The American Political Melodrama: Luce on Bloomberg, a comment by Political Observer

As usual Mr. Luce is a nervous nelly, this time about our friend Mayor Bloomberg entering the presidential race! Who can forget hiz honor’s leadership in so many areas: well, you know, he managed to get Judge Shira A. Scheindlin removed  from the Stop and Frisk case, as reported here in The New York Times. (One might just note, for no good reason, except that hiz honor might very well have lost that case, but putting the fix in with the three judge panel, made the political road a whole lot easier!)

‘A federal appeals panel in Manhattan that had abruptly removed Judge Shira A. Scheindlin from New York City’s high-profile stop-and-frisk litigation and questioned her conduct in the case issued a lengthy explanation on Wednesday, saying it had made “no findings of misconduct, actual bias or actual partiality” by the judge.

The three-judge panel’s Oct. 31 order has been the subject of pointed debate among judges, lawyers and others, and the statement on Wednesday appeared to be an effort to soften the tone of the original ruling, if not its import. The new opinion was another turn in the stop-and-frisk litigation, in which Judge Scheindlin issued a landmark decision in August imposing sweeping changes on the Police Department, including the appointment of a monitor.’

‘saying it had made “no findings of misconduct, actual bias or actual partiality” by the judge.’ I  think that this comment is demonstrative of self-exculpatory chatter that is a specialty of American Jurisprudence.

On hiz honors’ enthusiastic support for Charter Schools, some examples of are in order:

Just one example from Diane Ravitch:

Nominee for Best Charter School Scandal of the Year

An example of the ‘success’ in NYC, an interview with wunderkind Joel Klein in US News, title and subtitle is key,

Regaining Control of Public Education
Former New York City schools chancellor Joel Klein explains what others could learn from the Big Apple’s success.:

http://www.usnews.com/opinion/articles/2015/01/02/under-bloomberg-new-york-city-schools-prioritized-choice

Or just read Sharon Higgins’ indispensable blog, for the latest scandals as related to Charter Schools :

http://charterschoolscandals.blogspot.com/

This is just two examples of the Bloomberg Magic Touch for Leadership! But picture this: could we expect hiz honor to do some arm-twisting once he is elected? The picture of Roberts, Alito, Scalia ,Thomas or even Kennedy getting the ‘Bloomberg Treatment’ has a kind of crude appeal.

Mr. Luce, there is no telling how long Bloomberg’s fascination with this scheme will last! Recall the title of Robert Evan’s autobiography ‘The Kid Stays in The Picture’?

Political Observer

http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/e25f28d6-c0f8-11e5-9fdb-87b8d15baec2.html#axzz3yGUy3exN

 

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Janan Ganesh defends political apathy, a comment by Political Observer

Mr. Ganesh, in his first two paragraphs, faintly echos, suggests, that old Rogers and Hart standard The Lady is a Tramp:

I get too hungry, for dinner at eight
I like the theater, but never come late
I never bother, with people I hate
That’s why the lady is a tramp

I don’t like crap games, with barons and earls
Won’t go to Harlem, in ermine and pearls
Won’t dish the dirt, with the rest of the girls
That’s why the lady is a tramp

‘For someone who is quite good at it, David Cameron is not very interested in politics. Britain’s prime minister does not read Robert Caro’s monumental works on American statecraft for fun. He avoids Borgen, the television drama about a Danish government, because it is “too much like work”.

He never talks policy or strategy with friends, most of whom pre-date his career. His Downing Street is not Bill Clinton’s White House: there are no late-night symposia over pizza, no infectious enthusiasm for politics as sport. When he retires, he will retire easily.’

 

This lasts until Mr. Ganesh surrenders to his usual cynicism of how the World Is or at least how Politicians view it:

‘All politicians understand Yes, No and Undecided. Only the winners understand Don’t Much Care. Mr Cameron communicates crisply because he knows most people only tune in for a few minutes a day. He does not lose himself in marginalia that no swing voter will ever notice. Rousing a nation through force of personality is something leaders do in films: the real art of politics is accepting apathy and bending it to your purposes.’

