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Some Counties in Texas Actually Are Denying Birthright Citizenship Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=26249"><span class="small">Esther Yu-Hsi Lee, ThinkProgress</span></a>   
Saturday, 19 September 2015 13:16

Lee writes: "GOP candidates eager to end birthright citizenship need look no further than Texas, where local country registrars have started to make that situation a reality for hundreds of immigrant parents living along the border."

A 2-year-old Texas girl who was born in the United States. Her parents cannot get her birth certificate and are plaintiffs in a lawsuit against the state. (photo: Getty)
A 2-year-old Texas girl who was born in the United States. Her parents cannot get her birth certificate and are plaintiffs in a lawsuit against the state. (photo: Getty)


Some Counties in Texas Actually Are Denying Birthright Citizenship

By Esther Yu-Hsi Lee, ThinkProgress

19 September 15

 

ince 2016 Republican presidential frontrunner Donald Trump released his immigration policy plan to end granting citizenship to U.S.-citizen children born to undocumented immigrants, other GOP candidates have become remarkably supportive of this hard-line stance. Many scholars point out that it’s unclear how this policy would work in practice. It would likely take an act of Congress or a constitutional amendment to overrule the current birthright citizenship provision of the 14th Amendment, it would be incredibly expensive to implement, and the number of babies being born to undocumented parents is already on the decline.

Nonetheless, GOP candidates eager to end birthright citizenship need look no further than Texas, where local country registrars have started to make that situation a reality for hundreds of immigrant parents living along the border.

In the Lone Star state, undocumented immigrants say they’ve been denied birth certificates for their children since 2013. Without that official document, it’s difficult for them to enroll their child in other programs, like Medicaid or day care, or even get baptized.

Since many undocumented immigrants do not have legal identification documents — like a driver’s license or a green card — in the past they have been able to show two secondary forms of identification to obtain their child’s birth certificate from the Department of State Health Services (DSHS). One of those documents is a Mexican matrícula consular identification card.

But Texas county registers are starting to change that. In Texas’ second-largest county, the Dallas County clerk’s office announced on its website that as of June 1, its county registrars will “no longer accept the Mexican Matrícula Consular Card as verification of identity for purchase of birth certificates or for obtaining confidential records.”

Other counties already had similar policies in place, but didn’t strictly enforce them until 2013 — when Dee Porter, then chief operating officer of DSHS, told Rosalba Ojeda, the former consul general of Mexico in Austin, that the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agency wouldn’t accept the matrícula identification as a valid form of identification.

Texas officials stated that consulate offices don’t verify the documents used to obtain matrícula identification. They said that immigrants can use other types of identification, like student IDs, Medicaid cards, Mexican voter registrations, utility bills, and paycheck stubs, to obtain birth certificates. They insisted that they’re making sure that birth records are released “to people who are qualified to obtain them,” Chris Van Deusen, a spokesman for the Texas Department of State Health Services, which oversees the state’s Vital Statistics Unit, told the New York Times.

But not everyone living in Texas has access to those documents. Juana, a 33-year-old Mexican immigrant mother, told the Los Angeles Times that she doesn’t have a Mexican electoral card because she left her hometown at a young age. She also doesn’t have a Mexican passport with a U.S. visa.

Neither the Federal Bureau of Investigation nor the U.S. Department of Justice accept the matrícula as a “reliable form of identification,” the Texas Tribune reported. However, as Huffington Post’s Elise Foley reported earlier this month, many states do.

Twenty-two states would “either certainly either certainly or likely accept consular IDs as a form of identification, according to their websites, staffers or the Mexican consulate. Some of those states require an individual to show a second form of ID along with the consular card; others allow it as a primary form,” Foley reported. In Arizona, a state that once had a famously anti-immigrant law, undocumented immigrants can receive a birth certificate with a notarized signature, “so long as they have a credible witness with an ID who can attest to their identity.”

In a state where 1.68 million undocumented immigrants live, the problems presented by Texas officials are creating big headaches.

Juana, a 33-year-old Mexican immigrant who crossed the border at the age of 14, was turned away earlier this year when she went to get a copy of her youngest daughter’s birth certificate. “I’ve been here practically half my life,” Juana told Al Jazeera America. “I pay taxes. I’ve never depended on the government.” Juana’s daughter, who was born in November 2013, still doesn’t have her birth certificate.

Other undocumented immigrants told the New York Times that they limit their travels because they’re afraid of driving north past border checkpoints set up along the interior of the United States for fear that they wouldn’t be able to provide proof that they are the parents of their children. One undocumented immigrant stated that she couldn’t work since day care centers want a birth certificate and she was unable to obtain one for her nine-month old daughter.

