason psychiatrists prescribe drugs rather than talking therapy: the latter makes no money for pharmaceutical firms The New York Times recently led with a front-page splash about psychiatry’s propensity to prescribe pills, “Talk Doesn’t Pay, So Psychiatry Turns Instead to Drug Therapy” . That news is already widely known in the mental health field, but it has vast ramifications for Americans trying to maintain their sanity in our market-driven and medical system for delivering mental healthcare. What does the turn to drug therapy mean for the mass of Americans? Mental illness has not decreased with the change from talk therapy to drugs. In fact, as Robert Whitaker’s book diagnoses , mental illness in America has become an established epidemic. So-called miracle drugs like Prozac are taken by 11% of the population – and Prozac is only one of the 30 available antidepressants on the market. Antidepressants are accompanied by anti-anxiety and anti-psychotic drugs. Xanax, America’s leading anti-anxiety medication, is so ubiquitous that Xanax generates more revenue than Tide detergent, reports Charles Barber in his Comfortably Numb . Anti-psychotics drugs alone net the pharmaceutical industry at least $14.6bn dollars a year. Psycho-pharmaceuticals are the most profitable sector of the industry, which makes it one of the most profitable business sectors in the world. Americans are less than 5% of the world’s population, yet they consume 66% of the world’s psychological medications. Do these psycho pharmaceuticals work to restore mental health? Actually, the evidence is overwhelming that they fail. Antidepressants, the most popular psycho-pharmaceuticals, work no better than placebos. They work 25% of the time and stop working when the user stops taking them. In addition, they may actually harm patients in the long run. They disrupt brain neurotransmitters and may usurp the brain’s organic soothing functions. Psycho-pharmaceuticals are less effective in the long run than talk therapy. Talk therapy, like drugs, does change brain and body chemistry; unlike drugs, though, talk therapy has no side-effects. Instead, talk therapy gives a patient tools that usually help to solve future problems. The latest research is most clearly expressed in both Irving Kirsch’s Antidepressants: The Emperors New Drugs and Gary Greenberg’s, Manufacturing Depression , both published last year. Kirsch is one of the world’s leading psychiatrists; Greenberg is one of the world’s most prestigious psychologists. Their views are echoed by many voices in the field of mental health. Why is prestigious and extensive research so widely ignored by doctors and patients alike? Our market-driven healthcare system gives us clues. All 30 of the available antidepressants have suffered lawsuits within five years of their appearance on the market. These suits are often settled with large payments and gag clauses. The new generation of anti-psychotics are the latest case in point. Anti-psychotics were the single biggest targets of the False Claims Act . Every major company selling anti-psychotics – Bristol Meyers Squibb, Eli Lilly, Pfizer, Johnson and Johnson and AstraZeneca – has either settled investigations for healthcare fraud or is currently being investigated for it. Two recent settlements involving charges of illegal marketing set records for the largest criminal fines ever imposed on corporations. Their corporate logic is expressed in the words of Dr Jerome Avorn , a medical professor and researcher at Harvard: “When you are selling a billion a year or more of a drug, it’s very tempting for a company to just ignore the traffic ticket and keep speeding.” There is also the widespread practice of paying physicians and psychiatrists heavy subsidies to recommend psycho-pharmaceuticals to their colleagues in small meetings at which a drug company representative is present. If doubt or criticism of the discussed drug is expressed, the doctor’s stipend stops . Another legally acceptable tool is to publish praise of a company’s drug in a scholarly article, which is often written by drug company personnel and simply tweaked by the physician whose name appears on the article. The physician is paid handsomely for such a service. Under the pressure of legal settlements and embarrassing disclosures, eight pharmaceutical companies began posting doctors’ names and compensation on the web. ProPublica compiled these disclosures, totaling $320m, into a single database that allows patients to search for their doctor. Receiving payments for publishing articles written by drug companies is not illegal. Two doctors, Dr Joseph Biederman and Dr Timothy Wilens of Harvard University Medical School, illustrate the close and cozy relationship between medical “scholarship” and drug companies. Drs Biederman and Wilens netted $1.6m each from drug companies for their work in recommending powerful anti-psychotic drugs for children. Biederman, Wilens and other extremely well-rewarded child psychiatrists are in part responsible for giving children the diagnosis of paediatric bipolar disorder for which anti-psychotic drugs like Risperidal and Zyprexa are used . Experts agree that there is no long-term improvement in children’s lives from taking anti-psychotic drugs. In fact, these drugs have a substantiated pattern of metabolic problems and rapid weight gain that often leads to diabetes . The use of bipolar diagnoses and bipolar medications is one small example of how market-driven mental healthcare works in the United States. It illustrates the transformation of US healthcare into a system dominated by some of the richest corporations in the world. Caring about profit is first, and that is why psychiatry has turned to drug therapy. Psychology US healthcare Pharmaceuticals industry Drugs United States Mental health Harriet Fraad guardian.co.uk

