Truthout: August 9, 2011
Truthout: August 9, 2011
On the News With Thom Hartmann:
Judgment Day in Wisconsin, and More
In today's On the
News segment: Today is judgment day in Wisconsin with six
Republican state senators who supported Gov. Scott Walker's
anti-union efforts now fighting for their political lives in
the biggest recall election ever held in this country,
investors brace themselves for another turbulent day on Wall
Street, violent riots continued for the third straight day
across London and a number of other British cities, Japanese
government willingly let thousands of its own citizens be
exposed to dangerous levels of radiation, the question of
personhood is going to be debated in Montana, James McMillan
- the figurehead of New York's "The Rent Is Too Damn High"
political party is being evicted from his Manhattan
apartment because his rent is too damn low.
Watch the Video and Read the Transcript
Britain Recalls Parliament as Unrest
Spreads
Alan Cowell, The New York Times News Service:
"Prime Minister David Cameron pledged on Tuesday to flood
the streets of London with 10,000 extra police officers and
said Parliament would be recalled in emergency session after
rioting and looting spread across and beyond London for a
third night in what the police called the worst unrest in
memory. At the same time, the police said they had launched
a murder inquiry after a 26-year-old man, who was not
identified by name, was shot and killed in a car in Croydon,
south of London, late Monday as rioters torched and looted
buildings - the first known fatality since the unrest began
in another part of the city on Saturday."
Read the Article
On Eve of Recall,
Walker Booed at Wisconsin State Fair
Tanya Somanader,
ThinkProgress: "Today, Wisconsin voters will head to the
polls for the special recall elections of six Republican
state senators who supported Gov. Scott Walker's (R)
anti-union bill that stripped public workers of collective
bargaining rights. While Walker can tread the recall
backlash until January of 2012, Wisconsinites are forcing
him to face the music now. Last week, Wisconsin kicked off
its 10-day state fair. It's traditional for the governor to
herald the fair's opening day. But when Walker took the
stage Thursday, he was met with a hail of boos and protests
signs. 'This is the one place where all across the state
where people can actually come together,' he tried to shout
over the crowd. 'At least most people can.' As he walked off
stage, the crowd chanted 'Recall Walker.'"
Read the Article
Paul Krugman |
Capitulation, Not Compromise, Led to a Debt Deal
Paul
Krugman, Krugman & Co.: "What would I have done? That's the
question President Obama's kinda-sorta defenders keep
asking; it's supposed to be a conversation-stopper. But the
answer is clear: I would have made a statement declaring
that giving in to this kind of blackmail would constitute a
violation of my oath of office, and that my lawyers, on
careful reflection, have determined that there are several
legal options that allow me to ignore this extortionate
demand. Now, the Obama people say that this wasn't actually
an option. Well, I hate to say this, but I don't believe
them."
Read the Article
Secretive
Corporate-Legislative Group ALEC Holds Annual Meeting to
Rewrite State Laws
Amy Goodman, Democracy NOW!:
"Hundreds of state legislators from all 50 states have
gathered in New Orleans for the annual meeting of the
American Legislative Exchange Council, known as ALEC.
Critics say the Washington-based organization plays a key
role in helping corporations secretly draft model
pro-business legislation that has been used by state
lawmakers across the country. Unlike many other
organizations, ALEC's membership includes both state
lawmakers and corporate executives who gather behind closed
doors to discuss and vote on model legislation. In recent
months, ALEC has come under increasing scrutiny for its role
in drafting bills to attack workers' rights, roll back
environmental regulations, privatize education, deregulate
major industries, and passing voter ID laws."
Read the Article
Cliff Schecter |
Washington's Three-Ring Circus
Cliff Schecter,
Truthout: "It shouldn't be surprising to those of us who
physically restrain our gag reflex and endeavor to observe
or participate in the American political spectacle that a
trending topic on Twitter this past weekend was the
combination of a four-letter word, the word 'you' and
'Washington.' For a long time now, what goes on in the
Beltway has ceased to serve the interests of the vast
majority of Americans, in that, shockingly, most of us don't
have weekly passes to the Creation Museum or attend
performances at the David H. Koch Theatre while monocle clad
and porting brandy snifters. But the current disaster, over
an artificially created 'debt ceiling' (an artifact of World
War I) that's been a non-event in the past, is pushing our
political culture toward what was previously reserved only
for Barnum and Bailey."
Read the Article
Thom Hartmann |
Unequal Uses for the Bill of Rights
Thom Hartmann,
Berrett-Koehler Publishers: "'Of the cases in this court in
which the Fourteenth Amendment was applied during its first
fifty years after its adoption, less than one half of one
percent invoked it in protection of the Negro race, and more
than fifty percent asked that its benefits be extended to
corporations.' - Justice Hugo Black, 1938. The statistic in
this chapter's epigraph is sobering indeed. It says
corporations sought protection under the Fourteenth
Amendment a hundred times more often than did the people it
was intended to protect. And this is not a victimless shift
- there have been real and substantial consequences. In the
years following the Santa Clara decision and the cases that
referred to it, companies have used their personhood rights
in an amazing variety of ways. What follows in this chapter
is a small selection."
