Friday, December 28, 2012
For Paul Krugman: Please
analyze, if you can, the effect of the Bush era tax cuts on creating jobs in
America. My notion is that we gave the super rich a nice piece of lagniappe,
which largess they then took and actually did create jobs -- in China. So, if
it is possible to track differential rates in overseas investments by
America's wealthiest as a result of the Bush era tax cuts, I believe the study
would be extraordinarily entertaining to most of your readers. It is now
possible, I think, to describe the Republican party as being in thrall to
Currency Cranks, Abortion-Nots, Teahadi partisans, whose elected members are in
thrall to big money contributors like Sheldon Adelson. Lundberg's book The Rich
and the Super Rich could be updated by a bright graduate student to cover the
last 30 years of criminally silly tax cuts for the wealthiest Americans -- and
to track the lobbying money that supported ramming this down the throats of
ordinary Americans. It is possible to speculate that higher tax rates on the
wealthiest Americans would (a) balance the government's books and (b) spur the
kind innovation in domestic industries that brings augmented profit. I'd be in
favor of a direct tax on shares similar to the real estate tax -- if it would
do any good. Corporations not registered in this country, and whose shares
aren't traded here could be taxed at a higher rate to encourage them. My very
best to Sarah Murphy, and best wishes for the coming year.
Wednesday, October 3, 2012
Papa -- From Millersville University's Archive
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Wednesday, September 12, 2012
THE DRAGAS-SULLIVAN SHAMBLES AT UVA
I thought you might be interested in this article from the NYT on the Dragas-Sullivan shambles at UVA .. the demonstration was
the most fun I've had on campus since ... 1974?
I don't think the controversy is over yet. The trend to "online education" seems counterproductive to me in light of artist Kyle McDonald's covert photographing of people staring at new Apple computers with robotic expressions on their faces. Perhaps McDonald was just recording the usual facial expressions of people absorbed in what Roland Barthes calls "the dream of reading" ....
(See Guardian article on Kyle McDonald, and some of McDonald's other projects are also entertaining, as is this video.)
As I noted in a comment on Kurzweil AI, even though online education is being ballyhooed just now, perhaps primarily as a cost-saving measure, probably a great deal of intelligence, including what are possibly the most valuable parts of education, are transferred most efficiently in a human to human interface that allows the student’s mirror neurons an opportunity to learn these intellectual behaviors in a process similar to learning to dance. It seems possible that students won't learn the most important elements of what we might call “the dance of the intellect among facts” just by staring at a computer ... but then, reading books and attending lectures have never been very important to the ill-educated.
Hoping to see you at the Messiah Sing In on Tuesday, December 8, and 8 p.m. in Old Cabell Hall (not free any more, but not expensive)
I don't think the controversy is over yet. The trend to "online education" seems counterproductive to me in light of artist Kyle McDonald's covert photographing of people staring at new Apple computers with robotic expressions on their faces. Perhaps McDonald was just recording the usual facial expressions of people absorbed in what Roland Barthes calls "the dream of reading" ....
(See Guardian article on Kyle McDonald, and some of McDonald's other projects are also entertaining, as is this video.)
As I noted in a comment on Kurzweil AI, even though online education is being ballyhooed just now, perhaps primarily as a cost-saving measure, probably a great deal of intelligence, including what are possibly the most valuable parts of education, are transferred most efficiently in a human to human interface that allows the student’s mirror neurons an opportunity to learn these intellectual behaviors in a process similar to learning to dance. It seems possible that students won't learn the most important elements of what we might call “the dance of the intellect among facts” just by staring at a computer ... but then, reading books and attending lectures have never been very important to the ill-educated.
Hoping to see you at the Messiah Sing In on Tuesday, December 8, and 8 p.m. in Old Cabell Hall (not free any more, but not expensive)

Monday, August 13, 2012
UVA - The West Lawn - The Rotunda
I wrote this 20 years ago. It's from from Why I Love Brunettes, an unpublished novel that is the exact opposite of 50 Shades of Grey -- not only is it reasonably well-written, but also -- it makes repulsive behavior seem repulsive in a way that alters the behavior. I hope you love this bit about The Lawn at the University of Virginia.
