Sunday, August 19, 2012

Truth is no defense

Truth is no defense in a modern political campaign.

 For example, the new Swift Boat attack and be rebutted point by point, and the ads continue to run effectively.

Or the New York Times editorial, below, rebuts the Romney-Ryan confused attack on Medicare effectively, and the ads continue to run.

If you were advising the Obama campaign, what would you advise it to do about false ad attacks?


August 18, 2012

Truth and Lies About Medicare
 Republican attacks on President Obama’s plans for Medicare are growing more heated and inaccurate by the day. Both Mitt Romney and Paul Ryan made statements last week implying that the Affordable Care Act would eviscerate Medicare when in fact the law should shore up the program’s finances.
Both men have also twisted themselves into knots to distance themselves from previous positions, so that voters can no longer believe anything they say. Last week, both insisted that they would save Medicare by pumping a huge amount of money into the program, a bizarre turnaround for supposed fiscal conservatives out to rein in federal spending.

The likelihood that they would stand by that irresponsible pledge after the election is close to zero. And the likelihood that they would be better able than Democrats to preserve Medicare for the future (through a risky voucher system that may not work well for many beneficiaries) is not much better.

THE ALLEGED “RAID ON MEDICARE” A Republican attack ad says that the reform law has “cut” $716 billion from Medicare, with the money used to expand coverage to low-
income people who are currently uninsured. “So now the money you paid for your guaranteed health care is going to a massive new government program that’s not for you,” the ad warns.
What the Republicans fail to say is that the budget resolutions crafted by Paul Ryan and approved by the Republican-controlled House retained virtually the same cut in Medicare.
In reality, the $716 billion is not a “cut” in benefits but rather the savings in costs that the Congressional Budget Office projects over the next decade from wholly reasonable provisions in the reform law.

One big chunk of money will be saved by reducing unjustifiably high subsidies to private Medicare Advantage plans that enroll many beneficiaries at a higher average cost than traditional Medicare. Another will come from reducing the annual increases in federal reimbursements to health care providers — like hospitals, nursing homes and home health agencies — to force the notoriously inefficient system to find ways to improve productivity.

And a further chunk will come from fees or taxes imposed on drug makers, device makers and insurers — fees that they can surely afford since expanded coverage for the uninsured will increase their markets and their revenues.

NO HARM TO SENIORS The Republicans imply that the $716 billion in cuts will harm older Americans, but almost none of the savings come from reducing the benefits available for people already on Medicare. But if Mr. Romney and Mr. Ryan were able to repeal the reform law, as they have pledged to do, that would drive up costs for many seniors — namely those with high prescription drug costs, who are already receiving subsidies under the reform law, and those who are receiving preventive services, like colonoscopies, mammograms and immunizations, with no cost sharing.

Mr. Romney argued on Friday that the $716 billion in cuts will harm beneficiaries because those who get discounts or extra benefits in the heavily subsidized Medicare Advantage plans will lose them and because reduced payments to hospitals and other providers could cause some providers to stop accepting Medicare patients.

If he thinks that will be a major problem, Mr. Romney should leave the reform law in place: it has many provisions designed to make the delivery of health care more efficient and cheaper, so that hospitals and others will be better able to survive on smaller payments.

NO BANKRUPTCY LOOMING The Republicans also argue that the reform law will weaken Medicare and that by preventing the cuts and ultimately turning to vouchers they will enhance the program’s solvency. But Medicare is not in danger of going “bankrupt”; the issue is whether the trust fund that pays hospital bills will run out of money in 2024, as now projected, and require the program to live on the annual payroll tax revenues it receives.

The Affordable Care Act helped push back the insolvency date by eight years, so repealing the act would actually bring the trust fund closer to insolvency, perhaps in 2016.

DEFICIT REDUCTION Mr. Romney and Mr. Ryan said last week that they would restore the entire $716 billion in cuts by repealing the law. The Congressional Budget Office concluded that repealing the law would raise the deficit by $109 billion over 10 years.

The Republicans gave no clue about how they would pay for restoring the Medicare cuts without increasing the deficit. It is hard to believe that, if faced with the necessity of fashioning a realistic budget, keeping Medicare spending high would be a top priority with a Romney-Ryan administration that also wants to spend very large sums on the military and on tax cuts for wealthy Americans.