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Spain ‘wrongly jailed’ Basque leader

European court of human rights says Arnaldo Otegi must be compensated after being wrongly imprisoned for insulting King Juan Carlos Spain must compensate the radical Basque separatist leader Arnaldo Otegi after wrongly sentencing him to jail for insulting King Juan Carlos, the European court of human rights has decided. The court in Strasbourg ruled on Tuesday that Spain must pay €23,000 (nearly £20,000) in compensation to Otegi for breaching his right to freedom of expression after he accused the Spanish monarch of protecting police torturers. Otegi made his comments after police raided and closed down the Basque-language Egunkaria newspaper in February 2003. The editor, Martxelo Otamendi, and other executives, claimed they were tortured. When Juan Carlos visited the Basque country soon afterwards, Otegi said that as “supreme head of the civil guard police force”, the monarch was effectively in command of those who had tortured Egunkaria staff. Otegi claimed the king “protects torture and imposes his monarchical regime on our people through torture and violence”. Three years later a Spanish court found him guilty of insulting the king, handing down a one-year suspended jail sentence and imposing costs. But the Strasbourg court has decided Otegi was within his rights as a politician to air his grievances against the king, though the torture allegations were never proved. Otegi’s remarks were “made in his capacity as elected member of and spokesperson for a parliamentary group …in the context of the recent closure of the Egunkaria newspaper and the complaint alleging ill-treatment”, the Strasbourg judges ruled. They accepted that his words “could be understood as contributing to a wider public debate on the possible responsibility of the state security forces in cases of ill treatment”. Spanish judges last year threw out a case alleging that Otamendi and other Egunkaria executives had collaborated with Eta. The decision came too late to save Egunkaria. Four civil guard police officers were found guilty last December of torturing members of an Eta unit that killed two people with a bomb at Madrid’s Barajas airport in 2006. Otegi is one of a group of separatist leaders now trying to persuade Eta to end four decades of terrorism. Spain European court of human rights Human rights Europe Eta Giles Tremlett guardian.co.uk

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Taxes ‘must rise by £20bn a year’

