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Imus Calls Anderson Cooper Beating ‘A Stunt’ To Gain Publicity

Our guest blogger is Elon Green, a freelance writer living in Brooklyn.

The protests in Egypts have already resulted in a great deal of bloodshed and journalists, foreign and domestic, have not been exempt. As The New York Times recently noted, “[J]ournalists were chased through the streets and had their equipment stolen or smashed. Some were beaten so badly that they required hospital treatment.” News organizations across the political spectrum have been on the receiving end: a Fox News correspondent was the target of a Molotov cocktail; ABC staff was threatened with beheading; and, mostly famously, CNN’s Anderson Cooper and his colleagues have been twice attacked.

Right wing personalities have reacted to these incidents with either apathy or derision, arguing that journalists in the thick of the Egyptian uprising are simply narcissists or hungry for ratings. Until now, however, they have avoided suggesting the incidents mentioned above are staged.

But yesterday on his radio show — which is also broadcast of Fox Business Channel — Don Imus managed to do just that. Here’s Imus reacting to the news that Cooper, in response to the attacks, has gone into hiding,” claiming that Cooper made the whole thing up just for ratings:

MCGUIRK: And he doesn’t know this morning when he can leave his little secret hiding spot.

IMUS: That is a scam to get them to watch CNN.

MCGUIRK: No, no, caught on tape the whole thing.

IMUS: Yes, but, wrestling, like wrestling, not really doing that. Come on, I like Anderson Cooper.

MCGUIRK: A stunt, you call it a stunt.

IMUS: I call it a CNN stunt, getting killed by Fox and he said what can we do? Let’s see. For example how will they get the reporters out of there?

Watch it:

Security

White House Now Pushing For Mubarak’s Departure

The Obama administration’s policy on Egypt has now gotten to where it perhaps should have been a week ago — pushing for Mubarak to go and for talks to commence on reforming the constitution to create a “real democracy.” The New York Times reports:

The Obama administration is discussing with Egyptian officials a proposal for President Hosni Mubarak to resign immediately and turn over power to a transitional government headed by Vice President Omar Suleiman with the support of the Egyptian military, administration officials and Arab diplomats said Thursday.

Once the government initiated violence against the protesters, the Mubarak regime made it impossible for the US and others to remain neutral in their public pronouncements. This was also entirely predictable — the only way to really put down a protest movement as robust as this is through a significant crackdown. American leverage no doubt constrained Mubarak’s ability to usher a more formal crackdown, ala Iran’s on the Green Movement. So instead, in a fairly desperate act, Mubarak tried to mask the crackdown as organic counter-revolutionary protests. That didn’t fool anyone, and as Middle East expert Marc Lynch wrote yesterday:

By unleashing violence and refusing the demand for an immediate, meaningful transition, Mubarak has now violated two clear red lines laid down by the President. There must be consequences. It’s time to meet escalation with escalation and lay out, in private and public, that the Egyptian military now faces a clear and painful choice: push Mubarak out now and begin a meaningful transition, or else face international isolation and a major rupture with the United States.

Indeed, a bipartisan working group of outside experts came to that conclusion as well, in a statement released yesterday:

If the government continues to employ such violence, the United States should immediately freeze all military assistance to Egypt.

Clearly, Mubarak’s departure has become non-negotiable for the protesters. Some have questioned the protesters staying power, but all evidence points to the contrary. We are now in the second week of the protests and they have seemingly gotten stronger. Impressively, the massive rallies today came on the heels of intense violence, which one could expect would serve to deter further protesters. Many protesters now believe that there is no turning back — that either Mubarak goes, or they themselves will end up in prison. There is therefore every reason to believe that as long as Mubarak stays, this will go on.

While Mubarak may stubbornly attempt to hang on, there is also little doubt that the rest of his regime is very nervous about his departure. Unlike Mubarak, who can leave the country and retire in a nice villa, most of the regime will be left behind and fear a loss of institutional privilege and potentially outright persecution.

This is where the US can seem to play a role in trying to calm these fears by urging and facilitating negotiations that lead to a classic “pacted transition” to democracy that gives the regime a clear role in shaping the new constitutional structure. The existing regime could demand, for instance, immunity from prosecution for past acts in government (this was critical in Argentina for example, where the outgoing military junta was worried it would be prosecuted later for the thousands of “disappeared” persons). They could insist on constitutional provisions that prevent any possible Islamification of the state (akin to the framework in Turkey), and finally, they would have a say in shaping the make up of the new political system.

But the problem now is that to get to this stage, Mubarak simply has to go.