Regardless of who wins the election, Medicare spending has to be reined in lest it squeeze out other priorities, like education. It is utterly irresponsible for the Republicans to promise not to trim Medicare spending in their desperate bid for votes.

THE DANGER IN MEDICARE VOUCHERS The reform law would help working-age people on modest incomes buy private policies with government subsidies on new insurance exchanges, starting in 2014. Federal oversight will ensure a reasonably comprehensive benefit package, and competition among the insurers could help keep costs down.

But it is one thing to provide these “premium support” subsidies for uninsured people who cannot get affordable coverage in the costly, dysfunctional markets that serve individuals and their families. It is quite another thing to use a similar strategy for older Americans who have generous coverage through Medicare and who might well end up worse off if their

vouchers failed to keep pace with the cost of decent coverage.
Mr. Romney and Mr. Ryan would allow beneficiaries to use vouchers to buy a version of traditional Medicare instead of a private plan, but it seems likely that the Medicare plan would attract the sickest patients, driving up Medicare premiums so that they would be unaffordable for many who wanted traditional coverage. Before disrupting the current Medicare program, it would be wise to see how well premium support worked in the new exchanges.

THE CHOICE This will be an election about big problems, and it will provide a clear choice between contrasting approaches to solve them. In the Medicare arena, the choice is between a Democratic approach that wants to retain Medicare as a guaranteed set of benefits with the government paying its share of the costs even if costs rise, and a Republican approach that wants to limit the government’s spending to a defined level, relying on untested market forces to drive down insurance costs.

The reform law is starting pilot programs to test ways to reduce Medicare costs without cutting benefits. Many health care experts have identified additional ways to shave hundreds of billions of dollars from projected spending over the next decade without harming beneficiaries.

It is much less likely that the Republicans, who have long wanted to privatize Medicare, can achieve these goals.


Friday, August 17, 2012

Israel in a frenzy; Palestine, just another day


The Israeli newspapers report, with great alarm, that only 53 percent of the Jews have gas masks.  Read Israel's Iran Itch from yesterday's New Your Times..

A question:  are there gas masks for the many Palestinians living in territory controlled by the Jews?  Do the Palestinians have bomb shelters?

DON’T BOMB IRAN!

The blood of Palestinians will be on your hands, unto the seventh generation.

For unintended consequences, consider the Merchant of Venice, Act 3 Scene I.  Read “Arab” for “Jew.”  For “Christian” read “Jew"


I am a Jew. Hath
not a Jew eyes? hath not a Jew hands, organs,
dimensions, senses, affections, passions? fed with
the same food, hurt with the same weapons, subject
to the same diseases, healed by the same means,
warmed and cooled by the same winter and summer, as
a Christian is? If you prick us, do we not bleed?
if you tickle us, do we not laugh? if you poison
us, do we not die? and if you wrong us, shall we notrevenge? If we are like you in the rest, we will
resemble you in that. If a Jew wrong a Christian,
what is his humility? Revenge. If a Christian
wrong a Jew, what should his sufferance be by
Christian example? Why, revenge. The villany youteach me, I will execute, and it shall go hard but I
will better the instruction.
Pictures of some Palestinians living in territory controlled by Israel who may die, burn, be torn limb from limb, smashed to smithereens, split all ends up, if Israel bombs Iran and there is retaliation:


NDER the wide and starry sky, 
Dig the grave and let me lie. 
Glad did I live and gladly die, 
And I laid me down with a will. 
This be the verse you grave for me: 
Here he lies where he longed to be; 
Home is the sailor, home from the sea, 
And the hunter home from the hill.



The Gaza Beach, to be turned 
into another Waikiki,
 when peace break out.


The Israeli soldier and the Palistinian kids
 he os so valiantly guarding:  all dust and ashes


The olive otreees, no atelling how old, 
burned with their human friendss

Just a guy, but a guy no more

A way to while aaway the time.



No, no, another Hussein;
 and one for whom I feel great aaffection


A Palistinian football team.  Football, of course.


Shall we dance? 
On a bright cloud of music shall we fly? 
Shall we dance? 
Shall we then say "Goodnight and mean "Goodbye"? 
Or perchance, 
When the last little star has left the sky, 
Shall we still be together 
With are arms around each other 
And shall you be my new romance? 





Wednesday, August 15, 2012

Don't Bomb Iran

Read this post from the Guardian.  Send this simple message to our President.

DONT BOMB IRAN!

President Barak Hussein Obama
http://www.whitehouse.gov/contact

Send this message to your Republican nominee for President.

