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~ covering government and politics in Missouri – since 2007

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Monthly Archives: August 2009

Having your say about wind energy

28 Friday Aug 2009

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

aces, McCaskill, missouri, REPOWER

Here’s some excellent news:

TARKIO, Mo. — A national survey of wind energy says Missouri added the third-highest amount of wind farm capacity in the nation during the second quarter of the year.

The American Wind Energy Association said Tuesday that the completion of the Farmers City wind farm near Tarkio in northwest Missouri added 146 megawatts of wind energy capacity. That brings the state’s total capacity to 306 megawatts.

The 90 percent increase in capacity was the largest jump among [sic] any state the nation, the association said.

And here’s how to put that news to good use. Repower America has a phone line set up where you can leave a message for Senator McCaskill. Just call 1-877-9REPOWER (737-6937). The automated voice will ask you for your zip code, offer some generic advice on properly identifying yourself in your message, and then let say what you have to say to her. Every day, the messages for that day are delivered to Claire.

We need to keep the pressure on Claire because she’s a weak link as far as keeping ACES (clean energy legislation) from being watered down. In late June, she tweeted: “I hope we can fix cap and trade so it doesn’t unfairly punish businesses and families in coal dependent states like Missouri.”

She was wrong to believe that the legislation unfairly punishes coal dependent states, and perhaps you’d want to stress that to her. She can’t hear it too many times.

Listen, the flat earthers will shout their fears at her, and they’ve got the money for a megaphone the size of Kansas. That’s another fact you might see fit to mention to our junior senator, namely that the opposition is funded by big oil. Mark Twain said, “Tell me where a man gets his corn pone, and I’ll tell you what his ‘pinions is.” Well, the opposition is getting its corn pone from Saudi Arabia. The rest of us think we ought to get it from Missouri wind mills.

Bond torture

28 Friday Aug 2009

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

http://c.brightcove.com/services/viewer/federated_f9/14599856001?isVid=1&publisherID=14494319001

Senator Claire McCaskill (D): health care town hall in Warrensburg – press conference

28 Friday Aug 2009

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

Claire McCaskill, health care reform, missouri, press conference, town hall, Warrensburg

Our previous coverage of the Warrensburg health care reform town hall on Wednesday morning:

Senator Claire McCaskill (D) – health care town hall – Warrensburg

The press conference was held immediately after the town hall:

….Question: You were very harsh on the Bush administration and Republicans in general in this town hall session. And of the four I’ve heard this is probably some of the most partisan remarks you made about the, the fiscal condition of federal government after the Bush presidency and the Republican majority. Is that any way to get things done?

Senator Claire McCaskill: No, I, I did in this one which I did in Kansas City. I talked about Medicare D. And how Medicare D was passed and how many of the things that are embraced by Medicare D should be very troubling to people who are opposing this health care reform. And I may have mentioned that that happened under that administration, but in every time I’ve mentioned it I’ve said it happened, you know, under the last administration. So, I’ve talked about Medicare D specifically and I think generally that has been the only time I’ve talked in any way partisan and also talkin’ about the amendment process.  [crosstalk] I talked about that]…

…Question: No, no, you were much more spicey today than I’ve [crosstalk]…

Senator McCaskill: You just missed me.

Question: Huh.

Senator McCaskill: I, I [crosstalk]…

Question: No, you know, I was there. I’ve heard Hannibal, I’ve heard Moberly, you did, you weren’t ripping them they way you were today.

Senator McCaskill: I don’t think I ripped anything. I talked about the, the amendment process and how many Republican amendments were offered and accepted. And the fact that none of them voted for it. But, this, you know, and I also talked about the last ten years today. I didn’t just talk about the last eight, I talked about the last ten. We have a deficit problem in this country that didn’t happen yesterday. It happened over a long period of time. It, it doesn’t help to point fingers, it doesn’t help to get wildly partisan, but I think it’s important for Americans to remember that it’s a long, it was a long time in coming that we got here and we’ve got to be more disciplined and move forward. But it is frustrating for me when I have watched Republican members of, of the Senate spend like there’s no tomorrow and all of a sudden they’re trying to whitewash themselves with this – I’m a fiscal conservative. And it’s frustrating and, and there are times that that feeling comes out. Maybe it came out a little bit too much today.

