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From: Gregory Brown
To: undisclosed-recipients:;
Bee: [email protected]
Subject: Greg Brown's Weekend Reading and Other Things.... 05/05/2013
Date: Sun, 05 May 2013 16:20:36 +0000
Attachments: Five_myths_about_electric_cars_Chris_Paine_TWP_April_28,_2013.pdf;
Public_and_Private_Sector_Payroll_Jobs,_Bush_and_Obama_Bill_McBride_CalculatedRIS
K_04_28_2013.pdf;
The_Economy_Is_Heading_the_Wrong_Way_NYT_Editorial_Board_April_28,_2013.pdf;
The_Urban_Fire_Next_Time_Patrick_Sharkey_NYT_April_28,_2013.pdf;
Five_myths_about_manufacturingjobs_Ro_Khanna_TWP_February_15,_2013.pdf;
Iraq_on_the_brink,_again_Ryan_Crocker_TWP_April_30,_2013.pdf;
May_Day_is_not_about_maypoles,_the_histoty_of_international_workers'_day_Richard_Se
ymour_The_Guardian_May_l ,_2012.pdf;
The_Brief_Origins_ofMay_Day_Eric_Chase_Industrial_Workers_ofthe_World.pdf;
How_to_ease_economic_atutiety_Harold_Meyerson_TWP_April_30,_2013.pdf;
Myths_and_Realities_About_the_U.S._Economy_Ben_Gersten_Money_Moming_April_29,
_2013.pdf;
Norman Ornstein and Thomas Mann Explain_Why_Congress_is_Failing_Us_Moyers_&
Company_Apri1:26, j013.pdfcThe_IsText_Wall_Street_Mega-
candal Has Arrived_Shah_Gilani_Money_Morning_May_2,_2013.pdf;
Meshell_Ndegeocello_bio.pdf
DEAR FRIEND
After doing a "last review/edit" of my Weekend Reading and sending it to friends, being a political
news junkie, I start the week with the Sunday Morning major networks news programs, Face the
Nation hosted by Bob Schieffer/CBS, Meet the Press hosted by David Gregory/NBC and The
Week with George Stephanopoulos/ABC. Since in LA they all concurrently broadcast at 8am, I
record them along with Chris Matthew' half-hour weekend news show on NBC for later viewing. In
addition to their round table panels of usual suspects including, George Will, Newt Gindrich, Mathew
Dowd, Chuck Todd, Kelly O'Donald, Bob Woodward, Andrea Mitchell, Dan Rather, David Ignatius,
Peggy Noonan, Cokie Roberts, David Brooks, Sam Donaldson, Fareed Zakaria, E.J. Dionne, Jr., Robert
Reich, David Gergen, Peggy Noonan, John Dickerson, and Norah O'Donnell, this week's special guests
included Senator Lindsey Graham on CBS, Senator John McCain on NBC and Representative Mike
Rogers on ABC, to allow them to `Monday Morning Quarterback' the past week's political events and
decisions. The problem with all of these shows, it that they are often use to settle scores and advance
ideological positions, with sound bites being presented as solutions, pro and con, just in case one is
correct. And because great humor is often based on a foundation of truth, what President Obama said
at the Press Dinner last Saturday is true for the Sunday news programs — "... I know CNN has taken
some knocks lately, but thefact is I admire their commitment to cover all sides of a story, just in case
one of them happens to be accurate."
House Intelligence Committee chair Rep. Mike Rogers, R-Mich., said this morning on This Week that
"some action needs to be taken"against Syria for its alleged use of chemical weapons, saying that the
red line "can't be a dotted line." Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., said Sunday on Face the Nation that
"there's a growing consensus in the U.S. Senate that the United States should get involved." "If we
keep this hands-off approach to Syria, this indecisive action towards Syria, kind of not knowing
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what we're going to do next, we're going to have war with Iran because Iran's going to take our
inaction in Syria as meaning we're not serious about their nuclear weapons program," he said. "We
need to get involved." And on Meet the Press, Senator John McCain auguring that the United
States should be arming the rebels, using airstrikes to attack Assad's forces and create a safe haven for
refugees. What all of this really means, no one knows, because as we know from Viet Nam, Iraq and
Afghanistan, without clearly defined goals, strong partners and total international support, the
aftermath will most likely end up as a disaster. The first rule in drinking, if you don't know sip slow",
and in international diplomacy, "when you don't know move slow." The President is right to dial back
the "red line", especially when none of his options are good and there is no clear long-term goals or
strong local partners. Leaving Afghanistan in the hands of Karzai and Iraq with Chalabi, Allawi and
Maliki has proven to be a disaster, and in Syria it could be even worse.
