Tuesday, November 30, 2021

ANS -- HCR -- November 30, 2021 (Tuesday) Biden and the Economy

Here's another one from Heather Cox Richardson.  She explains about what is going on with the economy, and then what is happening with the Jan. 6 committee.  If you find yourself arguing about the economy with anyone, there's some good stuff here to use.  
--Kim


November 30, 2021 (Tuesday)
The U.S. economy is booming.
Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell testified today before the Senate Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs, saying that although the rise in COVID cases due to the Delta variant had slowed recovery, the gross domestic product is still on track to grow about 5% in 2021. According to Christine Romans, CNN's chief business correspondent, the last time we had that kind of growth was under the Reagan administration forty years ago.
Unemployment is also down. The economy added 531,000 jobs in October, dropping the unemployment rate to 4.6 percent, the lowest rate since November 1969. The recovery is not even, though, with jobs harder to find for Black and Brown Americans than for White Americans.
Meanwhile, the American Rescue Plan is restoring the nation's basic social safety net. According to Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen, food insecurity dropped 24% for families as a result of Biden's Child Tax Credit, creating "a profound economic and moral victory for the country."
Powell also noted that inflation is up, from the 2% level for which administrations aim to about 5%. He predicted that inflation will ease as supply chains smooth out and as the administration takes measures at its disposal.
In illustration of what sort of measures those might be, Biden released 50 million barrels of the nation's oil reserves to combat the rising gas prices that have grabbed headlines. Other nations, including India, the United Kingdom, and China, released some of theirs as well, and the price of WTI Crude has dropped back to what it was in early September. That fix may very well be temporary as economic growth puts pressure on oil supplies.
The success of the Democrats' measures illustrates the effectiveness of the "liberal consensus" of the years between World War II and the Reagan Revolution, when members of both parties believed the government should promote economic growth by supporting those at the demand side of the economy. That meant giving those just starting out access to resources which they would, in turn, reinvest in the economy, helping all to rise.
The Reagan years reversed this popular understanding as lawmakers claimed instead that the best way to nurture the economy was to focus on the "supply side"—those wealthy people who, officials argued, would invest their money in the economy and create jobs. To free up capital for those people, Republicans focused on cutting taxes.
But while that system never worked as promised, Republicans have come to believe that tax cuts are the most important way to expand the economy. With the American Rescue Plan helping the U.S. to recover from the economic crunch of the pandemic faster than other nations, and with the extraordinary numbers we're now seeing, Biden's plan has once again illustrated the power of supporting ordinary Americans.
And such legislation is popular, so popular that, right on cue, Republicans who voted against the American Rescue Plan and the bipartisan infrastructure bill are advertising its benefits to their constituents as if they were responsible for it. Representative Rob Wittman (R-VA) has a new ad out boasting that "Congressman Rob Wittman is Bringing Broadband to the Northern Neck." "It's the future," the ad reads, and Wittman "has helped bring broadband to thousands of homes and businesses. And he will not stop until every Virginian is given an equal opportunity to connect to the future."
Wittman voted against the bipartisan infrastructure bill.
The headline-grabbing news today, though, came from investigations into the events surrounding the January 6 insurrection.
Early this morning, Hugo Lowell of The Guardian reported that multiple sources told him that Trump had called the "war room" at the Willard Hotel several times on January 5 to talk about how they could stop Congress from counting the certified ballots that would make Joe Biden president. The team at the Willard was led by lawyers Rudy Giuliani, John Eastman, and Boris Epshteyn and Trump loyalist Steve Bannon. Trump called the lawyers separately from the others, trying to keep from jeopardizing claims of attorney-client privilege.
Although those at the war room have maintained that they were acting only on the wishes of state legislators who worried about voter fraud, reports of phone calls from the president challenge that position. Lowell wrote: "Trump's remarks reveal a direct line from the White House and the command center at the Willard. The conversations also show Trump's thoughts appear to be in line with the motivations of the pro-Trump mob that carried out the Capitol attack and halted Biden's certification, until it was later ratified by Congress."
After the story came out, Trump's spokesperson said, "This is totally false," but offered no more information.
The House Select Committee to Investigate the January 6th Attack on the U.S. Capitol is looking into the Willard meetings. Today, though, it interviewed Georgia secretary of state Brad Raffensperger, the man who recorded a phone call with Trump as the then-president tried to get him to overturn the results of the election. Raffensperger testified for five hours.
Also today, Trump's former chief of staff, Mark Meadows, dropped his refusal to answer the January 6th committee's subpoena and has begun to cooperate, providing records and agreeing to be interviewed. Meadows had refused to participate in the process, citing Trump's order that he stay silent. But after a grand jury found Trump adviser Steve Bannon in contempt of Congress, and as the House considers charging former Justice Department lawyer Jeffrey Clark, who came up with a scheme to overturn the election and who has also refused to answer a subpoena, with criminal contempt of Congress, Meadows has apparently reconsidered his position.
Former federal prosecutor and legal analyst Renato Mariotti notes that this is a good move on Meadows's part because it means that any future refusals will go to court, not criminal prosecution. Meadows is the highest-ranking official to testify before the committee and has made it clear he continues to expect to keep mum about what he considers sensitive material. Still, his participation will indicate to others that they should tell their stories before someone else's testimony makes their information worthless as a bargaining chip.
The House committee today voted to hold Clark in contempt of Congress and passed the resolution on to the full House. The committee wrote: "The Select Committee believes that Mr. Clark had conversations with others in the Federal Government, including Members of Congress, regarding efforts to delegitimize, disrupt, or overturn the election results in the weeks leading up to January 6th," and it expects him to comply with the subpoena. It rejects Clark's contention that his conversations with Trump were a "sacred trust" and wrote that Trump had not, in fact, tried to assert executive privilege over Clark's testimony. The committee noted that "the willful refusal to comply with a congressional subpoena is punishable by a fine of up to $100,000 and imprisonment for up to 1 year."
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Monday, November 29, 2021

ANS -- How America Loves Killing More Than Life Itself (In 5 Graphs)

This is a bit inflammatory, but makes some good points.  Some of the comments argued with the numbers, but see what you think -- and you can go there and read the comments if you like.  It's about the huge part of our government spending that is devoted to military things, and all those military things are really bad for the climate.  
--Kim


How America Loves Killing More Than Life Itself (In 5 Graphs)

Every American budget is a murder-suicide pact

The whole world is America's burn pit. The American military is the single largest killer and polluter in the world.