National Institute of Economic and Social Research says taxes amounting to 6% of GDP should be levied as soon as possible Taxes will need to rise by £20bn a year to offset the higher health costs and underfunded state pension commitments of the current generation of workers, according to a leading thinktank. Higher taxes amounting to 6% of GDP should be levied, starting as soon as possible, to prevent future generations suffering tax rises or cuts in services beyond anything contemplated by the Tory-led coalition government. The National Institute of Economic and Social Research (NIESR) warned that the total bill for pension and health costs for the UK’s rapidly ageing population will dwarf the government debts caused by the financial crisis and even the £800bn deficit built up over recent decades. It has said that the UK will need to find £7tn in taxes over the next 100 years on top of the taxes already expected, based on forecasts of growth, interest rates and inflation. A child born today will pay £68,000 more in taxes over their lifetime than they get back in pensions and health services. A child born in the next decade will need to pay £160,000 extra, the report said. It continued: “One might think that, in a steady state, the net contribution would be zero. However, there is a past history of pay-as you-go benefits, which has allowed earlier generations to receive more from the state than they have contributed over their lifetimes and it is inevitable that there is now a net contribution which has to be paid.” Martin Weale, one of the report’s authors and a member of the Bank of England’s monetary policy committee, has argued that each successive generation is taking more out of the economy than it puts back. He said that a lack of saving by individuals and the government was leaving younger workers to pick up an increasingly large bill for pension and health costs. Rocketing land prices, leaving accumulated wealth in the hands of the over-50s, have also meant that younger workers are paying higher mortgage bills than the baby boomer generation, those born between 1947 and 1964. Baby boomers will begin retiring this year and will all be receiving a pension by 2030. NIESR said that its attempt to produce intergenerational accounts for the UK was based on a rate of interest of 3% and the current outlook for the economy established by the government’s independent fiscal watchdog, the Office for Budget Responsibility. The accounts, which detail assumptions made by the authors on long-term trends, show that “on plausible assumptions about future spending pressures, taxes and spending will need to adjust by about 6-6.5% of GDP over time, relative to the projections, to bring the generational accounts into balance”. “This is mostly driven by the upward pressure on spending, especially pensions and health, resulting from demographic pressures. It is not driven primarily by the rise in the national debt resulting from the recent recession, which has had a relatively modest impact on fiscal sustainability for the long term – if there was no national debt at all, the required rise would still be 5.5-6% of GDP.” Tax and spending State pensions Pensions State benefits Tax Economics Budget deficit Financial crisis Public sector pensions Public services policy Phillip Inman guardian.co.uk

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Manning doctors accused of cruelty

WikiLeaks suspect treated cruelly, says rights group, which accuses psychiatrists of ‘violating ethical duties’ A leading group of doctors in the US concerned with the ethical treatment of patients has questioned the role of military psychiatrists in Quantico, Virginia, where the suspected WikiLeaks source Bradley Manning is being subjected to harsh treatment that some call torture. The advocacy body Physicians for Human Rights (PHR) has sounded the alarm over the role of psychiatrists at the brig in the marine base where Manning has been in custody since last July. The group sees the psychiatrists as trapped in a classic case of “dual loyalty”, where their obligations to the military chain of command may conflict with their medical duty to protect their patient. Christy Fujio, author of a forthcoming report on the issue, said the main concern was that psychiatrists were allowing Manning’s continuing solitary confinement. “Even if they do not officially approve it, by continuing to examine him and report back to the government on his condition, they are effectively taking part in security operations. Their failure to call it what it is – cruel and inhumane treatment – constitutes a violation of their ethical duties as doctors.” Manning, who has been charged with passing a mountain of digital US state secrets to WikiLeaks, is under a prevention of injury order (PoI) that requires him to be kept alone in a cell for 23 hours a day and checked every five minutes. Since earlier this month, he has also been stripped naked each night and made to parade in front of officers. Manning himself says the conditions amount to pre-trial punishment provoked by a sarcastic remark he made to guards. Official records kept at the brig, released recently by Manning’s lawyer, reveal that between last August and January military psychiatrists made no fewer than 16 recommendations to their military commanders that Manning should be taken off the PoI restrictions because he was no threat to himself. Typical of the entries was that of 29 October 2010, which stated that Manning “was evaluated by the brig psychiatrist and found fit to be removed from prevention of injury classification from a psychiatric standpoint”. Only once in that five-month period did the psychiatrists conclude that the prisoner should be subjected to the restrictions. Despite the clear medical opinion given, brig commanders have repeatedly ignored the advice and retained the harsh regime. That is in itself, PHR says, an indication that the US government is breaking its own clearly stated rules. The group’s Susan McNamara, a doctor who works with victims of torture from other countries, said Manning’s treatment appeared to be an extension of the interrogation tactics used against terror suspects in Guantánamo. “That is a huge problem, as it is designed to break a person down psychologically. Solitary confinement is a form of sensory deprivation, and if you are depriving a person of the human contact they need that can amount to torture.” She added: “In the US, if a patient was treated in a psychiatric hospital in the same way the military is treating Manning, the federal government would stamp all over it … [it] is disobeying its own rules.” The controversy over Manning’s treatment has reached to the heart of the Obama administration. This week, state department spokesman PJ Crowley resigned, having called the confinement “ridiculous and stupid” and warned it could damage the global standing of the US. Obama himself was forced to defend the regime, saying he had been “assured” by the Pentagon it was in Manning’s own interests. While the Quantico psychiatrists are given credit for having consistently argued that Manning should be removed from the current extreme regime, there are serious questions about whether they are doing enough to force change. Doctors have been under tight ethical guidelines to protect their patients since the framing of the Nuremberg ethic at the end of the second world war. More recently, the American Medical Association ruled that physicians “must oppose and must not participate in torture for any reason … Physicians should strive to change situations in which torture is practised or the potential for torture is great”. PHR has called on all doctors to avoid performing evaluations of patients in a manner that facilitates violations of human rights and condemns doctors who remain silent in the face of human rights abuses. The group believes the psychiatrists should act on their duty to report Manning’s cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment and ensure, in line with their ethical duties, that he is kept in the least restrictive environment needed. Bradley Manning US military US national security Human rights United States Ed Pilkington guardian.co.uk