Although I applaud John McCain as a patriot, he is totally out of touch with reality. This is a person
who believes that the Surge In Iraq was a success, when in reality is was a temporary band-aid that for
a time, overwhelming several violent factions while paying off others, but doing nothing to address the
underlying core problems and dysfunctionality in the country. I believe that Lindsey Graham is right
when he says that Syria looks like it is going to end up a failed state. As such I believe that tjat Senator
McCain and the other Sunday experts are wrong when they insist that American should act alone,
when there is nothing that the US can do other than putting a band-aid on a festering situation,
especially with little or no public support at home, and regional non-existent partners, will put the
blame on the last man standing. Because of this, all of the President's options are bad. Bombing a
foreign country is -- an act of war, however you spin it. And as Collin Powell once caution, President
George W. Bush V it breaks you will own it", the same is true in Syria. It is estimated that 70,000
people have already died in Syria as a result of this current civil war, and to use the death of 20 to 3o
more as a pretense to go to war seems a bit hypocritical to me. Although Sarin is categorized as a
WMD, less people died worldwide during the same period in the US due to firearms. Still,
we couldn't even get background checks approved in Congress last week. I watched the Sunday
Morning News Programs, with their guests advocating that we do something immediately, even when
they all agree that there are no good options. Maybe when there are no good options, we should wait.
And if this is truly a problem, let's wait for the Arab League, EU or the UN to take the lead, because as
General Powell explained, if we break it we will end up owning it." And the Syrian war, will be our
war.... game-changer or not. So again, if you don't know, sip slow.
Jon Stewart On Syria's 'Red Line': Republicans Think 'Freedom Magic' Will Win
War (VIDEO)
Video Clip: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/05/01/jon-stewart-on-syrias-red n 3192131.html
If Lindsey Graham has his way, the U.S. soon will be fighting four wars. On Tuesday, Jon Stewart took
a look at Obama's "red line" that Syria may or may not have crossed by using chemical weapons, and
then took apart the Republican march to war, but not "boots on the ground" war. Apparently, we'll be
fighting this one with "remotefreedom magic." But Stewart gave Graham some credit when he said
we just have to get the right weapons to the right people. "Oh, the right weapons to the right people...
maybe we could do background checks." Isiah, that'll never work." Jon Stewart
Please watch the above video clip, to truly see the absurdity of the ill-thought advice that the Sunday
News Programs experts presents week in and week out.
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Actually it was kind of nice to see five Presidents representing both parties, putting aside partisan
bickering and gushing over the one thing that everyone could agree, George W. Bush is a true patriot
and a good man. And having met him when he was Governor of Texas, I can confirm that from my
meetings, he is both. Even after personally believing that Cheney and others stole the 2000 election on
his behalf (no different to what happen forty years earlier to Nixon as a result of voter irregularities in
Cook County), like with JFK, I hoped that this injustice might produce something positive, as George
W ran on a platform of Compassionate Conservatism. And he might have gotten there if it weren't for
Cheney, Rumsfeld, Wolfowitz, Rove and others who subverted the White House for political, personal,
ideological and economic gain. Economic yes, because how else can you explain how trillions of
dollars were spent or diverted to special interest and the rich with so little to show for it. As Deep
Throat use to say, "follow the money".
The issue is that I really can't whitewash are the failures of his administration, no matter how many
supporters try to rewrite history so that his legacy can be redeemed, similar to what has happen with
Harry Truman. Like LBJ's legacy will always be linked to Viet Nam, Nixon's to Watergate and Carter's
to American hostages in Iran, George W. Bush will and should always be painted with his biggest
blunder -- the senseless failed Iran war. When asked what was the biggest problem was when he first
arrived in the White House at the tender age of 31, George Stephanopoulos replied, "everything is
magnified." He described having a great day in the White House Press Briefing Room, and his Mother
calling to say that she saw him pick his nose while on camera and as a result, she will never be able to
face her friends at the hairdressers — thus both mistakes and/or successes are magnified beyond
sensible proportion. But this is not true for the 2nd Iran War.
The difference here is not one of magnification. George W's disastrous war, cost the lives of more than
4000 Americans, hundreds of thousands Iraqis, made refugees out of millions more, costs trillions of
dollars and totally destabilized the entire political balance in the Middle East, for decades to come.
And depending on who you speak to, it is now considered the number one or two worse foreign policy
blunders in the country's history. But even if we cut Iraq out of the equation, his ruinous economic
policies of lowering taxes and raising spending taking the country from a $230 billion surplus to a $1
trillion yearly deficit, the gutting of regulatory controls that enabled the housing bubble and Wall
Street malfeasance that caused the worse economic crash since the Great Depression, poor response to
Katrina that left thousands of New Orleans destitute (and the President "Brownie you're doing a good
job"), the utter mismanagement of the War in Afghanistan and finally 9/n(the Bushes knew the bin
Ladenfamily personally and as a result George W. did not take CAI and State Department warnings
about Osama seriously), because as Harry Truman use to say, "the buck stops here" (the President's
desk), these catastrophes should certainly place the Bush/Cheney Administration in the Pantheon of
the "worse ever Presidency."