And my fondest hope is that you get to visit The Lawn as often as I have done. I saw Queen Elizabeth there from about 10 feet away. I saw the Dalai Lama there3. I once catered a party for Edgar Shannon and his wife Eleanor at Carr's Hill, long ago. Please go to the Messiah Sing at Old Cabell Hall as often as you can -- this year it will be on Tuesday, December 8,.2012. And afterwards, walk up The Lawn for me. In 1988, we found a miniature model of the Rotunda modeled in packed snow, with fresh snow just drifting over it one year. My friend Patrick Tompkins and two other graduate students witnessed this. No one at the C&O believed our tale. It was before cell phone cameras or I'd have a picture.
Read this now?
But you and I, mon capitaine, wild tchopitoulas that we are, we're going to stand here just outside the door of Number 8, The West Lawn, watching how the clean white dome of old Tom Jefferson's Rotunda gleams above the shadows deepening like smoke across the green cove of The Lawn. We’ll see the dome of the Rotunda change as dusk begins to purple into evening; we’ll watch how the catalog of column styles and types of portico changes with the shadows as the east side of the dome reflects the clear blue skies above the Grounds, and we’ll see the dome reflecting, orange gold and purple, the 'candescent sun’s red ball of glory settling behind the Blue Ridge Mountains at the western edge of Albemarle.
The shadows and the columns amplify the peaceful stillness of what you and I – remembering the English poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge – might call:
On the steamy hot days Doc liked best, the timeless promise of the columns and the dome – a cool, serene lucidity connected to the world and yet apart from it – inspires a belief in what, for lack of any better term, we may as well call:
And my fondest hope is that you get to visit The Lawn as often as I have done. I saw Queen Elizabeth there from about 10 feet away. I saw the Dalai Lama there3. I once catered a party for Edgar Shannon and his wife Eleanor at Carr's Hill, long ago. Please go to the Messiah Sing at Old Cabell Hall as often as you can -- this year it will be on Tuesday, December 8,.2012. And afterwards, walk up The Lawn for me. In 1988, we found a miniature model of the Rotunda modeled in packed snow, with fresh snow just drifting over it one year. My friend Patrick Tompkins and two other graduate students witnessed this. No one at the C&O believed our tale. It was before cell phone cameras or I'd have a picture.
Read this now?
But you and I, mon capitaine, wild tchopitoulas that we are, we're going to stand here just outside the door of Number 8, The West Lawn, watching how the clean white dome of old Tom Jefferson's Rotunda gleams above the shadows deepening like smoke across the green cove of The Lawn. We’ll see the dome of the Rotunda change as dusk begins to purple into evening; we’ll watch how the catalog of column styles and types of portico changes with the shadows as the east side of the dome reflects the clear blue skies above the Grounds, and we’ll see the dome reflecting, orange gold and purple, the 'candescent sun’s red ball of glory settling behind the Blue Ridge Mountains at the western edge of Albemarle.
The shadows and the columns amplify the peaceful stillness of what you and I – remembering the English poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge – might call:
“A holy and enchanted place.”Or else, remembering a few lines of the poet Baudelaire, we might conclude that:
La, il n'y a qu'ordre et beautéBecause no one who wanders in that place can ever quite believe its timeless promise of unchanging grace and beauty can be false.
Luxe, calme et volupté ....
On the steamy hot days Doc liked best, the timeless promise of the columns and the dome – a cool, serene lucidity connected to the world and yet apart from it – inspires a belief in what, for lack of any better term, we may as well call:
Man's immortal soul.
Friday, August 10, 2012
Helen Dragas Must Go
Clearly, Governor Bob and Helen Dragas see some opportunity for corporate profit in lowering the quality of education at UVA so he can then award privatizing contracts for computerized online "education" to private companies. Perhaps Ms. Dragas will start one of those companies -- soon after she retires from her position on the Board of Visitors!
I have not yet heard of any move to ask all members of the Board of Visitors to require themselves to adhere to the University's Honor Code. And that seems to me the key element.
Extending the term limit for Helen Dragas, who has shown herself to be not only a truly dishonest but also a dishonorable human being, not just in her business dealings but also in her work (no, her devious machinations) as Rector of the Board of Visitors, where her dastardly actions brought discredit on the University and made its Honor Code a laughingstock ... is a travesty.