Both the Texas Civil Rights Project and Texas Rio Grande Legal Aid have sued the Texas Department of State Health Services on behalf of 28 adults and 32 children originally from Mexico, Honduras, and Guatemala. Lawyers for the plaintiffs believe that there are hundreds of other people who were potentially denied birth certificates but are too afraid to officially join the suit.

On October 2, attorneys for those 28 undocumented immigrants will appear before U.S. District Judge Robert Pitman, who will consider whether to issue an emergency injunction to order the Department of State Health Services to allow two forms of identification that the parents can use.

“Yes, I’m here illegally. But I’m the one who committed the crime, not them,” a 34-year-old woman who was denied birth certificates for two of her children told the New York Times.


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What Exxon Knew, and When Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=35861"><span class="small">Bill McKibben, The New Yorker</span></a>   
Saturday, 19 September 2015 13:15

McKibben writes: "New documents and interviews show that Exxon, now ExxonMobil, one of the world's largest oil companies, knew its main product would heat up the planet disastrously. This did not prevent the company from then spending decades helping to organize the campaigns of disinformation and denial that have slowed - perhaps fatally - the planet's response to global warming."

CEO of Exxon Rex Tillerson. (photo: AP)
CEO of Exxon Rex Tillerson. (photo: AP)


What Exxon Knew, and When

By Bill McKibben, The New Yorker

19 September 15

 

ednesday morning, journalists at InsideClimate News, a Web site that has won the Pulitzer Prize for its reporting on oil spills, published the first installment of a multi-part exposé that will be appearing over the next month. The documents they have compiled and the interviews they have conducted with retired employees and officials show that, as early as 1977, Exxon (now ExxonMobil, one of the world’s largest oil companies) knew that its main product would heat up the planet disastrously. This did not prevent the company from then spending decades helping to organize the campaigns of disinformation and denial that have slowed—perhaps fatally—the planet’s response to global warming.

There’s a sense, of course, in which one already assumed that this was the case. Everyone who’s been paying attention has known about climate change for decades now. But it turns out Exxon didn’t just “know” about climate change: it conducted some of the original research. In the nineteen-seventies and eighties, the company employed top scientists who worked side by side with university researchers and the Department of Energy, even outfitting one of the company’s tankers with special sensors and sending it on a cruise to gather CO2 readings over the ocean. By 1977, an Exxon senior scientist named James Black was, according to his own notes, able to tell the company’s management committee that there was “general scientific agreement” that what was then called the greenhouse effect was most likely caused by man-made CO2; a year later, speaking to an even wider audience inside the company, he said that research indicated that if we doubled the amount of carbon dioxide in the planet’s atmosphere, we would increase temperatures two to three degrees Celsius. That’s just about where the scientific consensus lies to this day. “Present thinking,” Black wrote in summary, “holds that man has a time window of five to ten years before the need for hard decisions regarding changes in energy strategies might become critical.”

Those numbers were about right, too. It was precisely ten years later—after a decade in which Exxon scientists continued to do systematic climate research that showed, as one internal report put it, that stopping “global warming would require major reductions in fossil fuel combustion”—that NASA scientist James Hansen took climate change to the broader public, telling a congressional hearing, in June of 1988, that the planet was already warming. And how did Exxon respond? By saying that its own independent research supported Hansen’s findings? By changing the company’s focus to renewable technology?

That didn’t happen. Exxon responded, instead, by helping to set up or fund extreme climate-denial campaigns. (In a blog post responding to the I.C.N. report, the company said that the documents were “cherry-picked” to “distort our history of pioneering climate science research” and efforts to reduce emissions.) The company worked with veterans of the tobacco industry to try and infuse the climate debate with doubt. Lee Raymond, who became the Exxon C.E.O. in 1993—and was a senior executive throughout the decade that Exxon had studied climate science—gave a key speech to a group of Chinese leaders and oil industry executives in 1997, on the eve of treaty negotiations in Kyoto. He told them that the globe was cooling, and that government action to limit carbon emissions “defies common sense.” In recent years, it’s gotten so hot (InsideClimate’s exposé coincided with the release of data showing that this past summer was the United States’ hottest in recorded history) that there’s no use denying it any more; Raymond’s successor, Rex Tillerson, has grudgingly accepted climate change as real, but has referred to it as an “engineering problem.” In May, at a shareholders’ meeting, he mocked renewable energy, and said that “mankind has this enormous capacity to deal with adversity,” which would stand it in good stead in the case of “inclement weather” that “may or may not be induced by climate change.”

The influence of the oil industry is essentially undiminished, even now. The Obama Administration may have stood up to Big Coal, but the richer Big Oil got permission this summer to drill in the Arctic; Washington may soon grant the rights for offshore drilling along the Atlantic seaboard, and end a longstanding ban on oil exports. All these measures help drive the flow of carbon into the atmosphere—the flow of carbon that Exxon knew almost forty years ago would likely be disastrous.

