Thursday, September 20, 2012

Jesus and the 47%





And he gathered his disciples together and said, "I say unto you - well 47% of you anyway - that you have grown dependent on a handout. Verily, I say unto you, as you treat the least of these (except for the free-loading 47% - you know who you are) so do you do unto me. And those among you who are outcast, downtrodden, without taxable income - you are now uninterested in caring for yourself. And those who have much will have more as long they create jobs which they do not need to do until a Republican is president. And if you are struck on the cheek by an enemy, turn the other cheek, unless that enemy is a member of the 47%. Oh, wicked 47%ers, what profit you if you win a free meal but lose your potential for corporate personhood?


Jesus - at least the Jesus who comes to us through the oral tradition that was later written down, edited, rewritten in parts (there is no other Jesus) - was obviously speaking like someone who felt, as he put it, that the Kingdom of Heaven was nigh. His movement was essentially an apocalyptic one, predicting an end of the world as they knew it before some of his followers had tasted death, as he put it, meaning in their life times. Therefore, if your time horizon is contracted, your priorities change. You behave differently if you believe the ship is about to sink than if it will reach the port safely (and your kids' college bills are there waiting to be paid). Give everything away and get ready was essentially his message. Live as the birds in the field live, he said in Matthew, who do not (according to belief at that time anyway) gather food for the future but have faith they can find sufficient food each day. One of the essential difficulties with Christianity is that this short-term model is not viable long-term economically if taken literally, so a balance must be found, not just in my humble opinion, but in that of most of those who have identified themselves as Christians in the centuries that past after all his followers tasted death but the world was very much its old bloody, labor-demanding, investment-rewarding self.
Mitt Romney's solution to this problem seems essentially ignore it, pretending Jesus never said these things, or if he did, that he was just kidding. Hoard, invest, don't be bothered helping the poor who are, he tells us in a moment of candor, simply looking for a hand-out and will only be enabled by your helping them.
But Jesus did say these things and most of what he said had to do with such a radical view of wealth redistribution and personal material wealth (eschew it in favor of spiritual wealth) that he would never have been invited on Fox and Friends had it existed, Glenn Beck would have warned his listeners (viewers?) not to listen to his message, and O'Reilly would have devoted an entire season to bashing the War on Wealth launched by this long-haired hippie-looking Jewish teacher spreading a subversive message of class warfare.

Wednesday, September 19, 2012

Romney's Tortured View of Money, Logic, and What it Means to Pay Taxes


Links to the complete video of Mitt Romney's May 17th "47%" remarks were released along with a transcript and if you wade through the remarks, they raise all sorts of interesting questions.


The comment that got him in the most trouble was the 47% Mitt Romney will "never care about":
47% of Americans pay no income taxes. So our message of low taxes doesn't connect... And so my job is not to worry about those people. I'll never convince them that they should take personal responsibility and care for for their lives. 
Wow. So if you don't pay federal income taxes, you are not taking personal responsibility or caring for your life?

The most interesting question is why he didn't disown his remarks immediately after they were made public. Not Mitt.  He seemed to endorse them, quibbling only that they were not elegantly expressed.   Not elegantly stating something is when you call your friend fat instead of "heavyset" or "stocky." Either way, you are still saying they are heavy.
Mitt just called 47% of the country dependent on the federal government (which is silly) and therefore (as night follows day) pro-Obama. I am not sure how he could have stated that more elegantly. The idea was rude (and baseless) not its expression.  (For the record, I neither depend on government aid, pay zero federal taxes (I pay a higher rate than Romney), but I do support President Obama.)
The issue is not that the video was put out there or even that it was taken but that Mitt Romney, a candidate for president of 100% of the people, actually said these things about 47% of the people he would like to represent. Instead of admitting that we got him and he really doesn't think those things (the "I was lying to a bunch of people to get $10,000 a plate from them" defense) he doubled down and essentially endorsed the idea, quibbling only about the elegance of its expression.