His essay is about the uses the adroit politician makes of apathy:

‘And it all starts with the realisation that apathy is not a type of sickness. Unlike the Labour party, opinion pollsters chose self-examination over self-indulgence after flunking last year’s general election.’

A reader might first ask, is this a companion piece to his December 28,2015 essay in defense of ‘the politics of fear’?

http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/a40adeb4-a973-11e5-955c-1e1d6de94879.html#axzz3xpY72Xl1

Will Mr. Ganesh complete his advocacy for the cardinal historical/political sins? Fear, Apathy, Acedia, Vainglory, and even with the addition the seven deadly sins: Pride, Greed, Lust, Envy, Gluttony, Wraith and Sloth? Perhaps, here are some answers:

‘Apathy is a respectable disposition in a country where, for most people most of the time, life is tolerable-to-good.’ ‘They priggishly elide apathy with dysfunction: if voters do not care, something must be wrong with the body politic.’

This essay devolves into a sneering attack on the ‘Left’ and Jeremy Corbyn and the’ movement building’ at the center of reclaiming Labour, from the Neo-Liberalism of Tony Blair. One can’t imagine Mr. Ganesh trundling his trolleys through the Tesco, but rather through Waitrose , Sainsbury’s or Marks & Spencers.

Mr. Ganesh’s final paragraph dismisses the ‘hot heads and crusaders’ with self-congratulatory rhetoric, as if he were dismissing a insolent cabby in London, circa 1900!

‘Apathetic Britons are not waiting to be redeemed. They just have lives to get on with. Not only are they apolitical; they rouse themselves to vote every five years precisely to stop hot heads and crusaders from running their country. They like Mr Cameron because he governs well enough to save them having to think about politics. He is prime minister because someone has to be.’

Political Observer

http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/4b8bd6f6-bdcf-11e5-9fdb-87b8d15baec2.html#axzz3y5UO93Qh

 

 

 

 

 

 


 

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Episode DCCIX of The American Political Melodrama:Jonathan Capehart on Sanders the political heretic & Hillary as the redeemer

Like Michael Eric Dyson, Mr. Capehart can’t forgive Dr. West’s political candor and refreshing moral honesty, it goes against the grain of the loyal political apologist! West was candid with Obama, when he promised that he would vigorously campaign for him, but if and when he thought him wrong on issues, or pursuing the wrong political path, that he would be equal in his zeal to criticize him. Dr. West has lived up to his word: in 2008 Obama ran as a ‘Progressive’ but in the last seven years has governed as a moderate conservative, or just call it the exercise of an unimaginative Neo-Liberalism.  Dr. West’s criticisms are completely valid, even if they offend the delicate political sensibilities of Dyson and Capehart, with addition of Ta Nehisi Coates about the  ‘challenge to Sanders revolutionary mien’, the Dyson/Capehart not so sub rosa tribalism remains one the  glaring unaddressed questions of this essay. West’s crime, of that kind of disloyalty, requires the political elders, to publicly shame the heretic. The theological rhetorical frame is completely appropriate here!

Without surprise Capehart’s essay devolves into political advocacy for the political inevitability of Hillary, as check against the political heretic Sanders.

Political Observer

https://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/post-partisan/wp/2016/01/22/how-cornel-west-hurts-bernie-sanders/

 

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Robert Zoellick attempts to slay the Keynesian Dragon, a comment by Unrepentant Socialist

I just finished reading chapter 3 of Deirdre N. McCloskey’s  The Rhetoric of Economics, Second Edition titled Figures of Economic Speech and its first sub-title Even Mathematical Economist Uses, and Must Use , Literary Devices : The Case of Paul Samuelson. Her argument is that metaphor is indispensable in all forms of economic argument/rhetoric. Reading Mr. Robert Zoellick’s essay one is forcefully confronted with Professor McCloskey’s indispensable examination of economic rhetoric, or should it be called wisdom? Some selective quotation of Zoellick’s essay offer proof of the efficacy of  Prof. McCloskey’s thesis.