Yglesias

Growth and Decoupling

Lane Kenworthy argues that we haven’t just seen a growth slowdown over the past 35 years, we’ve also seen a decoupling of growth and median living standards. He illustrates it thusly:

What I see when I look at this data is that the “decoupling” went away in the 1990s—the very same period of time when the growth slowdown temporarily went away. So I think the growth problem and the decoupling problem are linked.

Theoretical explanations include an uptick in rent-seeking (FIRE shenanigans, IP shenanigans) that are both anti-growth and pro-inequality, and the fact that tight labor markets disproportionately benefit low-skill workers.

Climate Progress

Expert consensus grows on contribution of record high food prices to Middle East unrest

Scientific American on Egypt: “… there is no doubt that rising food prices added fuel to an already combustible mix,” other MidEast countries “have been snapping up supplies of wheat in the world market to forestall any hint of food price spikes””or regime change”

E&E NewsHigh food prices brought about by climate change have helped fuel the current unrest in the Middle East, the United Kingdom’s global warming envoy said yesterday.

Oxfam:  “Food prices are just one of many factors contributing to the situation in Egypt, but they have helped provide a spark for recent unrest across the region.”

The Atlantic:  “The foundation of Egypt’s economy is broken. Even worse, there is the acute shock of global food prices rising. Agricultural inflation puts a particular squeeze on Egypt’s middle class, because their paychecks go overwhelmingly toward nourishment.”

NPR:  “Rising Food Prices Can Topple Governments, Too”

Slate:   “Protesting on an Empty Stomach.”

The Guardian:  “How extreme weather could create a global food crisis” [That's my new article]

ClimateProgress works hard to identify the key climate and energy issues before they hit the mainstream media.  That’s why I wrote this piece last August, “The Coming Food Crisis: Global food security is stretched to the breaking point, and Russia’s fires and Pakistan’s floods are making a bad situation worse.”

That’s why I began a multipart series on food insecurity in early January on the connection between extreme-weather (driven in part by climate change) and high food prices.  Even I didn’t realize how timely it would be, although Lester Brown, an expert on the food-climate connection, had warned me a crisis could be right around the corner.

As unrest spread through the MidEast, it became increasingly obvious that higher food prices were playing a key triggering role.  This link was predictably attacked by those who deny climate science — and a smaller group who seem to accept the science but then deny the reality of climate impacts (even though they purport to believe adaptation to climate impacts is the best climate strategy).  We must understand the impacts we see today, because they are only going to get worse in the future.

Read more

Politics

Leading Iowa ‘Family’ Group Compares Homosexuality To ‘Second Hand’ Cigarette Smoke

Good As You’s Jeremy Hooper has put together a video exposing the anti-gay rhetoric of The Family Leader, a conservative group spearheading the repeal same-sex-marriage campaign in Iowa. The organization’s president, Bob Vander Plaats, has embarked on a 99-county tour in which he presents The Family Leader as a traditional religious group that is more interested in restoring biblical values than slandering gay people. “The Family Leader affirms sexual relations within the bond of marriage, and opposes distortions of sexuality or special rights to those practicing distorted sexual behavior,” the group’s website states.

But as Hooper discovered, a slight alternation of the organization’s website reveals SecondHandEffects.com, a site which describes homosexuality as a public health crisis akin to smoking and endorses discredited ex-gay reversal therapies:

In fact, one doesn’t even have to change the URL or search for the “Second Hand Effects” of same-sex marriage. I signed up for The Family Leader’s email alerts and was taken to this page, which prominently displayed the offending website:

SecondHandEffects.com offers the following “facts” about homosexuality:

– Reduces life expectancy by about 20-35 years.

– Homosexuals are 20x more likely to be abused by partner than heterosexual.

– CDC reports cancer rate is 90x higher in homosexual men – while smokers is only 10-30x.

– Yes, they CAN change! (Sept. 1, 2009 NARTH report).

Plaats and the Iowa Family Policy Center, which is a subsidiary of the Family Leader, have a long history of anti-gay bigotry. In June 2010, the Iowa Independent reported that Iowa Family Policy Center president Chuck Hurley called a group of pastors who supported same-sex marriage “confused at best and blatantly evil at worst.” Earlier this year, Family Leader official Danny Carroll predicted same-sex marriage in Iowa will lead to polygamy and Plaats himself compared gay unions to incest.

The group has also established lecture series with potential presidential candidates like Sen. Rick Santorum (R-PA) and Newt Gingrich. And that, Hooper concludes, creates “a national interest” “that exceeds the gay marriage conversation altogether.” “The Family Leader has every right to connect gays to cigarette smoking, and conservative leaders have the right to align themselves with this kind of advocacy,” he says. “But if they do, then perhaps the big election question of 2012 will be, is this really the kind of change any of us should believe in?”