Romney has a very strange view of money. On one hand, he believes that his father's money played no role in defining him. His father's wealth and political connections had nothing to do with his wealth and political connections. (Why, he might even be better off if he were Mexican!)
On the other hand, if someone is poor,disabled, unemployed, or leaves the workforce to care for an elderly parent, the absence of taxable income automatically makes that person irresponsible and not caring for themselves.
So, to review, high family income has no effect on individual worth (meaning any financial success must come from some other factor, such as talent for hard work).  Low or modest family income, however, automatically means the person is irresponsible. (Even worse, it means they vote Democrat.)
When I hear Mitt Romney talk about the poor or even the middle class, he reminds me of an opinionated barber sounding off loudly about parts of the world he has never visited.  As David Brooks points out in his column Thurston Howell Romney:

It suggests that Romney doesn’t know much about the culture of America. Yes, the entitlement state has expanded, but America remains one of the hardest-working nations on earth. Americans work longer hours than just about anyone else. Americans believe in work more than almost any other people. Ninety-two percent say that hard work is the key to success, according to a 2009 Pew Research Survey.
It says that Romney doesn’t know much about the political culture. Americans haven’t become childlike worshipers of big government. On the contrary, trust in government has declined. The number of people who think government spending promotes social mobility has fallen.
The people who receive the disproportionate share of government spending are not big-government lovers. They are Republicans. They are senior citizens. They are white men with high school degrees. As Bill Galston of the Brookings Institution has noted, the people who have benefited from the entitlements explosion are middle-class workers, more so than the dependent poor.
Romney’s comments also reveal that he has lost any sense of the social compact. In 1987, during Ronald Reagan’s second term, 62 percent of Republicans believed that the government has a responsibility to help those who can’t help themselves. Now, according to the Pew Research Center, only 40 percent of Republicans believe that.



And what sort of view of taxes does Romney really have?  He is on record as saying that he pays not a dime more than he legally has to and I know from the tax record he has released that he pays a much lower marginal income tax rate that I do, but after months of being criticized for this low rate and what it might say about him as a person, it seems Romney actually agrees that there is a direct relationship between taxes paid and personal responsibility.
But having Romney lecture us about paying our fair share of income tax is like having George W. Bush lecture us about serving in the military in a time of war. These guys always act as though we are incapable of Googling them.

Here is a thought experiment: since Bush was working so hard to lower taxes and theoretically (if his rhetoric was true and these were not just tax cuts for the very rich) increasing the number of Americans at the margin who pay no income taxes, are the Republicans trying to increase the number of people who "are not taking personal responsibility or caring for" their life? If the Tea Party gets its way and government is shrunk to as close as zero as they can get it, doesn't that mean that most Americans will turn into deadbeats by Romney's definition of those who pay no taxes?  Is the Tea Party and the GOP therefore promoting irresponsibility?


Here is another thought experiment: if a population ages and a greater proportion is elderly, most of whom pay no income or low income taxes, does this mean that medical advances and the care of our elders create personal responsibility? Is a society with less advanced medical care and no social security or Medicare equivalent more personally responsible therefore? Should a medical researcher be discouraged from developing the next generation of artificial hip or a cancer drug out of fear that such developments are mathematically guaranteed to make the number of irresponsible people not caring for their lives rise, all things being equal?
Ditto for abortion: consider that most terminated pregnancies are unplanned for and unwanted. If forced to bring every pregnancy to term, the resultant children would be much more likely to be poor and a net consumer of federal, state, and local resources. By Mitt's logic, these children are irresponsible and not caring for their lives. So is Mitt Romney making a case for abortion? Or does he think he will encourage a pregnant woman to carry an unintended pregnancy to term by calling her and her child irresponsible and not caring for her life?