I find some amusing parallels to the John Hawkes novel Travesty, in which three occupants of a car are speeding toward a rendezvous with a tree in Southern France ... that will kill them all. At the end of these ridiculous shenanigans, Governor Bob will be out of office permanently, the not-Rector Helen Dragas after having puked on her own shoes a few more times, will go back to building shoddy houses in some of Virginia's more densely populated districts, and the power of Terry Sullivan to do good on The Lawn will have been circumscribed.
Helen Dragas made plenty of money building houses. Let her go back to that -- it is a business she understands. And she did the right thing for her customers when some of those houses, were outfitted with defective Chinese-made drywall. But I am willing to believe that none of that drywall was as defective as her paltry notion of how to "transform" the University of Virginia. Ms. Dragas didn't bother to write or "craft" her own oracular pronouncements or official "statements," rather, she hid behind and concealed the involvement of a non-Virginia PR agency like Hill & Knowlton. So She's Gotta Go! Will Someone please make up a batch of buttons .... with a flattering picture of Helen Dragas on them?
I have not yet heard of any move to ask all members of the Board of Visitors to require themselves to adhere to the University's Honor Code. And that seems to me the key element.
Extending the term limit for Helen Dragas, who has shown herself to be not only a truly dishonest but also a dishonorable human being, not just in her business dealings but also in her work (no, her devious machinations) as Rector of the Board of Visitors, where her dastardly actions brought discredit on the University and made its Honor Code a laughingstock ... is a travesty.
I find some amusing parallels to the John Hawkes novel Travesty, in which three occupants of a car are speeding toward a rendezvous with a tree in Southern France ... that will kill them all. At the end of these ridiculous shenanigans, Governor Bob will be out of office permanently, the not-Rector Helen Dragas after having puked on her own shoes a few more times, will go back to building shoddy houses in some of Virginia's more densely populated districts, and the power of Terry Sullivan to do good on The Lawn will have been circumscribed.
The Sun Is Beer!
With regard to computerized online "education," it seems worth nothing that people staring at computer screens often adopt robotic, trance-like facial expressions, and though they may perform well on some low-level multiple choice tests, they rarely learn anything important. They don't, for example, learn or absorb any of the transfer of personality and attitudes that takes place by way of interactions between two human beings within the mirror neuron system. That's what real education is about; and that is why it civilizes the barbarians.Helen Dragas made plenty of money building houses. Let her go back to that -- it is a business she understands. And she did the right thing for her customers when some of those houses, were outfitted with defective Chinese-made drywall. But I am willing to believe that none of that drywall was as defective as her paltry notion of how to "transform" the University of Virginia. Ms. Dragas didn't bother to write or "craft" her own oracular pronouncements or official "statements," rather, she hid behind and concealed the involvement of a non-Virginia PR agency like Hill & Knowlton. So She's Gotta Go! Will Someone please make up a batch of buttons .... with a flattering picture of Helen Dragas on them?
SHE'S GOTTA GO!
If Ms. Dragas doesn't yet understand
how dishonest and dishonorable she was by claiming Hill & Knowlton's
work as her own, I'll be happy to explain it to her over a beer.
Wednesday, July 18, 2012
The Secret King -- from beloved Gravely -- (Scribner's 1984)
Spook’s book The Secret King demolished modern economic theory by demonstrating the utter unreliability of conclusions based on such highly unstable data as government statistics, corporate reports, and the fluctuating value of modern currencies; Spook said the Never-Never Land approach just ignored the fact that any overall treatment of “the economy” always reflected the author’s innate political bias, and usually little else.
He then went on to
point out some of the similarities between modern times and the last stages of
dynastic monarchism. In both cases,
according to Spook, the principal sources of wealth were controlled and/or
owned by what he called “immortal agencies.”
The principal source of wealth in modern times, of course, is industrial
production. Under the last stages of
dynastic monarchism, it was agricultural production.
In modern times, the immortality of industrial corporations, subject only to the very realvicissitudes of mismanagement and cut-throat competition, is not a matter for
dispute because it is one of the attributes of the “legal fiction” which
created corporations in the first place.
Pretty much the same thing was true under the dynastic monarchies; even
though individual members of the ruling class might die, the titled offices or
patents of nobility from which their privileges derived did not die. In both cases the “immortal agencies” –
corporations or princes – were granted an immunity from prosecution on capital
charges for all but the most atrocious crimes, and even in the event of those
crimes it was only the individual who was prosecuted, not the “immortal
agency.” Modern corporations, said
Spook, have been created by the state in much the same way and for many of the
same reasons that dynastic monarchies created patents of nobility: to enforce
the laws, to regulate production, and to collect the taxes. A reciprocal relationship exists in both
cases, and both systems are characterized by heavy taxes laid on the less
wealthy citizens, and also by vast differences in wealth between the rich and
the poor.