DON'T BOMB IRAN!

Willard Mitt Romney
http://www.mittromney.com/forms/suggestions

[You'll get lots of junk mail in return, but "junk" takes care of that pretty well.  You won't make a difference, but you'll feel as if you and Sheldon Addison were equals.]


The Guardian home

Israel and Iran: Lethal game of bluffThe enthusiasm of Israel's prime minister and defence minister for an air strike on Iran appears to have united their country's defence and security establishment against them
The war drums have been beating – again – in Israel. The latest alarm was started by two usually well-briefed journalists, Nahum Barnea and Shimon Shiffer, who wrote that an Israeli attack on Iran's nuclear facilities could come in weeks, rather than months, and before the US presidential election in November. Their story contained a caveat: if the decision to attack were up to Binyamin Netanyahu and Ehud Barak alone. Because plainly, it is not.
The enthusiasm of Israel's prime minister and defence minister for an air strike on Iran appears to have united their country's defence and security establishment against them, including Israel's new minister for homeland security. The two have yet even to convince their own inner cabinet. But the report was taken so seriously that Barnea amended it on Monday by speculating that Barak, the thinly disguised source, may be trying to cover his own back, in the knowledge that such an attack will never be launched. Barak's reasoning depends only partially on Iran's alleged actions, and the latest US intelligence assessment that Tehran now possesses 170 kilograms of medium-enriched uranium, from which it is relatively easy to produce bomb-grade material. Barak is worried that so many centrifuges are being hidden underground that they will soon be out of Israel's military reach. After that point, Israel will have to rely on a US president it suspects will never order an attack .
Barak's case for an airstrike now is peppered with inconsistencies – not least the calculation that if Israel attacked, Iran would be rational enough not to retaliate against US military targets in the Gulf and hence the regional war everyone feared would not materialise. This confidence is not shared by his military chiefs. But to take Barak's war-gaming at face value, if Iran were rational enough to contain its response, it would prove that deterrence works for a state Netanyahu continues to describe as an irrational actor motivated by messianism. If Barak is right, the deterrence of mutually assured destruction would work all the more if Iran acquired a bomb, particularly as Israel has several hundred of them.
Loud talk of an impending airstrike could be no more than an attempt to twist Washington's arm. If it is, nothing should stiffen Barack Obama's resolve to prevent it happening more than the thought that Netanyahu is not just playing politics in his own country but in America too. Netanyahu foolishly dares Obama not to cast his veto, because if he did, Mitt Romney his Republican challenger would make hay with the idea that the Democat in the White House endangers Israel's security. This lever will no longer work after the election, hence the November deadline. Even as bluff it is dangerous, and eminently combustible in a tinder-dry Middle East.

Tuesday, August 14, 2012

Is Israel becoming a pariah? Can we make it change course?


Follow the thread.  Write something to someone to stop Netanyahu from turning Israel into a pariah.

While you're at it, tell Iran to allow inspection of all nuclear sites. Tell Iran we want to welcome it back into the Family of Nations.

And tell the Horrible Saudis to stop meddling in Syria.

Durell

The New York Times depicts Netanyahu as a miserable blackmailer, using our elections to force a result he wants that most Americans (and most Israelis, too) don’t want. 

I don’t want Israel to turn into a rogue dictatorship, bad as the Nazis.  I’d love for somebody to prove me wrong. Write something to somebody to stop him.  Try Paul Ran.  Perhaps he has influence over Netanyahu.


On Aug 13, 2012, at 4:29 PM, rikisensee wrote:

nyt's editorial--
hope this can help!