My father use to say, "that history is always rewritten by the winners." And like everyone else,
President's should be allowed to make mistakes, and not be tainted forever as a result of one, two or
several miscalculations or indiscretions. Ronald Reagan got beyond Iran-Contra and the Marine
Barracks massacre to become the most popular Republican since Abe Lincoln (who
actually wasn't popular when in office) and somehow Bill Clinton got beyond Monica Lewinsky and
Somalia, to now become the most popular former President in the world. But in this moment of
Kumbayah we should rightfully be put aside Presidential mistakes. But if we do not want to repeat the
past mistakes, we should not allow history to be white-washed. As a result we should always recognize
that slavery, the Holocaust and child labor and child soldiers/armies in the past and present are
blights on humanity, should be acknowledged and not white-washed, so that they never happen again.
As a result, the same should be said for the Bush/Cheney Presidency, even though like President
Obama said, I personally believe that George W. Bush is a good man. And obviously his mother agrees
with me, based on what she said on the Today Show last week,"/ think it's a great country. There are
a lot of greatfamilies, and it's not justfourfamilies or whatever. There are other people out there
that are very qualified and we've had enough Bushes."
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"No taxation without representation" is a slogan originating during the 175os and 176os that
summarized a primary grievance of the British colonists in the Thirteen Colonies, which was one of the
major causes of the American Revolution. In short, many in those colonies believed that, as they were
not directly represented in the distant British Parliament, any laws it passed taxing the colonists (such
as the Sugar Act and the Stamp Act) were illegal under the Bill of Rights 1689, and were a denial of
their rights as Englishmen. The phrase captures a sentiment central to the cause of the English Civil
War that led to the creation of the United States. Obviously our current congressional representatives
in Washington have loss sight that they serve at the pleasure of the people who voted them into office,
and as such should enact their wishes.
More than half of Americans agree with the Obama administration's contention that the economy is
being hurt by the spending cuts prompted by the sequestration, according to the latest New York
Times/CBS News poll. About one-third said the automatic cuts to military and domestic programs
that went into effect because President Obama and Republicans in Congress could not agree on a
budget plan would have no effect on the economy one way or the other. Just 1 in 10 said the automatic
cuts would help the economy. And economist are now almost in universal agreement that austerity is
the wrong direction. Even those who supported sequestration, including Rep. Renee Ellmers (R-N.C.)
who appeared on Wednesday's edition of "All in With Chris Hayes," admitting that the
government's priorities on sequestration were not carried out in the right order, citing that payments
for cancer-related drugs and services should have priority over the recent air traffic controller
settlement.
But let's not limit this to economic matters. In the wake of the Newtown massacre, 90% of Americans,
including almost 8o% of NRA members now believe that there should be background checks on
anyone purchasing a firearm, still with 54 to 46 vote in-favor, gun control legislation was shelved. And
with more than ii million people living in America illegally, many for decades with children who were
born here, supported by a majority of American favoring a passage to citizenship, congress still
appears to be slow-walking legislation that would address this grievance. Obviously a major part of
the problem is hyper-partisanship. But the Big Ugly is Republican leaders' desire/intention to make
Obama a failed President. As a result, I Agree with the President when he chides Congress telling them
that they should act as adults. And I urge everyone of you to make our political representatives know
that the current dysfunctionality, will not be tolerated and that there will be a price paid on Election
Day.
This week in Money Morning, journalist David Zeiler wrote - What America's $2 Trillion
Underground Economy Says About Jobs. Although I totally disagree with the premise of his
article that Obamacare and other regulations enacted during current administration has caused the US
underground economy to balloon to $2 trillion annually. By "underground economy,"Zeiler is
talking about all the business activity that is not reported to the government, which includes a growing
number of people getting paid for their labor in cash.
That means the shadowy figures of the underground economy - the drug dealers, Mafia godfathers and
tax cheats, for example - now have a lot more company. But most of these new participants in the
underground economy are ordinary hard-working Americans, who are increasingly taking jobs that
pay "under the table" either because nothing else is available or they need a second source of income to
make ends meet. America's underground economy is nothing new, but since the Great Recession hit in
2009, experts estimate it has doubled in size, driven by unemployed or underemployed people
desperate for income.
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My belief is that many in the underground economy are folks (like my mother who was a domestic
worker for fifty years), including handymen day-laborers, construction workers, childcare workers,
illegal aliens and domestic maids like my mother. And most of these people have been trapped in the
underground economy for years. And the number one reason is that paying workers off the books has
great appeal to employers, who then can avoid paying benefits and taxes, as well as to get around
regulations that protect workers' right. And as more people are now working from home or have had
to take on second jobs, much of this increased business activity goes unreported. But the balloon is a
result of companies moving full-time employees to private contractor status, and the growth of many
more working from home.
Even the workers getting paid under the table don't get-off scot-free. They forfeit contributions to
Social Security, which will greatly reduce benefits in their retirement years, and get no healthcare, paid
vacation or other benefits. And they often end up with lower average pay to boot. "People who do
these types ofjobs run the risk of getting exploited with lower pay or not being paid at all," Laura
Gonzalez, professor of personal finance at Fordham University, told CNBC. "There could be more
exploitation if more people areforced into this type of economy."
