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Is Politico Shilling For Conservatives For Patients Rights?

scottpic.jpgToday, Politico publishes the third, in what seems to be a series of soft profiles of Conservatives for Patient’s Rights — that right-wing smear campaign dedicated to unraveling the Democrats’ reform agenda. CPR is very well becoming the GOP alternative to the Democratic proposal, and as such it elicits legitimate news interest.

But since the group is actively advertising on Politico’s website, the publication’s uncritical treatment of the Swift Boat Health Attack Group raises certain ethical concerns. While the paper did publish an Editor’s Note revealing that “Conservatives for Patients’ Rights purchased advertising space on POLITICO.com for this campaign” at the bottom of one article, its latest profile does not inform readers of the potential conflict of interest.

Today’s piece by Carrie Budoff Brown describes Scott as “a conservative health care champion” and cheerfully reports that Conservatives for Patients Rights will soon release a documentary “illustrating what he describes as the perils of public health care in Great Britain and Canada” that will ‘most likely’ make it “into TV ads” (and future Politico stories, to be sure).

Brown dives into Scott’s fantasy world without so much as informing the reader that the Democratic health care plans have only limited resemblance to the British or Canadian systems. She clearly defines Scott in his own terms — as a crusader for “choice, competition, accountability and personal responsibility” and helps Scott conflate health care reform with the problems of Great Britain’s system by reporting that Scott’s aides are circulating an article in which Prime Minister Gordon Brown apologized for conditions at a government-owned hospital (again, without explaining how conditions at a British hospital relate to current reform proposals).

The irony of all this is striking, and it strikes Brown over the head. The Wonk Room has previously reported that as a hospital executive, Scott limited “choice” and “competition” by buying up “hospitals by the bucketful” and routinely placed profits ahead of “accountability” or quality of care. During Scott’s tenure at Columbia/HCA, his cost cutting methods threatened patient care and safety:

- Susan Marks, a technician at one of Scott’s hospitals, was forced to monitor 72 heart monitors by herself. Marks explained, “I have to. I’ve been told you either do it, or there’s the door.” [ABC News, 9/26/97]

- Scott downsized nursing staffs, created conditions where “babies were attended as infrequently as every three hours. Once, the only nurse caring for seven ill infants was so busy she failed to hear an alarm when a baby stopped breathing. A parent dashed to the baby and stimulated breathing, the state report said.” [New York Times, 5/11/97]

- Hospital workers in Florida complained, “gloves come in only one size, and rip easily.” In addition, California employees protested “filthy conditions,” and being “stretched to the limit” as Scott’s company slashed “the ratio of nurses to patients.” [Money Driven Medicine, pg. 119]

But Brown seems taken in by Scott’s “soft-spoken” style and in the vanilla-flavored interview that follows the write up, she asks him where Democrats could concede on the public health plan option, playfully presses him to identify his donors and pitches an open-ended question about his background as a hospital executive.

By any measure, Scott’s multi-million dollar investment in online advertising is legitimizing his group and their criticisms. And Politico is helping in more ways than one.

Security

Harman: ‘I’m Just Very Disappointed’ NSA Wiretapped Me, After I Voted To Allow Them To

On Sunday, CQ reported that the NSA had wiretapped Rep. Jane Harman (D-CA), listening in on a call in which she apparently offered a quid pro quo to a lobbyist group. Harman has vigorously denied the reports. Today, she appeared on MSNBC to express her shock and outrage that her phone calls were listened to, saying she was “disappointed” that the U.S. could have allowed such “a gross abuse of power”:

HARMAN: I’m just very disappointed that my country — I’m an American citizen just like you are — could have permitted what I think is a gross abuse of power in recent years. I’m one member of Congress who may be caught up in it, but I have a bully pulpit and I can fight back. I’m thinking about others who have no bully pulpit and may not be aware, as I was not, that right now somewhere, someone’s listening in on their conversations, and they’re innocent Americans.

Watch it:

Harman’s anger seems a bit disingenuous, considering that she was one of the earliest supporters of Bush’s warrantless wiretapping program. When the practice was revealed by the New York Times in 2005, she defended it as “essential,” though admitted she was “concerned” about its scope:

“I have been briefed since 2003 on a highly classified NSA foreign collection program that targeted Al Qaeda. I believe the program is essential to U.S. national security and that its disclosure has damaged critical intelligence capabilities,” Harman said. “Like many Americans, I am deeply concerned by reports that this program in fact goes far beyond the measures to target Al Qaeda about which I was briefed.”