The former US Treasury secretary fears emerging markets face sluggish global demand, capital outflows, weaker investment prospects and depreciating exchange rates.

e.g.:emerging markets, sluggish global demand, capital outflows, weaker investment prospects, depreciating exchange rates

There are many more examples in Mr. Zoellick’s essay of the use of metaphor as central to economic argument . One wonders at the choice of Summers and Rogoff as the experts he quotes or paraphrases. Yet the appeal to authority is not just the choice of the author of this essay but the choice of the editors at The Financial Times.

On Summers: his enthusiastic support for Gramm–Leach–Bliley Act  is just the beginning:

‘In 1999 Summers endorsed the Gramm–Leach–Bliley Act which removed the separation between investment and commercial banks, saying “With this bill, the American financial system takes a major step forward towards the 21st Century.”[22]

‘In 1999 Summers endorsed the Gramm–Leach–Bliley Act which removed the separation between investment and commercial banks, saying “With this bill, the American financial system takes a major step forward towards the 21st Century.”[22]

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lawrence_Summers

On Rogoff: See this insightful essay by Dean Baker titled Reinhart and Rogoff Are Not Being Straight from April 26, 2013 at New York Times eXaminer.

https://www.nytexaminer.com/2013/04/reinhart-and-rogoff-are-not-being-straight/

‘Carmen Reinhart and Ken Rogoff, used their second NYT column in a week, to complain about how they are being treated. Their complaint deserves tears from crocodiles everywhere. They try to present themselves as ivory tower economists who cannot possibly be blamed for the ways in which their work has been used to justify public policy, specifically as a rationale to cut government programs and raise taxes, measures that lead to unemployment in a downturn.

This portrayal is disingenuous in the the extreme. Reinhart and Rogoff surely are aware of how their work has been used. They have also encouraged this use in public writings and talks. While it is unfortunate that they have “received hate-filled, even threatening, e-mail messages,” as one who works in the lower-paid corners of policy debates, let me say, welcome to the club.’

Or this Wikipedia entry:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kenneth_Rogoff

‘In April 2013, Rogoff was at the centre of worldwide attention with Carmen Reinhart (coauthor of the book This Time is Different) when their widely cited study “Growth in a Time of Debt” was shown to contain computation errors which critics claim undermine its central thesis that too much debt causes recession.[7][8] An analysis by Herndon, Ash and Pollin argued that “coding errors, selective exclusion of available data, and unconventional weighting of summary statistics lead to serious errors that inaccurately represent the relationship between public debt and GDP growth among 20 advanced economies in the post-war period.”[9] Their calculations demonstrated that high debt countries grew at 2.2 percent, rather than the −0.1 percent figure initially cited by Reinhart and Rogoff.[9] Rogoff and Reinhardt claimed that their fundamental conclusions were accurate after correcting the coding errors detected by their critics.[10][11] They further disavowed the claim frequently attributed to them that a 90% government debt to GDP ratio is a specific tipping point for growth outcomes.[12] Further papers by Rogoff and Reinhart,[13] and the International Monetary Fund,[14] which were not found to contain similar errors, reached conclusions similar to the initial paper. The subject remains controversial, because of the political ramifications of the research, though in Rogoff and Reinhart’s words “[t]he politically charged discussion … has falsely equated our finding of a negative association between debt and growth with an unambiguous call for austerity.”[12] He is a member in the Group of Thirty.’

Mr. Zoellick’s concluding paragraph:

‘If in 2016 there is no shift from monetary to growth policies, the future envisioned by Profs Summers and Rogoff could prove more likely: sluggish growth; currency conflicts; and populist politics and fights over distribution — punctuated by mini-crises as struggling economies falter. Political leaders can either try to shape their countries’ destinies now or risk a future reckoning from the decade’s economic experiments.’

To foreshorten this: the failure of Neo-Liberal Dogmas has summoned forth the devil of a spent Keynesianism, which now must be slain to protect those precious Dogmas!

