Small Town Gets Court To Ban Fracking
Green groups win a court ruling. But what does this mean for the future of hydraulic fracturing?
#winning
Source: news.discovery.com
The Biggest Risk to the Economy in 2012, and What’s the Economy For Anyway?
Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner, speaking at the World Economic Forum in Davos a few days ago, said the “critical risks” facing the American economy this year were a worsening of Europe’s chronic sovereign debt crisis and a rise in tensions with Iran that could stoke global oil prices.
What about jobs and wages here at home?
As the Commerce Department reported Friday, the U.S. economy grew 2.8 percent between October and December – the fastest pace in 18 months and the first time growth exceeded 2 percent all year. Many bigger American companies have been reporting strong profits in recent months. GE and Lockheed Martin closed the year with record order backlogs.
Yet the percent of working-age Americans in jobs isn’t much different than what it was three years ago. Yes, America now produces more than it did when the recession began. But it does so with 6 million fewer workers.
Average after-tax incomes adjusted for inflation are moving up a bit. (They increased at an annual rate of .8 percent in the last three months of 2011 after falling 1.9 percent in prior three-month period. For all of 2011, incomes fell .1 percent.)
But beware averages. Shaquille O’Neal and I have an average height of six feet. Exclude Mitt Romney’s $20 million last year — along with everyone else securely in the top 1 percent — and the incomes of most Americans are continuing to slip.
Consumer spending picked up slightly in the fourth quarter mainly because consumers drew down their savings. Obviously, this can’t last.
Meanwhile, government is spending less on schools, roads, bridges, parks, defense, and social services. Government spending at all levels dropped at an annual rate of 4.6 percent in the last quarter – and that’s likely to continue.
Some economists worry this drop is a drag on the economy. But it also means fewer public goods available to all Americans regardless of income.
Congress still hasn’t decided whether to renew the temporary payroll tax cut and extend unemployment benefits past February. If it doesn’t, expect another 1 percent slice off GDP growth this year.
Tim Geithner is surely correct that the European debt crisis and Iran pose risks to the American economy in 2012. But they aren’t the biggest risk. The biggest risk is right here at home – that most Americans will continue to languish.
All of which raises a basic question: Who or what is the economy for? Surely not just for a few at the top, and not just big corporations and their CEOs. Nor can the success of the economy be measured by how fast the GDP is growing, or how high the Dow Jones Industrial Average is rising, or whether average incomes are turning upward.
The crisis of American capitalism marks the triumph of consumers and investors over workers and citizens. And since most of us occupy all four roles – even though the lion’s share of consuming and investing is done by the wealthy – the real crisis centers on the increasing efficiency by which all of us as consumers and investors can get great deals, and our declining capacity to be heard as workers and citizens.
Modern technologies allow us to shop in real time, often worldwide, for the lowest prices, highest quality, and best returns. Through the Internet and advanced software we can now get relevant information instantaneously, compare deals, and move our money at the speed of electronic impulses. We can buy goods over the Internet that are delivered right to our homes. Never before in history have consumers and investors been so empowered.
Yet these great deals increasingly come at the expense of our own and our compatriots’ jobs and wages, and widening inequality. The goods we want or the returns we seek can often be produced more efficiently elsewhere around the world by companies offering lower pay, fewer benefits, and inferior working conditions.
They also come at the expense of our Main Streets – the hubs of our communities – when we get the great deals through the Internet or at big-box retailers that scan the world for great deals on our behalf.
Some great deals have devastating environmental consequences. Technology allows us to efficiently buy low-priced items from poor nations with scant environmental standards, sometimes made in factories that spill toxic chemicals into water supplies or pollutants into the air. We shop for great deals in cars that spew carbon into the air and for airline tickets in jet planes that do even worse.
Other great deals offend common decency. We may get a great price or high return because a producer has cut costs by hiring children in South Asia or Africa who work twelve hours a day, seven days a week. Or by subjecting people to death-defying working conditions.