But in another setting, Romney tells us that he would have been better off Mexican.  Yes. If he were Mexican and he could find someone like his dad who paid for his private school, tutors, college, law school, and bought his house for him. And if no one discriminated against him along the way or asked to see his papers then got a little trigger happy when he was reaching for them. If he didn't "self deport" out of frustration for Arizona's discriminatory immigration laws White Guy Mitt supports. That sort of thing.

It's a very strange world where someone with ideas so offensive is polling at 45%.

Monday, September 10, 2012

It's amazing that certain people continue to get paid to say such stupid things:

 

Monsieur Robertson, Jesus, if he could be said to have any party affiliation, was a socialist. Religious conservatives are hostile to socialism (and have a soft spot for fascism and militarism) only because of a quirk of recent history. Marx and Engels were indifferent to religion (calling it the opiate of the masses was not a bad thing in an age in which some tincture of opium was in every active medicine) and the communists in Russia, then later China, showed overt hostility, feeling - with some justification - that religion seemed more interested in self-preservation than in progress. But this is a silly, recent quirk; Jesus and Amos and a whole host of Jewish prophets would never have been invited on Fox and Friends for the left-leaning tendencies.

Sunday, September 9, 2012

No Apology: This Book is Terrible - a Review of Romney's Opus for Americanus Terribulus