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Taliban ‘decimated’ in Helmand

Special forces say they are winning the battle against Taliban insurgents in southern Afghanistan Taliban leaders are being “decimated” by special forces in Helmand province, southern Afghanistan, where more than 9,000 British troops are deployed, US and UK commanders have said. They say the next few months will test the strength of the Taliban-led insurgency. “We will see what [the Taliban] bring back to the battlefield in the spring,” said Major General Richard Mills of the US marines, commander of nearly 30,000 British and US troops in Helmand. He was speaking via videolink to London. Echoing the comments, Brigadier George Norton, Mills’s deputy, said the coming months would reveal how resilient the insurgency is. Major General John Lorimer, chief military spokesman for the British chief of defence staff, General David Richards, said large caches of weapons and equipment for making improvised explosive devices were discovered by 1st battalion Royal Irish Regiment in Helmand last month. More than 500 soldiers of the regiment, using 15 helicopters, with fast jets providing cover, also took part in an assault on what was described as an insurgent haven in Helmand’s Nad-e-Ali district. It was the regiment’s biggest operation since it crossed the Rhine in 1945, the MoD said. Mills sidestepped the question when asked when the Afghan army and police would take responsibility for Helmand’s security. The Afghan president, Hamid Karzai, has said he will announce on 21 March the start of a process of transferring responsibility for security to Afghan forces. The process is due to end in 2014, when the British and US governments say their forces will withdraw from a frontline combat role. The number of UK and US forces in Afghanistan is likely to start being reduced later this summer, after a much-hoped-for success against the insurgency. The number will then be gradually reduced until the end of 2014, when the main task of all foreign troops there will be to train Afghan security forces. Taliban Afghanistan Military Richard Norton-Taylor guardian.co.uk

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Rebels face last stand as troops zero in on Benghazi

