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FOCUS: We Haven't Scratched the Surface of What Bernie Is Capable Of Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=11104"><span class="small">Charles Pierce, Esquire</span></a>   
Friday, 15 January 2016 13:12

Pierce writes: "Sanders has been running a 50-state campaign since before he formally declared his candidacy. He went to South Carolina. He went to Mississippi. He drew large and approving crowds in both places. He has stayed doggedly on message, directly refusing to help the elite political class in its pursuit of shiny objects."

Senator Bernie Sanders. (photo: Getty)
Senator Bernie Sanders. (photo: Getty)


We Haven't Scratched the Surface of What Bernie Is Capable Of

By Charles Pierce, Esquire

15 January 16

 

It's time for Hillary Clinton to check the rearview mirror.

K, shit's starting to get real on the Democratic side of things.

As the countdown to the caucuses continues, 40 percent of Democrats say they could be persuaded to change their minds about their first choice candidate. Sanders is running strong with young voters and with those who say they plan to attend their first caucus on February 1—the same type of coalition that helped Barack Obama surge to victory over Clinton in Iowa in 2008. Among those younger than 45, Sanders bests Clinton 59 percent to 27 percent. And among those who say they plan to attend their first caucus, he leads 52 percent to 34 percent. Clinton wins with older Democrats (56 percent to 26 percent) and women (49 percent to 32 percent). Both candidates remain popular with Democrats in the state. Eighty-nine percent said they view Sanders favorably, while 86 percent said the same of the former secretary of state.

Now, as far as I'm concerned, polling numbers as they relate to the screwy Iowa caucus system are completely meaningless, since so much depends on your campaign's ability to get enough white people to the local middle school. But the race has tightened in New Hampshire as well, and that leaves us to ponder what the week of free media is going to be like if Hillary Rodham Clinton, the consensus frontrunner, comes out of the beginning of the actual process at 0-2.

(I think cable news would be rendered a nightmare and/or a bloodbath. But I also think she's the only candidate alive who could survive those early losses. What she would have to do to survive them—raise even more big money, get physical with the TV ads, move toward a more Bill-type—likely would alienate further the party's activist base.)

And, if you want some more evidence that shit's getting real on the Democratic side, consider that the Clinton campaign has unlimbered Chelsea Clinton to rip Sanders on health care, and consider that HRC herself has decided to appear on Squint and the Meat Puppet on Friday in what appears to be a desperate attempt to re-establish some Green Room cred. (S. & M.P. are "on the scene" in Iowa, probably because cattle mutilations have fallen off.) The simple fact is that, if HRC has lost her lead at the moment, she has lost it to a superior campaign.

And it's not as simple as the "populist anger" narrative would have you believe. Sanders has been running a 50-state campaign since before he formally declared his candidacy. He went to South Carolina. He went to Mississippi. He drew large and approving crowds in both places. He has stayed doggedly on message, directly refusing to help the elite political class in its pursuit of shiny objects. He repeatedly has emphasized that the pursuit of his policy goals, which all have to do with breaking the power of impending oligarchy and its threat to self-government, cannot be limited simply to electing him. And that's where the easy narrative falls apart.

The basic appeal of He, Trump is that he is Donald Trump, and you're not, and neither are the rest of those losers on stage with him. He's a down-punching bully basking in the mindless adulation of people looking for someone close at hand to blame for what they believe has gone wrong with their lives and their country. The very strange thing is that Trump asks almost nothing from the people at his rallies except that they love him. He doesn't appeal to sacrifice or common purpose. All the problems will be solved because he's Trump and you're not, and he knows all the Top Men in their fields. But enough about him, let's talk about you. What do you think of him? He looks at his audience and he sees little more than a faceless mirror. He's not a democratic politician. He's freaking Napoleon.

Meanwhile, Sanders punches up at the elites that, frankly, have more power in our politics than he does, or than you do, or than any politician does. He tells his audiences that he can't do it alone, that the money power has grown too great for any one person to combat. He needs them more than they need him. He is not Napoleon, he is a democratic politician. And that makes all the difference and that's why the "populist anger" narrative is a shuck. Anyone who says they could vote for either Bernie Sanders or He, Trump has been living for the last nine months with their head in a laundry bag.

The respective appeals of the two men are similar only on the simplest and least consequential levels. On the most profound levels, the two campaigns couldn't be more different. Bernie Sanders is where he is because the positions and the policies he has been championing all his career have come back somewhat into favor ever since some grifters broke the world economy and then made off with the rubble. That is why he's different from Donald Trump and that is why Hillary Rodham Clinton is noticing that things in the rear-view window are closer than they appear.

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FOCUS: The Official GOP Debate Drinking Game Rules, Pt. 6 Print
Friday, 15 January 2016 11:22

Taibbi writes: "After nearly drinking myself to death during the last debate, I'm revising the Rolling Stone GOP debate drinking game. No more, 'Take a shot of bourbon when Donald Trump brags about his billions.' This isn't a mass-suicide exercise."