Again: To suggest that Obamacare and increase regulations caused the underground economy to
mushroom over the past couple of years, is a totally fallacy, especially since Obamacare wasn't enacted
until January 2013, and much of won't be enacted until 2014, 2015 and later. When the truth is that
many people's work habits have change due to opportunities on the Internet and because many
companies now outsourced former in-house activities both here and abroad, in search of increased
corporate profits. And with more than it million illegal immigrates who technically are not allowed to
participate in the formal economy, a fast-track to citizenship, could quickly add millions to the tax
rolls.
One of the problems with the main-stream press today, is that if the news isn't sensational it is
ignored. As such they concentrate on buzz words such as WMDs and foreign born terrorists, when the
truth is that including 9/11 terrorists have killed 3,033 people in America while in the decade of 2000
to 2010 445,000 people have died as a result of traffic accident, 485,000 patients have died from
hospital infections, (not infections that you came in the hospital with but infections contracted when,
of instance a doctor wearing a tie that got into your soup). But the most dangerous place is your
couch, because three million people died as a result of obesity related diseases. The World Health
Organization says that 150,000 people die every year from immediate causes as a result of
the environment And 13 people go to work every day who don't come home because of work-related
accidents, while the Home Land Security budget is $6o billion and the EPA budget is $8 billion a year.
Shouldn't the main-stream media try a little harder to explain to people what is really killing them,
instead of them playing to the cheap seats.
As most of you know, I am a big fan of Bill Moyers and last week on Moyers & Company, political
scholars Norman Ornstein and Thomas Mann explained to Bill that Congress' failure to make progress
on gun control last week — despite support for background checks from 90% of the American public —
is symptomatic of a legislative branch's dysfunction, partisan ravings and obstructionism.
Web Link: http://billmoyers.comisegment/norman-omstein-and-thomas-mann-explain-why-congress-is-failing-
us/
A year ago, the two — who had strong reputations as non-partisan analysts — decided to speak truth to
power with their book It's Even Worse Than It Looks: How the American Constitutional
System Collided with the New Politics of Extremism. In it, they argue that congressional
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gridlock is mostly the fault of right wing radicals within the Republican Party who engage in `policy
hostage-taking"to extend their political war against the president. What's more, Ornstein and Mann
say, the mainstream media and media fact-checkers add to the problem by indulging in False
equivalency" — pretending both parties are equally to blame.
"Sadly, divided party government, which we have because of the Republican House, in a time of
extreme partisan polarization, is a formula for inaction and absolutist opposition politics, notfor
problem solving,"Mann tells Bill. Ornstein says, "Some of this is comingfrom the kinds ofpeople
who we're electing to office, through a nominating process that has gotten so skewed to the radical
right. But some of it is an electoral magnet that pulls them awayfrom votingfor anything that
might have a patina of bipartisan support because they'llface extinction." Yes, it takes two to fight,
but it only takes one person to throw the first punch, and the first punch was thrown the first day that
President Obama took office on January 20, 2009, when behind closed doors Minority Leader Mitch
McConnell urged fellow Republicans that their #r Priority was to make Barrack Obama a one-term
President. And nothing has changed
******
In a new article at the U.K. site eFinancialCareers, that I found reprinted in the Huffington Post
- Bankers Explain How They Cannot Possibly Live On Si Million Pay - with several
bankers explaining that they have legitimate reasons for needing more than one million British pounds
(about $1.6 million) per year in pay -- more money than most non-banking types could ever figure out
how to spend. In a nutshell, it's all about psychology. Abraham Maslow clearly should have added
"crap-tons of money" when building his hierarchy of needs. "It's really not that unusual tofind Wall
Street bankers who are close to declaring themselves bankrupt," Gary Goldstein, co-founder of U.S.
search firm Whitney Partners, tells eFC's Sarah Butcher. "Some people are really struggling."
See web link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MVCAfGwXoqA
The entire story -- the latest in a series of jaw-dropping articles from Butcher, who is becoming the City
of London's version of Bloomberg's Max Abelson, reporting bankers saying dumb things -- is
required reading for anyone trying to understand the soul of the banker. The struggles of millionaire
bankers (in Butcher's piece most of them are men) are an important factor for heartless regulators and
shareholders to keep in mind as they consider putting limits on banker pay in the wake of a financial
crisis that was fueled by bankers chasing higher pay. "One million" of anything -- pounds, dollars or
Bitcoins, sounds like a lot to us rabble, but let bankers explain to you how it's pretty much the same as
nothing, really.
For one thing, taxes will quickly whittle a seven-figure income right down to the mid-six figures,
perilously close to being within sight of the middle class. Then, an ex-Goldman banker points out, with
the mere $600,000 in take-home pay remaining, bankers still need to "pay the mortgages on, and
maintain houses, in the Hamptons and Manhattan, to put three children through private schools
costing $40k a year each, and to pay living costs."
Bankers might want to shed some of these costs by, say, sentencing their kids to rub elbows with the
filthy Poor in public schools or owning just one house. But they are under constant social pressure to
spend and spend some more, according to another ex-Goldmanite -- who is now a psychotherapist,
naturally. And this is before the wives get their cut. According to the bankers and ex-bankers in this
article, there are only two marital choices available to bankers: The frumpy, educated girl they've been
saddled with since college, or a physically attractive layabout who sucks their soul and bank account
dry. Which only makes sense, because what other kinds of women are there,fellas? Science.
