Sunday, November 30, 2008

T-giving weekend update

11-29/30-08—Bill Cosby says comedians need time to develop their Obama routines. “It’s too soon,” he says. “They not finished with the last guy yet.” WSJ W3.

11-29-08--Europe Says Drug Makers Unfairly Block Generics, Driving up Health Costs. NYT B3

11-27-08---A “lack of moderation discernible on all fronts,” is how Dwight D. Eisenhower assessed Sweden in 1960, seeing Scandinavia in general and as a cautionary tale about extended social welfare.

11-27-08—Lawmakers in Baghdad Delay Vote on US Pact. NYT A6

11-27-08—Afghan Leader, Showing Impatience with War, Demands Timetable from NATO NYT A6

November 27, 2008--Randy Scandinavia? A “lack of moderation discernible on all fronts” is how Dwight D. Eisenhower assessed Sweden in 1960, seeing Scandinavia in general as a cautionary tale about extended social welfare. “We don’t sin any more than other people, but we probably sin more openly,” responded an irate Swedish baker, when approached by a journalist. ...As the columnist C. L. Sulzberger observed in The New York Times after Denmark, the most libertine of the Scandinavian constellation, legalized pornography, “There is nothing in the least bit either unwholesome or immoral about the Danes who simply share with Benjamin Franklin, an American never renowned for excessive Puritanism, a belief that honesty is the best policy.”

But calling out American criticism of Scandinavia for its hypocrisy missed one point: to many Americans, procreation aside, sex was supposed to be naughty. Making it wholesome spoiled the fun. Anyone who has had to acclimate to the obligatory nakedness (supposedly for health reasons) of saunas in this part of the world knows that to be true. There is nothing sexy, believe me, I know, about sweating in a small, dark sauna with a half dozen large, middle-aged Germans.

But I digress. ... Now dimly recalled for the censorship ruckus caused by its full-frontal male nudity, “I Am Curious (Yellow)” became the ultimate Scandinavian sex film. Its naked couplings, involving notably ordinary lovers, were punctuated by ponderous disquisitions on Swedish labor law, interviews with Olaf Palme, the Swedish labor minister, and a section with the Soviet poet Yevgeny Yevtushenko. Norman Mailer championed it as “one of the most important pictures.” There you go. Even “Bonanza” was sexier, in retrospect. How did Scandinavia turn from “Maid in Sweden” to Ikea, from the purveyor of earnest free love into the purveyor of affordable love seats, from the home of Christina Lindberg (the maid) into the home of Abba? .... Berge Ragnar Furre, a Norwegian historian, theologian and a politician in the Socialist Left Party, now on the Nobel Committee, offered this thought: “You have to remember that here in Norway we have also had a strong tradition of liberal democracy that is against sexuality, so we are historically divided as a liberal society.” In other words, Norwegians have long split between being sexually liberated and puritanical, while remaining politically liberal in both cases. ....“Suddenly we are very proud of our native prostitutes,” Ms. Mühleisen said, shaking her head. “They’re supposedly cleaner, more law-abiding, they stay out of the tourist center in Oslo. So a whole new discussion about good Norwegian sexuality — which, this being Scandinavia, includes equal rights for women — has arisen in contrast to bad sexuality, which is now the sexuality of the ‘other.’ ” NYTC1, C8

Tuesday, November 25, 2008

Nov. 25, 2008

11-25-08—US Court Allows Abuse Case v. Vatican. The appeals court found that the Vatican may be responsible for policies or directives as they were carried out in the US, and may have affect how abuse complaints were handled. One of the central pieces of evidence in the case is a 1962 memo, issued by the Vatican and unearthed by reporters in 2003, which directs Catholic bishops to keep silent about claims of sex abuse. The document was approved by Pope John the23d. WSJ A4

--While [GWB] administration officials acknowledged that the number of nations supporting the [Iraq] war changed over time, academic researchers say three official [website] lists appear to have been changed, yet retained their original release date, making them appear to be unaltered originals.—NYT A9

Monday, November 24, 2008

catching up

11-23-08—Maybe it won’t be long before some excellent writer undertakes “The Decline and Fall of the American Empire.”—NYT BK 13