Question: You talked about fear and how people are afraid. And how does fear play into this health car system, the health care plan?

Senator McCaskill: Well, I think people are afraid they’re gonna lose their coverage and if they can’t afford their coverage, but they’re also afraid of the unknown. It’s like that old saying that the devil you know was devil than the devil you don’t know. And I think that what happened, the President wanted these bills to be grown organically in Congress. He wanted Congress to grow them and try to reach compromises. He didn’t start with, “This is my way, or the highway.” And when he did that it created a vacuum. And a lot of misinformation filled that vacuum. The, the opponents got out there with facts that were wildly off the mark, that were just big old whopper lies that were being told. So I think to some extent those who want and need reform were on defense for a little bit. I think now that, that tide has turned again. This is the second health care town hall in a row I’ve had where clearly the people who want reform outnumbered those who didn’t.

Question: Why do you,  why do you think that is? Is that, say, go back and compare with Hillsboro, that, is there a fatigue here? Is there fear fatigue or, I mean, are people just getting tired of, of yelling at, at lawmakers?

Senator McCaskill:  I think, by and large, most Missourians are pretty well mannered. I think, by and large, the proponents of health care reform had been sitting on the sidelines. And then all of a sudden, you know, because it was raucous and conflict and the last time I looked you guys liked that stuff, it got a lot of coverage because it was good visuals and it was different and it was big crowds. So all of a sudden everybody sittin’ at home who wanted health care reform go wait a minute, we, we want health care reform. And I think they’ve woken up now. I think they’re showing up. I think they’re getting more engaged. And I think it, it, I will be surprised if we don’t continue to see, I think there’ll be town halls that’ll be pretty rough, depending on where we are. But, it was interesting to me here in Warrensburg, I wasn’t shocked in Kansas City where you have a, it’s generally a more Democratic area of the state. But, today was, I thought was interesting that, that the proponents outweighed the opponents [crosstalk] [inaudible]…

Question: Well, it seemed more fifty fifty.

[Note: In my observation of the entire event I believe Senator McCaskill’s characterization of the makeup of the crowd was more accurate than the Kansas City television reporter’s.]

Staffer: Senator, [inaudible] take questions from a print reporter as well?

Senator McCaskill:  Yeah.

Question: Okay, I just was wondering whether you felt that the, that any minds are being changed at these forums. Now, you’re talking about people who are coming in with, I think they’ve already got a mindset. But, you feel the forums are doing anything to change minds?

Senator McCaskill:  I don’t know how many minds, I think the vast majority of people who come to these have, feel very strongly one way or the other. I don’t think these are a forum where a lot of undecided voters come. There may be a few. But it’s, doesn’t mean we shouldn’t do ’em, because I think I owe the people of the state an opportunity to come out, ask questions, make comments,. I think I need to be respectful of them. So, just because people have already made up their minds I don’t think that’s any excuse not to have these town hall forums all over the state which we have done and will continue to do.

Question: So when you go back to Washington then, knowing that not a lot of minds have been changed coming out here I would guess, and I would think the same in terms of the Senate and the House, what do you think the odds are of actually getting health care legislation passed this year?

Senator McCaskill: I think something will get passed. I think it remains to see, be seen what the details will be. I think there is broad based support for some parts of this health care reform agenda. And I’m confident that some of that will get done. I think what remains to be seen is what, whether or not we get any kind of public option or a, a government sponsored co-op, or not for profit that is part of the equation. That is really one of the most controversial parts of the bill and I think it’s too early to tell yet how that will turn out.

Question: Senator, you’ve been holding several of these forums across the state now. When you do go back to Washington what is the main thing that you’re going to take away, or take back with you? Is there, you know, a specific issue or concern that you’ve heard voiced several times that, you know, just kind of at this stage what you’re taking back?