Government troops close in on centre of resistance as western powers continue deliberations on whether to aid oppostion Libya’s revolution was facing collapse , as Muammar Gaddafi’s forces broke through the last major line of resistance before Benghazi, the heart of the uprising and the seat of the rebel administration. Gaddafi’s forces pushed back the rebels in an air and land assault on the town of Ajdabiya, as the regime moved to crush the revolution once and for all before foreign powers could agree measures in support of the uprising, including a no-fly zone. The rebels had pledged a vigorous defence of Ajdabiya but swiftly lost control of large parts of the town, including the strategically important coastal road, although pockets of fighting continued. The regime’s advance leaves the road open to Benghazi, 90 miles away, where there was growing alarm as word of the defeat spread. “The battle is lost. Gaddafi is throwing everything against us,” a rebel officer who gave his name as General Suleiman told Reuters. The revolutionary leadership promised a fight to the death but some Benghazi residents were fleeing to the Egyptian border last night amid considerable bitterness at the failure of western countries to back up vocal support for the rebels with practical help, including a no-fly zone and military equipment to fight Gaddafi’s better armed forces, some of them trained by the British army. “They have betrayed us,” Ahmed Malen, one of the revolutionary volunteers pasting anti-Gaddafi posters on walls in Benghazi. “If they kill us all, the west will have blood on its hands. They do not believe in freedom. They are cowards.” The regime’s strategy to defeat the rebellion before international support for the uprising could be galvanised seemed to be paying off as the US finally joined British and French support for a draft UN resolution imposing a no-fly zone over Libya. A vote on a draft motion is expected later this week or early next week, which is likely to be too late for the rebels. State television declared: “The town of Ajdabiya has been cleansed of mercenaries and terrorists linked to the al-Qaida organisation.” The defeat in Ajdabiya is the latest in a series of reverses that has seen the fortunes of the revolution rapidly set back after the initial successes that had many Libyans believing that Gaddafi’s regime was on the brink of collapse a fortnight ago. Many in Benghazi are now fearful of retribution by the regime’s agents and saying they have no choice but to fight for their survival. But the rebel army does not appear to have made any significant preparations for the city’s defence. The assault on Ajdabiya took on a familiar pattern with Tripoli’s forces first bombing and then shelling the town. Gaddafi’s army then came at the town from two sides. A call went out through mosques in the town and rebel fighters moved to the front but they said they were outgunned and began pulling back. Some of Ajdabiya’s 135,000 residents had already left. Others immediately piled in to cars and fled along with some of the rebel forces. The revolutionaries initially made a stand at the western entrance to the town but that swiftly collapsed and the street-by-street fighting promised by their military leader, Abdel Fattah Younis, two days ago failed to materialise. Younis, who was Gaddafi’s interior minister and who now has a $4m (£2.48m) bounty on his head, had said that the supply lines to Tripoli’s forces were overstretched and that its soldiers lacked the motivation for street fighting. But that proved to be an overly optimistic interpretation of the situation and Younis’s own, largely inexperienced fighters, many of whom are young men with no military experience, were overcome. Gaddafi’s seizure of Ajdabiya opens the way not only to Benghazi but to the eastern oil town of Tobruk and for the regime to take back control of Libya’s border with Egypt. The main coastal road divides at Ajdabiya, offering Gaddafi’s forces the opportunity to bypass Benghazi to seize towns to the east and then to lay siege to the rebels’ de facto capital from both sides. Libya Middle East Arab and Middle East protests Chris McGreal guardian.co.uk