11-22-08—New accusations have emerged during the appeal of the bribery conviction of former Gov. Don Siegelman of Alabama that could buttress Democrats’ claims that the case against him was politically tainted....NYT A10

11-21-08—An internal investigation by the CIA has found that the agency withheld crucial information from federal investigators who spent years trying to determine whether CIA officers committed crimes related to the accidental drowning of a missionary plane in Peru in 2001. NYT A6

11-19-08—The ex-head of an EPA probe into BP pipeline spills in Alaska claims the DOJ prematurely shut down the investigation. WSJ, A1

--November 5, 1968. Nixon elected President.

Friday, November 21, 2008

this is why they call them intelligence agencies....

--A new study of the global future by American intelligence agencies [said] “although the United States is likely to remain the single most powerful actor, the United States’ relative strength—even in the military realm—will decline and US leverage will become more constrained... By 2025, it predicted, “the US will find itself as one of a number of important actors on the world stage,” playing “a prominent role in global events” but not a decisive one as in the past. NYT A13

Thursday, November 20, 2008

framboise

November 20, 2008

Sarkozy’s Fiscal Meeting Raises Diplomatic Hackles

WASHINGTON — President Nicolas Sarkozy of France left the summit meeting on the financial crisis here last weekend in a triumphal mood, declaring that it had tamed the animal spirits of American capitalism. Then he went home and announced that he would hold his own summit meeting in a few weeks in Paris — on the same topic.

That has raised hackles in diplomatic circles, not just because the meeting appears to compete with a planned gathering of 20 world leaders next April. Mr. Sarkozy’s aggressive statements have put American officials on edge, with some saying that he seemed determined to turn the global crisis into a referendum on the ills of untrammeled capitalism.

“Sarkozy claimed he put a bell on the American cat,” said Simon Johnson, a former chief economist of the International Monetary Fund. “He said the U.S. had agreed to a whole range of negotiations on regulations. But he didn’t actually come in and negotiate any of these things.”

Making matters worse, Mr. Sarkozy said nothing about his plans to convene a meeting to President Bush or the 18 other leaders while he was here. A senior European diplomat said he found the French proposal “amazing,” while an American official said that that would be a charitable description.

French officials said the gathering on Jan. 8 and 9, which is to be co-hosted by former British Prime Minister Tony Blair, is merely a conference, intended to bring together political leaders and prominent thinkers to discuss issues like globalization and the values of capitalism.

The surfeit of summit meetings reflects what has become a tense trans-Atlantic contest over the global economy. Much of this is posturing by ambitious leaders, but it also reflects a genuine philosophical debate about how best to fix the fractured global markets.

On one side is Mr. Sarkozy, the supercharged French leader, determined to keep the initiative on what many in Europe regard as a long-overdue discussion of the excesses of American-style capitalism.

On the other is Mr. Bush, playing out his final weeks in office but unwilling to allow Europeans, especially the French, to dominate the debate on how to overhaul international financial regulations.

Certainly, the two leaders had sharply different interpretations of what happened at the meeting. Mr. Sarkozy portrayed it as a shift in power, saying, “Europe for the first time expressed its clear determination.” Americans had “never, ever” been willing to negotiate these kinds of regulatory changes, he said.

Mr. Bush agreed that the meeting had been productive. But he noted that the leaders had reaffirmed the value of free markets, free trade and the primacy of national regulation — all hallmarks of American capitalism.

The timing of Mr. Sarkozy’s January meeting has ruffled feathers, even more than its agenda has, because the Group of 20 set out a detailed process to tackle regulatory reform. It assigned working groups to develop proposals on 47 issues, to be taken up later by the leaders, possibly in London.

At that meeting, President-elect Barack Obama will have a seat at the table. Mr. Obama will not, however, be in office during the Paris meeting, ensuring that the participants discuss the future of capitalism when the world’s leading practitioner of it is still in a transition.

Though the Élysée Palace, Mr. Sarkozy’s office, announced the meeting as an international summit, his aides emphasized that it was an informal gathering not connected to the G-20.