We’ve gotten so inured to this kind of corporate power that the report in InsideClimate News received relatively little coverage. The big news of the day on social media came from Irving, Texas, where the police handcuffed a young Muslim boy for taking his homemade alarm clock to school; all day people tweeted #IStandWithAhmed, and rightly so. It’s wondrous to see the power of an Internet-enabled world shining the light on particular (and in this case telling) injustice; there’s a principal and a police chief in Irving that will likely think differently next time. But we badly need the same kind of focus on the long-lasting, underlying abuses of corporate might. As it happens, Exxon is based in Irving, Texas too.


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FOCUS: Politicians, Servants of the Wealthy Print
Saturday, 19 September 2015 11:25

Abu-Jamal writes: "It is impossible to look at the current crop of political presidential aspirants and not be struck by their level of subservience to the wants and needs of the owner class. Like puppies panting in the presence of their masters, the politicians, emboldened by the unconscionable Citizens United decision, beg at the feet of the billionaires for scraps to better serve their betters."

Mumia Abu-Jamal. (photo: Lou Jones/First Run Features)
Mumia Abu-Jamal. (photo: Lou Jones/First Run Features)


Politicians, Servants of the Wealthy

By Mumia Abu-Jamal, Prison Radio

19 September 15

 

t is impossible to look at the current crop of political presidential aspirants and not be struck by their level of subservience to the wants and needs of the owner class. Like puppies panting in the presence of their masters, the politicians, emboldened by the unconscionable Citizens United decision, beg at the feet of the billionaires for scraps to better serve their betters. Now, a single billionaire can field a half dozen polls, and by so doing, can determine not just who runs, but who wins, and what laws will be passed. Why not? They own them don't they?

But still, that is not enough. For witness the emergence of New York real estate executive Donald Trump. Trump brags, at every opportunity, of his enormous wealth. By so doing, he intimidates his potential rivals, who are used to bending their knees to such men. But he also represents the distrust of his class. Rather than hiding politicians, he runs himself to lock in his class dominance.

But this is not solely a Republican affair, for Democrats who run on emotional appeals to labor unions and working people, once in power keep to the interests of Wall Street, the source of the lions share of their donations. Their strategy of talking labor while pleasing capital was seen in the destructive North American free Trade Agreement pact, which decimated manufacturing jobs in the US by the millions. Bill Clinton hustled NAFTA, like a street dealer selling crack, selling dreams that turned to dust.

Now the Clintons return posing as the saviors of the working class, while their NAFTA ripped away tens of thousands of jobs, undermined unions, and transferred vast wealth to Wall Street.

When Texas business man and 1992/1996 presidential candidate Ross Perot said NAFTA would produce a giant sucking sound of lost jobs, the media pundits laughed at him, making him sound like a fool. History proves his words were true.

Politicians servants of capital, promisers of progress, but bringers of disaster.


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FOCUS: Bill Clinton on Missed 9/11 Signs, ISIS, and Ragging on George W. Bush Print
Saturday, 19 September 2015 10:19

Warren writes: "It was as a Southerner whose moral imagination had been awakened by the racism all around him that Clinton would shape his political career - in a canny, treacherous, and open rebellion against the values that prevailed in the place that created him."

Bill Clinton. (photo: Getty)
Bill Clinton. (photo: Getty)


Bill Clinton on Missed 9/11 Signs, ISIS, and Ragging on George W. Bush

By Mark Warren, Esquire

19 September 15

 

Among political figures, only President Kennedy has appeared more often on this magazine's covers. Even as Hillary takes over the stage, Bill remains a powerful and enlivening public force. And is likely to remain so, even into the administration of his third successor. We spoke with him again recently.

n July 2, 1964, when Lyndon Johnson turned to his aide Bill Moyers after signing the Civil Rights Act and said, "I've just handed the South to the Republicans for a generation," Bill Clinton was seventeen and had already decided to run for public office, as a civil-rights Democrat. It was as a Southerner whose moral imagination had been awakened by the racism all around him that Clinton would shape his political career—in a canny, treacherous, and open rebellion against the values that prevailed in the place that created him. And so it would be that Clinton—the greatest political talent of his generation, the one his opponents feared most and most ardently sought to destroy—not only would learn to survive but would become the embodiment of American potential in the late twentieth century. He would take those survival skills with him onto the world stage, which meant that he would have fixed principles but everything else would be negotiable. This approach often vexed both his opposition and his allies as he led the world during the first chaotic decade after the fall of global Communism and faced the rise of global jihadism, genocide in the hearts of Europe and Africa, economic globalization, the realignment of Congress, the birth of the Internet, and his own political mortality. But by the end of his second term, when he appeared on the December 2000 cover of Esquire, he had the highest approval rating of any departing president in history. We recently sat down with the former president to talk about how the world has changed in the fifteen years since he left office.