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I’m fairly sure that the theoretical “free market” Adam Smith describes in his book “Wealth of Nations” never actually existed, but I’m 100 percent, absolutely positive it doesn’t exist today. The worldwide economy — and the essentially country-less multinational corporate conglomerates — have become too big and complicated to have anything resembling the kind of fair competition with informed self-interested consumers that Smith was so excited about in his theories. In the country and world we live in today, companies have become so big and powerful that they can manipulate and badly distort markets, and they can wield such outsize influence over governments that it wreaks havoc with countries as a whole — and sometimes the worldwide economy, per the economic crisis of the last three years. So while markets still work pretty well for some things in some contexts (the best new technologies will win a lot of new converts quickly, the best restaurants in a given metro area will get a lot of customers, etc.), the free market for the economy and society as a whole doesn’t really work very well in this era. Take banking, for example. When six stunningly big banks control assets equal to 64 percent of our entire country’s GDP, it distorts the financial markets in all kinds of ways. There’s the Too Big to Fail problem, a bitter example of market distortion that will weaken our entire economy for as long as these big banks are so dominant: knowing that our government will not let them fail has given them all kinds of competitive advantages in the marketplace, and made their corporate cultures far more likely to make big risky bets in pursuit of short term profits. Banks with that kind of market share have a huge edge in knowledge of the marketplace, and make other businesses feel compelled to do business with them or risk being left out of the big moves that can come with all that insider knowledge. Banks that size can quite literally manipulate stock prices and commodity prices and real estate prices at will to reap big profits. Banks with that kind of market power can dominate whole sectors of finance — such as credit and debit cards — and force smaller businesses to pay whatever fees they demand. And banks that wealthy have the political, legal, and public relations juice to rewrite laws and regulations to their advantage. Banks, of course, are not the only industry where a few companies have too much market share for the public or economic good. A small number of huge health insurance and drug companies have driven up health care costs dramatically because of lack of competition. A small number of big oil and coal companies have had the power to manipulate prices and escape environmental regulations. Companies the size of Walmart have driven millions of small businesses out of business. A relatively small number of insider contractors get the vast majority of government contracts. And the list goes on. Whenever too few companies get too big and powerful (economically and politically), the free market gets distorted and way too many small businesses are stomped into the ground. Here’s the other thing: companies this big are pretty much all multinational in scope. They have almost no loyalty to the country they happened to be incorporated or based in. Their employees and executives, their factories and offices and outlets, their markets, their profits, and their shareholders are scattered all over the world. For these kinds of companies, if America’s middle class falls apart, there are always consumers elsewhere. If our schools are terrible, there are always employees they can bring in from other places. If our trade surplus is terrible, it doesn’t matter much to them. On the other hand, smaller community-based businesses are far more bound to the communities they are based in, because they know that if their communities — their schools, their labor force, their customers, their environment — start to fall apart, it hurts their business as well. The idealized free market that conservative politicians and ideologues love to worship is a myth in the modern economy. And in this kind of uncompetitive economic environment, governments have to make choices about whose side to be on. Every decision on taxes, every decision on which contractors to choose, every decision on trade, every decision on regulation and anti-trust: there is nothing idealized about it, it is quite simply a choice of who you want to benefit and who you want to penalize. And every one of these choices is a matter of values: does government side with the most powerful of the special interests or those with less power? Does the government help poor and middle class folks or the wealthy? Does government help hard-pressed small businesspeople creating jobs here, or big multinationals shipping jobs overseas? Does government side with workers trying to organize a union, or employers who want to crush unionization? On government contracting, does our government sign contracts with innovative up and coming small businesses who have never had a chance at a contract before, or just reward contracts to the same old insider companies who have always gotten the deals in the past because of their connections (even if they have been guilty of cost overruns, labor and environmental violations, and sloppy work in the past)? Let’s take a couple of specific examples from the world of banking. The first is one I have been working on and have written about a lot before, the swipe fee issue . Sen. Durbin succeeded in passing an amendment to the financial reform bill that for the first time would regulate debit card swipe fees, and the Federal Reserve — which generally has been extremely pro-banker in past regulatory issues — wrote a reasonably balanced regulation that would cost the big banks (who control 80 percent of the market on this) about $12 billion. The big banks and their allies in Congress are now screaming and whining and gnashing their teeth about the great injustice done to them. But this is a simple matter of values that the government has to decide: either the big banks get the $12 billion, or Main Street retailers, restaurant owners, cabbies, and their customers do. My values say that the big banks already have too much money and power, and that the economy — along with basic fairness — would be better served if the retailers and all those other small businesspeople got to keep the money. Government has a clear choice to make, and going with the Main Street economy over the banks seems pretty clear. Then there’s the housing mess. Faced with a little bit of pressure from the state AGs to write down underwater