An even stronger urge than the need to keep up with the Rotschilds or satisfy the miss-us is rooted in
the bankers' childhoods. Every time they push a client to buy a sub-prime CDO, these bankers are
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merely trying to bring a smile to the cold, disapproving eyes of the parents looking over their
shoulders. According to the squid/therapist quoted in the article, only "intense therapy." So you truly
have to ask, if these new Masters of the Universe, who see themselves apart from those who make less
are having trouble living off of $1.6 million a year, they are obviously not financial wizards that they
claim. Whereas, anyone who is working at McDonalds earning $18,000 yearly or a family of four
living on $50,000 a year are economic magicians, much like my Mother who raised me, making $10,
$12, $16 a day in the 1960s.
For those of you (like me) you probably haven't had any formal computer training and after reading
Computerfor Dummies, you trudged along learning what you can, during trial and error. To help
both you and me Tech columnist David Pogue shared 10 simple, clever tips for computer, web,
smartphone and camera users during a TED Talk. And yes, you may know a few of these already --
but there's probably at least one you don't. David Pogue is the personal technology columnist for the
New York Times and a tech correspondent for CBS News. He's also one of the world's bestselling
how-to authors, with titles in the For Dummies series and his own line of "Missing Manual"
books. Please feel free to click on the web-link below.
http://www.ted.comitalks/david_pogue_10_top_time_saving_tech_tips.html?
source=facebookkUX64fReWlacebook
The April employment numbers are in and after a disappointing March report in which only 88,000
jobs were added to the US economy, the Department of Labor said that the nation added 165,000 jobs
and unemployment fell to 7.5%; a solid job creation in April. What is truly encouraging is that this
positive news comes in the shadow of the sequester's automatic spending cuts, causing federal
government employment (excluding postal service) to fall by 4,900. On top of this the new report
revised the March numbers up from 88,000 to a healthier 138,000, suggesting that the labor
market isn't slumping as much as it had appeared. Many of the details of the new report also point to a
steady job market: The drop in the unemployment rate, for example, was driven by more people
finding jobs, not by people leaving the labor force. Some 293,00o more people described themselves
as employed in a survey of households, and 93,000 fewer said they were looking for a job but
couldn't find one. The ratio of the population with a job ticked up to 58.6 percent, from 58.5 percent.
And the number of long-term unemployed, those out of work and looking for a job for more than 27
weeks, fell by 258,000. Good news I say....
Some of the numbers were disappointing such as, the average workweek fell to 34.4 hours, from 34.6
hours, suggesting businesses are relying on part-time workers and possibly reflecting the impact of the
sequester. And a broader measure of unemployment, capturing people who have given up looking for
a job out of frustration and those who are working part-time but want full-time work, actually rose to
13.9 percent from 13.8 percent. But the good news is that the job gains were concentrated entirely in
private-sector service industries: Manufacturing employment was flat and construction was down.
Government employment at all levels—federal, state and local—declined as well. And the bright spots
for job creation included professional and business services, which added 73,000 positions, and leisure
and hospitality, which added 43,000 jobs. We often hear the bad news, but Friday's jobs numbers is
solid evidence that the US economy is rebounding. Add to the employment numbers, housing prices
posted sharp gains across the country, with 15-year fixed home loans at an all-time low of 2.67%. So
why are we not celebrating? And why isn't Congress not doing more to push job growth. Especially
when every economist will tell you that because of the upward momentum, if the government moved
forward with an aggressive government jobs program, jobs growth could easily double and
unemployment dipping another i% — hence back to a healthy economy. This is not rocket
science Just common sense
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THIS WEEK's READINGS
This week in The Washington Post, filmmaker Chris Paine wrote — Five myths about electric
cars - based on his documentaries, "Who Killed the Electric Car?","Charge" and "Revenge of the
Electric Car." He writes this article to counter the debate around electric-car-maker Fisker
Automotive, who halted production, laid off most of its employees, missed a federal loan payment last
week and told a congressional hearing on Wednesday that bankruptcy may be unavoidable, fueling the
debate that plug-ins cars were dead. In the article he dispels five major myths.
1. The electric car is dead.
Paine says that his myth is partly his fault, perpetuated by the title of his 2006 documentary, "Who
Killed the Electric Car?" Saying that the signs back then weren't promising, when under pressure
from car companies and other lobbyists, California rolled back its Zero-Emission Vehicle mandate,
which had helped get nearly 5,000 electric cars on the road. The change in the regulation freed car-
makers to round up the cars they had leased — and then surreptitiously crush them. Today, almost all
the major automakers, along with a cast of new players, are investing in and building plug-in cars.
California's mandate has also made a comeback, and other states are considering similar rules. A new
report from IEE, part of the Edison Foundation, projects that between 5 million and 3o million electric
cars will be on U.S. roads by 2035. "The electrification of the vehiclefleet is a foregone conclusion,"
says former GM vice chairman (and former electric-car-basher) Bob Lutz. Having driven both the
Fisker and its main start-up rival Tesla, I found both to have the feel of toys, except that Tesla
developed both a sports car along with a separate sedan, and is estimated to turn a quarterly profit this
year.