ESQUIRE: Mr. President, the world became a very different place after your presidency. Was 9/11 the pivotal point for the time in which we live now? What in your mind has been its effect, and how long will the effects of that day play out?

Well, let me just say a few words about the time I served and then the impact of 9/11. Because of the economic growth we had and because it was the only period where prosperity was broadly shared through every sector of the American economy, America was in a very strong position to try to take the end of the cold war and build new partnerships of all kinds, which I tried to do. We did have terrorist threats, many of which we defused and prevented from getting worse, sometimes through skill, sometimes through luck. You gotta get lucky in this business, 'cause it ain't like baseball; you don't get credit for saves. You're supposed to win 100 percent of the time, and it's difficult to do. So when 9/11 happened, it was such a shock to us that there were a lot of short- and long-term consequences.

We tended to believe that the right thing to do had to be something big, because what happened to us was big. So I personally have always believed insufficient attention was paid to fixing little things. Like, there were two FBI agents, in Arizona and Minnesota, who did call the FBI office and say, "We've got all these guys up here flying airplanes and they're not practicing taking off or landing; there's something wrong here." And it apparently just went into a file, and nobody did anything about it in the central office. I always thought more should have been done about immediate information sharing.

And when I went before the 9/11 Commission, I remember telling them, "Look, I'm gonna save you some time. I'm not interested in covering my backside. If you find something I did wrong, by all means tell it and let's figure out what to do about it." I'll give you an example: After Oklahoma City, I issued an executive order that required greater cooperation between the FBI and the CIA, and I asked them to put a senior officer in each place doing that job. But because there had been a history going back to Watergate of the president taking a hands-off attitude toward the FBI, I didn't micromanage [that effort] the way I otherwise would have, and they basically didn't do very much with it. So as the 9/11 Commission reported, the CIA knew some things, the FBI knew others. The hijackers were in this country a long time before this happened. Several months, anyway. So I think that one of the things that I worried about after 9/11 was that we were gonna try to find big, potentially bureaucratic, and maybe overly intrusive ways of dealing with this instead of identifying the cracks in a more nimble system.

The president's first national-security responsibility is to prevent big, bad things from happening. This is a big, bad thing. And it's worth a lot of effort to do that, but at all costs you have to try to do it without compromising the future of our children and the character of country, which is a free place. So we've been debating that ever since. I think that debate is healthy, just like I think the debate's healthy about moving away from "three strikes and you're out" and other erosions of judicial discretion, and ending the distinction between sentencing laws for crack cocaine and cocaine. I think all that's good. So I think we may have overreacted a little bit after 9/11, but we were trying to keep big, bad things from happening. And thank God no big, bad thing has happened again.

But it's an ongoing battle. Because the things that benefit us about globalization also burden us with great responsibilities. So I see this thing going on in some form or fashion for another twenty or thirty years. And the reason that I believe on balance the Iranian nuclear agreement is good for the country is not because I think that Iran is gonna turn into, you know, a "Kumbaya" partner, but because there are at least four other Arab states that have the capacity to become nuclear powers. And it costs a lot of money, and it's difficult to develop, maintain, and secure a nuclear arsenal, and you always have a lot of loose nuclear fuel, which can be sold, stolen, or given away and turned into suitcase bombs. I felt much better when [secretary of energy] Ernie Moniz went over there and became part of the deal, because he had been part of my administration and we had worked a lot on that. I'll never forget it, he came to see me—he wasn't yet secretary of energy, but he was in an executive position, and I knew him and trusted him; he is a brilliant man—and he said, "Look, what we have to worry about is somebody putting a Girl Scout cookie's worth of fissile material in Timothy McVeigh's fertilizer bomb." And so we tried to identify every country in the world that had that much, which is a lot because of biomedical research, and then go and tell those countries what he had found with his simulations and work out arrangements with each country about what to do, because nobody wanted that to happen.

I consider it a major—I don't know if achievement is the right word—but I think it's a major development, given the penetration of the Pakistani military and security forces by people that we knew were sympathetic to the Taliban and then became sympathetic to Al Qaeda, that to the best of our knowledge, none of their fissile material has ever been given away, sold, or stolen. And I just didn't want five more headaches, and I didn't think it was good for the people in the Middle East. So now, if this deal is approved, then the ball is in Iran's court. We'll have to see what they continue to do, and we'll have to continue to respond to it. But buying ten years without an Iranian nuclear weapon is a lifetime-plus in global affairs. I understand why the Arab states are worried. I understand why Israel is worried, and they're absolutely right. But I just don't think there's any way Israel would be more secure if there were four or five nuclear powers in the Middle East and you had all that fissile material floating around that anybody could get a hold of.