There was a real
revolution in America, but unfortunately it occurred just as the source of
wealth was changing from agricultural to industrial production.
Spook said that anti-monarchist
sentiment in America and in most of the rest of the world was so strong that
those people who were naturally a part of the monarchist party had been forced
to call themselves by a different name.
But, he went on, the history of the “secret monarchy” that they
controlled could easily be traced. The
monarchists, before the Revolutionary War, were by far the stronger party. Fully a third of the population were avowed
Royalists. Geographical factors, along
with their reliance on the English armies – mostly hired mercenaries – coupled
with some French intriguing, were responsible for the defeat of the Royalist
party. But the Royalists themselves
went right on prospering even after losing the war – whereas the starry-eyed
idealists who had signed the Declaration of Independence, for the most part,
suffered a decline in wealth and died poorer than they had ever been under the
Old Regime.
For several years,
however, the apparently inexhaustible reserves of new land in the West retarded
the reconsolidation of power in Royalist hands; before too long, however, even
Jackson had to fight the bank, and after the rise of finance capital and the
immortal agencies that controlled it, the die was cast; the agrarian democrats
were no longer fighting agrarian monarchists, but the far stronger forces of
the capitalist plutocracy. Then as the
source of wealth shifted more and more from land to capital, so did the
government shift back to “secret” monarchy from what had been American
democracy.
This conflict ended
with the War Between the States.
The Secret King,
triumphant in the war, proceeded to consolidate his power; and his vassals, the
new corporations, soon were abusing their privileges to such an extent that the
central government itself was forced to make efforts to curb the power of
capital, but now lacked the necessary philosophical justification for doing so.
According to Spook, the
problem was precisely that the government had – either intentionally (at the
behest of the Secret King) or inadvertently (through clumsiness and
inattention) – allowed the re-creation of a monarchical system of government
controlled by immortal agencies: much the same as things had been before.
The results of this state of affairs
– the creation of a permanent underclass, the establishment of a society based
on differing degrees of privilege and entitlement in which the poor pay taxes
and the very rich do not – could not be ameliorated, except temporarily, Spook
concluded, without attacking the problem at its root – e.g., by breaking the power of the federal government and the
corporations in the same way that the power of the English kings and their
vassals had once been broken.
Saturday, June 30, 2012
The Merkin Way?
Posted in The Atlantic, months before the date of this post -- Though I paid so little attention to news regarding the OWS protests that I can't "parrot" any of their slogans (in fact, I never heard that they had a slogan other than "Down with Corporate Greed") -- it would be fair to note that a very distant cousin, Joel Gehman, seems to be an organizer of the Occupy protest in Lancaster, Pennsylvania. I never met the man. I doubt you'll try reading Ferdinand Lundberg's book The Rich and the Super Rich because you don't really want information about the history of favorable tax treatment paid for in the halls of Congress by the 10% of the American population that owns 90% of the wealth. It's not quite fair to opine that they got so rich by cheating the rest of us. It's an old, old story in America -- but I doubt you'll pay any more attention to Alexander del Mar's notes on the Greenback Bond Scandal after the Civil War than you will to the even older news about the Yazoo scandal. Funny, ain't it, how "the facts" often seem so strongly biased against special deals for the rich and their pet politicians and toward liberal theories of prosperity? And how liberal, centrist American politicians -- like Nelson Rockefeller -- have managed to produce long periods of the sustained prosperity that comes with rational government? "A rising tide lifts all boats" is the Liberal shibboleth. If you're not appalled by the notion that Warren Buffet pays tax on his income at less than half the rate his secretary pays, I'll need to remind you again that "_______ don't have politics, they just have enemies." Fill in the blank any way you like -- "fascists, corporatists, the Rich and the Super Rich ... or even liberals." It would be unfair to assume that your politics depend on willful ignorance .... Greed and personal interest likely have a stronger influence. I'm not sure we all want to agree that "Work hard and pay for tax breaks" has often been the American Way to get rich -- but those are the facts. Real and lasting general prosperity, however, means a strong, relatively stable market for bonds -- not the false promise of artificially inflating equity values during the boom phase of the Keynesian cycle. We're all paying for that last boom now.