Unrepentant Socialist

http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/c1dec280-b47b-11e5-b147-e5e5bba42e51.html#axzz3xbzJrt3q

 

 

 

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

American Scribbler on ‘G Force’

Robert Gordon’s book, ‘The Rise and Fall of American Growth: The US Standard of Living since the Civil War’,  of usable historical reconstruction/remembrance, acting here as political nostalgia, for the once great Engine of Capital in America: in the face of the collapse  2008, and the dismal present of an economy geared to the imperatives of the 1%, is reviewed here at The Economist. But what is absent from this book review, and the book itself, in the narrative of the continuing of life of Capital,is the victory of Financialization over the production of goods and services,that have actual value to its civic partners (Yes,civic partners! Producers without customers , in what world?): Capital has devolved into a malfunctioning casino, subject to even greater crises, than a Capital that actually produced something of value. The practice of nostalgia for a vibrant past, as compensatory in the dismal present? Even your still from Chaplin is an implicit reference, comic though it may be, to the person as part of the cogs of industry, an implicit visual critique of atomization that produces alienation. It provides undermining  decoration. Your writer enthuses on Mr.Gordon’s celebratory volume :

‘Anybody who is tempted by this argument should read Robert Gordon’s magnificent new book.’

Yet, the ardor of your writer cools in her/his last paragraph, that points to the drawbacks of  Mr. Gordon’s readable popular history of ‘The Rise and Fall of American Growth’ and  his doubt as to the economic consequences of the ‘IT revolution’:

‘But he goes too far in downplaying the current IT revolution. Where the first half of the book is brilliant, the second can be frustrating. Mr Gordon understates how IT has transformed people’s lives and he has little to say about the extent to which artificial intelligence will intensify this. He also fails to come to terms with the extent to which, thanks to 3D printing and the internet of things, the information revolution is spreading from the virtual world to the physical world. Mr Gordon may be right that the IT revolution will not restore economic growth rates to the level America once enjoyed. Only time will tell. But he is definitely wrong to underplay the extent to which the revolution is changing every aspect of our daily lives.’

American Scribbler

http://www.economist.com/news/books-and-arts/21685437-why-economic-growth-soared-america-early-20th-century-and-why-it-wont-be?fsrc=scn/tw/te/pe/ed/Gforce

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Aaron David Miller on the maladroit, misplaced good intentions/aspirations of the Obama/Kerry team, a comment by American Scribbler

Mr. Miller instead of opting for the foreign policy techno-chatter favored by other ‘Experts’, favors something that resembles the cliche ridden patois of the sports announcer of American football. Although Mr. Miller has no talent for the necessary brevity of between the plays commentary. File this under the melodramatic heading of Obama’s last year meditation, and a complete waste of the reader’s time. For a grim, but utterly realistic appraisal of Israel as Western/World conundrum, see Perry Anderson’s essay at The New Left Review titled The House of Zion:

https://newleftreview.org/II/96/perry-anderson-the-house-of-zion

‘Since the turn of the century, the Arab states have come to constitute a zone for Western military intervention without parallel in the post-Cold War world—us invasion of Iraq, nato bombardment of Libya, us proxies in Syria, Washington-backed gcc assault on Yemen. What of their traditional enemy? At the time of the second Intifada, an essay in these pages surveyed the balance of forces between the two nationalisms, Zionist and Palestinian, reflected in the naked inequities of the Oslo Accords. [1] Since then, how much has changed? On the West Bank, very little. The first Intifada was the rebellion of a new generation of Palestinians, whose activists came from local universities that were themselves recent creations. Displacing the compliant notables on whom the occupiers had relied, they led a three-year wave of popular demonstrations, strikes, boycotts and punishment of collaborators. The exiled plo in Tunis was caught by surprise, and played little part in it. Driven out of its bases in Lebanon, and defunded by Saudi Arabia and Kuwait after the Gulf War, the organization was rescued from its weakness by the Oslo accords, which returned it in pomp to bits of the homeland.’