The New York Times




August 13, 2012

Israel and Iran

Israeli leaders are again talking about possible military action against Iran. This is, at best, mischievous and, at worst, irresponsible, especially when diplomacy has time to run.
Iran’s nuclear ambitions are clearly dangerous to the region. Iranian leaders operated a nuclear program in secret for two decades and continued to invest in it even after its discovery in 2002. The government is outspoken in its hatred of Israel. It supports President Bashar al-Assad of Syria and extremist groups like Hezbollah. If Iran gets a weapon, other countries in the region may want one, too.
But while Israel’s defense minster, Ehud Barak, suggested on Israel Radio Thursday that Iran had made significant progress toward acquiring weapons capability — citing what he said was a new American intelligence report — there is no proof that Iran is at the point of producing a weapon. Obama administration officials would not confirm the existence of such a report, and, in any case, continue to insist strongly that Iran is not on the verge of achieving a weapon.
It is impossible to know what Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is planning or why he has ignored American entreaties to give diplomacy a reasonable chance. There is, however, persistent speculation in Israel that Mr. Netanyahu wants to attack in the coming weeks in the belief that President Obama will be forced to support the decision because of his political needs in his re-election campaign. Such a move would be outrageously cynical.
Military action is no quick fix. Even a sustained air campaign would likely set Iran’s nuclear program back only by a few years and would rally tremendous sympathy for Iran both at home and abroad. The current international consensus for sanctions, and the punishments, would evaporate. It would shift international outrage against Mr. Assad’s brutality in Syria to Israel. Many former Israeli intelligence and military officials have spoken out against a military attack. And polls show that many ordinary Israelis oppose unilateral action.
Even so, Mr. Netanyahu’s hard-line government has never liked the idea of negotiating with Iran on the nuclear issue, and, at times, seems in a rush to end them altogether. On Sunday, the deputy foreign minister, Danny Ayalon, told Israel Radio that the United States and the other major powers should simply “declare today that the talks have failed.”
Of course, it is disappointing that the negotiations have made so little progress. No one can be sure that any mix of diplomacy and sanctions will persuade Iran to give up its ambitions. But the talks have been under way only since April, and the toughest sanctions just took effect in July.
There is still time for intensified diplomacy. It will be best served if the major powers stay united and Israeli leaders temper loose talk of war. 

--- On Mon, 8/13/12, Durell Douthit <ddouthit@mac.com> wrote:

From: Durell Douthit <ddouthit@mac.com>
Subject: Re: Netanyahu ready to bomb Iran?

Yahoo news reports that Paul Ryan was voted the Chief Brown-Noser in his senior high school class:  Republicans have nominated a brown-noser and a cowardly bully at the top of their ticket.  Our guy just smoked a little pakalolo.

And now Netanyahu threatens lots of killing.

I don’t mind killing as I used to do:  dead folks have no egrets, feel no loss, don’t miss sunrises or loved ones; and the world has plenty of people; maybe too many; we can afford to lose a few million; we’ll replace them quickly.  I don’t like the manner of  their taking off: bodies burned, ripped limb from limb, smashed to smithereens, split all ends up; but it’s all over in a few hours or days or months or years. And that’s the human way of it.

It’s the ones left behind whom I mourn.  It is not good to be left behind.  

I’ll stop Israelis from making suffering remainders, at home and in Iran.  I think I can sill do it.  I’m 100% successful to date.    I could use a little help, please.  Write something to someone.  Be indignant or mournful, a suits your temperament.  Play tricks on their minds.  Enjoy the act of writing to someone to prevent the Bombs from falling.

REM:

This one goes out to the one I love
This one goes out to the one 've left behind
A simple prop to occupy my time
This one goes out to the one I love

Fire (she's comin' down on her own, now)
Fire (she's comin' down on her own, now)
Youtube:


 
Eddie_Sez_it__s_a_Cat_a_Lick_by_BaddogLtd

Baddog.Ltd accompanies the pic above with the words to this Iggy Pop song, thanks to capturedguy:
Lost Boys, Wayward Angels and Dead End Kids: Pikture 11
Get into the car
We'll be the passenger
We'll ride through the city tonight
We'll see the city's ripped backsides
We'll see the bright and hollow sky
We'll see the stars that shine so bright
Stars made for us tonight
And everything was made for you and me
All of it was made for you and me
So let's take a ride and see what's mine

Iggy Pop - The Passenger  Youtube:


If you don't know The Passenger, you should. Er, I didn't before this moment.  Velazquez would love it.
On Aug 12, 2012, at 6:22 PM, rikisensee wrote:

if he goes ahead, I'm afraid Obama will be drawn into war, lest Romney attack him for abandoning Israel.

doesn't anyone have the temerity to confront Netanyahu?

you've held them off so far--
quick, you've got to do something before it's too late to save us all--


http://www.nytimes.com/2012/08/13/world/middleeast/time-to-call-diplomatic-effort-on-iran-a-failure-israeli-official-says.html?hp

Friday, August 3, 2012

Secede now or forever hold your peace!

'Till the Watchman the Tower
Cry:
      Up! Thou rascal, Rise!
      I  see the white
                      Light
                      And the night
                                    Flies!