Senator McCaskill: Well one of the things I’m gonna do, I really am gonna start working on a broad based effort to change the way we write bills so that they’re more easily understood. That’s a really legitimate and valid criticism. People who want to read the bills ought to be
able to understand what they’re reading. And, you know, I, I certainly have learned a lot from doctors. I learned at Children’s Mercy a lot yesterday. I ,I’ve got three or four meetings with doctor’s groups tomorrow. And nurses, I’ve talked to a lot of nurse practitioners about their frustrations. So, you know, these, this is, this, I’m getting good information about where the problems are now and possibly where some of the solutions are. So, it, it’s definitely helpful. Definitely helpful. And I also understand how strongly some people feel about this on both sides. ‘Kay? All right?

Staffer: Thanks everyone….

[Note: Another reporter asked a question and Senator McCaskill stayed to answer.]

…Question: ….the, the tide, tide’s turning at some of these?

Senator McCaskill: I don’t know that the tide is turning. It’s not a tide so much. It’s that it appears to me that a lot of people who felt strongly in favor of health care reform had the attitude at the beginning of this process, “Well we won the election, we control the Senate and the House, this is gonna happen.” And then they realized that there was really strong, strident opposition that [crosstalk] was going to work very hard…

Question: Were they complacent in your mind?

Senator McCaskill: I, I think they may have been more laid back. I don’t think complacent is a word I’d use. I, they just weren’t, they weren’t on the edge of their couch and worried about trying to help and make their opinions shown. We’ve seen a shift in our mail, we’ve seen a little bit of a shift in our phone calls, and we, I’ve seen a little bit of shift in, in the tenor of these meetings. I don’t, they’re not as many people that are willing to interrupt and be rude as there were a week and a half ago…

"We're going to win this… but we can't do it without you"

27 Thursday Aug 2009

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ 2 Comments

To make sure a good health care reform bill passes, with a real robust public option and regulation of the insurance industry, it’s not enough to elect the right people and hope they’ll make good decisions. In the finale of this speech delivered on a table top in Pittsburgh during the Netroots Nation convention, Howard Dean reminds us of where the battle lines are drawn and what we have to do:

The tide is turning, folks – only you can keep it going. You can start by showing up on Sunday evening. Here’s Glenn Burleigh’s reminder:

Well, now it’s time to show what the Pro-Reform side can do, and we need everyone to come out to this Sunday’s Organizing For America/Health Care for America Now! event.  Organizing For America’s healthcare reform bus tour stops in St. Louis, this Sunday, and we need to show up in big numbers.  If we show up with close to a thousand supporters, we will have changed the media narrative.  Already, we have seen our side match or exceed the right’s presence at this week’s townhalls.  While this is great news, we need to prove that we can come together ourselves, and not just to protect Democratic politicians.

Send out emails, call friends, give neighbors rides to the event, whatever it takes.  Congress is going back into session and we need the narrative to be that while the teabaggers caught us offguard, we have rallied and reclaimed the momentum, and we are demanding real healthcare reform, with a strong public option!

What: Rally for the Passage of Healthcare Reform (HB 3200)

Why: Because the Real Majority Stands with the President

Where: IBEW Local 1 Union Hall, 5850 Elizabeth (one block east of Hampton)

When: This Sunday, August 30th at 7pm

Open or closed health care town halls? Easy answer: *IOKIYAR

27 Thursday Aug 2009

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

Claire McCaskill, health care reform, John McCain, Kansas City, Kit Bond, missouri, Mitch McConnel, town hall

Our friends at Fired Up are reporting:

Bond, McConnell & McCain Holding Private “Health Care Reform Forum” Monday in Kansas City

Monday, Senators Kit Bond, Minority Leader Mitch McConnell and John McCain will be the featured guests at a “Health Care Reform Forum” at Children’s Mercy Hospital in Kansas City.

The 75-100 guests invited to the event have reportedly been “hand-picked” by Bond’s office to hear about Republican plans for obstructing real health care reform.

The forum is closed to the public.

Heh. Maybe they’re afraid the great unwashed would try to hold them accountable for Medicare Part D.

It’s one thing to not do town halls because they’ve been going badly, it’s quite another to hold a fake one and hand pick your crowd.