Thursday, May 31, 2012
The Sheltering Sky
The Sheltering Sky is a novel by Paul Bowles. I love everything Bowles wrote. Bernardo Bertolucci filmed this novel. I found the
movie less entertaining than the book; scarcely worth watching, is how I remember the film (and a big letdown after The Conformist). It's fair to note that, alas, Bowles's novel struck
me as scarcely worth finishing: it seemed to me, while I was trying to read it, that after writing about a third of what could have turned out to be a
very, very good book indeed, Bowles just got bored with it .... but continued
writing it anyway. He had got hold of a theme that wouldn't support a whole symphony? Not even a film score? Bowles is much better at writing short stories -- he's really at the top of his form, perhaps because they hold his
attention. Or because he doesn't get bored before they are over? Possibly a logline for a film would be his ideal length? Maybe The Sheltering Sky was just too big and too ambitious (as a book); or perhaps it needed a strong passionate romance at its core, and I don't think Bowles was temperamentally any more capable of writing a strong passionate romance than he was of living through one himself. Bowles spent much of his life in, and preferred living in, Morocco, a country where most of the natives despised him as a foreigner. What hapened to Bertolucci's flim, I don't know. Got lost in Morocco, I guess. Don't miss visiting the great Moroccan / Mediterranean restaurant Aromas in Charlottesville. Next time you're here. It is at Barracks Road. You might be here at the film festival, maybe -- at the beginning of November 2012? For the Messiah Sing In at Old Cabell Hall in early December? Thank you, NetFlix for making "a life with film included" possible here
in Bumpass, Virginia.
Friday, October 14, 2011
The Swamp We're In -- came from NOT TAXING THE RICH
Seems to me that the 53% of us who pay taxes -- and especially those like you who are in the middle third of that bracket -- are the ones who really got screwed by the cockeyed Trickle Down scheme for not taxing the Rich and the Super Rich at all -- or maybe only at half the rate their secretaries pay. So our current tax scheme probably needs an adjustment it won't get.
You might spend some time parsing Paul Krugman, who has many interesting takes on why continuing to think inside the box will get us deeper into the swamp.
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/10/14/opinion/rabbit-hole-economics.html?_r=1&ref=opinion
Of course, Krugman won't go for the Trickle Up! Economics miracle that would actually pull us out of the mess fairly quickly. The problem now is that there's no liquidity at the bottom of the system. The top's doing fine ....
Sometimes it seems to me that all economic theory is just cleverly disguised political theory aimed at promoting the interests of a particular class at the expense of the others. We've mostly been fascinated by one variant or another of eitehr Keynesian economics or Trickle Down economics since the thirties -- since, in fact, Keynes proposed it. And the result has been that 37% of this country is stuck below the poverty line, while 10% of the country owns 90% of the wealth producing assets. The "middle class" -- YOUR 53% -- has been shafted by the R&SR clique, and even worse, the "middle class" by and large has bought into the notion that "cutting the deficit" will somehow ameliorate our current economic malaise. The ill-gotten gains enjoyed by the super rich combined with a climate of financial de-regulation and two long-running very expensive foreign wars to produce, first -- the housing bubble and (2) now a self-defeating spiral into what seems long-lasting, if not a terminal recession.
Quite a lot of the smart money went over to China during the last 20 years -- chasing high returns in Chinese industries blessed with very low wages and a government that provides neither health care, health insurance, a social safety net, financial regulation nor any pollution controls. Without those blessed benefits of the pirate/slave economy, bolstered by Western investment, your iPhone never would have happened at a cost-effective price, and Steve Jobs would have continued floundering along like he did with the NEXT.
Jeffrey Sachs has argued persuasively that general prosperity won't return to America during my lifetime because there has been little investment in education, worker training, infrastructure ... and without a balancing overhaul of the tax code, we're all down the tube anyway.
My favorite part of the Chinese swindle over the last 20 years is the reverse mergers scam -- 18 Billion dollars worth of good ole American dollars contributed mostly by medium and small investors.