Soon enough a majority of voters in Texas will be of Mexican descent.  I look forward to that day.  We will see

∼ Powerful pro-union laws, guaranteeing every worker the right to have a union negotiate a fair wage;

∼ A progressive income tax, very steep, to get at all those who have had a free ride for so long;

∼ A Spanish-proficiency test as a prerequisite to voting (why not; if an English one is ok?)

∼ Good schools that teach in Spanish and English;

∼ Free and plentiful pregnancy planning and birth control centers;

∼ A declaration that Spanish, which shall become an official language of the State, may be used in all legal documents, just as Hawaiian may be in Hawaii;

∼  Solid cooperation with Obamacare';

∼ When the State anthem is sung, this exuberant phrase shall be shouted out:
CHORUS: To beautiful, beautiful Texas,
Where the beautiful bluebonnets grow.
We're proud of our forefathers
Who fought at the Alamo [all citizens of Mexican  descent to shout "WE WON!"]. . . .
Those of you -- and here appears to be many, and well-armed, too,
     
           Who wish to fight

                The Hated Feds,

                    TAKE HEED:

Destroy their Bolshevik Fence!

Legalize and regulate drugs, and end the Border Wars!

 Defy the Feds if they try to close you down!


Beef up the old-style Texas Rangers  [you should never have allowed a mere baseball team to appropriate that hallowed name!];

Have the Rangers round up all federal border guards and confine them to barracks!


Open the Border ! Allow free passage between the United States and Mexico!  Don't be afraid!  You can handle it and make it work for you!



OTHERWISE,  WHERE WILL FOLKS CECEDE TO?  Wouldn't it be better to learn how to get along with folk with whom you have differences?

Here are images of Texas scenes I remember with great fondness, mixed in with images of events I expect to see multiply rapidly as minorities in Texas assume their rightful power.




































 Duck-hunting, I swear.







But what do I know, out here on a speck oaf land in the middle of the ocean, with memories and hopes for a more egalitarian Future for my Home State.  A future that my grandfathers, who stood against the KKK, would be proud of.

Enlighten me, please.

The America that was becoming the America that is


Diane Aarbus, photographer, published in American Suburb X:

Celebrating the end of American sexual dimorphism,
though that is, perhaps, not the intended
effect

Thursday, August 2, 2012

Romney's Ignorance isn't merely a Reactionary Pander

Mr. Romney quotes Jared Diamond's  Guns, Germs and Steel as support for his comments on culture as an explanation for the disparity in wealth between Israelis and Palestinians.  Mr. Diamond's response, below, is withering.

It may be that Mr. Romney's ignorance is not merely a pose to pander to his Reactionary base.  It may be that he really is ignorant, outside the narrow confines of making lots of money.


The New York Times



August 1, 2012
Romney Hasn’t Done His Homework
By JARED DIAMOND
Los Angeles

MITT ROMNEY’S latest controversial remark, about the role of culture in explaining why some countries are rich and powerful while others are poor and weak, has attracted much comment. I was especially interested in his remark because he misrepresented my views and, in contrasting them with another scholar’s arguments, oversimplified the issue.

It is not true that my book “Guns, Germs and Steel,” as Mr. Romney described it in a speech in Jerusalem, “basically says the physical characteristics of the land account for the differences in the success of the people that live there. There is iron ore on the land and so forth.”

That is so different from what my book actually says that I have to doubt whether Mr. Romney read it. My focus was mostly on biological features, like plant and animal species, and among physical characteristics, the ones I mentioned were continents’ sizes and shapes and relative isolation. I said nothing about iron ore, which is so widespread that its distribution has had little effect on the different successes of different peoples. (As I learned this week, Mr. Romney also mischaracterized my book in his memoir, “No Apology: Believe in America.”)

That’s not the worst part. Even scholars who emphasize social rather than geographic explanations — like the Harvard economist David S. Landes, whose book “The Wealth and Poverty of Nations” was mentioned favorably by Mr. Romney — would find Mr. Romney’s statement that “culture makes all the difference” dangerously out of date. In fact, Mr. Landes analyzed multiple factors (including climate) in explaining why the industrial revolution first occurred in Europe and not elsewhere.