*it’s okay if you’re a republican

Astroturf Petroleum Energy Rally Comes to Saint Louis

27 Thursday Aug 2009

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

American Petroleum Institute, Astroturf, Climate Change Legislation, energy

Earlier today I headed down to the “Energy Citizens’ Rally” that Sean mentioned yesterday. The American Petroleum Institute has put together multistate campaign against climate change legislation and a new clean energy policy.  API has also hired local oil industry lobbyists to organize rallies by bussing in employees from local oil and gas companies and their contractors. St. Louis’ rally was no different – organizer Ryan Rowden is a registered lobbyist for the Missouri Petroleum Council.

I arrived at approximately 11:45 – doors were supposed to open at 11:30. Although I imagined that meant the program wouldn’t start until sometime after noon, FreedomWorks promised free hamburgers and hot dogs to attendees, and I wasn’t about to pass that up. But when I walked into the hotel (yes, the “grassroots” rally was held in a hotel ballroom) I didn’t see anyone at all. A quick walk through the main floor of the hotel revealed nothing, but then I noticed a herd of people in matching yellow shirts pouring through a side door, where helpful staffers were directing them up a set of stairs. I pushed past them outside, and sure enough, two busloads of employees with yellow “I’m an Energy Citizen” T-shirts in their hands or worn over their work clothes were emptying onto the street.

I took this video clip, attempting to look like a tourist trying to get past the buses to film the Arch and the Old Courthouse. Notice the yellow shirts in hand, the staffers directing people to go in and take the escalator.

Unfortunately, one of the staffers noticed me filming and notified me that he had told security what I was doing and that I would not be allowed into the building because I seemed like I wanted to disrupt the rally. I protested that I was just curious about what was going on, but he repeated that I would not be allowed in. I suppose the only images they want coming out of these rallies are tightly controlled interviews with oil and coal industry workers after a captive propaganda session.

Thus ended my foray into the bizarre world of hotel ballroom astroturf rallies with energy employees and their bosses. And I didn’t even get a hamburger.

Does Mackey deserve push back?

27 Thursday Aug 2009

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

CEO of Whole Foods, John Mackey, missouri

Update: Tea partiers are staging a “buycott” Tuesday evening at Whole Foods. Dana Loesch is urging her followers to buy their week’s groceries there. Heh. They’ll take a look at the receipt, gasp, and go back to Shop n Save the next week.

WillyK had some reservations about pressuring Whole Foods CEO John Mackey to stop using his position to speak out against health care reform:

Just occurred to me that an analogous situation was that of the Dixie Chicks, the singing group who had the guts to speak out about against the Iraq war and Bush’s excesses and suffered financially for it — just as Mackey serves a largely liberal group, these country singers were dependent on the fringer-land for their livelihood and they suffered for being out front about their beliefs. Certainly the boycott of their records (and the CD-burning, etc. parties) had the effect of intimidating free speech.

I would feel differently if Mackey were funding astroturf organizations or otherwise using Whole Food profits to organize against healthcare.  I am not too outraged that he says what he thinks and that it is bunkum.

Good argument, Willy, but I still don’t have a problem with the demonstrations that United Food and Commercial Workers have been organizing nationwide. Even if this were a call to boycott–which it wasn’t–I’d just say that when a commercial entity knowingly offends a large portion of its customers, it shouldn’t be surprised if consequences follow. I was sorry to see the Dixie Chicks suffer. In fact, I bought one of their CDs in direct response to that. But so it goes. Just call me a free marketer.

In fact, though, yesterday’s rally wasn’t a call to boycott or a call for Whole Foods to fire Mackey. It was just push back, which is little enough considering his simple minded assertion that people could skip health care and just buy healthy foods from his stores instead. I don’t have the kind of pull it takes to get an op ed piece published at the WSJ, so I support this small attempt to let Mackey and his employers know how insulted we feel. Oddly enough, the signs weren’t about him. They were signs in support of health care reform. Only one demonstrator (a “wise Latina woman”) mentioned Mackey:

The demonstrators, 25 or 30 of them, fanned out along the sidewalk on busy Brentwood Boulevard in St. Louis, and got lots of honks for their pro-health care reform signs. (Those yellow t-shirts and striped umbrellas belong to UFCW members.)