America's war machine is not new, therefore it's not news. It is nonetheless the greatest single threat to life on this planet. It's not just that America is the single greatest killing force in the world, though it is. The US military is also the single largest emitter, killing us all.

And it's not just the murder, this is also suicide. Americans are also human beings who live in a shared climate, and this kills them as well. Americans are also people that live without healthcare and basic social services so that arms dealers can loot them. Every American budget is a murder-suicide pact, but their corporate press doesn't report on it because it's not new. It is nonetheless true.

Just look at a few graphs (from the intrepid Stephen Semler) and see.

The Killing

Biden's economic agenda is half the cost of projected military budgets (Stephen Semler)

America's Pentagon budget is more than they have spent on Biden's supposedly transformative investments in America itself. It's more than 4x the relief given to the American people during COVID-19. For reference, more people have died from their failed pandemic response than all US combat deaths ever, but you can see what the priority is. More killing than death. Always more killing.

Even if you look at regular appropriations spending, the priority is still death. Even under Democrats the budget is mostly militarized. America is officially fighting no wars, so in truth they are just out there murdering.

Biden's economic agenda is half the cost of projected military budgets (Stephen Semler)

Everything President Dwight D. Eisenhower warned about in his 1961 farewell address has thus come to pass.

Dwight D. Eisenhower, 1961

Whereas "American makers of plowshares could, with time and as required, make swords as well" now they just make swords all the time. Whereas "an alert and knowledgeable citizenry can compel the proper meshing of huge industrial and military machinery of defense," the population is dumb as fuck and the media just manufactures consent (Afghanistan, Iraq, any Muslim person walking the Earth, now China).

The military-industrial complex has corrupted the entire US government and the machinery of defense doesn't mesh with any 'peaceful methods and goals,' if it ever dead[did]. America's war machine is purely offensive, and it grinds bones all over the world. As anthropologist Wade Davis wrote in Rolling Stone, quoting President Jimmy Carter, "America is the most warlike nation in the history of the world."

They are also the biggest losers. It's the only empire built on losing wars and looting itself. Today you can see the absolute corruption clear as day in the numbers, but the story is so old by now that it's not even news. For example if you look at climate collapse — the greatest threat to human life today — America spends less money fighting that than it gives to just one (1) arms dealer:

Redistribution of wealth comparison: climate programs vs. private sector contractors (Stephen Semler)

Thus private company Lockheed Martin gets more money to kill people (and produce emissions) than the total climate funding in the Build Back Better Act. Whatever Biden says he's trying to build, the numbers tell a different story. America's priority is still to destroy.

The point isn't even winning wars anymore, that's irrelevant. There's actually more money in losing. Just drop expensive bombs on poor people and profit. Seize their funds on the way out and let them starve. America spent 20 years losing their war on Afghanistan and it didn't matter because arms dealers got paid all the way.

The top 5 military contractors ate $2 trillion during the Afghanistan War (Stephen Semler)

Their media talks about 'losing' or 'wasting' trillion in Afghanistan, but it's not that. That money was stolen, along with hundreds of thousands of lives. It's just rank corruption, of the most violent and venal kind. It's blood money.

The Dying

This brings us to the most glaring graph of all. All of this killing, all of this very expensive murder, it would be one thing if it occured in a vacuum, but we live in a climate. Within this climate, the single biggest source of emissions is America's war machine. Hence it's not just that Americans can't have nice things because they're so devoted to murdering poor people. It's that no one can have a livable Earth. That's the nature of their moral black hole.

"The Department of Defense is the world's largest institutional user of petroleum and correspondingly, the single largest institutional producer of greenhouse gases (GHG) in the world" (Brown University).

Some people propose killing with electric tanks, but no. No no no. To stop the dying we have to stop the killing. We have to stop American empire fullstop. The answer is America's war on humanity just stopping, but this is something their media (and budgets) cannot even consider. Instead the funding (and emissions) just keep increasing and this is just considered implacable, untouchable reality. It is excluded from all (bullshit) climate agreements. And so we all die. This final graph is the most horrifying because it kills everyone.

The US needs to work on itself before it can claim a global leadership role on climate (Stephen Semler)

The Pentagon budget, which produces the most emissions in the world, is over 20x whatever America is doing to mitigate emissions. America's whole climate policy is a non-starter. They remain far more committed to dying than to living. This is so unchanging from budget to budget that their media doesn't even report on it, but the numbers don't lie. Americans are just lying to themselves and the entire world.

The actual priorities America commits money to are so unchanging that they're not even considered news, but they are facts. Beyond all the pledges, committments, and statements, America is downright hostile to human life on Earth and even in America itself. Every budget is a murder-suicide pact, and it doesn't get reported on because this is every budget. In truth, America cares much more about death than it does about life. There simply is no living with this. We as human beings cannot hope to live until American empire ends.

Stephen Semler does a lot of digging to produce these graphs, while America's corporate media just digs a deeper hole. Subscribe to his newsletter, it's excellent. For more supplemental yelling, subscribe to mine.