2. Electric cars can't get people where they need to go.
But ask people what their biggest hesitation is about electric vehicles, they're most likely to say
something about the cars leaving them stranded. This myth is so pervasive that General Motors
applied to trademark the name for it: "range anxiety." A controversial New York Times test drive in
February of Tesla's Model S, which ended up needing a tow to a charging station, seemed to confirm
the fear. But that test drive — covering more than 500 miles in temperatures as low as to degrees —
was not your everyday trip. The average American drives fewer than 4o miles a day. That's well within
the 75-mile-plus range of most electric cars. And while batteries do run down faster in extreme cold,
on a normal day Tesla's Model S can go as far as 265 miles on a single charge. The answer to range
anxiety for many car-makers is the plug-in hybrid, an electric car with a backup gasoline engine. The
Chevrolet Volt, the Toyota Prius Plug-In and the Ford C-Max Energi all use electric power for the first
20 to 50 miles and then switch to gasoline for longer drives. And most Americans drive less than 50
miles a day.
3. Charging is a headache.
Charging an electric car can be as simple as plugging it into a wall outlet. But AC outlet charging is
slow, taking between eight and 24 hours. So it's not usually the method of first resort. That's why
most plug-ins are sold with charging docks that work in a home garage and can charge a car in four to
eight hours, allowing drivers to treat their cars like their cellphones: topping them off periodically or
charging them up overnight. For those who don't have garages, there are now 5,734 public stations in
the United States, many with multiple charging points. The newest generation will charge your car
nearly to times faster than home stations and 5o times faster than an AC outlet. Tesla just installed
several of these supercharger stations on the East and West coasts, and Nissan recently announced
plans to install 500 in the coming months.
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4. Electric cars aren't any better for the environment.
Electric cars have clear environmental benefits: They don't require gasoline, they don't pollute from
tailpipes, and they operate at 8o percent efficiency (vs. about 20 percent for internal-combustion
engines). Skeptics will cite a 2012 report from the Union of Concerned Scientists as evidence that
electric cars aren't as green as some people make them out to be. That study correctly notes that autos
powered by coal-generated electricity are little better for the environment than small gas-powered
cars. But the same report concludes that "consumers shouldfeel confident that driving an electric
vehicle yields lower global warming emissions than the average new compact gasoline-powered
vehicle." That's because only 39 percent of U.S. electricity comes from coal. With the retirement of
old power plants and the addition of cleaner energy sources, electric cars will have even greater
advantages for the environment. Another environmental concern is about batteries. Won't they end up
in landfills like billions of disposable batteries do? No. Even gasoline-car batteries avoid that fate
when they are exchanged and recycled. And electric-car batteries are valuable as energy-storage
devices after life on the road. Backup power systems for utilities, businesses and homes create a
secondary market for these batteries before their elements are recycled.
5. Most people will never be able to afford an electric car.
At $102,000, the base price of a 2012 Fisker Karma was clearly beyond the reach of most drivers.
Tesla, too, was critiqued for the assumptions built into its recent claim that a Model S could be leased
for $500 a month. (The Washington Post calculated that the monthly cost would be closer to $1,000.)
But these two luxury cars have targeted the high-end market. By contrast, the cost of leasing a Nissan
Leaf ($199 a month with $1,999 down) is equivalent to leasing a compact gasoline car such as the
Mazda3 — except you don't have to pay for gas. Keeping electric car sticker prices from decreasing
right now are low production volumes and the cost of batteries. But a 2012 McKinsey report estimates
that the price of lithium-ion batteries could fall dramatically by 2020. As the cost of electric-car
technology trends downward and the price of oil trends upward, electric cars should prove the more
affordable.
Summary:
Without a doubt, electric cars are the future, and in the meantime, advances developed by electric car-
makers are being used in hybrid cars, such as our Prius and Cadillac, which give excellent mileage
compared to the 12 mpg that my Jeep Grand Wagoner and 15 mpg Jaguar use to give two decades ago
and the if3mpg my BMW gave a decade ago. As for the potential failure of Fisker, lets imagine how
many people sailed west before the Vikings and Columbus were successful, and the thousands of
failures before the Wright Brothers proved that man-flight was possible. A hundred and fifty years
ago, most manufacturing was powered by steam engines, breakthrough were made and today steam
power is obsolete while electric power trains run at speed in excess of 200 mph. Thus the same can be
true for automotive travel and transportation of goods.
This week in Money Morning Shah Gilani wrote an article under the title — The Next Wall Street
Mega-Scandal Has Arrived — saying that major financial institutions haven't learned a lesson as it
appears that they are neck deep in another new financial scandal of global proportions, as U.S. and
international securities regulators investigating manipulation of LIBOR, the world's most important
set of benchmark interest rates, have uncovered another price-rigging scheme, this one in the $379
trillion market for interest rate swaps. $379 Trillion, not Billion. Trillion. And the Commodity
Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) has already issued subpoenas to Wall Street's biggest banks and
is interviewing a dozen former and current brokers from the Jersey City, NJ, offices of ICAP Plc. For
investors in the big banks, new revelations may put an end to the upward push to the groups' stock
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prices, whose earnings of late have been helped by reductions in reserves meant as a cushion against
future asset hits and litigation expenses.
