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Yglesias

Irony Department

I guess they haven’t taken the Madoff Securities website down yet:

The Owner’s Name is on the Door

In an era of faceless organizations owned by other equally faceless organizations, Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities LLC harks back to an earlier era in the financial world: The owner’s name is on the door. Clients know that Bernard Madoff has a personal interest in maintaining the unblemished record of value, fair-dealing, and high ethical standards that has always been the firm’s hallmark.

And, indeed, Madoff did appear to have been harkening back to an earlier era of scams.

Yglesias

Shoe Toss

Iraqi journalist tosses shoes at George W. Bush:

Some people got very upset when I said I thought throwing pie at Tom Friedman was funny, but I’m having trouble coming up with appropriately humorless language with which to express my fake outrage at this incident. Instead, a flashback to April 2003:

Iraqis had begun tearing down portraits of Saddam and throwing shoes — a grave insult in the Arab world — and chipping away at the base of the statue with sledgehammers after a column of Marines advanced into the square Wednesday afternoon.

Is it possible that there’s a region somewhere where throwing shoes is a compliment?

Climate Progress

Stanford study, Part 1: Wind, solar baseload easily beat nuclear and they all crush “clean coal”

When we last met Stanford professor Mark Jacobson, he was explaining why you shouldn’t buy a diesel car if you care about global warming (see “Why hybrids beat diesels“).

His new myth-busting study finds the following “Total CO2-eq of Electricity Sources”:

jacobson1.jpg

[CSP is concentrated solar power, but I prefer solar baseload to that ambiguous acronym. CCS is carbon capture and storage, called "clean coal" by some, "clap trap" by others.]

The study, “Review of solutions to global warming, air pollution, and energy security,” by the co-founder and Director of Stanford’s Atmospheric Energy Program warrants a two-part examination. I will focus on electricity in Part I, but it is worth noting now that in his alt fuels analysis, cellulosic ethanol comes in last.

His basic conclusions will come as no surprise to Climate Progress readers (see “An introduction to the core climate solutions“). But as Stanford’s summary of this important paper notes:

Read more

Politics

An Encounter With Hogs On The Road To Alabama

Our guest blogger is Barry Nolan, a veteran TV journalist who was fired by Comcast Cable’s CN8 channel in Boston for protesting an award honoring Bill O’Reilly.

smithfield.jpgAccording to an article in the New York Times, a typical salary in the Smithfield Packing slaughterhouse in Tar Heel, NC is $11.90 per hour, or $476 for a 40 hour week. Because I am a considerate person, I will spare you any description of the grisly jobs performed by those workers in that slaughterhouse.

The base salary of a U.S. senator is $169,300 a year or $3,255 a week. Because I am a considerate person, I will spare you any description of the job some of those senators are doing on us these days.

The slaughterhouse story in the New York Times looked back on the 16-year long struggle to bring union representation to the 5,000 or so workers in Tar Heel, which ended up in court at one point. In 2006, after seven years of litigation, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit ruled that Smithfield had engaged in “intense and widespread” coercion and ordered Smithfield to reinstate four union supporters it found were illegally fired, one of whom was beaten by the plant’s police on the day of the 1997 election.

The court also said Smithfield had engaged in other illegal activities: spying on workers’ union activities, confiscating union materials, threatening to fire workers who voted for the union and threatening to freeze wages and shut the plant.

But the big news in the Times story, especially if you pack meat, was that after the long struggle with Smithfield, the union finally won. The slaughterhouse is going union.

On the same day MSNBC had a story about a GOP memo titled “Action Alert,” which went out to the Republican senators just before their “No” vote on the Big Three Auto Makers bailout bill. The GOP memo contained this pithy paragraph:

This is the democrats first opportunity to payoff organized labor after the election. This is a precursor to card check and other items. Republicans should stand firm and take their first shot against organized labor, instead of taking their first blow from it.

It has been a longstanding part of the conservative’s core philosophy that unions are simply bad for business. That is why is why conservatives who are making $169 K per year for standing around arguing, just can’t understand why someone who is making the princely salary of $24,752 for working 40 hours a week in a slaughterhouse would ever want to join a union. It could eat into a company’s profits. Never mind that as a non-union hog butcher, you may bring home a little bacon, but good luck sending your kids to college.

The Federal Poverty guideline for 2008, sets $22,200 as the poverty level for a family of four. Those who do the hard spirit killing, tendon ripping work of slaughtering hogs, forty hours a week, 52 weeks a year, are just barely, faintly above the poverty level.

So just who are these people the GOP sees as the enemy? These awful, greedy, lazy Union people? Read more

Yglesias

Evan Bayh Organizing Senate Version of “Blue Dog” Caucus

This seems like a good idea to me. With Republicans out of power, the GOP can’t really block progressive change in exchange for large sums of special interest money. That creates an important market niche for Democrats willing to do the work. It was a good racket for the House Blue Dogs in 2007-2008 and there’s no reason it couldn’t work for Senate analogues over the next couple of years.