mortgages, the big bankers have gone into high-pitched bouts of chutzpah not seen since the proverbial son killed both of his parents and threw himself on the mercy of the court as an orphan. Bank of America executive Terry Laughlin said that “It’s not that we don’t want to help troubled borrowers. It’s a moral hazard issue.” Ah, yes, the moral hazard issue. Someone from a Too Big to Fail bank which got rescued by taxpayers after they helped blow up the economy worrying about the moral hazard of writing down a mortgage for someone who bought a $150,000 house now worth less than 100K is precious. Then there is Bank of America CEO Brian Moynihan fretting about the good-hearted, working class guys who have managed to keep up their bank payments in spite of having been screwed by Bank of America: “There’s a core problem that if you start to help certain people and don’t help other people, it’s going to be very hard to explain the difference. Our duty is to have a fair modification process.” I feel for these Wall Street folks when they have to wrestle with moral issues — clearly they aren’t used to it and get easily confused. But you know what? I am willing to give Brian a break, and go so far as to agree with him on something: their duty is to have a fair modification process. My suggestion is pretty simple: write down every underwater mortgage holder’s mortgage to current market prices. That solves your moral hazard issue, stabilizes the housing market, and gives middle and working class homeowners some economic security, boosting the economy as a whole. As I wrote on this issue a while back: Willie Sutton famously said that the reason he robbed banks was because that was where the money was, and if we are looking to get our economy moving again, we should be looking to get the money to do it where the money is. Right now, more than ever, the big banks are where the money is concentrated. The most important fact by far in Big Banks Bonus Bonanza is this one: right now, 11 million American homeowners owe $766 billion more on their mortgages than their homes are worth, but if the banks were to write down those mortgage principals to market value and refinance them into 30 year fixed rate loans, you would get $73 billion pumped directly back into the economy- every year for the next 30 years. Now unlike extending tax cuts for the rich or reducing the estate tax, which tends to be saved and invested in long term bonds, this money would go directly into stimulating the economy and creating jobs. Think about who those 11,000,000 underwater homeowners are: they are almost entirely middle and working class families who have spent the last couple of years sweating bullets to save their main life investment after its value plummeted by 20%, 30%, or more. They haven’t been spending money on new products, they haven’t been taking any vacation trips with their families, if they own a little mom and pop business they sure haven’t been taking any risks to expand it: they have just been desperately scrimping and saving and trying to hang on by the skin of their teeth. But if their mortgage is reduced to what their house is actually worth in today’s market, that means their overall financial situation is far more stabilized, and it means their monthly mortgage payment will go down as well. With a stabilized debt and lower monthly mortgage payments, with the psychological weight of probable foreclosure off their shoulders, these middle class homeowners (at least the ones with jobs, which is most of the folks who still have homes) are exactly the kind of people who will be likely to start spending a little money in this economy. Maybe they will finally buy the car they have been holding off on now for years. Maybe they will do a little home improvement now that they know they will be able to stay in their home. Maybe they will feel able to finally make the investment in their small business they have been wanting to make, and hire a few extra folks as a result. The economic multiplier effect of this $73 billion would be as good as any money injected into the economy right now. You want to know what the second most important fact in this report is? The 73 billion dollars it would cost to write down those mortgages would be only half what the top 6 banks alone are getting ready to write in bonuses and compensation for 2010. If forced to write down these mortgages, the banks will scream bloody murder, even claiming it would endanger them and the entire economy. But all they have to do is cut their bonus and compensation packages, the vast majority of which go to top executives and traders, by 50%. Given all the cash these banks are sitting on, all the profits made and bonuses distributed in recent years, I have no doubt they can afford the hit. The ironic thing is that if they wrote down these mortgages, they would be getting monthly mortgage checks from all these homeowners, plus avoid the costs of all those foreclosure proceedings, but they don’t want to write down the property because of their own phony accounting that claims the properties are worth far more than they actually are. So here’s the other little nugget the report alludes to: if you injected 73 billion dollars into the economy through these write downs, the multiplier effects I was referencing earlier- homeowners being able to free up cash to buy things and invest in small businesses and do home improvements- would mean 1.8 million new jobs. So this plan would cost Brian and Terry and other Bank of America execs a chunk of their bonus money this year, and perhaps would mean that Bank of America shareholders bailed out by us taxpayers wouldn’t get as big a dividend in coming years. But I can live with that if it clears up the moral hazard dilemma that Brian and Terry have weighing so much on their consciences. Again, this is a choice government has to make: side with middle-class homeowners, or side with the big Wall Street banks. The former is the correct moral choice, and better for the economy by far. The latter is easier politically because of the banks’ enormous power and money. Now Tim Geithner might tell you (as he has been telling progressive members of Congress and advocacy groups fighting for bank writedowns) that the government has no power to make the bankers do anything in this situation, but the government — both the feds and the state AGs — has enormous power to lean on bankers to do the right thing. It would take courage to do the right thing here, but these are the kinds of choices government officials have to make every day. With the big banks and the other major special interests with a vise grip on our government today, it just takes some courage.