In fact, in 2004 she “urged that The [New York] Times not publish the article” revealing Bush’s program.

Indeed, she issued a press release in 2007 specifically highlighting that the updated FISA bill she approved of would fully allow warrantless wiretapping:

This bill does a good job — a far better job than the bill reported last month by the Senate Intelligence Committee. … This legislation arms our intelligence professionals with the ability to listen to foreign targets — without a warrant — to uncover plots that threaten US national security. The bill also protects the Constitutional rights of Americans by requiring the FISA court, an Article III Court, to approve procedures to ensure that Americans are not targeted for warrantless surveillance.

To her credit, Harman warned against “a slippery legal slope to potential unprecedented abuse of innocent Americans’ privacy” and stated her opposition to granting telecommunications companies retroactive immunity. Perhaps her outrage at being a target of wiretapping herself will force her to realize that the program she deemed “essential” invaded the privacy of untold millions of Americans.

Yglesias

Our Enemy, Argentina?

newt-pic

Back when New Republic editor in chief Martin Peretz lumped Argentina in with Syria and Iran as among “our antagonists” I assumed he was just making a silly mistake. But here’s Newt Gingrich:

Gingrich said he was fascinated to watch a variety of “semi-dictators,” specifically, the leaders of Nicaragua and Argentina, who lecture the president on what the United States is “doing wrong.”

My understanding is that the “semi-dictator” of Nicaragua came to power through the nefarious method of winning an election. But I at least understand that conservatives don’t like Sandinistas. But what’s Argentina done? Pissed off some bond-holders? Conservative alternative reality is becoming mighty baroque.

Politics

Lieberman: Obama releasing OLC torture memos ‘helps our enemies.’

In an interview yesterday with Fox News’s Greta Van Susteren, Sen. Joe Lieberman (I-CT) panned President Obama’s recent release of Bush-era OLC memos approving torture. “I thought release of the memos was a bad idea,” Lieberman said. “It wasn’t necessary. It just helps our enemies. It doesn’t really help us.” Lieberman then said waterboarding should always be on the table:

Q: First of all, is waterboarding torture?

LIEBERMAN: Well, I take a minority position on this. Most people think it’s definitely torture. The truth is, it has mostly a psychological impact on people. It’s a terrible thing to do. … I want the president of the United States in a given circumstance where we believe somebody we’ve got in our control may have information that could help us stop an attack, an imminent attack on the United States like 9/11 or, god forbid, worse, we ought to be able to use something like waterboarding.

Lieberman said he does “believe General Hayden” in that waterboarding “really did work” to prevent terrorist attacks. Watch it:

Last year, Lieberman downplayed the severity of waterboarding, saying, “It is not like putting burning coals on people’s bodies.” In February, he joked about the torture tactic at Washington’s Alfalfa dinner.

Climate Progress

EPA Analysis: Clean Energy Act Will ‘Play A Critical Role In The American Economic Recovery And Job Growth’

EPA Preliminary Analysis
EPA’s Waxman-Markey Discussion Draft Preliminary Analysis: Executive Summary, Full Analysis

As Congressional hearings on draft green economy legislation begin, the Environmental Protection Agency has found that the bill will “play a critical role in the American economic recovery and job growth.” The initial EPA analysis, based on the draft of the American Clean Energy and Security Act (ACES) released by Rep. Henry Waxman (D-CA) and Rep. Edward Markey (D-MA), looks only at the effects of the cap-and-trade “market-based emissions program,” without modeling the effects of the complementary renewable energy and energy efficiency standards in this comprehensive legislation. Despite the limited review, the EPA has found that Waxman-Markey would “enable American workers to serve in a central role in our clean energy transformation”:

The draft bill would establish a wide range of policies to promote the development and deployment of new clean energy technologies that would fundamentally change the way we produce, deliver, and use energy. The bill would: (1) advance energy efficiency and reduce reliance on oil; (2) stimulate innovation in clean coal technology to ensure that coal remains an important part of the U.S. energy portfolio by capturing harmful greenhouse gas emissions before they enter the atmosphere; (3) accelerate the use of renewable sources of energy, including biomass, wind, solar, and geothermal; (4) create strong demand for a domestic manufacturing market for these next generation technologies that will enable American workers to serve in a central role in our clean energy transformation; and (5) play a critical role in the American economic recovery and job growth – from retooling shuttered manufacturing plants to make wind turbines, to using equipment and expertise in drilling for oil to develop clean energy from underground geothermal sources, to tapping into American ingenuity to engineer coal-fired power plants that do not contribute to climate change.