Another good reason to put Mackey and Whole Foods on the hot seat is that the company has taken pride in its social consciousness, but the public might be less enchanted with the corporation’s benevolence if people had a few more facts about its behavior.

Mackey has said he believes workers should have the right to unionize, but when workers at two stores voted a union in, he went into full court press to stop the unions. It was the whole nine yards. For example, at a Madison, Wisconsin store that voted to unionize, the company tried unsuccessfully to subpoena Yahoo! for the e-mail records of the union organizing committee members. It tried, again unsuccessfully, to convince a judge that workers hired on at Whole Foods just to start organizing a union, with the ultimate intention of quitting as soon as they succeeded. The company fired two pro-union workers because one of them mistakenly made a deli drink with skim milk instead of soy. Instead of throwing it away, the worker gave it to a co-worker to drink. Once the union was actually certified, Whole Foods dragged its feet on negotiating sessions, sometimes canceling them, in order to prevent reaching a contract within a year, when it could legally petition to decertify the union.

In fact, Whole Foods, along with Starbucks and Costco, are lobbying to weaken the Employee Free Choice Act. Besides card check, the legislation would currently penalize employers who … wait for it … dragged their feet on negotiations.

Well, well.

I didn’t object to UFCW campaigns to make the populace aware of Wal-Mart’s sins, and although Whole Foods is wa-a-y better than Wal-Mart, that’s not necessarily saying a whole lot. Mackey and Whole Foods (as he runs it) deserve some bad publicity, and I’m here to offer it. I shop there, and because they offer items I can’t easily find elsewhere, I will continue to do so. But that doesn’t mean I can’t publicly shake a finger at them for their bad behavior.

And they may lose some business over this kind of publicity. Fair enough, say I.

"the conversation ends in a conspiracy against the public"

27 Thursday Aug 2009

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

Dear Family, Friends and Folks,

I don’t normally put a whole cross-posting on my blog, but will make an exception this time with an op-ed Ed Pearl forwarded along to me.

A great read below by Robert Freeman reminded me of an important trend I learned about years ago.  The pivotal work, the documentary feature film “The Corporation”, lays out an important milestone statistic in modern history’s timeline. If Multi-National Corporations, as economic actors, could be considered as separate economies alongside national economies, we have passed a tipping point in the balance of power between governments and multi-nationals.

Out of the top 100 economies in the world, today, 52 are transnational corporations. And these economic super-citizens reside above the fray of sovereign nations and play in all the national political systems below them, meanwhile the people, by and large, do not have any means for decent representation on that over-arching field of “globalization”.

This is the real driving force behind our political woes, that these behemoth institutions and their agents, due to executive “fiduciary responsibilities” and contractual severance packages / performance clauses, must attack all openings for increasing profits and market share.

That puts our representative democracy #1 on the target list.

Economist Adam Smith, in his much-heralded work “Wealth of Nations”, foreshadowed corporate collusion and profiteering,

People of the same trade seldom meet together, even for merriment and diversion, but the conversation ends in a conspiracy against the public, or in some contrivance to raise prices.

Coercing, manipulating and buying legislation to change the rules of the market, or garner massive subsidies and contracts, are an easy way to expand profits or reduce liabilities by externalizing the cost of doing business onto tax-payers’ shoulders; as opposed to old fashioned hard work, like, creating a product or service and bringing it to market to compete with other products or services — that’s sooo passe these days, isn’t it?.  It’s my contention that we have two forms of Capitalism afoot, one that is productive and another, parasitic and viral.

As Robert Freeman below shows, the current free market alternatives, debated by the tea-baggers and Michael Steele et al, are a ruse and red herring. Largely, the only real market forces allowed to flourish and perpetuate today are ones in which workers and corporate drones compete with one another to pay tribute and satisfy, as FDR put it, the “economic royalists”, their corporate feudal masters. This is the state of our nation and world today. In the US, workers deathly afraid of getting laid off because they lose their health care and become much more vulnerable.  When fear and stress have been identified as contributing factors in illness and disease, having our workforce in a state of fear of becoming sick and being sent to the poor house is, well, not a healthy way to go.