Republican debate. (photo: CNN)
Republican debate. (photo: CNN)


The Official GOP Debate Drinking Game Rules, Pt. 6

By Matt Taibbi, Rolling Stone

15 January 16 AM

 

It’s right up the river from Ft. Sumter. Yee haw!

fter nearly drinking myself to death during the last debate, I’m revising the Rolling Stone GOP debate drinking game. We’re having just 10 rules from now on, and no easy ones.

No more, “Take a shot of bourbon when Donald Trump brags about his billions.” This isn’t a mass-suicide exercise.

This debate is likely to be heavily focused on the president’s State of the Union address and should feature some excellent eye-gouging between Trump and the pride of Canada, Ted Cruz. There are only seven candidates left onstage, as both Carly Fiorina and Rand Paul got the Jason-ax this time around.

Without further ado, tonight’s rules:

DRINK AFTER EVERY MENTION OF:

1. Sean Penn.

2. Farsi Island. “Sailors” also acceptable.

3. Law-abiding gun owners.

4. Goldman Sachs. One shot if it’s regarding Hillary. Two shots if it’s about Ted Cruz.

5. The Emanuel AME church.

6. The Confederate flag.

7. “This president didn’t even mention Islamic terrorism in the State of the Union address…”

8. “When I was a federal prosecutor.” Limit five shots. Chaser if Christie mentions 9/11.

9. Gov. Nikki Haley. Take a double if it’s Trump and he works in a sexist/racist joke at her expense. If he works in both, take an unprecedented triple shot. 

WILD CARD:

  • If you feel up to it, drink after every clearly rehearsed joke.

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Now a Clinton Super PAC Is Attacking Us Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=15102"><span class="small">Bernie Sanders, Reader Supported News</span></a>   
Friday, 15 January 2016 09:39

Sanders writes: "Frankly, I am a bit surprised that with less than three weeks to go before the Iowa caucuses, the Clinton campaign is attacking our belief that health care must be recognized as a right, not a privilege, for every man, woman and child in our country."

Senator Bernie Sanders with Hillary Clinton at the Democratic debate. (photo: David Becker/AP)
Senator Bernie Sanders with Hillary Clinton at the Democratic debate. (photo: David Becker/AP)


Now a Clinton Super PAC Is Attacking Us

By Bernie Sanders, Reader Supported News

15 January 16

 

rothers and Sisters,

Here is what I believe: the greed of the pharmaceutical and health care industries in this country is killing Americans. It is a national disgrace that, despite great gains made under the Affordable Care Act, 29 million of our neighbors are still without care.

That is why I am, frankly, a bit surprised that with less than three weeks to go before the Iowa caucuses, the Clinton campaign is attacking our belief that health care must be recognized as a right, not a privilege, for every man, woman and child in our country. We cannot wait to realize that goal, and the best way to get there is a Medicare-for-all, single-payer system.

Yesterday, one of Hillary Clinton's several super PACs took aim at us, saying our plan would "require tax increases on working families."

It would be a terrible setback for our shared values and for our movement to reform a corrupt political system if we lost because a super PAC scared voters into thinking our plan would take away people's coverage or cost them more money. Help make sure that doesn't happen.

Under my plan, we will lower the cost of health care for the typical family by nearly $5,000 a year. It is unfair to say simply how much more a program will cost without letting people know we are doing away with the cost of private insurance and that the middle class will be paying substantially less for health care under a single-payer system than Hillary Clinton's program.

Attacking the cost of the plan without acknowledging the bottom-line savings is the way Republicans have attacked this idea for decades.

Taking that approach in a Democratic primary undermines the hard work of so many who have fought to guarantee health care as a right in this country, and it hurts our prospects for achieving that goal in the near future.

Real change comes about when large numbers of ordinary Americans speak, vote and get involved in the democratic process. If we stand together, we win. If we are divided, the big-money interests win. And we have a real shot to deliver a big victory in the fight for health care as a right for all Americans in this campaign.

In Solidarity,

Bernie

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A Few Questions for the Candidates in Tonight's Republican Debate Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=36361"><span class="small">Robert Reich, Robert Reich's Facebook Page</span></a>   
Thursday, 14 January 2016 14:51

Reich writes: "Here are a few of the questions I hope are asked at tonight's Republican debate."

Robert Reich. (photo: Richard Morgenstein)
Robert Reich. (photo: Richard Morgenstein)


A Few Questions for the Candidates in Tonight's Republican Debate

By Robert Reich, Robert Reich's Facebook Page

14 January 16

 

ere are a few of the questions I hope are asked at tonight’s Republican debate:

  1. Ted Cruz: You’ve spoken in recent days about Donald Trump’s “New York values.” What exactly are “New York values?” Do they include Goldman Sachs – whose loan for your Senate campaign you failed to disclose, according to today's New York Times?

  2. Jeb Bush: You have a new ad going after Donald Trump for being a “jerk.” What exactly does a “jerk” mean? Another of your new ads questions Marco Rubio’s masculinity. How do these ads fulfill your stated goal of running a “high-minded, substantive” campaign?

  3. Marco Rubio: You won’t admit Syrian refugees because of your fear that some might be connected to Isis. Would you admit refugees from a country that becomes communist, out of fear that some of them might be communist spies? If not, would your parents have been admitted to America under the Cuban refugee program?