The ACES Act does not address the question of how allocate the revenues of a carbon market auction. Industry executives and conservative allies like Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) are calling for free giveaways to polluters. However, the EPA analysis finds that polluter giveaways are “highly regressive.” A full auction of permits and equitable returns, however, allows for working families to come out ahead:

Assuming that the bulk of the revenues from the program are returned to households, the cap-and-trade policy has a relatively modest impact on U.S. consumers. . . . Returning the revenues in this fashion could make the median household, and those living at lower ends of the income distribution, better off than they would be without the program.

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Politics

Feingold: ‘Grounds for impeachment can be made’ against Bybee.

In 2003, Sen. Russ Feingold (D-WI) voted against confirming OLC torture memo author Jay Bybee to the 9th Circuit Court, one of only 19 Democrats to do so. At the time, Feingold noted “the failure of the administration to provide any of his numerous OLC opinions to the Judiciary Committee for review.” Today, in the wake of the release of Bybee’s torture memos, Feingold said that there are certainly “grounds for impeachment” against Bybee:

feingold2.jpgThe idea that one of the architects of this perversion of the law is now sitting on the federal bench is very troubling. The memos offer some of the most explicit evidence yet that Mr. Bybee and others authorized torture and they suggest that grounds for impeachment can be made. Clearly, the Justice Department has the responsibility to investigate this matter further. As a Senator, I would be a juror in any impeachment trial so I don’t want to reach a conclusion until all the evidence is before me.

Please join our campaign calling on Congress to begin impeachment hearings against Jay Bybee.

Yglesias

No Layoffs at Harvard

I sort of hesitate to blog on a parochial Harvard issue, but I think this is important and implicates some broader questions in society, so let me quote Dylan Matthews on the basic situation:

A good case study of this class consciousness at work is the debate on layoffs at Harvard. For the normal people reading this, allow me to explain the situation. Harvard has tens of billions of dollars. How many tens of billions they won’t say, but its in that ballpark. However, because they’re slightly less obscenely wealthy than they were before the economy went to hell, the Harvard administration has started laying people off without cause. Some students, like the Student Labor Action Movement (SLAM) and its supporters (like me and Perspective), think that this is uncalled for. We think that Harvard should be more forthcoming about its financial situation, so that students and other members of the community can evaluate whether we really need to lay off workers to weather the recession. And until Harvard releases the information that would allow such a debate to take place, it should stop cutting jobs and find other ways to make up the shortfall. After all, if they’re going to cut the jobs of valued members of our community, we have a right to know why that’s happening, and how necessary or unnecessary that is. I, for one, kind of doubt that a university that can pay for massive concerts/carnivals can’t cough up the cash necessary to pay its workers.

There’s a petition that students, alumni, and parents can (and should!) sign here and here’s a video those inclined can watch:

Back when I was in school, we were the Progressive Student Labor Movement (PSLM) and had a worse acronym. The main issue in our day was the campaign to ensure that Harvard workers could earn a living wage that was adequate to raise their families in the local area in a non-impoverished manner.

In both cases one counterargument you here is that the university will do the most good if it sticks to its core function. I think you can construct a defensible version of this claim, namely that paying workers an above-market wage (or eschewing layoffs) is not the cosmically optimal use of funds for a well-endowed university. But it’s crucial to realize that what well-endowed universities are actually doing doesn’t meet the standard of optimizing social welfare either. Instead, our system is organized in a backward way such that the 18-22 year-olds who are least in need of help with their education are given the most resources, while the least resources are devoted to those students who are in the most need. Clearly, though, Harvard and the rest of the Ivy League and sundry similar elite private colleges and universities have no intention of giving up the mission of elite education.

Given that constraint, there’s no good reason why they shouldn’t also strive to be good citizens and good members of their community and treat all stakeholders fairly.

A larger issue here is that the collapse of the coercive, command-and-control, dictatorial economies of the Soviet Bloc has tended to lead to an unworthy valorization of greed and profit-maximization. This extends to the idea that a non-profit organization like Harvard ought to ape the behavior patterns of a profit-maximing firm rather than do the right thing. But there’s no need for individuals or non-commercial institutions to behave in that manner.

Security

The Torturer’s Apologist

Our guest blogger is Ken Gude, Associate Director of the International Rights and Responsibility Program at the Center for American Progress Action Fund.

thiessen1.jpgIn a Washington Post op-ed today, Mark Thiessen claims that torture kept Americans safe, but his piece reveals far more about Thiessen’s ignorance about both torture and intelligence than about “enhanced interrogation” techniques.