The real dilemma for all of us over the next twenty years is going to be that the future is going to have way more positive possibilities because of our interdependence, but also continued opportunities for hacking, for cybersecurity problems, and for the spread of deadly technologies, with a lot of confused, undereducated, and unemployed young people in the world, and with a global shortage of jobs for young people, opportunities to do destructive things. Young people are more vulnerable to the siren songs of fundamentalism and the social media. And if they get up thinking tomorrow is going to be like yesterday, that's a very bad thing. This is why I think it's so important that the nation-states that are functioning work harder on shared prosperity, shared opportunities, and shared security, because that's the great battle here.

You can't make all this stuff happen without technology, without relatively open borders and without other people being able to use the same technology for more selfish and more lethal ends. And that's basically where we are.

On balance, I feel good about it because we can't turn back the clock. We're moving toward an integrated, global society. And I think you see the rapid progress in America on the gay-rights issue, and the less rapid but in a way equally moving progress made after the terrible killings in Charleston, South Carolina, thanks to a blistering four-minute speech by a direct descendant of Jefferson Davis. That's moving history in the right direction. It's coming together instead of tearing apart. I'm for the coming together. I'm against the tearing apart.

When I say "the people who have defined our time," who or what comes to mind?

Well, for me, as a baby boomer, it's the people who led the great movements to try to make America a more just place, a better place. The civil-rights movement, the women's-rights movement, the gay-rights movement, and the environmental movement. The idea that the world is going to have to become more accepting of diversity—and the people who don't agree, ISIS. The world is becoming more interdependent, and national borders look more like nets than walls. The nation-state will continue to be very important, but there will be more and more and more unique, previously unforeseeable partnerships required. Alliances by issues, hard choices. How can you make a deal with Iran on nuclear capacity if they're still gonna sponsor Hamas and Hezbollah? How can you break down barriers between government, business, and NGOs when you should and keep the barriers when you shouldn't? All these questions are going to present problems, and the nongovernmental movement is going to be filled with good actors that some nations are increasingly trying to control—China and Russia, for example—and also bad actors that can be very successful. You could argue that ISIS is the most successful NGO—it's like the Gates Foundation versus ISIS, you know? They're a nongovernmental organization.

There are still lots of big ideas revolutionizing the modern world in very good ways. The intersection of science and technology, for example, shows that we should now treat cancers based on what's in our genome rather than where they are in our bodies. A big National Institute of Cancer lateral research project has just been announced on that. That's what's being done at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, St. Jude Children's Research Hospital and MD Anderson Cancer Center. One of the pioneers is a South African-born American doctor of Chinese descent, Patrick Soon-Shiong, in southern California. He's the first person that ever talked to me about this, and he was treating people with late stage cancers with a program he developed. Once a person's genome was properly sequenced, Soon-Shiong could use an analytic program that would in forty-seven seconds tell you of all the available chemotherapies—not just for a lung cancer or a colon cancer or a pancreatic cancer, but of all of them, one through five—which ones would most likely work on this person. And now he's working on identifying in every tumor a protein he says is unique to you and me. If we both had, let's say, colon cancer, our genomes are not only different, but we'd have an identifying protein, and he's trying to develop a killer cell that can go in and take out that protein and collapse the tumor. He says if it can be done to scale, it could raise all cancer survival rates above 85 percent. That, along with the work Ray Kurzweil is doing at Singularity University in California, signals a very exciting time to be alive. And if we can continue the trend toward rapidly driving down the cost of medicine as we did with AIDS drugs, I think that will be an idea that shapes our time.

So in the modern world, the ideas that will shape our time will be the intersection of science and technology, medicine and health and technology; the ability to eradicate poverty—we've already exceeded the poverty goals in the first Millennium Development Goals; the ability to identify and lend dignity and importance to every life, because there will be fewer people that need to live and die anonymously in the world; and the ability to find ways to cooperate against the forces that are using the same exact technologies and mobility and porous borders to try to gain a very different future. Boko Haram, Al Shabab, Ansar Dine, ISIS, et al. And underneath it all, in the twenty-first century we will be called upon, I think and I hope, to resolve the oldest dilemma of human society, which is "What does it mean to be a human being?" Our identity crisis. Which is more important, our differences or our common humanity?

What do you consider to be the world-historic effects of the Internet, both good and bad?