According to a former broker from London-based ICAP's Jersey City swap desk, nicknamed "Treasure
Island" for the huge commissions and pay packages traders there are accustomed to, brokers routinely
manipulated prices on behalf of bank clients to benefit bank trading desks. On the other side of the
banks' trades were tens of thousands of counter-parties who may have lost hundreds of billions of
dollars as a result of having to pay more interest, or may have received less interest, on swaps whose
prices were manipulated. ICAP, formerly Intercapital Brokers, initially hit regulators' radar as part of
the LIBOR scandal. According to the July 7th, 2012 print edition of the Economist. "Court
documentsfiled by Canada's Competition Bureau have also aired allegations by traders at one
unnamed bank, which has appliedfor immunity, that it had tried to influence some LIBOR rates in
cooperation with some employees of Citigroup, Deutsche Bank, HSBC, ICAP, JPMorgan Chase and
RBS."
Far from being in a shady corner in the world of derivatives, interest rate swaps are a mainstream
financing tool used by tens of thousands of corporate treasurers worldwide. Interest rate swap prices
are used to set the value of over $550 billion of commercial real estate collateralized bonds and are
used to calculate pension annuity values and benefits.
Big Banks in Big Trouble, Again?
Mega-banks primarily facilitate interest rate swaps by initially taking the other side of customers'
trades and are responsible for establishing pricing of these instruments in conjunction with a handful
of brokers. Similarly to how LIBOR is calculated, the ISDAFIX, the benchmark series of rates used to
price interest rate swaps for U.S. dollar denominated swaps, is convened by a "panel" of banks. The
panel, according to the International Swaps and Derivatives Association consists of: Bank of America
Corp., Barclays, BNP Paribas SA, Citigroup Inc., Credit Suisse AG, Deutsche Bank AG, Goldman Sachs
Group Inc., HSBC Holdings Plc, JPMorgan Chase & Co., Mizuho Financial Group Inc., Morgan
Stanley, Nomura Holdings Inc., Royal Bank of Scotland, UBS and Wells Fargo & Co.
The banks submit their quotes for a range of maturities to ICAP through a secure screen connection.
ICAP then forwards those data points to Thompson Reuters, who calculates the actual swap rates.
Rates are then disseminated to over 6,000 viewers.
An Easy Con in an Era of Regulation
Manipulation of rate pricing is easy. ICAP posts rates, supposedly based on transactions and bid and
offer quotes it receives and enters manually into what's known as the 19901 screen (namedfor the
Reuters screen page number). Banks don't have to submit their own rates as part of the panel; they
can use the suggested rates ICAP posts. Or they submit their own rates to ICAP to be forwarded to
Thompson Reuters who calculates the final numbers. ICAP sits in the middle, entering by-hand prices
and rates from the transactions that occur through their brokerage desk, which average a staggering
$1.4 trillion a day.
Not only can banks ask ICAP brokers to post whatever quote benefits the bank's internal trading book,
whether it's to affect a positive mark-to-market closing price for accounting and profit and loss (bonus)
calculations, or manipulate an entry price on a new trade with a counter-party, they allegedly ask ICAP
brokers to delay entry of actual transactions until after ISDAFIX rates are disseminated. The delay can
easily create a beneficial entry price on a trade that would otherwise be priced based on fresh data.
Manipulation of prices and rates has huge profit and loss and mark-to-market implications in terms of
capital reserve ratios and other bank balance sheet metrics.
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So far these allegations have yet to become indictments, and nothing may come out of any of this but a
few little fines and some slapped wrists. And if the past is actually prologue, we can rest assured that
no criminal charges will ever be tossed into the casino, since none ever are. And as Gilani says, "After
all, the tumbling dice alwaysfavor the house, and we know whose house it is." Again, because
Money Morning is a boom & gloom blog, I can't really vouch for the validity of the
above allegations, but thefact that after all of the malfeasance of the past decade that brought the
international economic markets and a number of economies to the brink of collapse -- this is still a
possibility -- in-itself, is a serious problem.
******
To counter the Neocons who will tell you that the Surge In Iraq work, please read Ryan Crocker's
article in The Washington Post - Iraq on the brink, again - because the situation in Iraq has
taken a very dangerous turn. As events there in recent days are reminiscent of those that led to virtual
civil war in 2006 and resulted in the need for a surge in U.S. troop levels, a new strategy and very
heavy fighting. The places where the violence has erupted are eerily familiar, as many were
strongholds of al-Qaeda in Iraq at the outset of the surge, before the spread of the Awakening
movement that fostered reconciliation between disaffected Sunni Arabs and the Shiite-led government
in Baghdad. The recent events come on top of increasing incidents of horrific attacks by al-Qaeda in
Iraq, with last month seeing the largest losses in years — and they take place against a backdrop of
increasingly serious political discord. But do these developments require the United States to lead an
international community response?