Granted there is a lot of overlap between the agendas of Multi-Nationals and the Nations beneath them, or even the Consumers (“human beings”) making up the grassroots of our socio-economic landscape. In other words, some positive things do occur, beneficial products get made, medical breakthroughs delivered and services provided, etc. But when it is increasingly difficult for common sense to even be recognized as such in our political system — remember single-payer the only real viable solution to our health care crisis, was and still is, a non-starter — there has to be concrete reasons for rationale and logic to be locked out of the process.

Successfully countering the modern myth of free markets will be one way to begin to restore some balance and sanity to our current economic system, to help create a mutually beneficial relationship between Multi-National Corporations, Consumers (“human beings”) and the referees of the economic playing field, our National and State governments.

In your service,

Byron DeLear

The Debilitating Myth of the ‘Free Market’ Alternative

by Robert Freeman

Common Dreams: 8/24/09

When choosing a pet, do you prefer unicorns or bunnies?  I prefer unicorns because, though bunnies are undeniably snuggly, unicorns have a much better color.  That lustrous pink fur beats out dull brown every time.  And if you can get one with wings – well, how can floppy ears compete with that?  It isn’t even close, is it?

This is something like what the healthcare debate is about.  It’s not about real alternatives.  Rather, it’s about the choice between a realistic alternative that can actually extend coverage while lowering costs – the public option – and a fantasy: the “free market” option.

And health care is only the most readily available of industries that illustrate our fatal fetishistic fixation with the “free market” myth.  Our thrall to that myth makes it impossible to have a rational debate about almost any economic issue.  For vast swaths of the U.S. and global economies bear as much resemblance to “free markets” as do unicorns to real pets.

There is, for example, no free market in health care.  Most markets for health insurance in the U.S. are dominated by one or two players.  They easily collude to keep prices high, choices low, payouts at a minimum, and new competitors from entering.  This is exactly what both common sense and economic theory would predict when few firms dominate a market.  Economists call it “oligopoly.”

Hospitals operate as oligopolists as well.  I live in a small town in California.  It doesn’t matter to me that there are many thousands of hospitals across the country.  The “relevant” market for my health care needs extends only a few miles.  For most people in America, there are at most two “competitors” in the hospital delivery business, if that.  This is not a competitive market.  The lack of true choice and the vendors’ incentives and ability to collude, make a mockery of the idea of “free markets.”

Or consider the pharmaceutical industry.  Though there are many firms, the vast majority of the prescriptions, sales, R&D, and profits are controlled by very few companies.  In many critical drugs, because of our patent laws, there is only one provider.  And George W. Bush passed a $700 billion health care law that specifically forbade the U.S. government from using its buying power to secure lower drugs prices for government purchases.  So much for the rigor of competition.

There is simply no effective competition in these markets and the results show it.  The U.S. spends twice per capita what other industrial nations spend on health care with inferior outcomes.  Adam Smith, the founder of modern economics, foretold this when, in 1776, he wrote in The Wealth of Nations, “People of the same trade seldom meet together, even for merrimen
t and diversion, but the conversation ends in a conspiracy against the public, or in some contrivance to raise prices.”

So what is the point in even arguing about “free market” alternatives?  It is like arguing for unicorns as pets.  It is fantasy.  When raised to a matter of policy prescription, it is worse.  It is social psychosis.

The fact of such social psychosis is not an accident either, and it, too, derives from the same narrow ownership and control of a vital industry. Only thirty years ago, the media industry contained over 50 independent companies delivering television, radio, newspapers, and magazines.  Today, there are five giant conglomerates that control more that 80% of all the media sales in the country.

These media conglomerates are owned by a very small, very wealthy elite whose interests lie not in promoting democracy in political markets or competition in economic ones, but precisely in preventing them.  Their aim is to divert attention from the staggering concentration of wealth at the top of the economy and the steady impoverishment of all the rest.  They tout the sham rituals of democracy such as town hall meetings precisely to disguise the takeover of real government by large corporate interests. Meanwhile, the constitutional protections of civil liberties for the people are quietly, slowly, relentlessly dismantled.