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CNN’s Costello: ‘Crazy to Me That We’re Hoping the Outcome Is Like Three Mile Island’

On CNN Newsroom this morning, anchor Carol Costello spoke with national correspondent Jason Carroll about the potential for a nuclear disaster in Japan.

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Arizona is having an immediate impact on the sanity of local politicians all over the country. The latest loony-bin candidate is Virgil Peck of Kansas. And you wonder why Tuscon wants to split off and become its own state? Kansas certainly has its share of the nuts. LJWorld: A legislator said Monday it might be a good idea to control illegal immigration the way the feral hog population has been controlled: with gunmen shooting from helicopters . Rep. Virgil Peck, R-Tyro, said he was just joking, but that his comment did reflect frustration with the problem of illegal immigration. Peck made his comment during a discussion by the House Appropriations Committee on state spending for controlling feral swine. After one of the committee members talked about a program that uses hunters in helicopters to shoot wild swine, Peck suggested that may be a way to control illegal immigration. Appropriations Chairman Marc Rhoades, R-Newton, said Peck’s comment was inappropriate. Rhoades said he thought Peck was joking, but added, “Hopefully he won’t do it again.” Asked about his comment, Peck was unapologetic. “I was just speaking like a southeast Kansas person,” he said. He said most of his constituents are upset with illegal immigration and the state and federal government response. He said he didn’t expect any further controversy over his comment. “I think it’s over,” he said. Feral pigs and guns in helicopters. This is truly a horrifying thing to think, let alone say. And that’s not a joke. Dome On The Range caught the audio and says: Yes, Virgil. Everyone in Southeast Kansas believes that we should respond to immigration by sniping down brown people from a helicopter. Should we bother checking their citizenship status first or should we just go off “their olive complexion,” as suggested by your colleague, Rep. Connie O’Brien? So much for toning down the rhetoric after the tragedy in Tucson. It’s worth noting that at the end of February, the Kansas Republican Party called union members protesting in the Capitol “thugs.” What seems more thuggish to you: Kansas workers exercising their right to free speech in a public building (in protest to a bill that suffocated their First Amendment rights), or an elected representative suggesting we should gun down immigrants like pigs? Check out Peck’s website. It conjures up visions of a cross between VDARE and Stormfront with a hint of the Hutaree Militia .

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Musician dies during police raid

1980s reggae star, who was awaiting trial for cocaine charges, dies from stab wounds, according to police The police watchdog is investigating the death of the British reggae star Smiley Culture, who has died during a Metropolitan police raid. The 48-year-old singer, whose real name was David Emmanuel, appears to have died on Tuesday from a stab wound sustained as officers visited his house to carry out an arrest warrant. The Press Association news agency reported, citing sources, that the wound may have been self-inflicted. A Scotland Yard spokesman said: “As part of an ongoing operation officers from the Metropolitan police service’s serious and organised crime command today attended a residential address in east Surrey to carry out an arrest warrant. “While they were at the address, an incident occurred during which a 48-year-old man died. Officers from Surrey police attended the incident and it has been formally referred to the Independent Police Complaints Commission.” The IPCC confirmed that it was looking into the death. A spokeswoman told the Guardian: “The IPCC are independently investigating the death of a man at 7am this morning. Metropolitan police officers went to a house in Warlingham to make an arrest. While they were there, it seems that the man suffered a stab wound and it seems he died at the scene.” Emmanuel, who shot to fame in the 1980s with songs such as Cockney Translation and Police Officer, spoke to the Guardian last year about the legacy of his one of his most famous singles. “Police Officer was a true story — the police used to take my weed. It was better than being arrested, and I made that into a hit … I was invited to meet the Queen, who said she listened to my records in the palace. “Although I paved the way for people like the Streets and Dizzee Rascal, I left the music business because I wasn’t rich.” Reggae Sam Jones guardian.co.uk

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