Among those planning to attend are two Nobel Prize-winning economists, Joseph E. Stiglitz and Amartya Sen. Mr. Blair is contacting world leaders, aides said, adding that it was too soon to say which ones would attend.

“It’s a joint idea of Tony Blair and Nicolas Sarkozy; they have had it on their minds for a while,” said a French official, who, like other officials, spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak publicly.

Mr. Sarkozy has had many ideas. He proposed last weekend’s meeting, though Mr. Bush rejected his idea to hold the talks in New York. American officials said it was Mr. Bush’s idea to expand the guest list to 20 countries, rather than the usual gathering of 7 or 8.

The common ground between Europe and the United States is greater than these public statements suggest. The United States has shown a willingness to accept regulation of a wide variety of institutions and markets, including credit default swaps — a form of bond insurance — and possibly private equity firms and hedge funds, that are not now regulated.

“People may have been surprised by the U.S. willingness to cooperate on issues,” said David H. McCormick, under secretary of the Treasury for international affairs.

Although the French favor a strong state role in the economy and are partial to regulatory agencies with cross-border authority, they did not propose such measures at the talks here. That was mainly because Britain and Germany had earlier resisted a supranational regulator.

Tuesday, November 18, 2008

mission accomplished, again

11-18-08—Premier of Iraq is quietly firing fraud monitors. US created the posts. Corruption said to soar. –NYT A1 mission accomplished

Monday, November 17, 2008

11-17-08

11-17-08—Those hard dates [in the US pullout agreement from Iraq with Iraq] reflect a significant concession by the departing Bush administration, which had been publicly adverse to timetables. –NYT A1 mission accomplished

--Dan Rather’s lawsuit against CBS, claiming a slanted investigation into his report on President Bush’s National Guard service, seems to have unearthed evidence of political influence. NYT A1, B1 fancy the Bushies trying to politicize something...!...

--“The work of this Congress will be seen as a watershed, where we turned away from the outmoded, Depression-era approach to financial regulation and adopted a framework that will position our financial services industries to be world leaders into the new century.”—Phil Gramm, Dec. 15,2000, NYT A1 short century

--[After National Review columnist Kathleen Parker] wrote in her syndicated column ... arguing that Gov. Palin was unfit to be vice president, Ms. Parker received nearly 11,000 e-mail messages, one of which lamented that her mother did not abort her.—NYT B9 Right wingers carve out special cases exception for abortion

Friday, November 14, 2008

Jan. 21, 2009, Bush et al get their turn...

11-14-08 NYT A10

MADRID — Nearly 20 years after the Salvadoran Army killed six Jesuit priests in one of the most notorious events of El Salvador’s civil war, a criminal complaint filed in the Spanish High Court has revived hopes that those behind the massacre could face trial.

Human rights lawyers filed a complaint on Thursday against the Salvadoran president at the time, Alfredo Cristiani Burkard, and 14 former members of the Salvadoran military, for their roles in the killings of the priests and two female employees, and in the official cover-up that followed. International outrage over the murders proved to be pivotal in sapping American support for United States military assistance to the Salvadoran Army. ...

“The crusading Spanish judge Baltasar Garzón made legal history in 1998 when he secured the arrest in Britain of the Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet using a Spanish legal principle that crimes against humanity can be prosecuted anywhere. General Pinochet narrowly escaped extradition to Spain by pleading ill health. Since then, Spain’s High Court has received cases connected to rights abuses in several countries, including Argentina, Chile and Guatemala.

“It will put pressure on the Salvadoran authorities and remind them that there is an international community out there and they have to respect its norms,” [human rights lawyer Bernabu] said by telephone. Even if the suspects were not extradited, the Spanish case could force a trial in El Salvador, Ms. Bernabeu said. Any prosecution would serve as some form of justice and help strengthen calls for a repeal of the country’s controversial amnesty law, she said. “Remember, Pinochet died a criminal,” she said.

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

11-12-08

11-12-08—Iraq Signs $3.5 billion Deal for China to Develop Oil Field ... the first major oil-development deal that Iraq has made with a foreign company since the American-led invasion of 2003. NYT A10 [and the silly unpatriotic liberals thought this was a war for USA oil companies....]

