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    « December 9, 2007 - December 15, 2007 | Main | December 23, 2007 - December 29, 2007 »

    December 16, 2007 - December 22, 2007

    December 19, 2007

    The Energy Fraud of 2007

    Pelosi_and_reid_as_cheese_eating_su The Democratic Congress labored mightily, they said, all through 2007, and they brought forth...this?

    No new efficiency standards before 2020? A huge subsidy for ethanol, guaranteeing higher fuel prices? No breaks for alternative energy, and the tax breaks for oil stay in place?

    Really? Well, if that's a War Against Oil, I got some waterfront property here in Atlanta to offer you. Trouble is, by 2020 it might just BE waterfront property, only sitting in a desert, and filled to the rim with refugees from what used to be Florida, and New York City, and 10,000 other places.

    The only thing worse than this so-called energy bill is the self-congratulatory nonsense spouted by the Democratic "leadership" on its behalf.

    Memo to Harry Reid, Nancy Pelosi, and Steny Hoyer. See you in hell, man. No, I mean that literally. Because that's what you're turning the whole planet into with this piece of garbage.

    The Arctic ice cap is melting even faster than Al Gore warned it would. The Himlalayas may be glacier-free within a decade. Need a Clue what that means to the ocean level? It'll be on your front porch by 2015, Nancy, and over Steny's head a few years after that. Good luck finding a new place.

    Continue reading "The Energy Fraud of 2007" »

    The Populists of 2008

    Williamjenningsbryan1 The run-up to Iowa is revealing a single trend in both parties.

    The rise of populism.

    Populism lets you draw a direct line through the rise of Mike Huckabee, Ron Paul, John Edwards and (to an extent) Barack Obama. Both parties are flirting with Populism today to a greater extent than ever before, and for the same reason.

    It's the economy, stupid. (Right, William Jennings Bryan.)

    The shorthand way Washington Villagers will explain this is that Huckabee represents religious populism, Edwards economic populism and Paul libertarian populism. That's wrong. Huckabee carries an economic message as well, Edwards carries a libertarian message, and Paul is perfectly willing to see a theocracy if that's what floats America's boat.

    Mike_huckabee They resonate because America has seen a succession of Populist uprisings at every time of political crisis. The Abolitionists of the 1850s were religious populists. The actual Populist Party reached its peak of electoral influence in the 1890s. Franklin Roosevelt won with the support of the Populists. George Wallace was a Populist.

    Populism is a broad term, often difficult to define, but generally reflects a distrust of central authority, and a call for power to be given to the people, taken away from the central government. Its origins can be traced back to the first two crises in American political history -- the contested 1800 election of Thomas Jefferson and the stolen 1824 election which fueled the rise of Andrew Jackson and the creation of the Democratic Party. Both men sounded populist themes, Jefferson the yeoman farmer and Jackson the idealized frontiersman. Both based their success on organizing people around their myths and values.

    Populism is the real American political religion. No matter what we actually believe, or what we actually do, we tend to cloak ourselves in the guise of Populism, if only rhetorically. This makes the real thing tough to detect.

    So what's the key to discerning the real thing?

    Continue reading "The Populists of 2008" »

    December 18, 2007

    Ignored in the Big Shitpile

    Mr_housing_bubble There are three big problems, laid on top of one another, in the financial mess known as the Big Shitpile:

    1. Bad loans were mixed with good ones and sold as securities, even options.
    2. Millions of adjustable rate mortgages are re-setting to higher rates over the next three years.
    3. Homes are priced at twice their value.

    There are a lot of "solutions" being proposed by both parties for the first two problems. (Picture from Bayareahousingbubble.)

    No one is even talking about the third, because its implications are too massive to contemplate.

    But this is the stark reality. What we're reading now, even the pessimists' argument, is not yet even realistic.

    When any bubble bursts, the actual value of things gets cut in half. Usually it over-shoots this mark, then it resettles at the halfway line and starts proceeding upward again, slowly.