Thiessen claims that “without enhanced interrogations, there could be a hole in the ground in Los Angeles to match the one in New York.” Thiessen is referring to the Library Tower attack that President Bush revealed in a February 2006 speech at the height of the outcry over the NSA warrantless wiretapping program. Khalid Sheik Mohammed apparently told his CIA interrogators about this “plot” during one of his 183 waterboarding sessions.

This is exactly the kind of garbage you get from torture when the detainee will grasp for whatever he thinks his captors want to hear. One former National Security Council official put the “Library Tower story” in Al Qaeda’s “what if” category along side “what if Superman had worked for the Nazis.” In a report debunking the Library Tower claim a full year before Bush’s 2006 speech, the Los Angeles Times quoted a senior FBI official saying “to take that [Library Tower] and make it into a disrupted plot is just ludicrous.”

Its not surprising that Thiessen would resurrect a supposed plot from a Bush speech because he probably wrote it. That’s right: Thiessen was a speechwriter, not an intelligence analyst, something that comes through loud and clear in his writing. He notes approvingly that torture “has resulted in more than 6,000 intelligence reports,” which is like saying a baseball game resulted in 250 pitches. It’s an accurate figure, but a completely meaningless measurement. One CIA official who read all the reports on the KSM interrogations described them as, “total f***ing bulls***.”

For the sake of argument, lets just accept that LA was saved from another 9/11 because we tortured KSM. Even then, Thiessen’s claim that torture has kept Americans safe dissolves when one considers that our official policy of torture has resulted in hundreds of American soldiers and Marines being killed in Iraq.

Matthew Alexander, the pseudonym for the military interrogator in Iraq who uncovered — through a humane interrogation — the information that led to the airstrike that killed al Qaeda in Iraq’s leader Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, said he “listened time and time again to foreign fighters, and Sunni Iraqis, state that the number one reason they had decided to pick up arms and join Al Qaeda was the abuses at Abu Ghraib and the authorized torture and abuse at Guantanamo Bay.” He also wrote that “the large majority of suicide bombings in Iraq are still carried out by these foreigners. They are also involved in most of the attacks on U.S. and coalition forces in Iraq…. How anyone can say that torture keeps Americans safe is beyond me — unless you don’t count American soldiers as Americans.”

It’s depressing to watch former Bush administration officials defend “enhanced interrogation.” I wish Thiessen would have the guts to call it torture, but I guess that’s expecting too much from these guys. A former Pentagon analyst provided a perfect epilogue for this entire episode, “KSM produced no actionable intelligence. He was trying to tell us how stupid we were.”

Climate Progress

EPA Analysis of Waxman-Markey: “Returning the revenues in [a lump-sum rebate] could make the median household, and those living at lower ends of the income distribution, better off than they would be without the program”

The EPA has just published a “Preliminary Analysis“ of the Waxman-Markey Discussion Draft aka “The American Clean Energy and Security Act of 2009.”  The analysis finds:

  • The Waxman-Markey draft would drive the clean energy transformation of the U.S. economy. Major investments in energy efficiency would mean that energy consumption levels that would be reached in 2015 without the policy are not reached until the middle of the century with the policy, reflecting more energy efficient manufacturing, residential, and transportation sectors.
  • Renewable energy penetration accelerates by 150% percent over the next two decades, and would be expected to grow even faster under the draft bill’s renewable electricity standard, which has not been modeled yet due to time limitations.
  • [The bill would] create strong demand for a domestic manufacturing market for these next generation technologies that will enable American workers to serve in a central role in our clean energy transformation; and
  • [It would] play a critical role in the American economic recovery and job growth – from retooling shuttered manufacturing plants to make wind turbines, to using equipment and expertise in drilling for oil to develop clean energy from underground geothermal sources, to tapping into American ingenuity to engineer coal-fired power plants that do not contribute to climate change.

Dan Weiss, Senior Fellow and Director of Climate Strategy, at American Progress says:

The EPA analysis confirms that the American Clean Energy and Security Act will create jobs in the clean energy industry, benefit consumers, slash oil use, and cut pollution. This analysis disproves the false claims made by doomsayers who want to continue our existing energy policies.

UPDATE:  Winner of the ass-backwards headline of the year award, is E&E News PM (subs. req’d) for “House bill would pinch economy — EPA.”

Significantly, the net cost to the country and the consumer is extremely low, which is consistent with other analyses (see “Intro to climate economics: Why even strong climate action has such a low total cost — one tenth of a penny on the dollar“).  The EPA finds:

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