The power and collusion of the media oligopoly were never better illustrated than in the run-up to the Iraq war. We now know that all of the putative justifications for that war were false.  None of that mattered.  The neo-conservative political elite and their wealthy capitalist masters wanted a war so they manufactured one with the help of their hirelings in the mainstream media.  Truth had nothing to do with it.  Indeed, alternative voices, those that actually spoke the truth, were ruthlessly, viciously mocked and suppressed.

The entire country was frog-marched into a nakedly illegal colonialist takeover of a sovereign country that had not attacked the U.S., had not threatened to attack the U.S., had no interest in attacking the U.S., and had no capacity to attack the U.S.

Such is the power of controlling one of the most influential industries in the world, that you can, at will, manufacture a war that will expend trillions of dollars, raise the price of oil, and increase government deficits – all to your benefit.  Or, in the case of health care, that can elevate moronic screamers to the level of cultural prophets or anoint six senators representing 3% of the country to prevent real competition in markets that you also control.

This narrow control of critical markets extends far beyond just the health care and media industries.  It applies to industries across the entire economic spectrum.

There are only a handful of companies selling soda pop.  There is essentially only one company selling desktop operating systems.  Two companies sell more than 90% of all batteries.  Three companies sell over 80% of the beer, cigarettes, and breakfast cereals consumed nationally. Only two companies in the world sell large airplanes for commercial travel. Only two companies make the microprocessors that power PCs or the switches that power national-scale telephone networks.

In watches and clocks, railroad engines, jet engines, integrated oil production, sporting goods, musical instruments, motorcycles, man-made fibers, tobacco, music, wireless phones, chemicals, vitamins, industrial process control machinery, satellites, pharmaceuticals, networking equipment, and many other industries, fewer than six firms control virtually all of the entire world’s production!

Such levels of “industrial concentration,” as it is called, have never existed before in the history of the world.  It reflects the consolidation of the world’s wealth into the hands of a very small plutocratic elite which manage the world’s commerce among themselves, for themselves.  And this concentration is growing rapidly.  This is part of what the recent trend toward “globalization” is all about.

The big players in major countries have “gone global” by buying up or shutting down smaller players in other countries.  In 1973, $75 billion was spent by international companies buying up other companies that competed against them in foreign markets.  By 1993, that figure had soared to $500 billion and by 1999 had risen still another five-fold, to $2.4 trillion.  It continues to increase still today, creating a global marketplace in which more and more industries are dominated by fewer and fewer larger and larger companies.

The result is an extraordinary transfer of wealth and income from consumers and the middle class to monopoly producers and their owners.  In 2007, the top 1% of the U.S. population owned 60% of all business assets.  Meanwhile, the bottom 50% of the population owned a mere 2.5% of such assets.  The bottom 40% owned nothing.  U.S. income distribution has become more unequal than at any time since 1928, just before the Great Depression.  In the ten years between 1996 and 2006 two thirds of all the growth in the entire U.S. economy went to the top 1% of income earners.

This is far more akin to a feudal world than it is to “free market” capitalism.  In this, the real world, a very few ultra-rich families – think of the Bourbons, the Tudors, or the Hapsburgs – own everything, including the government, and everybody else owns nothing, save the labor they must render to their wealthy overlords in exchange for the right to live.

This has profound implications for the efficiency of the economy.  There is simply not enough purchasing power in the hands of consumers to clear markets of goods.  In the past three decades, this shortfall in demand has been compensated for by the government running massive budget deficits.  The national debt has grown 10-fold in the past 30 years and is forecast to double again in the next ten.  The burden of paying for that debt will enslave working Americans for generations to come, effectively, forever.

And as much as all of this is a matter of economic concern, it has grave implications for the viability, indeed, the survival of democracy.  When extreme size becomes extreme wealth, and when global economic power is exercised as preponderant national political power, how do we insure the survival of democracy?

Democracy depends on “one person, one vote”.  The motto for monopoly capitalism might well be, “One dollar, one vote.”  The two institutions — democracy and monopoly capitalism — are incompatible.   The one will inevitably destroy the other.   This is what Supreme Court justice Louis Brandeis meant when he wrote, “We can either have great concentrations of wealth or we can have democracy.  But we cannot have both.”