Cross-posted on The Wonk Room.

LGBT

Leading Iowa ‘Family’ Group Compares Homosexuality To ‘Second Hand’ Cigarette Smoke

Good As You’s Jeremy Hooper has put together a video exposing the anti-gay rhetoric of The Family Leader, a conservative group spearheading the repeal same-sex-marriage campaign in Iowa. The organization’s president, Bob Vander Plaats, has embarked on a 99-county tour in which he presents The Family Leader as a traditional religious group that is more interested in restoring biblical values than slandering gay people. “The Family Leader affirms sexual relations within the bond of marriage, and opposes distortions of sexuality or special rights to those practicing distorted sexual behavior,” the group’s website states.

But as Hooper discovered, a slight alternation of the organization’s website reveals SecondHandEffects.com, a site which describes homosexuality as a public health crisis akin to smoking and endorses discredited ex-gay reversal therapies:

In fact, one doesn’t even have to change the URL or search for the “Second Hand Effects” of same-sex marriage. I signed up for The Family Leader’s email alerts and was taken to this page, which prominently displayed the offending website:

SecondHandEffects.com offers the following “facts” about homosexuality:

– Reduces life expectancy by about 20-35 years.

– Homosexuals are 20x more likely to be abused by partner than heterosexual.

– CDC reports cancer rate is 90x higher in homosexual men – while smokers is only 10-30x.

– Yes, they CAN change! (Sept. 1, 2009 NARTH report).

Plaats and the Iowa Family Policy Center, which is a subsidiary of the Family Leader, have a long history of anti-gay bigotry. In June 2010, the Iowa Independent reported that Iowa Family Policy Center president Chuck Hurey called a group of pastors who supported same-sex marriage “confused at best and blatantly evil at worst.” Earlier this year, Family Leader official Danny Carroll predicted same-sex marriage in Iowa will lead to polygamy and Plaats himself compared gay unions to incest.

The group has also established lecture series with potential presidential candidates like Sen. Rick Santorum (R-PA) and Newt Gingrich. And that, Hooper concludes, creates “a national interest” “that exceeds the gay marriage conversation altogether.” “The Family Leader has every right to connect gays to cigarette smoking, and conservative leaders have the right to align themselves with this kind of advocacy,” he says. “But if they do, then perhaps the big election question of 2012 will be, is this really the kind of change any of us should believe in?”

Yglesias

Simple Alternatives To Being Regarded As A Greedy Bastard

This piece on Jamie Dimon’s pity party is the latest entry in what’s becoming my favorite journalistic genre. You’ve got a guy, you see, who’s making tons of money on Wall Street. But he’s not in it for the money. Maybe like Dimon “he sees himself as a financier/statesman.” Or maybe he works at Citigroup because he loves the data. But nobody believes him! People think he’s just a greedy SOB. So he needs a press strategy to persuade the world.

It’s a thorny problem. So here’s my idea to help Dimon out. The median household income in Manhattan is about $70,000. For work, I bet Dimon needs more fancy suits and so forth than the typical person, so let’s say he needs quadruple the median household income for one of the country’s richest and highest-cost jurisdictions. Then maybe we round up to $300,000 a year. That’s peanuts compared to what he makes. So give the rest away! You don’t even need to bother with charity. Take the income. Pay the taxes. And have your assistant pick a few addresses at random each year and put checks in envelops. If your assistant doesn’t want to do it, get in touch with me and I will volunteer my own time to facilitate the semi-random disbursement of unwanted funds.

Alyssa

Book Club, Round III

Now that everyone’s had a week off to finish absorbing Cryptonomicon, it’s time to decide what’s next! I’m opening up a new round of nominations, and I’ll keep the thread open through the end of the day on Monday. Let’s start totally fresh—if you’ve nominated something before, let’s consider it ineligible for this round, though we might go back to the well later. Aaaaand go!

Security

California Congressman Plans To Push For A National Version Of Arizona’s Immigration Law

Rep. Ed Royce (R-CA) has announced that he is planning to introduce a national version of Arizona’s immigration law, SB-1070. According to Royce, his legislation would give state-level cops and local law enforcement nationwide the authority to enforce federal immigration laws. In an interview with Fox News this morning, Royce laid out his plans:

FOX NEWS: Number one, you want to give local police — including state troopers at the state level — the authority to enforce immigration laws. Which is identical to Arizona, right?

ROYCE: It’s a force multiplier. We’re basically giving them the option, if you’re in local law enforcement to assist. [...] We need a force multiplier for the border patrol. [...]