Yglesias

F-150

roush_f150_1.jpg

Back when I was in New York for Thanksgiving, my dad pointed out to me that the Dennis Leary Ford F-150 ads are extremely annoying. This was wise on his part, but also unfortunate because ever since then I’ve had a kind of heightened sense of annoyance every time I see the ads — which is a lot, because they’re shown constantly during NFL games.

Are we alone on this? Surely not. I had a good joke in mind about how any Detroit bailout should be conditioned on ceasing these ads, but (a) the thread by which hundreds of thousands of jobs are now hanging isn’t very funny and (b) the bailout proposals are for GM and Chrysler anyway. I will say this for Ford’s advertising, though. I’m obviously not the sort of person who’d know much about trucks. But I do always really enjoy getting behind the wheel of one of Zipcar’s Toyota Takomas when I need to move something large. And yet despite my truck experience being limited to good experiences with the Takoma, the idea is planted firmly in my head that the Ford F-150 is the best truck out there. I think that’s a pre-Leary notion, but maybe while he’s annoying me he’s also having an incredible impact on my subconscious.

Yglesias

A Bit More on Shaun Donovan

I was a little bit wrong-footed by the Shaun Donovan pick since he’s not really as high-profile as a lot of the Obama administration’s other incoming cabinet secretaries (no Nobel Prize, etc.) but I should say that I’ve heard from a few people involved in affordable housing work and they’re very excited about this guy. They feel that he’s a real expert in the field, and someone who’s really committed to HUD’s issues, in a way that the department has rarely seen.

Climate Progress

Oliphant and Washington Post ignorantly smear GM and plug-in hybrids

[I think this is worthy of another email campaign -- this time to the Post (see below).]

There’s nothing wrong with mocking GM. It is a target-rich environment that has gone the extra mile and painted a bunch of bull’s-eyes on itself (see General Motors is full of crocks and GM’s Lutz: Wagoner is one of “the innocents,” just “the mayor of a city hit by an earthquake”).

To fire at GM and hit yourself instead thus requires a special kind of ignorance, as both cartoonist Pat Oliphant and the Washington Post exhibited Saturday when they ran this staggeringly ill-informed cartoon:

This easily wins the 2008 award for the most unintentionally laughable cartoon of 2008. The cartoon mocks GM for designing a car that solves the very problem the cartoon claims it does not address.

The idea that a major media outlet could publish such a cartoon in the internet era is almost incomprehensible and really tells you a lot about why the print media is dying a long-deserved death.

I do think this cartoon should represent a mini-wake-up call to plug in hybrid advocates [note to self: this means you] — every time you discuss plug ins, you must be 100% clear the vehicles revert to being gasoline-powered after they exhaust their charge from the electric grid.

But that is not to excuse the supreme laziness of both Oliphant and the Post:

Read more

Security

Iraqi Journalist Throws His Shoes At Bush During Press Conference In Baghdad (Updated)

shoe.jpgPresident Bush is in Baghdad today on a surprise farewell visit highlighting the security deal recently reached between the U.S. and Iraq. CNN Baghdad correspondent Michael Ware reports this afternoon that during a press conference with Bush and Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, an Iraqi man threw a shoe at Bush — “a grave insult in the Arab world” — but “it just sailed past his head”:

WARE: Well, Wolf, the most extraordinary thing. You may or may not believe this. We’re getting reports from the press pool that flew in with President Bush and apparently just a short, short time ago in a press conference with Prime Minister Maliki, an Iraqi man stood up in the press conference and threw a shoe at President Bush. But the reports we’re getting, it just sailed past his head and while the man was dragged out of the room, President Bush is said to have remarked that, “This was a size 10 shoe he threw at me you may want to know,” even as the man was heard screaming in the hallway.

Watch it:

McClatchy identified the man as Iraqi television journalist Muntader al-Zaidi and reports he threw both of his shoes at Bush just after he finished prepared remarks.

The New York Times notes that the first shoe “narrowly missed” and the second shoe also missed. “This is a farewell kiss, you dog,” Zaidi shouted.

Apparently, Bush was unfazed by the incident. “I didn’t feel the least bit threatened by it,” he said.

Update

MSNBC has video of the incident with correspondent Patty Culhane reporting that Bush was “not injured” but that White House Press Secretary Dana Perino received a black eye in the scuffle of trying to contain Zaidi. Watch it:

Yglesias

Highway Signs in Cities

Without a doubt, the simplest thing you could do to improve my new neighborhood would be for the city to take Cary Silverman’s suggestion and scrap the giant green highway-style signs on New York Avenue east of Mount Vernon Square. It’s a wide street, yes, but it’s just not a highway and shouldn’t have the aesthetic attributes of one.

More generally, I think it’s important for cities to send the write subconscious cues to drivers. Of course any city of any size is going to have private motor vehicles zipping hither and yon, to say nothing of delivery trucks, taxis, buses, and emergency services. But precisely because a successful urban area will inevitably be heavily trafficked, it’s important for the design elements to send the message that the city is a place where people will be walking around and that drivers’ job is to accommodate themselves to that reality. If you send the signal that the streets belong to the cars and it’s the people who are the interlopers the cars will drive the people out.

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