You could simplify it all by opining that Trickle Down economics and/or Keynesian economics produced disproportionate prosperity for the rich and the super rich, who invested in China. But at least we can all be glad we sent the pollution overseas and got back some really cool gizmos that make it easier to send email and take pictures. That was a fair trade, right? mmmmmm ...
You might loke at Oliver Stone's documentary South of the Border if you'd like a clearer understanding of how difficult it is to change the corporatist economic policies that prevent real general prosperity. Those policies were part of the American hegemony that impoverished most of Latin America.
More of the same will only get us more of the same.
Sunday, October 9, 2011
Writing and the Internet
Three important notions apply: 1. Color Screen Addiction; 2. The rat experiment demonstrating that the absence of an expected reward produces increasingly frantic performances of the conditioned task (rat pushes button frantically even though no reward appears; and finally -- a basic concept equally applicable to rats, adults and children: 3. Internet (and television) usage should be rationed or even prohibited while working. And while writing. If you're working on a long piece, don't look at the net before you begin or even during a break. Interacting with a color screen is rarely a creative act. Turn on the typewriter sounds and go go back to composing in Word. Better yet, order some new Palomino Blackwing 602 pencils and write your draft by hand, then retype it -- seems clunky, I know, but often it's the only way to get your focus back. If all else fails, start a chapbook and copy passages from your favorite and most inspirational writers for 5-7 minutes to reset your mind from "watch naked color pictures dancing on the screen" to "Write It Now."
Wednesday, October 5, 2011
The Swamp! Let's get out!
A sensible and fair tax policy creates prosperity. Trickle Down
Economics, on the other hand, created a plutocracy by impoverishing 37%
of Americans. Trickle Down gave us an unending cycle of boom and bust,
plus endless expensive foreign wars. Printing money is not the answer:
nor is lending money to corporations and stock brokers. Lending money
to human beings, on the other hand, as an advance against future tax
refunds during prosperous times, will work very well. See note below regarding Trickle Down Economics. It's time to get out of the swamp!
TRICKLE UP! ECONOMICS
Money belongs in the pockets of the people. -- Thomas Jefferson
Written in 2011.
Paul McCulley did a good job at PIMCO before the economy got stuck in the current liquidity trap. But based on a discussion reported by John Mauldin, McCulley can't really think outside the box. The liquidity trap results from America's 40 year war on the working class. This war solidified the position of the American Plutocracy -- 10% of the people own 90% of the wealth; 37% of the people are living below the poverty line. The result of 40 years of Trickle Down Economics: an endless cycle of boom and bust, along with a continuing series of expensive foreign wars. Right now the bottom of the economic spectrum -- the bottom third of all taxpayers! -- doesn't have enough money to spend.
That is the trap we're in, and it is the swamp from which flow all our
other stagnating ills. The solution is Trickle Up Economics:
1. The IRS can loan every individual who has filed a tax return in the last five years $20,000 in equal monthly installments to as an advance against future tax refunds -- to be repaid over the next 20 years, all money to be spent on items produced by American labor.
2. The minimum wage can be doubled in three increments of 33% over the next 18 months -- or, just double the minimum wage.
3. Payouts on all entitlement programs -- Social Security, Railroad Retirement, welfare and food stamps can be doubled, with a requirement to spend the extra money on goods produced by American labor (penalties, with rewards for whistle blowers to be built in).
4. The renminbi can be revalued upward to a rational level, and at the same time we can put a substantial tariff on Chinese imports -- this will raise enough money to upgrade our airports and roads. And put a tariff on all imports from countries that don't have health, retirement and environmental protections -- a tariff sufficient to level the playing field.
5. All legally constituted operating companies doing business in or producing goods in America, whether corporations or partnerships, that have been in business for at least three years (unless their main business is investing in the stock market), can receive a $1 million dollar loan from the IRS to be repaid over the next 20 years.
6. And certainly, the Rich can pay taxes at the same rate as their secretaries, no matter how much they lost at the Wall Street Casino last year. Will these measures cause some inflation? Let's hope so. We need the money at the bottom -- for small businesses and the people those businesses employ. We don't need more money poured on the top -- that won't stimulate aggregate demand. But Trickle Up Economics will do the job handily. It's time for McCulley to stop flapping his hands and saying "I hope I'm wrong." He's not wrong. The current game is rigged against American prosperity -- which means the prosperity of the working classes. America is prosperous when grocery baggers and assembly line workers can make enough money to live on working one job, and by working two jobs or a job and a half can make enough money to save up to get into a properly-valued house.