The first questions begged by this book's title is who is apologizing and who is making the argument that America should not be great.  It's a bit like titling a book, The Case for My Daughter's Being Valedictorian.  What father would not like his daughter to excel and who would make a cogent argument against such excellence?  But greatness of any sort must be earned, not argued for.  I love America, but imagine the Australians, Japanese, and Swiss love their countries also.  What Romney argues in this book is not that America should be great but that it should use its military and economic might to win greatness whether it has earned it or not.
He begins with a quotation from an unlikely source, Dwight Eisenhower, the man who warned us of the dangers of a perpetual war footing that Candidate Romney seems to think is just swell, even coining the phrase "military industrial congressional complex" (he left the congressional part out at the last minute considering it was Congress after all he was going to be giving his warning-laced farewell address to).  "We must be ready to dare all for our country," Ike intones from the frontispiece of Romney's book.  Wow.  Coming from a man who did not even serve in our country's military and who has consistently argued that having to pay 13% or so to his country in taxes is unfair, I can hardly wait for how Romney reconciles the bold words of the Supreme Allied Commander with the comfortable, fabulously wealthy lifestyle of Willard Romney.
We must secure our "freedom, peace, and prosperity" he tells us.  How?  "By strengthening America."  A sentence later he circles back, saying with no more clarity that a strong America will enjoy prosperity following a period of hardship.  He implies we are in a period of hardship as great as the Civil War, World War I or II, and that - perhaps with the help of his book - we can rise up and do it!  What remains unclear, but he spews out these general tautologies with the breathlessness of someone saying Something Really Important.
His idea of hardship sounds almost insulting to Americans struggling to feed children or find healthcare:  pulling weeds on his admittedly "prosperous" estate as a child.  
He borrows from his father's story and grandfather's story, morphing it into his own.  My grandfather left behind his possessions once in Mexico so somehow that should make Mitt understand the middle class today.  My dad made the cover of Time Magazine, turning GM around, so gosh golly that shows that if you trust me, I'll turn America around too.  From what exactly?
Romney launches into a rambling survey of American history.   Ronald Reagan and George H. W. Bush won the cold war, he tells us, ignoring the role played by millions of nonviolent demonstraters who courageously rose up in Eastern Europe and later the Soviet Union without any assistance from us (giving a single rousing speech doesn't count).   He also ignores the role played by the mujahadin, including one Osama bin Laden, in bleeding the Russians dry in Afghanistan and showing the futility of even the mightiest of superpowers against determined Islamic fighters not afraid to die.
Like many people ungraced by military experience, Romney seems to believe military might (or "greatness") is a matter of counting things that go boom.  He is particularly keen on counting boats.  George Washington had few ships; the British had many.  We now have "over one hundred ships" fewer in our navy.  Ipso facto, we must be less great.
A single astonishing paragraph illustrates everything that is wrong with this book and by extension the man trying to sell himself through it.  On page 9, he summarizes the greatest economic expansion in human history that took place under President Clinton (although you would never know it since Romney does not name him) as "in some ways, we advanced as a nation during these years."  But did we really, he asks?  We decreased our military by 400,000 troops, got rid of those ships and "more ominously, we gutted our human intelligence capabilities."  As a former military intelligence officer, this is news to me, unless he is referring to the dozens of Arab linguists fired because they were gay, a policy Romney supported until recently.  Somehow - in the same paragraph! - he goes from this sweeping indictment of our military and intelligence services to a tongue-clucking musing about teen pregnancy, drug use, and pornography.  In the mind of Romney, these are somehow related, as though a sweaty encounter in the backseat of a car is made more likely because we have fewer ships in our fleet.
He dismisses the massive Wall Street-inspired meltdown of 2008 as a "panic" and the modestly increased financial regulation still bogged down in committee or stripped of any real teeth as "intemperate actions."  But maddeningly, as is true throughout the book and the campaign, Romney offers no specifics.  This is barbershop politics, the finger-wagging lament of a wealthy white man who believes he is among friends and can let loose with a tirade of stereotypes - untethered to any real facts - about how the country is going to hell now that a black man runs it.
So what would have Romney have done in 2008 that was not "intemperate" and what evidence does he have that it would have been as successful at stopping the financial implosion then reversing it?  He doesn't say.  He just says it would work, trust him on this one, just like Pop's plan worked at General Motors.
What exactly is he saying in a sentence like this:  "It is time for America to pursue the difficult course ahead, to confront the looming problems, to strengthen the foundations of our prosperity, and to secure the sources of our liberty and safety"?   Good thing Mitt thought of it (whatever it is) and isn't it just awful that the Obama administration (by implication) is doing none of these things, or not doing them effectively?  If you're not asleep by the end of this sentence, you're disappointed to have stayed awake for this pulp.
America is sick, he seems to be saying, so sick that it requires a radical treatment, although he is as vague about this treatment or its probability of success as he is about the diagnosis or why we should abandon the current treatment plan which - although far from perfect - is at least moving in the right direction.
Those on the far right (although Romney was once moderate, he is now courting the far right who dominate the Republican party, so must talk and write like one) have an unenviable problem:  they must make the case that the country is in terrible shape while not appearing to be defeatist or even anti-American.  They must criticize the federal government while making clear that somehow that does not mean that they hate the country of America which by their definition ignores the one out of five Americans working for or supported by the federal government, including the military they profess to love.  They must play up the fact we have not recovered completely from the horrific mess President Obama inherited without reminding voters who created that mess.  They must never mention Bush and hope everyone just forgets that Romney's antidote to what ails us - deregulation and lower taxes - is what got us in this mess in the first place.   Romney also has a far larger philosophical problem that he does not even begin to tackle in this book:  why we should trust a party that alleges government can do nothing right to run said government.

The Poetry of Sarah Palin


Sarah Palin's run-on sentences are longer than mine (but reach no conclusion).  They make excellent poetry however.  Consider the following based on a completely unedited, straight-up Palinism:


My name? Like me -- I had known what I was doing
  by
Sarah Palin

I think
   he diminished himself by
     even mentioning
       my name.
How does he even know
       my name?
I mean
   aren’t these guys
      supposed to be these
         big
         wig elites
            who don’t waste their time on
the little people
        like me --
me
   representing the
      average American who,
   yeah
      I did say
         in Alaska you can see Russia
             from our land
                base and
      I was making
          the point that
             we are strategically located
             on the globe and when it comes to
                   transportation corridors and
                   resources that are
                        shared and
                        fought over [in] Alaska and
      I as the governor
          had known what I was doing in
             dealing with
                 some
                     international issues that
                     had to do with our
                           resources that
                               could
                                  help
                                     secure
                                        the nation.

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