A critical reader can’t accept a Foreign Policy expert, sometime government employee and full time Zionist, to present anything but this cynical political handicapping: a wordy description of the maladroit, not to speak of the misplaced good intentions/aspirations of the Obama/Kerry team, as argued by Mr. Miller.

Here is Mr. Miller in 2005 making the case for ‘The case for Israel-first advocacy is compelling.‘ And for America as the indispensable  broker:

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/05/22/AR2005052200883.html

‘The case for Israel-first advocacy is compelling. Israelis live in a dangerous neighborhood; they have only one real friend and critically important security requirements that the United States is committed to furthering. Practically speaking, Israel sits on land the Arabs want, so without Israel’s trust and confidence there can be no peace process.

Having worked for the past six secretaries of state on Arab-Israeli negotiations, I believe in the importance of a strong U.S.-Israeli relationship. Paradoxically, it is our intimacy with the Israelis that gives America — only America — the capacity to be an honest and effective broker. Arab governments have come to accept this reality. That is why — even now — when our credibility is so diminished in the region, they continue to press for U.S. engagement.

American Scribbler

The Last Temptation of Barack Obama and John Kerry 

 

 

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Episode DCCLXII of the American Political Melodrama: Simon Schama & Nikki Haley battle for the redemtion of the Republican Party, 2016

One marvels at the almost eloquent call for the return to political rationality/civility by Mr. Schama,  with an assist from governor Haley:

‘As the child of Indian Sikhs she warned against conflating whole ethnic and religious communities with criminals or terrorists.’

Yet the governor is still a Republican who subscribes to the current Party Dogmas:

‘By any normal criteria Ms Haley is a rock-ribbed conservative: opposed to abortion, gun control and the Affordable Care Act.’

One can consider Trump as the culmination of  Republican Party mendacity. The beginning of Trumpism can be traced from the ‘Generation of Treason’ Anti-New Deal propaganda offensive of the Nixon/Mundt/McCarthy/McCarren Cold War alliance. And from Goldwater and his allies, who purged the Republican Liberals from the Convention in 1964, the Dixiecrat mass migration to the Republican Party in 1964 and 1965, after the passage of the Civil Rights and Voting Rights Acts, to the New Nixon of 68: The Southern Strategy, that even pitchman Reagan embraced in his first speech after his nomination at the Neshoba County Fair in 1980.  And then to the Willy Horton hysterics confected by Lee Atwater & Bush I. And the rise of political capo Karl Rove of Bush II. The key fact of that Dixiecrat migration into the Republican Party in ’64 and ’65, is unmentioned in Mr. Schama’s brief, historically superficial commentary.The root of the Republicans political necromancy of the present is that acceptance of Dixiecrat Feudalism, as politically/economically/morally plausible in the late 20th and early 21st centuries.

Political Observer

http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/6dfc4986-bae2-11e5-b151-8e15c9a029fb.html#axzz3xPy7TKTY

 

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

At The Financial Times: Janan Ganesh on ‘plodding desires’, a comment by Political Observer

This is my second reading of Mr. Ganesh’s rambling  essay, it is full of literary/political twists and turns, notable for the partial quotation of John Maynard Keynes’ observations on the modern world, remade by the telephone, in his introductory paragraph: every rich white male, made a king, by the reach of technology, circa 1914? Not to speak of Mr. Ganesh’s philosophical observations on the human condition, remade by a version of Neo-Liberal Rationalism of the Thatcher/Hayek alliance, that still holds sway in the realm of thought, about humans and their political institutions, in the present.

‘We fear structural reform of the state because of, not despite, the great lifestyle upheaval brought about by geniuses at the nexus of technology and commerce in recent times. We are creatures of balance, not masochists for endless change and ever greater atomisation.’

‘…geniuses at the nexus of technology and commerce…’ Electronic trinkets as the consolation for the collapse of the Western Economies of 2008, its successor Austerity and our present economic doldrums? The rise of the 1%, the watershed of Neo-Liberal ascendancy?