  4. Donald Trump: Nikki Haley, the governor of South Carolina – where this debate is being hosted, and someone frequently mentioned as a possible vice presidential candidate -- said Tuesday in her State of the Union response that “during anxious times, it can be tempting to follow the siren call of the angriest voices,” and she later said she was referencing you. Why has your campaign been the most hateful and deceitful of any presidential candidate in living memory? If you’re nominated, would you consider Haley for vice president?

  5. Ben Carson: Why are you still in this race?

What would you like asked tonight?

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With Public Sector Unions on the Rocks, Middle Class May Take Another Hit Print
Thursday, 14 January 2016 14:50

DePillis writes: "For all his talk about 'middle class economics' in recent years, it might have seemed odd that President Obama didn't mention the 'middle class' once during his nearly hour-long speech to Congress last night."

Labor union members and supporters demonstrate in opposition to a right-to-work law in Lansing, Mich in 2012. (photo: James Fassinger/Reuters)
Labor union members and supporters demonstrate in opposition to a right-to-work law in Lansing, Mich in 2012. (photo: James Fassinger/Reuters)


With Public Sector Unions on the Rocks, Middle Class May Take Another Hit

By Lydia DePillis, The Washington Post

14 January 16

 

New calculations quantify just how much the decline of unions has widened inequality.

or all his talk about "middle class economics" in recent years, it might have seemed odd that President Obama didn't mention the "middle class" once during his nearly hour-long speech to Congress last night.

Instead, he talked about "working families." Those phrases aren't interchangeable anymore — so many working people have exited the middle class that it's no longer the demographic majority.

Now, here's another thing the president mentioned, even if indirectly: The power of unions to help. Working families, he said, "won’t get more opportunity or bigger paychecks by...allowing attacks on collective bargaining to go unanswered." Attacks, he might have said, like the case argued earlier this week at the Supreme Court that could bar unions from collecting fees from non-members for administration of the contracts that cover them, a prohibition that has tended to weaken their bargaining power and ability to push for middle class priorities in the political process.

That observation has some new analysis behind it, courtesy of a report from the Center for American Progress senior fellow David Madland and Harvard economist Richard Freeman. The headline number: The decline of union coverage is responsible for about 35 percent of the drop in the share of the workforce that falls within the middle class, the researchers found.

Of course, that isn't a new argument. Liberals have long touted the equalizing effects of unions, and have been doing so more stridently as inequality has risen and become central to the Democratic party's message. Building on earlier work, Madland and Freeman have been contributing some quantitative ammunition, first with a look at how children in more unionized regions and even those in union families have a better-than-average chance of climbing the economic ladder.

Here's what the math looks like:

Because people covered by union contracts both earn more and have more uniform earnings, they are more likely to be middle class, which the authors define as earning between 67 and 200 percent of median income, taking a cue from the Pew Research Center's parameters. Therefore, the decline in union coverage will disproportionately remove people from the middle class. That decline is responsible for 2.7 percentage points of the 7.6 point decrease in the share of workers included in the middle class between 1984 and 2014.

Meanwhile, the amount by which union workers are more likely to be middle class than non-union workers — the "union equality premium"— has also declined, since it's harder to maintain high wages with smaller membership bases. That effect, the authors calculate, takes another 1.8 percent off the share of workers in the middle class. The combination of those two effects actually cancel each other out a bit, reducing the impact the weakened labor movement — most of which can be attributed to the decline in union coverage — to 47 percent of the total decline in the share of the middle class.

So here's a question: How much of this effect is due to a simple shift in the composition of the U.S. economy, from highly-unionized manufacturing over to service occupations that were never organized at as high a rate? If it were just a consequence of the rapid offshoring of relatively highly-paid factory jobs over the past three decades, that might suggest unions don't necessarily have the ability to keep people in the middle class.

Graph displaying data on the decrease in the private sector. (photo: The Washington Post)
Graph displaying data on the decrease in the private sector. (photo: The Washington Post)

Madland says that it's not just a manufacturing phenomenon. Other professions that can't be offshored, such as construction, have also seen their their union density decline. Here's a graph that separates out those industries:

James Sherk, a legal fellow at the Heritage Foundation, is a professional skeptic of organized labor. He says that union members tend to earn better wages because organizing campaigns have historically targeted middle-income workplaces. Those who are highly motivated to earn lots of money tend to avoid them, he argues, pointing to a 1996 paper describing these selection effects.

"Economists expect to find more union members in the middle class, whether or not unions causally contribute to it," Sherk says. "This study makes no effort to distinguish that correlation from causation."

In response, Madland refers to a number of of other studies that do suggest a causal relationship. "What this study is especially good at is showing that because there are fewer union members, there’s fewer people earning a middle-class income," he says. "And as unions have weakened, they have been less able to pull people up into the middle class."

How unions ought to be rebuilt, both through policy and the efforts of unions themselves, is a big question that Madland and Freeman don't try to answer in their paper. But one thing's for sure: If the Supreme Court rules against public sector unions in the case it just heard, Friedrichs vs. the California Teachers Association, the labor movement will have to redouble its efforts to arrest its long decline.

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