Large corporations are able to exercise extraordinary political influence through campaign contributions, lobbying, and control of the media.  By these means, they are able to have legislation enacted that favors themselves over the public: trillions of dollars sluiced to themselves through “bailouts;” guarantees against having to actually compete; differential tax rates on capital versus labor; environmental regulations that go un-enforced; etc.  This, of course, only further accelerates the concentration of private wealth and political power into narrow hands with the consequent further erosion of democracy.

How do we balance the democratic rights of individual citizens and the economic rights of small consumers when political and economic giants stride the landscape, concerned only with their own self-aggrandizement and almost inevitably hostile to the interests of the larger public?

In the case of an oligopolized media fomenting ignorance, hatred, and resentment in the place of knowledge, discourse, and deliberation, how can we even know what we need to know to operate a civilized country?  There can be neither informed consumer choice in
economic affairs nor consent of the governed in political. And that is precisely the intent.

Since the answer to these questions will effectively decide the future of democracy, it may well be the most important economic policy question facing America today.  Of course, Americans love everything free:  land of the free, home of the brave; let freedom ring; live free or die; buy one get one free.  That’s why it’s so hard to shake the illusion of free markets:  we’ve centuries of indoctrination into the idea of their existence as synonymous with our own.  Myths die hard, the more so, those at the heart of our cultural identity.

But we expect children to grow up, to stop believing in unicorns.  We need to hold the same standard for ourselves as citizen-adults.  We should use the chimera of “free markets” in health care to keep the spotlight on all such industrial concentration.  It is not glamorous or sexy, like unicorns, but it is ever so much more real and ever so much more at the heart of our nation’s survival.

Robert Freeman writes on history, economics and education. He can be reached at robertfreeman10@yahoo.com.

Senator Claire McCaskill (D) – health care town hall – Jefferson City

27 Thursday Aug 2009

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

Claire McCaskill, health care reform, Jefferson City, missouri, town hall

Senator Claire McCaskill made it to Jefferson City for her second health care town hall of the day. The event started at 6:00 p.m. We arrived at the location at around 5:00 p.m. to a considerable traffic control presence and a distinct lack of available parking. We were able to get to the media entrance and park next to the television satellite trucks. There was also a considerable media and police presence. We were told that only the first 375 of the people waiting in line would be allowed in. After the event I asked a police officer if he knew how many people who were in line didn’t get into the town hall. He wouldn’t estimate the number, but did state that people who were in line didn’t get in.

Unlike the previous three health care town halls I attended people brought in signs. It doesn’t add much to the cachet.

Like the Hillsboro town hall there were a number of people at the event who sincerely believed that being rude, loud, and obnoxious makes for a winning argument.

This wasn’t Hillsboro. A smaller space and much closer proximity to a smaller crowd made it appear more manic, but no one had their sign snatched away and no one (at least as I was aware of) was arrested.

Not everyone in line got into the event. Attendance was limited to 375, first come, first served.

Probably to the immense frustration of the loudest and most disruptive in the room, there were a significant number of pro reform individuals at the town hall.

A pro reform individual writing out a question on a form which was placed in a basket and then subject to selection out of the basket by two anti reform people appointed to the task by Senator McCaskill. Those questions selected then were read and answered by the Senator. What do you think the odds were?

RBH, this photo is for you.

This individual was very angry. In fact, on occasion she loudly stated that she was very angry.

Sometimes corporatist sign placement can be fortuitous.

At the press conference after the town hall.

Looking Back into History

27 Thursday Aug 2009

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

And not even that long ago. Matthew Yglesias reminds us that Medicare Part D (adding the prescription drug benefit) passed the Senate 54-44 only six years ago, adding hundreds of billions of dollars to the 10 year deficit window and explicitly forbidding the easiest way to cut costs. And yet Chuck Grassley and Max Baucus had few problems voting for it at the time.

It’s worth noting that Roy Blunt also voted for Medicare Part D and yet now opposes HR 3200, the House version of the health care reform bill, which is deficit neutral.

It’s also worth noting that Medicare Part D did not have 60 votes, yet still managed to pass the Senate.

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