As workers or as citizens most of us would not intentionally choose these outcomes but as seekers after great deals we are indirectly responsible for them. Companies know that if they fail to offer us the best deals we will take our money elsewhere – which we can do with ever-greater speed and efficiency.
The best means of balancing the demands of consumers and investors against those of workers and citizens has been through democratic institutions that shape and constrain markets.
Laws and rules offer some protection for jobs and wages, communities, and the environment. Although such rules are likely to be costly to us as consumers and investors because they stand in the way of the very best deals, they are intended to approximate what we as members of a society are willing to sacrifice for these other values.
But technologies for getting great deals are outpacing the capacities of democratic institutions to counterbalance them. For one thing, national rules intended to protect workers, communities, and the environment typically extend only to a nation’s borders. Yet technologies for getting great deals enable buyers and investors to transcend borders with increasing ease, at the same time making it harder for nations to monitor or regulate such transactions.
For another, goals other than the best deals are less easily achieved within the confines of a single nation. The most obvious example is the environment, whose fragility is worldwide. In addition, corporations now routinely threaten to move jobs and businesses away from places that impose higher costs on them – and therefore, indirectly, on their consumers and investors – to more “business friendly” jurisdictions. The Internet and software have made companies sufficiently nimble to render such threats credible.
But the biggest problem is that corporate money is undermining democratic institutions in the name of better deals for consumers and investors. Campaign contributions, fleets of well-paid corporate lobbyists, and corporate-financed PR campaigns about public issues are overwhelming the capacities of Congress, state legislatures, regulatory agencies, and the courts to reflect the values of workers and citizens.
As a result, consumers and investors are doing increasingly well but job insecurity is on the rise, inequality is widening, communities are becoming less stable, and climate change is worsening. None of this is sustainable over the long term.
Blame global finance and worldwide corporations all you want. But save some blame for the insatiable consumers and investors inhabiting almost every one of us, who are entirely complicit. And blame our inability as workers and citizens to reclaim our democracy.
Robert,
There are some salient points to your argument here, a couple of which, however, I think you should elaborate on. Perhaps you’ll afford me the room to proffer a couple of ideas which strike me as complications to your assertion, though:
I’ll begin with your remarks RE: the economy:
Who or what is the economy for? […]
The crisis of American capitalism marks the triumph of consumers and investors over workers and citizens
I’ll concede to your rhetorical flourish here which portrays “the economy” as a thing with a purpose. What a comprehensive understanding of the economy allows for, you must know, is the greater ability to control and direct it.
However, in whose interest does studying the economy serve? If we were to examine economic discourse, we would find a few things: observations and theories about the flow of cash, where and to whom it goes, how, and why; we would find observations and theories regarding the motives, intelligibility, desires, concerns, and impulses of buyers and sellers; we would find attempts, in almost all cases, to account mathematically and with formulas how all of these factors may be predicted and understood. But in service to whom?
Surely an honest, cursory glance will reveal to you that the consumer, the broadest and most common of all living economic agents, is not generally informed about any of these models or theories. That should be your first cue as to the democratic inclinations of Capitalism. What is most being presented to us is, as you point out, the unsurprising: offers: cheap buys, deals, savings, from producers—that is, the ones who profit. Our “understanding” of the market, the most common economic discourse that we are familiar with, is the one that enriches and serves the interest of the seller. If it were the consumers in power, the result would be obvious: we would be the ones dictating the terms of operation.
If you agree to this, then surely the “crisis of American capitalism” does not in fact mark the triumph of “consumers and investors over workers and citizens”. It must be understood, first of all, that consumers and investors, and workers and citizens, do not exist as a neat dichotomous pair, which you in fact concede at the end:
But save some blame for the insatiable consumers and investors inhabiting almost every one of us, who are entirely complicit. And blame our inability as workers and citizens to reclaim our democracy.