    • This is what happened to the NASDAQ after the tech bubble burst. It fell from 5,000 to under 2,000, but now trades at around 2,600.
    • This is what happened to the Japanese stock market after it peaked in 1987 at around 37,000. It now trades at about half that value, and investors are happy to be there.

    This is also what happened in the 1970s, the last time we had a housing crash. Homebuilding stopped in most markets -- at least those outside the oil patch. The price you could get for an existing home fell to much less than its replacement cost, and stayed there. Renting made sense.

    That is where the U.S. housing market is headed. That's where it has to be headed in order to regain free market equilibrium. That's the way markets operate.

    But you'd never know that from the nonsense being proposed right now:

    Continue reading "Ignored in the Big Shitpile" »

    December 17, 2007

    Awakening the Netroots

    Nancy_pelosi_and_steny_hoyer_dancin Perhaps nothing illustrates the impact of Howard Dean's achievements than the caving of his party's Congressional wing this month.

    It's the reaction to them that's important.

    The FISA filibuster and the Bush Christmas Present Budget are angering the Netroots and, hopefully, re-energizing them.

    It's a cold slap in the face, one that's overdue.

    It's one thing to build a party, or a movement, as Kos has done. It's quite another to see that movement directed toward a goal, and directed toward actively confronting a party, really taking it over. That was the lesson Howard Dean himself tried to teach before becoming DNC chair, when he formed Democracy for America.

    That's now taking place. The anger over at DailyKos, at Americablog, at Firedoglake, and elsewhere in the Netroots over what is happening now is palpable.  For much of 2007 netroots bloggers were, when outraged, mainly outraged at President Bush. They cut their own party's leaders considerable slack.

    No more. I hope, and expect, that the result of this anger will be a growing sophistication on the part of Netroots activists and a growing number of Netroots-inspired primary challenges, such as those now going on in Illinois and Maryland.

    We don't just need more Democrats. We need better Democrats.

    Continue reading "Awakening the Netroots" »

    We're All Deaniacs Now

    Howard_dean_at_caldem_speech_2003 In about three months we'll come up on a fascinating anniversary which few in the press will mention. (Image from Rantical.)

    On March 22, it will have been five years since Howard Dean's "democratic wing of the Democratic Party" speech.

    It's an important event when you compare where we are now to where we were then.

    In March 2003 Democrats were in disarray, the base hopelessly divided from the party's center. Today it's Republicans who are in disarray, the base spinning off in all directions from the party's center.

    Dean's speech crystallized, in just 20 minutes, the themes that now animate the majority of Americans:

    • Ending the war.
    • Balancing the budget.
    • Health insurance for everyone.
    • Caring for the needy.

    Dean laid out other markers on that day. A desire to re-animate young voters. A call to conservation and the environment. The 50-state strategy. Absolute inclusiveness. Intellectual honesty and consistency. Honest government.

    Continue reading "We're All Deaniacs Now" »

    December 16, 2007

    It's 1938 Over Here

    Neville_chamberlain_munich_agreemen I often decry the call of "Munich" on foreign policy. It's not 1938. Our foreign enemies are not Hitler. They don't have his kind of power, and don't pose his kind of threat.

    But domestically, it has been 1938 in this country for a long time, and most Democrats have been Neville Chamberlain before it.

    They constantly assume goodwill toward democracy, and to the basic rights of a free society, which Bush, Cheney, and their whole crowd do not share. The Administration uses this assumption of goodwill against them in ways large and small, in their ruthless campaign for absolute power -- not just political power, but personal power, financial power, and judicial power.

    It's only the DFHs of the Netroots, the ones called "extreme" by the mainstream press, who are playing Churchill here. They seem easy to dismiss. In the short run, they are. If these people had realized earlier this year they were, in fact, the majority, as they claimed they were, they wouldn't be in this mess.

    But let me leave the financial scandals, the power grabs, the planetary destruction and the sick foreign policy for a moment. Let's talk about this in terms of something I know well, the Internet.

    Continue reading "It's 1938 Over Here" »

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