Crocker (a former US ambassador to Iraq) advocates that to bring Iraqis from this current brink, the
United States must lead a sustained, high-level diplomatic effort, because we did it in the past,
beginning in 2007; and that we must do so again, because the stakes for Iraq and the region are far too
high for anything less. BUT when will Crocker and neocon supporters understand that until the
underlying issues are addressed these fixes will only be temporary? Because we have seen that
hawkish diplomacy can lead to a slippery slope, as hawks will sooner or later will lose patience and
demand military intervention. So we have to ask ourselves why is this our problem? If the Sunni,
Shiite and Kurdish leaders can't resolve their differences, maybe Iraq's neighbors in the Arab League
should take the lead. The US has spent more than a trillion dollars, in addition to the loss of more than
400o American lives, with tens of thousands more who will need life-long assistance due to injuries
suffered in Iraq — isn't this enough. Some wars you just have to walk away from and let time and
others resolve the country's problems. The Russians did this in Afghanistan and the US in Viet Nam,
and somehow the Afghans aren't sending terrorist to Russia nor are the Vietnamese sending terrorist
to America. Maybe this is the lesson that we should learn.
******
Having started working full-time (8 hours, six days a week) at the age of 15, first stamping rivets into
electronic circuit boards in a factory that made radios and record players and then working the grave
yard shift (11:3opm - 8am) in another factory that made Polyethelene Sheeting used for everything
from plastics bags, drop-cloths to dry cleaning bags, making minimum wage what was $1 an hour and
sometimes working more than 98 hours a week on the two jobs, or going to high school from 8:3oam
to 3:lopm after working an 8-hour grave-yard shift, and by the age of 25, having spent most of my
working life either working two full-time jobs simultaneously, or being a full time student in addition
to working a full-time job, so I truly understand and appreciate the plight of factory workers. As a
result, on May 1st I decided to examine the origins of May Day. Attached please find and article by
Richard Seymore - May Day is not about maypoles: the history of international workers'
day - in The Guardian last year chronicling the evolution of workers' rights that are celebrated on
May Day
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It appears that May Day celebrations appeared in pre- Christian times, with the Festival of Flora, the
Roman goddess of flowers, and the Walpurgis Night celebrations of the Germanic countries. It is also
associated with the Gaelic Beltane. And many of the pagan celebrations were abandoned or
Christianized during the process of conversion in Europe. In the 19th Century, popularized by
movements supporting worker's rights and in the United States the eight-hour work day groups in
Chicago decided to organize a non-violent general strike on May 1, 1996. On 1891 May Day was
formalized as an international holiday in Paris. It has since become an official holiday in many
countries where governments respect the will of working people. In the last decade in the United
States May Day has become a site for recognition and support for the struggles of undocumented
immigrant workers. Having work in a factory where new employees often would start their first day
(night) grave-yard shift at 11:3opm and quit before midnight, and next to the time-clock management
posted a notice that said, "If you don't come to work on Sunday, don't come back on Monday." I truly
support the idea as a celebration of worker's rights. In the last decade in the United States May Day
has become a site for recognition and support for the struggles of undocumented immigrant workers.
Also attached please find The Brief Origins on May Day - by The Industrial Workers of
the World, to see May Day from the prospective of unions.
As Harold Meyerson writes this week in The Washington Post in the article, How to ease
economic anxiety, that the general consensus is that America is downwardly mobile
and doesn't know what it can do to arrest, much less reverse, this trend. In a recent survey 49% of the
respondents said said that only the upper class could realistically expect to be able to pay for their
children's college education. Another 46 percent said that only the upper class could realistically
anticipate having enough money to cope with a health emergency or job loss, while 45 percent said
that only the upper class should expect to be able to save enough to retire comfortably. Fully 59
percent said they were concerned about falling out of their current economic class over the next few
years. This survey suggests that the public is aware of this downward trend.
Since the end of World War II the expectations of economic security and mobility that were widely
shared by Americans and this been replaced by a pervasive economic anxiety. The problem is that
anxiety won't change things. As Meyerson writes, "neither will the majority of analyses of how we
got into thisfix, nor will most of the (relativelyfew) recommendations as to how we can get out of
it." Especially when people like former private equity banker and Obama administration official
Steven Rattner, writing in the New York Times, "the lack of wage growth owes much to the
continuing effects of globalization, a trend that has benefited the United States as a whole while
hurting many workers." Good for America, apparently, but bad for Americans. Besides, he implies,
who can do anything about globalization? It's as inexorable as the sunrise.
Most American workers, however, are not in competition with their counterparts in Mexico and China
— not if they work at Wal-Mart or McDonald's, on construction sites, at college campuses or behind
the wheel of a truck. The downward pressure that globalization exerts on wages spills over to other
sectors, but it's no more than a secondary cause for pervasive income stagnation. The primary cause is
that, with collective bargaining nearly dead (just 6.6 percent ofprivate-sector workers belong to
unions), there is no pressur
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