Tuesday, November 11, 2008

11-11-08

11-11-08--Along the Atlantic Coast, parts of the “suburban South,” notably Virginia and North Carolina, made history last week in breaking from their Confederate past and supporting Mr. Obama. Those states have experienced an influx of better educated and more prosperous voters in recent years, pointing them in a different political direction than states farther west, like Alabama, Arkansas, Louisiana and Mississippi, and Appalachian sections of Kentucky and Tennessee. Southern counties that voted more heavily Republican this year than in 2004 tended to be poorer, less educated and whiter, a statistical analysis by The New York Times shows. Mr. Obama won in only 44 counties in the Appalachian belt, a stretch of 410 counties that runs from New York to Mississippi. Many of those counties, rural and isolated, have been less exposed to the diversity, educational achievement and economic progress experienced by more prosperous areas. NYT A1

--I’m finished with the Reagan Democrats of Macomb County in suburban Detroit....Before the Democratic convention, barely 40 percent of Macomb County voters were “comfortable” with the idea of Mr. Obama as president, far below the number who were comfortable with a nameless Democrat. But on Election Day, nearly 60 percent said they were “comfortable” with Mr. Obama. About the same number said Mr. Obama “shares your values” and “has what it takes to be president.” ... But focusing on the ways that Macomb County has become normal and uninteresting misses the extraordinary changes taking place next door in Oakland County — a place that played a bigger role in Mr. Obama’s success and perhaps in an emerging national Democratic ascendancy. While Macomb County is home to the white middle class that America’s auto industry made possible, Oakland County is home to the affluent, business-oriented suburbanites of Birmingham and Bloomfield Hills, some of the richest townships in America. Just a quarter of Macomb County residents have college degrees, but more than 40 percent do in Oakland. ... On Tuesday, Oakland County voters gave Mr. Obama a 57 percent to 42 percent victory over John McCain — those 15 points translated into an astonishing 96,000-vote margin. That helped form one of the most important new national changes in the electorate: Mr. Obama built up striking dominance in the country’s growing, more diverse and well-educated suburbs.—Stanley Greenberg A25

---A long standing tradition at Goshen [Indiana] College draw national attention Monday when a conservative radio show questioned the school’s practice of not playing the national anthem at sporting events. ... Bill Born, vice president of student life at the school, told Gallaher that not playing the national anthem was part of the college’s Mennonite and pacifist tradition. SBT A1

Monday, November 10, 2008

rust never sleeps

11-10-08--The encomiums greeting Barack Obama’s victory last week presented a reverse image of the darts for John Kerry after his 2004 defeat. But Kerry campaign veterans could not help noticing a surprise in the returns. In the battleground state of Ohio, where Mr. Kerry lost the presidency to George W. Bush, the 2.74 million votes he received almost precisely matched Mr. Obama’s 2008 total. Mr. Obama won because John McCain received 300,000 fewer votes than Mr. Bush did. That points to a cautionary reminder for Mr. Obama and his team: the election turned partly on what they did right, but also on what Republicans did wrong. And there is no assurance that Democrats will confront a similarly star-crossed opposition in elections to come.