Well, the good news, first of all—an eight-year-old can get on the Internet and learn things in thirty seconds that I had to go to college to learn. And we're only beginning to tap its potential to universalize and raise the quality of education and training and knowledge generally. The social media can be used to do wonderful things. Haiti is the first international disaster dealt with in America through cell phone contributions. We gave a billion dollars in private funds to Haiti after the earthquake. The median contribution was twenty-six dollars, because you could text "$10" in America and "$5" in Canada on your cell phone. Just a few years earlier, in the [Indian Ocean] tsunami, we gave a billion dollars, with a median contribution of fifty-six dollars, because it was the first one ever done over the Internet. Secondly, because we kept it relatively open and free, there's a bunch of junk on the Internet. Not only hate speech, but just plain crazy theories. I remember when I was arguing with President Thabo Mbeki in South Africa about AIDS. He's a highly intelligent man and the most gifted leader in Africa at the time on economic policy, but the exploding AIDS epidemic caused a lot of emigration into South Africa, and wrecked a lot of what Mbeki wanted to do at home. He was under a lot of pressure not to take it seriously and not to do things, but Mbeki found two articles on the Internet and, oh God, that was all I heard about. It's a mixed blessing, but there's no question that the power of the Internet to do crowdfunding, to provide information, is staggering.

After the tsunami, when I was the UN [Special envoy for relief efforts], we put all those fishing families back in boats. We gave them cell phones in a lot of places and their average incomes went up 30 percent, just because they could find out what the real price of fish was up and down the coast. So on balance it's a blessing, but every technology is democratizing in ways that can be good and bad. It also permits ISIS to send out propaganda that got two blonde-haired, blue-eyed Austrian teenage girls to try to go and join the Jihad, you know? But underneath it's a very old struggle. We've had dramatic reductions in poverty, dramatic reductions in child and infant mortality. We have found more and more economically affordable ways to change how we produce and consume energy, food, and water, which will be critical to dealing with not only climate change but rising global populations as well. Increasingly the people we want to serve in government will need the talent to figure out how to minimize hacking while maximizing the freedom of the internet; how to win these social media battles and identify people who may be troubled to the point of instability and doing something terrible by what they read. It will make delivery systems of all kinds even more important. I'll just give you one example. There's been an explosion of deaths of younger single women and college kids from opiates that are in medicine, like Oxycontin. Two young men I knew that died within weeks of each other a few years ago got me interested in this, including one who had worked for me and worked for Hillary and had a brilliant future. He was not a drug addict; went out with his girlfriend and drank four or five beers. She gave him an Oxycontin and said, "This will give you a buzz," and it did. But nobody to speak of understood the biochemistry that if you mix the two, it deadens the part of your brain that tells your body to keep breathing when you are asleep, so he never woke up. If it had happened at noon he would still be with us. He could have been revived. So we're trying to distribute Oxycontin in a spray form—a usable form on college campuses all over America. That's the sort of thing that there will be a huge premium on—the understanding of how to multiply fixes that can only be applied in individual and small group contexts and therefore require very good supply chains. It's one of the reasons that it's important that Coca-Cola partnered with Dean Kamen to deliver his water machine, which will take the most fetid water and turn it into drinkable form, because Coca-Cola has a great supply chain. Kamen never got it off the ground because nobody could afford it, but Coca-Cola can afford them, and the point is that once you get a certain number of them, they'll become cheap.

The budget was balanced at the end of your presidency and we were in surplus. Now, though, it seems that we are in an age of austerity, or something close to austerity. How long do you think this retrenchment will go on, and will we ever invest boldly again?

Well, I believe a lot of decisions have been made both by leaders and voters based on a laudable determination that we have accumulated in the past too many debts and we have guaranteed too much in terms of accumulated liabilities. And our projected future growth won't support them. There have been too many governments that were both profligate and riddled with corruption, making promises to people we couldn't pay for and allowing usually the wealthiest people in the country not to really pay taxes, so there was this impulse to retrench. The problem is that the impulse took hold at a time when, because of the financial crash, we were more at risk of deflation than high interest rates from big debt. What happens if you've got too much debt? Your interest rates go through the roof and there's nothing left for the present or the future. And so you can't explain that in ten seconds. You've gotta say, "Look, your impulse for the long run is right. We should be living within our means." Everybody's forgotten John Maynard Keynes's conservative side. He said that when interest rates are higher than inflation and growth is normal, government should run balanced budgets or surplus. But when you're in a period of deflation—when interest rates are lower than inflation—more austerity just puts you in a deeper hole. When Greece gave its first honest budget under [Prime Minister] George Papandreou in 2009, which destroyed his party because he agreed to do it, but at least it was the beginning, their debt was about 125 percent of GDP. Today it's almost 180 percent of GDP. So they made all these bond payments and where have they gotten? Deeper in the hole. There's nothing wrong with Greece, the people, the vast natural resources, its potential for clean energy development, which has done better than most people know. They've been saddled with a government that made promises it couldn't keep and elites that don't pay taxes. So the answer, which was to impose greater austerity on ordinary Greeks and cream the small business sector; to never miss a payment to the bankers; to not allow any haircut on the debt or a very long stretching out, has only made their problems worse. There was literally no opportunity Greece could have done anything with their debt relief, because there was no money tied to investment. And these are the kinds of things that we have to work out in an interdependent world.