‘In a sense, we like the NHS for the same reason we like the royals. It is a conservative impulse as much as a socialist one.’

The royals are the last gasp of Feudalism, and a symbol of an Empire on which the sun has set: an exercise of a vacuous nostalgia.

‘If this is somewhere near the truth, then it demands magnanimity from those of us who really are mad about freedom. For a youngish urbanite with good health, well-paid work and no duties, modernity is a daily miracle. Transience — of products, relationships, ideas — is not a problem, it is the point.’

‘…from those of us who really are mad about freedom.’ meaning acolytes of a  predatory Free Market Romanticism. ‘ youngish urbanite’ etc.  is a self-description, awash in self-congratulation.

‘Humans are hard-wired with more plodding desires: security, continuity, a nest. If these desires intensify even as capitalism showers people with bespoke choice, this is not necessarily a glitch. It might just be society’s mysterious equilibrium. Even if the medical rebellion is quelled, public sector reformers are up against more than producer interests. They are up against the oldest human yearnings.’

The patient reader is treated to this set of jejune observations on the human condition, featuring these nonpareils:

‘…more plodding desires…,… as capitalism showers people with bespoke choice.,It might just be society’s mysterious equilibrium.,… public sector reformers are up against more than producer interests. They are up against the oldest human yearnings.’

Political Observer

http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/8fe525f8-b84f-11e5-b151-8e15c9a029fb.html#axzz3xE6DyOqI

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

David Brooks ‘shames’ Sen. Cruz: Episode MMLIII of The American Political Melodrama

Is there nothing quite as contemptible as David Brooks’ public moralizing chatter? It enacts a kind of pitiable comic version of moral/political commentary. Although quoting Neo-Confederate/Originalist fellow traveler Anthony Kennedy on justice, and its relationship to ‘error’, gives voice to a kind of ersatz discontent,and is quite useful in his public scolding/shaming of Sen. Cruz. Mr. Brooks commits himself to a Republican Party: a quote that makes utterly clear the kind of Party he has allegiance:

‘Traditionally, candidates who have attracted strong evangelical support have in part emphasized the need to lend a helping hand to the economically stressed and the least fortunate among us. Such candidates include George W. Bush, Mike Huckabee and Rick Santorum.’

The Bush/Huckabee/Santorum wing of the Party is deeply entrenched in an idiosyncratic American Fascism, of a Republican Party in the grip of political nihilism, and in its seemingly interminable death agony. Trump being the most unapologetic and irrational of its actors.

Premature Anti-Fascist

 

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

At The Economist: Shadow Cabinet reshuffle as pretext for Episode XXXI of the Jeremy Corbyn Melodrama

The Corbyn Political Melodrama continues here at The Economist. The fact that the British political landscape is changing, in such a drastic fashion, i.e. the end of ascendant  Thatcherism? especially in the seeming end of New Labour, or a crippling political clevedge, or the re-birth of the Labour Party, before Tony Blair, as potential outcomes.
The political discontent that gave birth to the Corbyn phenomenon was the collapse of the Neo-Liberal dogmas of Thatcher’s interpretation of Hayek, in his Road to Serfdom, which was simply a belief in the practice of an unbridled Robber Capital, to put it in vulgar terms.
What followed the collapse of 2008 was Austerity and then the bleak economic slog of the present.
All of this much too much for the writers here at The Economist, to suffer gladly, but an opportunity to decry, at full rhetorical volume, the twin dangers of ‘Populism’ both ‘Left and ‘Right’ and to make the focus of its animus Mr. Corbyn, a notorious left wing backbencher.  The Shadow Cabinet reshuffle being the pretext for more of the same. The fight over Trident holds the possibility to end the closely held political notion of Britain as a significant world power, or as just an echo of American power,  perhaps too much for both citizens and writers at The Economist to face?

Political Reporter

http://www.economist.com/blogs/bagehot/2016/01/corbyns-consolidation

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment