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by das monde
The following exchange is from a Foxnews' show. It's a "fair and balanced" passion of Brit Hume (until recently, their anchor newsman). Speaking on Obama's tax increases:
Hume: Well it's just so dishonest because the top what, 2% of tax payers in this country pay something on the order of 40% of the taxes already. The top 5% pay 60% of the taxes already, income taxes. And the top 50% pay all but, you know they pay like 95% of the taxes. So most of the people in this country, most of the people pay almost, either no income taxes at all or almost none. That's like half the income brackets. So the idea that the playing field is somehow tilted in favor of the few is bosh! Read more... (2 comments, 454 words in story) by das monde
Recently, I wrote a diary with one of speculations that speculative markets (such as stock and real estate markets) tend to behave like pyramid schemes at certain stages (like now). The crucial feature is the point when the market valuation grows predominantly because of outsiders entering the market with expectations of profitting from the steadily growing market. When the market volume has nowhere to grow, the latest entrants (if only) suffer dearly.
I am content to find out that my suspicion is not a wack unseen to human mind. Please enter Prof. Hyman Minsky (1919-1996), and his Financial Instability Hypothesis.
![]() Read more... (3 comments, 1676 words in story) by das monde
This diary originated from a discussion of real estate markets, so we will eventually get to financial matters of today. The sweeping bottom question is: how can an apparently steady growth or progress possibly be halted, or even voided? Do civilisations collapse often, and how? Do they just meet bad luck or barbaric invaders sooner or later, or do they always collapse once they fully employ a "no-brainer" affluence strategy, like greed or self-indulgence? Can gains of globalization and free markets increase forever, or will they abruptly end just "around a corner"?
Globalization must have the limits of the globe, or not? It works all fine while new markets open and expand, while masses of new individuals enter speculative markets, either directly or via inescapably more aggressive pension funds. Will the global economy continue to prosper when the stream of eager new buyers will dry out? Deep down, it is not exceptionally remarkable that evaluation of the markets grows while their volume rapidly expands. You can run a pyramid scheme with the same effect! Read more... (18 comments, 1134 words in story) by das monde
For once, pro-war LA Times commentator Max Boot put up a reasonable article in his column:
Is Iraq turning into Yugoslavia? Read more... (1 comment, 1076 words in story) by das monde
Are they proud of being good in scaring the bejesus out of everyone in each election cycle?
To judge it from their latest ads and talks, the War on Terror is won by terror. Are Republicans proud of hurting Democrat politicians more effectively than Al Qaeda terrorists? Are Republicans proud of giving nice promises to their libertarian or Christian base, but never delivering to them? Are Republicans proud of achieving new corruption standards? Are they proud of accusing the opponents of ethical failures, while doing things far worse? Are Republicans proud of George W. Bush? Who is proud of George W. Bush? That guy did his worst in following security briefings prior to the 9/11. He did his absolutely worst with Katrina. He is continuing to do his worst in Iraq. [Sorry, it's just a few scattered one-liners. I have no time or flow to connect them into a beefy diary.] Read more... (161 words in story) by das monde
Are you interested in what an Egyptian democracy activist and professor of political sociology at the American University in Cairo has to say about the New emerging Middle East? Read Saad Eddin Ibrahim in Washington Post. Here are snippets from there:
President Bush and Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice may be quite right about a new Middle East being born. [But] it will not be exactly the baby they have longed for. [It] will be neither secular nor friendly to the United States.The law of unintended consequences is very strong for violent meassures - as if no one had guessed that. Read more... (6 comments, 842 words in story) by das monde
Capitalism has made us better people - morally better. That is the core claim of the thick (over 500 pages) book
The Bourgeois Virtues: Ethics for an Age of Commerce by the economist prof. Deirdre N. McCloskey. And that is only the first of the planned four books, where she is going to prove that all the "left and right intelligentsia" are wrong to criticize capitalism for corruption, social alienation and anti-cultural consumerism. At best, we have another academic exercise in advocating a particular system to the highest philosophical, and even moral, grounds. How successful is Prof. McCloskey? How different is she from Karl Marx, for example? At worst, this book signals a neo-neo-calvinistic ideology for emerging David Brooksian class of "supermoral" lords, where all morality is decided lonely by the size of the bank account, regardless how the money is earned or spent. Read more... (3 comments, 1394 words in story) by das monde
This is a peculiar news byte:
The other night at a Washington book party for the President's sister, Doro Bush Koch, the Supreme Court justice arrived with his wife, Ginny [...]Yeah, Clarence Thomas was praying for Bush the long 6 years. Now he needs some help, apparently. What might be coming up?! Comments >> (1 comment) by das monde
Washinton
Mr. Bush Unvarnished Read more... (2 comments, 325 words in story) by das monde
Greg Palast is back as The Guardian columnist, hillariously.
On the third anniversary of the tanks rolling over Iraq's border, most of the 59 million Homer Simpsons who voted for Bush are beginning to doubt if his mission was accomplished. Read more... (3 comments, 460 words in story) by das monde
New Jersey may prohibit anonymous posting on forums:
A bill introduced in the New Jersey Assembly would require websites to collect and make available the legal names and physical addresses of anyone posting on an Internet forum. Read more... (18 comments, 783 words in story) by das monde Tanker runs aground in Alaska, spills oil products
Is Alaska a good recipe for the American oil addiction? Read more... (1674 words in story) by das monde
Some say you can't make the world better than it is. They say you ought to be sceptical about human nature, yet they urge you not to question potentially abusive conduct of the powerful. They say you hate America if you want to give extra opportunities to the less fortunate. Conservativism is bigotry of low expectations.
But what drives us, liberals, to care not only about own well being, but about quality of life of others as well? Are we personally hurt by seeing injustice by abuse of political or economic power? Is it very satisfying to seek optimal social gains by collaboration? Are we concerned that uncurbed greed will have catastrophic consequences to everyone? Do we think that America is the foremost developer of achievements of the Western Enlightenment? Are we certain that America's success had been assured by an effective balance of civil powers? Read more... (7 comments, 768 words in story) by das monde
One might say, The New Republic journal "the liberal counterpart" of the conservative National Review. If so, it is very Lieberman-lite liberalism at best.
The New Republic has this article now: THE NETHERLANDS IS NO LONGER A PARAGON OF ALL THINGS LIBERAL Read more... (8 comments, 1312 words in story)
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