When [British Prime Minister] David Cameron was re-elected in the United Kingdom, he could say, "See, we proved austerity worked." And I've always been grateful to him, because the one thing he refused to be austere about was his foreign assistance. He kept helping poor people around the world. But it's not that simple. They didn't have austerity; they just had inflationary policies through the Central Bank rather than the government. He could have government austerity because he had the European counterpart of Ben Bernanke at the Central Bank, a man who had been head of the Central Bank of Canada and has done a fabulous job. But Greece has no Central Bank, in effect, so since the European Central Bank couldn't do that for Greece, [Managing Director of the International Monetary Fund], Christine Lagarde, tried to and it was insufficiently funded. I'm hopeful that this new agreement will allow at least a stretching out of the debt and the money they set aside to develop Greece will be put in immediately. And if you have proper oversight to eliminate both corruption and basically sending the money off into things that won't work, you may be able to put together that package. But in America and in Europe, everywhere else, that's really the issue. China's stock market crashed, but that's just because they're in a different stage of development. They had growth all the way through and they had a bubble they didn't know how to regulate. There's still too much of the economy state-controlled, so they'll work that out.

Let me tell you what I feel good about. I feel good about India being under a leader who understands that their biggest problem is that they have great entrepreneurs and great tech centers, but 100 percent of the gains have gone to 35 percent of the people, because the country is really not connected in virtual or real infrastructure or investment patterns. So [Prime Minister Narendra] Modi is determined to do that, and he's the first guy in a long time to have enough votes in the Indian Parliament to actually do it. So I feel good about that, as long as they don't get too nationalistic and really punish non-Hindu minorities and discriminate against them. He's got a chance to really be successful. I feel good about Shinzo Abe, [Prime Minister] of Japan. As long as he doesn't get too nationalistic, I think it's a good thing for Japan to want to participate in regional trade and regional defense initiatives. And Abe has concluded that at this stage in their development, they're not ready to take large numbers of immigrants. Therefore, the only thing you can do is get the oldest population in the world to work longer and get a lot more women in the workforce. The president of China is a very able man. I feel good about the internal reforms he's trying to make to develop an economy that generates more growth out of their own consumption. And I feel disturbed about the compromises he's made with the military, or maybe he agrees in building huge platforms out on those little islands in the China Sea to try to resolve unilaterally things that ought to be resolved in a multi-national forum. So it's an open question, but we still have to follow what I think has proved to be the right policy with China, which is always work for the best and prepare for the worst.

Since your presidency, it seems there's been a fight between those who would starve government and those who believe in more robust investment in human capital and in infrastructure. How about here, Mr. President, and the impulse for austerity?

Well, I believe it was an error not to invest more in infrastructure during these past few years when interest rates were low. They were lower than inflation, and the return on investment is great. The American people support investments in roads and bridges and universal broadband and free Wi-Fi and all that stuff. They are for that. They understand viscerally that our broadband access is not the best, and it's more costly than other countries. South Korea's download speeds are average four times ours, and its access is cheaper because the government financed the infrastructure. So they never had a debate about net neutrality. The debate about net neutrality is really a debate about two competing rights. That is, net neutrality is a good principle, but the people that invested in the infrastructure—because we did it privately—have to be able to recover their investment. And they can say—partly because we have an inadequate infrastructure—that's fine for net neutrality, but do you really believe that an emergency communication should take a backseat to a guy downloading his fifth movie of the day? Don't tell me about political talk and all that. All that happened because we didn't do what we should have done in infrastructure. I think we should separate in our minds our future budget and our investments in things that would affect our future, including science and technology, with our budget for past obligations. Separate our accumulated pensions, for example, and other unpaid debts, and our budget to maintain current operations. And I think we ought to look at a lot of these future investments, in terms of the return on investment, and begin to budget in a different way. Now, any macroeconomist will tell you, "Bill Clinton's nuts." Because if you run a national economy, you print the money and it's all six in one and a half dozen in the other. Macroeconomically it's true; psychologically it's false. And the psychology of Americans—to not have government too big and not to run uncharted debts—they're right about it. I had three surpluses and submitted a surplus budget on the way out the door, which I was legally required to do. But that's where I think we are.

We still haven't sorted that out in our minds.