So you assert that we are all functioning agents of this economic dominion, because that is what it is: a domain where various groups and agents dominate another. We know this because we know, from plain observation, that power is not divided equally among us. However, what that also makes clear, is that there is a problem with your final assertion.
In law, it is recognized that those who are in positions of prostration and submission to a higher power, or source of authority—as in employees under employers, children under parents, students under teachers, young partners in the cases of statutory rape—are lacking in the capacity to resist-to or agree-with their counterpart in the same degree of control and responsibility as they are. That is why, for instance, along the chain of command, superiors are generally responsible for the behaviour of those who execute their decisions and possibly make mistakes.
It’s clear now that there is an exception to that principle in functioning capitalist economics. If it weren’t the exception, where the power and responsibility over the workers exists in the hands of the workers, we would be looking instead at Socialism. So we see that the power is not in fact in the hands of consumers, and neither therefore should be the blame. The only remaining justification for this position, which you have not (thankfully) mentioned, is the presupposition that all economic agents are perfectly rational agents, who make decisions with perfect knowledge, which was long a position of prominent economists (including Friedman), an idea that is now, thankfully, coming to be understood as almost entirely false.
Your remaining position is now thus:
But save some blame for the insatiable consumers and investors inhabiting almost every one of us, who are entirely complicit.And blame our inability as workers and citizens to reclaim our democracy.
After what I’ve mentioned, refuting this point becomes a bit clearer: that our inability as workers to reclaim [y]our democracy is largely out of our hands.
[Y]Our inability as citizens, however, to reclaim [y]our democracy is entirely different matter. This position is complicated because it doesn’t account for a couple of things:
• Citizens are not only consumers
• Some of those who aren’t, in the operative sense, consumers are extremely powerful
• Law makers, those who make legislation, must do so—virtually as a prerequisite of operating politically in the USA—in the service of Capitalism
• The representatives and beneficiaries, including those who we know wield a certain amount of power over the consumer, of Capitalism, are by extension, the ones who legislation and law are crafted in service of
Most of these points, if you’re going to be honest, are already tacit in what you’ve said; I’ve merely pulled them from the depths of what you imply.
The final point should be very obvious, then:
As democratic agents, workers and citizens are comparatively powerless to control, like we are the capitalistic agents, the legislative ones, who are in service not always to that capitalist power, but to that capitalist operative principle.
A few other, terse words:
As Occupy Wall Street has shown, there is very little acknowledgment of either democratic demands, or of citizens’ actual power, even when exercised, demonstrated, and otherwise made as well-known as possible. They are widely dismissed and supressed in their attempts to effect change.
Even when the democratic agents attempt to use their voice as one, they’re met with the military and riot police—an interesting contradiction of a country which ostensibly enshrines in its populace the “right to bare arms” for purposes of resisting tyranny and oppression. Democratic agents are not even able to assemble in public spaces, or maintain libraries, or sit peacefully without facing violent suppression of their attempts to manifest their will. Never have they yet attempted to wield as one the 100 or so million personal firearms which exist in the United States—even though they have the “right” to. The reason they haven’t, by and large, must be because they don’t believe in the value of violence in society. Fancy that.
So even in America, where there is ostensibly the right to meet Statist force with Constitutionally-enshrined democratic force, the democratic agents are unable to effect their goals. Whatever blame that may previously have been leveled on citizens for remaining complacent is now entirely moot: they no longer are complacent, they are shouting: and they are beaten, pepper-sprayed, shot at, ignored, and have their voices suppressed by exclusion of the press, selective press coverage, and legislative bias which, as in the example of SOPA, PIPA, and in Europe, ACTA, continues to serve the Capitalist operative principle, to the detriment of 99% of America.
Source: robertreich
“Promo Bay”
The Pirate Bay starts today a new and interesting system to promote arts
Do you have a band? Are you an aspiring movie producer? A comedian? A cartoon artist?
They will replace the front page logo with a link to your work.
As soon as I learned about it, I decided to participate. Several of my books are there, and as I said in a previous post, My thoughts on SOPA, the physical sales of my books are growing since my readers post them in P2P sites.