FOX NEWS: Even with a Republican majority in the House can this pass, do you have enough support for this?

ROYCE: We have enough support for this in the House to pass this legislation, but then we’ll be up against the Senate. And in the Senate it’s going to depend upon how much pressure certain senators feel from the American public.

Watch it:

It’s worth noting that if the language of Royce’s bill mirrors his description of it, it’s still not exactly a duplication of Arizona’s law. SB-1070 doesn’t give police officers the option to enforce federal immigration laws, it requires them to.

However, Royce’s proposal is troubling for other reasons. In 1996 the Justice Department’s Office of Legal Counsel (OLC) determined that, under the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA), local police officers can only enforce the Act’s criminal provisions (entering the country illegally) and do not have the authority to arrest immigrants for simply being illegally present in the country. However, in 2005, a controversial legal opinion issued by Jay S. Bybee of the OLC was released that deemed the OLC’s 1996 opinion “mistaken.” “We further assume that States have conferred on state police the necessary state-law authority to to make arrest for violation of the federal immigration laws,” wrote Bybee. The 1996 decision — which some argue was actually written by SB-1070 architect Kris Kobach, who was employed by Bybee at the time — has been slammed on various accounts as based on a selective and misconstrued reading of case law.

Congress has the power to regulate immigration, so Royce’s bill could essentially make the OLC decision the law of the land. In arguing against Bybee’s memo, the Migration Policy Center cited several of the decision’s potential negative effects, including, “the potential damage to police-community relations; the diversion of resources from the prevention and punishment of crimes that may be of greater concern to the residents of particular cities and states; the potential for conscious or unconscious racial profiling; the costs to law enforcement of being compelled to release wrongfully arrested individuals; and the distraction of attention from security-related reforms of the INS at a time when that agency is facing radical restructuring.” Since a congressional action would carry even more weight, these effects would likely be amplified.

Ultimately, it’s extremely unlikely Royce’ bill will get past the Senate and even less likely that the current president will sign off on it. But it will continue to distract Congress from working on legislative solutions to the nation’s broken immigration system.

Economy

The For-Profit College Rip-Off: Predatory Schools Take 90 Percent Of Revenue From Govt, Leave Students Bankrupt

Robert Silberman, higher education's $41 million man

The Education Department today released new data on the rate at which higher education students default on their student loans, which showed that students at for-profit colleges — schools like the University of Phoenix or Strayer University — are defaulting at rates far above those at other institutions. In fact, 25 percent of students who attend for profit colleges default within three years. Here’s a chart comparing default rates at different types of schools (the green bar represents defaults at private, for-profit schools).

Here are some more key facts about for-profit colleges:

Just 11 percent of higher education students in the country attend for-profit schools, yet they account for 26 percent of federal student loans and 44 percent of student loan defaults.

Many of the schools make up to ninety percent of their revenue from U.S. taxpayers, through the Pell Grants, Stafford Loans, and other federal assistance used by their students. 91.5 percent of Kaplan’s revenue comes from the government, along with 88 percent revenue at the University of Phoenix.

CEO’s of for-profit colleges receive up to 26 times the amount of pay that the heads of traditional universities do.

Strayer CEO Robert Silberman was paid $41.9 million in 2009. As Bloomberg News noted, “Silberman’s annual compensation would have ranked him eighth on Equilar’s list of the highest-paid executives at the largest 1,000 companies.”

The schools also engage in aggressive recruiting and marketing tactics, promising students quick degrees and good jobs, when the result is more often a rip-off, resulting in “crushing debt and bleak job prospects.” A new report from the National Consumer Law Center said that the for-profits’ in-house loan programs are, for all intents and purposes, predatory.

To address these problems, the Obama administration is attempting to implement tougher regulations — dealing with what’s known as “gainful employment” — which would cause for-profit programs, as well as some programs at non-profit and state schools, to lose their access to public money if their graduates fail to meet a certain debt-to-income ratio or have high rates of student loan default. The regulatory drive has caused the for-profits to buy up a slew of lobbyists and make millions in donations to congressional campaigns and political action committees.

Currently, for-profit schools are only allowed to make 90 percent of their revenue from the federal government. But the schools evidently feel this is not enough, as they’re pushing the government (aided by House Republicans) to eliminate a rule capping how much of their revenue can come from federal largesse, providing them with what is essentially a bailout, as they’re likely to violate the rule this year unless an exemption is made.

For more information, read today’s Progress Report, “For-Profits, Not Students.” Cross-posted on The Wonk Room.

Update

Campus Progress lays out the truth about for-profit colleges:

 

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