Two things the president has done that I really like are this Precision Medicine Initiative and the brain research. He put one hundred fifty million dollars in each one. It took us three billion dollars to sequence the human genome, and it took a long time. And now that it's sequenced, we can do a lot of these other things quicker, but it requires more money. The estimates on the return we've gotten on the three billion dollars rank anywhere between seven hundred billion and a trillion dollars now. The best investment we ever made. I think that we never convinced the American people that investment decisions when interest rates are lower than inflation are functionally zero—therefore negative—are different than investment decisions when you have to worry about crowding out the private sector and their ability to get capital because you're going to drive interest rates through the roof. It also kills the government budget because then you have to put more of it into paying interest on their accumulated debt. So what you want is more borrowing when interest rates are lower than inflation generally. And because that didn't happen, Bernanke kept us going. But I believe this also will be a great decision facing the next twenty years.

I just went back to Bosnia for the twentieth anniversary of the Srebrenica [massacre], which led to the Dayton Agreement that has kept the peace for twenty years. All the publicity was about the Serbian Prime Minister being hissed and booed and having things thrown at him, but it's much more complicated than that. That happened because the official ceremony was inside the battery plant where a lot of those kids were slaughtered. I thanked him for coming, and I said everybody else should thank him too. The mayor invited him. The mayor is a thirty-six-year-old guy who called himself "the accidental survivor." His father and his brother were killed; every single male sixteen-year-old classmate he had was killed, and they never found them in the woods. He went outside in ninety-five degree temperature for the Muslim ceremony commemorating the dead, because they bury more people every year that they identify through DNA. I walked through that crowd, and they like America because they think we saved them, and they knew we tried for two years to get Europe involved before we did it. So all these old Muslim women were hugging me, you know, with their headscarves, and the men were shaking hands and everything. The young men who were either not alive twenty years ago or were not cognizant of what was going on were much more mixed, decidedly less cool. Not hostile, but skeptical, much less eager to shake hands with me. Why? Because all their tomorrows have been like their yesterdays. Because even though we preserved the peace, we don't have a growing economy. We don't have growing opportunities for them. That is the challenge everywhere. And the big idea of the next twenty years is going to be shared opportunities and shared prosperities against exclusive but fundamentally negative visions of the future like ISIS.

One of the problems is longer form journalism has become economically more challenging. We're all on Twitter, and I like to practice saying things in one hundred and forty characters, but some things have to be discussed and understood. It caused us a fundamental problem that no one ever made the distinction between economic policies in deflationary periods and economic policies in inflationary periods. And somebody needs to draw a distinction between trying to claw your way through the misconduct of the past and the potential of the country and the resources and the people right there before your very eyes. I've lived with it for years as I saw the press under more and more and more economic pressure. There's more and more and more pressure to develop a story line that just has a good guy, bad guy, A or B, and I'm very sympathetic because of the resource problem. You've got to pay the people you hire, you've got to earn a profit, you've got to figure out how to do it, and everybody just wants to read tomorrow's newspaper on the internet tonight. Digest what you want to digest and go on.

I always rag on George Bush, telling him, "You said once, famously, you don't do nuance." But I say, "Somebody needs to do nuance. I do nuance for you. I tell everybody that I disagree with you on a lot of things, but, you know, PEPFAR was a great thing." That's nuance. How do you get that in your head? You're supposed to disagree with the guy 90 percent of the time. We've got to explain how these things work. It is so important that people have some better understanding about the connection between all these unemployed young people and having the wrong economic policy for the moment.?


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Once Again, Corporate Crimes Result in No Jail 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>   
Saturday, 19 September 2015 08:15

Reich writes: "I don't understand how corporations can be held criminally liable yet no single person be held responsible. Federal prosecutors just struck a deal with GM for $900 in 'criminal penalties' for GM's failure to disclose faulty ignition systems that may have contributed to the deaths of more than 100 people."

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


Once Again, Corporate Crimes Result in No Jail

By Robert Reich, Robert Reich's Facebook Page

19 September 15

 

don’t understand how corporations can be held criminally liable yet no single person be held responsible. Federal prosecutors just struck a deal with GM for $900 million in “criminal penalties” for GM's failure to disclose faulty ignition systems that may have contributed to the deaths of more than 100 people (a sum less than the $1.2 billion Toyota paid last year to settle similar claims over its reporting of unintended acceleration). Despite widespread reports of failures beginning in 2004, GM didn’t notify the government until February 2014.

So if this was a “criminal” act, as prosecutors say it was, why isn’t any GM executive going to jail? It’s a replay of the prosecutions of big Wall Street banks that resulted in no one jailed. The deal even violates new guidelines the Justice Department announced last week directing prosecutors to indict real humans when they pursue criminal charges against corporations.

The Supreme Court (in its shameful 2010 “Citizens United” case) considers corporations people under the First Amendment. But corporations aren’t people. People are people. And there’s no incentive for executive people to obey the law when the costs of their malfeasance is borne by future shareholders who won’t even know how their stock price is affected by such “criminal” penalties.

What do you think?


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