Welcome to download my books for free and, if you enjoy them, buy a hard copy – the way we have to tell to the industry that greed leads to nowhere.
Love
The Pirate Coelho [link]
So this is a thing now.
This isn’t exactly the same as Neil Gaiman’s argument, although similar. Paulo’s perspective on the matter in its entirety, however, is rather different. (I’ve bolded the key distinction; he’d rather see literature diffused worldwide, than see his face everywhere—although he’d be pleased nonetheless, if he did.) Anyway, take a gander.
Citizen Philosophers
Teaching Justice in Brazil
Carlos Fraenkel »In 1971 the military dictatorship that ruled Brazil from 1964 to 1985 eliminated philosophy from high schools. Teachers, professors in departments of education, and political activists championed its return, while most academic philosophers were either indifferent or suspicious. The dictatorship seems to have understood philosophy’s potential to create engaged citizens…
The official rationale for the 2008 law is that philosophy “is necessary for the exercise of citizenship.” The law—the world’s largest-scale attempt to bring philosophy into the public sphere—thus represents an experiment in democracy. Among teachers at least, many share Ribeiro’s hope that philosophy will provide a path to greater civic participation and equality. Can it do even more? Can it teach students to question and challenge the foundations of society itself? >continue<
Source: bostonreview.net
“When the web started, I used to get really grumpy with people because they put my poems up. They put my stories up. They put my stuff up on the web. I had this belief, which was completely erroneous, that if people put your stuff up on the web and you didn’t tell them to take it down, you would lose your copyright, which actually, is simply not true. And I also got very grumpy because I felt like they were pirating my stuff, that it was bad. And then I started to notice that two things seemed much more significant. One of which was… places where I was being pirated, particularly Russia where people were translating my stuff into Russian and spreading around into the world, I was selling more and more books. People were discovering me through being pirated. Then they were going out and buying the real books, and when a new book would come out in Russia, it would sell more and more copies. I thought this was fascinating, and I tried a few experiments. Some of them are quite hard, you know, persuading my publisher for example to take one of my books and put it out for free. We took “American Gods,” a book that was still selling and selling very well, and for a month they put it up completely free on their website. You could read it and you could download it. What happened was sales of my books, through independent bookstores, because that’s all we were measuring it through, went up the following month three hundred percent I started to realize that actually, you’re not losing books. You’re not losing sales by having stuff out there. When I give a big talk now on these kinds of subjects and people say, “Well, what about the sales that I’m losing through having stuff copied, through having stuff floating out there?” I started asking audiences to just raise their hands for one question. Which is, I’d say, “Okay, do you have a favorite author?” They’d say, “Yes.” and I’d say, “Good. What I want is for everybody who discovered their favorite author by being lent a book, put up your hands.” And then, “Anybody who discovered your favorite author by walking into a bookstore and buying a book raise your hands.” And it’s probably about five, ten percent of the people who actually discovered an author who’s their favorite author, who is the person who they buy everything of. They buy the hardbacks and they treasure the fact that they got this author. Very few of them bought the book. They were lent it. They were given it. They did not pay for it, and that’s how they found their favorite author. And I thought, “You know, that’s really all this is. It’s people lending books. And you can’t look on that as a loss of sale. It’s not a lost sale, nobody who would have bought your book is not buying it because they can find it for free.” What you’re actually doing is advertising. You’re reaching more people, you’re raising awareness. Understanding that gave me a whole new idea of the shape of copyright and of what the web was doing. Because the biggest thing the web is doing is allowing people to hear things. Allowing people to read things. Allowing people to see things that they would never have otherwise seen. And I think, basically, that’s an incredibly good thing.”—Neil Gaiman on Copyright, Piracy, and the Commercial Value of the Web (X)
Besides having to resort to someone like Neil Gaiman, whose voice and authority on the endorsement of ‘piracy’ certainly must count towards our argument, there’s really an even simpler thing which he completely ignores. Books already are free. We have things called libraries which allow us, for a necessary period of time, to have a free book.