Read the Article
Interior
Secretary Tells Alaskans Obama Backs Drilling
Sean
Cockerham, Anchorage Daily News: "Interior Secretary Ken
Salazar came to Anchorage on Monday and said the Obama
administration supports more oil drilling in Alaska,
potentially including offshore Arctic development. Salazar
joined Alaska Sen. Mark Begich and Rhode Island Sen. Jack
Reed for a meeting with Alaska business people and said the
president's feeling toward Arctic offshore drilling is
'Let's take a look at what's up there and see what it is we
can develop.'"
Read the Article
We Are Wisconsin,
and We're Already Winners
Isaiah J. Poole, Campaign
for America's Future: "This morning Wisconsin voters will
stream to the polls in a historic recall election that pits
defenders of working people against six incumbents who
backed a right-wing legislative assault on workers. It is
not too late to give those working-class fighters a massive
outpouring of last-minute support to counter the torrent of
right-wing cash that is buying millions of dollars' worth of
attack ads and robo-calls in defense of the Republican state
Senate incumbents. Through the 'Call Out The Vote' campaign
by the Progressive Change Campaign Committee and Democracy
for America, and the 'virtual phone bank' set up by the
Wisconsin Democratic Party, anyone with a telephone can
persuade voters to go to the polls and elect middle-class
champions to replace the incumbents who backed an all-out
assault on the state's working people."
Read the Article
Barbara
Ehrenreich: On Turning Poverty Into an American
Crime
Barbara Ehrenreich, TomDispatch: "I completed
the manuscript for 'Nickel and Dimed' in a time of seemingly
boundless prosperity.... The big question, 10 years later,
is whether things have improved or worsened for those in the
bottom third of the income distribution, the people who
clean hotel rooms, work in warehouses, wash dishes in
restaurants, care for the very young and very old, and keep
the shelves stocked in our stores. The short answer is that
things have gotten much worse, especially since the economic
downturn that began in 2008."
Read the Article
Stepping Out of
Afghanistan's Shadows
James Gundun, The Trench: "Like
rotating blades hitting the dirt, propaganda spin from
Afghanistan's traumatic Chinook crash has destructively
spiraled into US policy. The 30 US troops inside the
helicopter, presumably a Special Operations-employed MH-47G
Chinook, morphed into masked heroes overnight, their
personal lives immediately reduced to political campaigning.
To both US policy-makers and the Taliban, Wardak's wreckage
is a symbol of their 'success' and the need to 'fight on.' A
stalemate, in other words."
Read the Article
Truthout
Contributor Jeffrey Kaye Discusses Guantanamo Water Torture
and Rumsfeld's Denials (Video)
Jeffrey Kaye,
RTAmerica: "A new report published by Truthout last week
suggests that there may be much more to interrogation
techniques and where they were used. This includes a little
known testimony by former Guantanamo detainee Murat Kurnaz
before the House Committee on Foreign Affairs, where he
described not waterboarding, but a form of water treatment.
Jeffrey Kaye, the Truthout contributor who authored the
groundbreaking report, discusses."
Watch the Video
Click here for more Truthout articles
TRUTHOUT'S BUZZFLASH DAILY HEADLINES
The demand economy has collapsed for the vast majority of Americans. Jobs have been lost, wages have stagnated and the buying power of all but the wealthy dramatically reduced.
But if you are super-rich, according to an August 4 New York Times article, you "are (almost) spending like it's 2006: luxury goods are flying off the shelves, even with the economy staggering."
If you want to walk in the shoes of the ultra-wealthy, it will cost you a few weeks' wages (if you are lucky enough to have a job). According to The Times, "In 2008, for example, the most expensive Louboutin item that Saks sold was a $1,575 pair of suede boots. Now, it is a $2,495 pair of suede boots that are thigh-high."
While most of America struggles with the basic costs of living, even delaying medical care because of high health insurance deductibles (for those who have medical insurance), the rich are on a luxury item buying rampage. According to the Times:
Luxury goods stores, which fared much worse than other retailers in the recession, are more than recovering - they are zooming. Many high-end businesses are even able to mark up, rather than discount, items to attract customers who equate quality with price....
The luxury category has posted 10 consecutive months of sales increases compared with the year earlier, even as overall consumer spending on categories like furniture and electronics has been tepid, according to the research service MasterCard Advisors SpendingPulse. In July, the luxury segment had an 11.6 percent increase, the biggest monthly gain in more than a year.
With the ongoing DC subsidies of the most affluent Americans through tax cuts, America has moved closer to the class and income gaps that characterize third-world nations.
To paraphrase an old Nancy Sinatra song, "These $2,495 boots are made for walking, and one of these days these boots are going to walk all over you."
They already are.
Mark
Karlin
Editor, BuzzFlash at Truthout
New York
Times Editorial: It's Time for President Obama to Get
Serious About Job Growth
Read the Article at The New York
Times
Gallup: US Employers Hold Back on Job
Creation
Read the Article at Gallup
White
House Adviser Blames Tea Party for Downgrade
Read the Article at The Associated
Press
US Spends Six Times More on Defense Than
China, Iran and North Korea Combined
Read the Article at
ThinkProgress
Union Decline Accounts for Much of
the Rise in Wage Inequality
Read the Article at Newswise
The
State of the Murdoch Empire and Its Mob-Like
Structure
Read the Article at Adweek
The
Abortion That Romney Doesn't Talk About Anymore
Read the Article at Salon
Click here for more BuzzFlash headlines