7. Finally, it's time to tax shares directly -- in kind, at the same rate as real estate is taxed -- on average -- around 2 or 3%. A hundred years from now the dividends on the investments held in trust will pay all our healthcare and infrastructure expenses.
Saturday, September 17, 2011
For All Writers
Can't write when
you're broke?
When you don't have a
job?
Are you much of a writer ....
I know, I'll just
wait until I'm rich ... until I have a job that takes all my energy ... and then I'll finally begin to write?
Monday, March 28, 2011
The Rich and Their Wars
I voted for Hilary. When I had a choice. The last Bush seemed at least misguided and impossibly corrupt; he embroiled us in several wars, which helped his friends the Saudis -- and others -- profit from the huge cost of the wars and the run up in the price of oil. Wars, and especially wars of revolution, come about when the rich are too rich by comparison with the poor. That is the lesson of the last 2,000 years. It is difficult for me to believe that anyone could think the last Bush was "the sexiest candidate;" he looked a little too much like Alfred E. Newman to me. And he created the Great Recession almost single-handed. No one gives him enough credit for that. The only difference between this Recession and the Depression is the flow of money from the government. Trickle down economics never worked for anyone but the rich. The playing field's not level. Read The Rich and the Super Rich and as much of Alexander Del Mar -- The History of Monetary Crimes, for example -- as you can find. It's time for trickle up economics. Time to set the minimum wage at $20 an hour with an annual increase pegged to inflation. Time to build a sidewalk/bikepath next to every country road in America. Put people back to work -- that's the real trickle up. Pay the highest wages possible. Double the minimum wage. At least set the minimum wage high enough so a 40 hour job puts anyone who has a job above the poverty line. Let grocery baggers earn enough to live on. You don't understand fascism very well if you think the right wing has ever been good for this country; however, in a similar way, Hitler was good for Germany. The last general prosperity we saw was during the Clinton administration. Clinton was good at bond issues. And that's what we need more of. Sensible bond issues. Not just borrowing our current account deficit from Red China so we can go on fighting yet another war at the crossroads of nowhere in Central Asia. That's your idea of prosperity?
Thursday, November 11, 2010
The House of Breath
"I came out and felt alone and lost in the world with no home to go home to and felt robbed of everything I never
had but dreamt of and hoped to have; and mocked by others' midnight victory and my own eternal failure, unnamed by nameless agony and stripped of all my history, I was betrayed again ." -- William Goyen, The House of Breath (still in print)
"My side is on the side of the human being, and the human being moving in nature, which is spirit; and nothing else seems important to me, and if I thought I could not spend my life laboring to perceive and to understand and to clarify what happens to us in the world, then I would want to die." - William Goyen, Selected Letters, 114–115
had but dreamt of and hoped to have; and mocked by others' midnight victory and my own eternal failure, unnamed by nameless agony and stripped of all my history, I was betrayed again ." -- William Goyen, The House of Breath (still in print)
"My side is on the side of the human being, and the human being moving in nature, which is spirit; and nothing else seems important to me, and if I thought I could not spend my life laboring to perceive and to understand and to clarify what happens to us in the world, then I would want to die." - William Goyen, Selected Letters, 114–115
Tuesday, July 13, 2010
Today - Nombre de ______
Love is a beautiful dance that spins
Into the world when the day begins
Sometimes the beautiful are good
And true as they are fair
Sometimes they say please call me up
-- Build castles in the air .....
Her hands.
Into the world when the day begins
Sometimes the beautiful are good
And true as they are fair
Sometimes they say please call me up
-- Build castles in the air .....
Her hands.
Now Snow Again
Now snow again —
“Snow everywhere.
A cold house.
The bright colors of the women”
And my mother
Dying
As if peacefully
at Ten Broek; I
Can’t cry about that much
Nor about being here
In Yankeeland
Not just so close to homeless, but
So far from home
“Snow everywhere.
A cold house.
The bright colors of the women”
And my mother
Dying
As if peacefully
at Ten Broek; I
Can’t cry about that much
Nor about being here
In Yankeeland
Not just so close to homeless, but
So far from home
Sunday, July 11, 2010
The 36 Comic Situations
Also in line with Polti's The 36 Dramatic Situations -- can anyone help me think of some of the main comic situations?
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