The argument for that service is even simpler. It’s the reason why institutions like democracy collectively pool resources together in order to provide a service: because we declare that the service has value, one that is so great to society, that we will (ostensibly) burden the very minor cost of supporting libraries so that every last person is not denied access to that enormous resource of knowledge. It’s a fundamental guarantee of the promotion of our culture, however much we starve and denigrate it today.
‘Piracy’ is the declaration of that value manifest, only electronically, and throughout the entire world. The internet itself was not supposed to be a commercial enterprise. Our realistic ability to manifest the value that we place as a society on the free exchange of knowledge is severely hampered only by our willingness to serve, or inability to combat, the groups that seek to control it for commercial interests.
Edit: To be honest, I’m actually kind of appalled that Gaiman’s argument exists solely on economic grounds. So you know what, because of that, just like the economic-argument that the Viet Nam, or Iraq, or Afghanistan wars are/were wrong because they’re costly, screw this guy. People overwhelmingly disapproved of all of those, and the world overwhelmingly approves of the internet and the free transmission of information: if you can’t acknowledge that, you’re one of them.
Source: roominthecastle
It’s true that website-seizures-without-trials are not quite as lawless as indefinite detentions, since there are actual statutes conferring this power. But it nonetheless sends a very clear message when citizens celebrate a rare victory in denying the Government a power it seeks — the power to shut down websites without a trial — only for the Government to turn around the very next day and shut down one of the world’s largest and best-known sites. Whether intended or not, the message is unmistakable: Congratulations, citizens, on your cute little “democracy” victory in denying us the power to shut down websites without a trial: we’re now going to shut down one of your most popular websites without a trial.
Source: banquethall
“vital decision-making…must remain at the top…the real threat to democracy comes not from overmanagement, but from undermanagement”
— Robert McNamara, probably one of my favourite Dicks in Politics
im.tomacreon: From this day forth I’m pretty sure I shall not be using any of...
From this day forth I’m pretty sure I shall not be using any of Amazon’s services again. if you didn’t hear already, WikiLeaks suffered some down time this morning not because of recent DDOS attacks but because Amazon Web Services took them off and moved them to a Swedish provider.
Senator Joe…
Source: acreon
My response to this answer.
Good job pulling up some Googled quotes of both authors—you’ve utterly failed in attempting to summarize their views, OR else whatever you did read, it was so incomprehensibly misunderstood that I shouldn’t even bother extracting a logical answer from you. (Not to mention the absurdly elitist, out-of-context, cherrypicking of Voltaire.)
Why do you call for ridicule and punishment? Do you think this was ham-fistedly concocted as a petty act of revenge by some 18-year-old with no sense of the historic, global implications a leak like this has?
Regardless, I was simply smacking you with the stick of rhetoric, whose purpose is to force the re-evaluation of a particular subject’s (You) terms (your beliefs).
That’s not to say they’re wrong. It’s not to say they’re right, either. And you may well think you’ve thought them over and arrived at them via informed, and logical means.
On the other hand, your opening line “I am by no means an Obama fan…” predisposes any further argument you make to the slave-driver of partisanship, and you even go on to link the exposure of classified documents to state security, while simultaneously calling for heads to roll in a knee-jerk reaction of jingoism.
Specifics aside (bad for Obama? Ha!), none of the points I’ve raised, or will raise, are really about you, or Obama, or America. America (ie. the citizens or in this case, a single citizen, within its’ borders) simply had the guts to do something about a very large problem.
(Hint: the problem is not especially American.)
America was just the biggest, most obvious example someone used to prove a very big point. It is a microcosm of the world’s behaviour at large — just an exaggerated form of it. The point of this leak was so much bigger than America, its foreign policy, or its’ violations of humans rights abroad.