“We should be confident, but not cocky,” said Donald Fowler of South Carolina, a former national Democratic Party chairman. “Several things that worked against them in this campaign could change quickly.” Among them, Mr. Fowler said of the deeply unpopular Republican incumbent in the White House, “Bush is going to disappear.” Mr. Obama, a senator from Illinois, inarguably fashioned an impressive victory for any Democrat, much less the first black nominee in American history. His 52 percent share of the popular vote exceeded that of any Democratic candidate since Lyndon B. Johnson in 1964 — and topped Ronald Reagan’s 1980 majority against Jimmy Carter. With breakthroughs in the South, Midwest and Mountain West, Mr. Obama captured at least nine states carried by Mr. Bush in 2004, with the outcome in Missouri still unclear. Yet the record-shattering turnout that some observers predicted appears not to have materialized. Curtis Gans of the Committee for the Study of the American Electorate projects that, when outstanding votes are tallied, the number of Americans casting ballots will fall short of the 130-million floor predicted by the McCain and Obama campaigns. Mr. Gans ascribes that shortfall in part to diminished Republican fervor — a “demobilization” that created political openings for Mr. Obama’s disciplined campaign organization. The reasons for that begin with Mr. Bush’s political infirmity, but they do not end there. Lacking a deep wellspring of support among conservative party regulars, Mr. McCain courted them to win the Republican nomination — in the process weakening his once-formidable standing among independents. He sought to appeal to both factions with his selection of Gov. Sarah Palin of Alaska, and saw most Americans deem her unqualified for the presidency. The campaign’s unalloyed appeals to cultural populism drove well-educated, high-income voters to the Democratic ticket. Meantime, disarray among Congressional Republicans over the financial bailout package in September compounded injuries Republicans suffered throughout Mr. Bush’s second term to their reputation for pragmatism and competence. Democrats “benefited greatly from tapping into voters’ frustrations about a very badly damaged Republican brand,” said Mr. McCain’s political director NYT A17

Sunday, November 9, 2008

kiss and make up

Nov. 9, 2008--That whole anti-American, friend-to-the-terrorists thing about President-elect Barack Obama? Never mind.

Just a few weeks ago, at the height of the campaign, Representative Michele Bachmann of Minnesota told Chris Matthews of MSNBC that, when it came to Mr. Obama, “I’m very concerned that he may have anti-American views.”

But there she was on Wednesday, after narrowly escaping defeat because of those comments, saying she was “extremely grateful that we have an African-American who has won this year.” Ms. Bachmann, a Republican, called Mr. Obama’s victory, which included her state, “a tremendous signal we sent.”

Friday, November 7, 2008

election aftermath

Nov. 7, 2008--

“The single most important thing that Congress can do right now is create universal voter registration, which would mean that all eligible voters are automatically registered,” said Rosemary E. Rodriguez, the chairwoman of the federal Election Assistance Commission, which oversees voting. “We also saw incredible success with early voting, and requiring states to adopt it would help as well.”

Ms. Rodriguez said universal registration would reduce the dependence on third-party groups like Acorn to sign up people and would remove the impetus for much of the pre-election litigation over who should be allowed to register.

Congress is already discussing the adoption of early voting nationwide. It now exists in 32 states in various forms.

A bill to do so was drafted last year by Senator Dianne Feinstein, Democrat of California, and its co-sponsors included Senator Barack Obama, Democrat of Illinois. The bill was tabled after receiving little support from Congressional Republicans but is likely to have a better chance next year when Democrats hold expanded majorities on Capitol Hill and Mr. Obama is president.

NYT A1, A21

Thursday, November 6, 2008

Nov. 6, 2008

Nov. 6, 2008—The ugly American that everybody was sick of has turned into an amicable, open-minded citizen of the world.—Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, NYT A13

--Election monitors from a European-rights watchdog organization say Tuesday’s elections met acceptable democratic standards. The Organization for Security and cooperation in Europe says, however, that US authorities should fix some flaws in its election system. SBT A3

Monday, November 3, 2008

weekend update, Nov. 1/2, 2008

Nov. 1/2, 2008—Many young workers [in Japan] are shunning choice promotions—even foregoing raises—in favor of humdrum jobs with minimal responsibilities. ... Employment experts have begun to call these workers hodo-hodo zoku, or the “so-so folks.” ... Chiaki Arai, who has written about the hodo-hodo phenomenon in newspapers, blames Japan’s economic woes during the long slump in the 1990s and early 200s. He says young workers saw older generations throw themselves into their work, only to face job and pay cuts as companies restructured. Now, young employees are cautious about giving too much of themselves—even it it means less money or prestige, Dr. Arai says... Dai-ichi Mutual Life Insurance Co. is finding it so hard to identify managerial candidates that it has turned to the clerical workers it calls office e ladies to fill positions. ... Law firms say the trend has companies seeking legal counsel on whether they can fire employees who refuse promotions. WSJ A1. A

--Many of the roughly 3000 political appointees of President George W. Bush are beating the bushes harder than expected for post-election employment. WSJ A3