First of all, it’s no surprise that WikiLeaks is founded and run by one Australian, Julian Assange. Australia’s one of a few Western-Civilized countries that has been systemically suffering from the erosion of citizens’—indeed, entire societies’—basic Democratic freedoms. Australia has been on a path of censorship, government market-interference (and not in the way you think, either), and fallacious appeals-to-fear for nearly a decade now. Democracy is about the government representing the interests of the people, as defined and elected by the people—not about the rampant implementation of laws, “rights”, procedures, bureaucracies, and international dick-waving behind closed-curtains.
Assange’s experience there is itself a simplified, microcosm of the exact same thing happening in America, and every other Western Civilization — just an exaggerated, Australian form of it. ;)
The problem, put simply, is power. Not Obama or Bush’s power—albeit Bush’s power was certainly more indulgently flexed than Obama’s—but the power of all institutions acting in unison in their own interests. (Obama, as you’ll note, traded GITMO detainees for his celebrity face-time in the prisoners’ countries of origin with their leaders.)
The direct result of this, of course, is profit and power-driven management of the economy, of information, and resultantly, of the people. Profit-driven is often interchangeably used with ‘market-driven’, and even conflated with nonsensical ablations of the word ‘capitalism’.
WikiLeaks’ actions served or tried, in essence, to restore that balance. The power that your government—all governments—wield over its people through the withholding of information and exploitation of its unknowability is tantamount to their continued dynasties of power, and maintenance of the processes already working.
What’s strange is that people are celebrating the leaks as huge, world-changing events, while others are denying them as meaningless and trite.
The media (the leak’s principle medium), which aims to serve as a representative of the public and report in its’ own interests (ironically becoming, in the process, more democratic than government), has determined these leaks to be indescribably important, precisely for the reason that they’re subversive of the exploitations I outlined earlier.
The US Government (the leak’s direct, though arguably not-principle target), which claims to serve as a representative of the people (for 20 years now, the judiciary has actually acted in the interests of your people more than your policy-forming electorates), by contrast, has played down—and yet condemned—the leak as both insignificant, and harmful to everything about everything about America.
This is not by chance.
By downplaying it, they’re serving to allay any anxiety they believe we may feel. What they fear is that a stimulated population will be invigorated to prompt change (both of your parties, GOP and Dems, are conservative and therefore highly resistant to change), something that only occurs when large breaches of public trust happens. They’re also exploiting the fallacy of appeal-to-fear (which makes people anxious), somewhat counter-intuitively. If this is true, then, why are Hillary and Obama et al. so infuriated by it? Certainly because it personally incriminates them—Hillary covertly instructed diplomats to obtain personal security information, including biometric data about UN’s Secretary-General Ban Ki Moon—but also because it revealed their actions not to their people, who they clearly aren’t accountable to, but to other international leaders that will accordingly respond to USA’s revealed actions.
“If citizens want their governments to reflect their wishes — which presumably entails ensuring security and international stability*, avoiding wars and creating economic growth** — they must allow those governments to operate in some degree of secrecy. This is because the reality of international relations dictates that states take certain unsavory actions because they are the least bad option available.”— U of SoCal’s Daily Trojan newspaper
*Fallacy: appeal to fear.
**Fallacy: bribery.
Unfortunately, as Sir William Temple expressed,
“The credit derived in negotiations from truthfulness [is] more useful than the suspicion aroused by cunning.”
This is merely representative of every government’s weakness, not America’s; for other nations to think they’re immune to this kind of infiltration is arrogant and myopic. If anything, it’ll only inspire others to do the same. (You should thank your own patriotic regurgitations about democracy for this, instead of getting all anxious when it actually happens. Canada’s own Access To Information Act of 1985 partially resolves some of our own urges to commit massive leaks like this.)
Cablegate, poetically, is a more apt description of its’ significance than any of the other numerous ‘-gate’ appendages. You wanted change—and now you got it.
Only time remains to tell how everyone will respond to these leaks. Clearly, somebody inside thought there were some things that everyone was entitled to know.