Just as a happy marriage depends on many different factors, so do national wealth and power. That is not to deny culture’s significance. Some countries have political institutions and cultural practices — honest government, rule of law, opportunities to accumulate money — that reward hard work. Others don’t. Familiar examples are the contrasts between neighboring countries sharing similar environments but with very different institutions. (Think of South Korea versus North Korea, or Haiti versus the Dominican Republic.) Rich, powerful countries tend to have good institutions that reward hard work. But institutions and culture aren’t the whole answer, because some countries notorious for bad institutions (like Italy and Argentina) are rich, while some virtuous countries (like Tanzania and Bhutan) are poor.

A different set of factors involves geography, which embraces many more aspects than the physical characteristics Mr. Romney dismissed. One such geographic factor is latitude, which has big effects on wealth and power today: tropical countries tend to be poorer than temperate-zone countries. Reasons include the debilitating effects of tropical diseases on life span and work, and the average lower productivity of agriculture and soils in the tropics than in the temperate zones.

A second factor is access to the sea. Countries without a seacoast or big navigable rivers tend to be poor, because transport costs overland or by air are much higher than transport costs by sea.

A third geographic factor is the history of agriculture. If an extraterrestrial had toured earth in the year 2000 B.C., the visitor would have noticed that centralized government, writing and metal tools were already widespread in Eurasia but hadn’t yet appeared in the New World, sub-Saharan Africa or Australia. That long head start would have let the visitor predict correctly that today, most of the world’s richest and most powerful countries would be Eurasian countries (and their overseas settlements in North America, Australia and New Zealand).

The reason is the historical effect of geography: 13,000 years ago, all peoples everywhere were hunter-gatherers living in sparse populations without centralized government, armies, writing or metal tools. These four roots of power arose as consequences of the development of agriculture, which generated human population explosions and accumulations of food surpluses capable of feeding full-time leaders, soldiers, scribes and inventors. But agriculture could originate only in those few regions endowed with many wild plant and animal species suitable for domestication, like wild wheat, rice, pigs and cattle.

In short, geographic explanations and cultural-institutional explanations aren’t independent of each other. Of course, not all agricultural regions developed honest centralized government, but no nonagricultural region ever developed any centralized government, whether honest or dishonest. That’s why institutions promoting wealth today arose first in Eurasia, the area with the oldest and most productive agriculture.

What does this mean for Americans? Can we assume that the United States, blessed with temperate location and seacoasts and navigable rivers, will remain rich forever, while tropical or landlocked countries are doomed to eternal poverty?

Of course not. Some tropical and subtropical countries have become richer despite geographic limitations. They’ve invested in public health to overcome their disease burdens (Botswana and the Philippines). They’ve invested in crops adapted to the tropics (Brazil and Malaysia). They’ve focused their economies on sectors other than agriculture (Singapore and Taiwan).

Conversely, geographic advantages don’t guarantee permanent success, as the growing difficulties in Europe and America show. We Americans fail to provide superior education and economic incentives to much of our population. India, China and other countries that have not been world leaders are investing heavily in education, technology and infrastructure. They’re offering economic opportunities to more and more of their citizens. That’s part of the reason jobs are moving overseas. Our geography won’t keep us rich and powerful if we can’t get a good education, can’t afford health care and can’t count on our hard work’s being rewarded by good jobs and rising incomes.

Mitt Romney may become our next president. Will he continue to espouse one-factor explanations for multicausal problems, and fail to understand history and the modern world? If so, he will preside over a declining nation squandering its advantages of location and history.

Jared Diamond, a professor of geography at the University of California, Los Angeles, is the author of the forthcoming book “The World Until Yesterday: What Can We Learn From Traditional Societies?”

Jared Diamond:


Guns, Germs and Steel




Behold the Horrible Saudis: how they grow; they toil not, neither do they spin:  and yet I say unto you, That even Solomon in all his glory was not arrayed like one of these. [Apologies to King James' translators.]  But perhaps the Book of Mormon doesn't contain this edifying passage.

Headquarters for the
Organization of Islamic States
Jeddah, Saudi Arabia


We are hopeful that, sone, perhaps in the present century,
 these pampered Saudi ladies
will not be publicly whipped 
if one should dare to
drive a
car

I don't think Mr. Romney can maintain that the Horrible Saudis have an edifying or admirable culture, and I suspect he'll try.


Guns, Germs and Steel was published in 1997.  It did not meet with critical success.  I expect Dr. Diamond's new book, The World Until Yesterday: What Can We Learn From Traditional Societies? will be better.  Its title is provocative and I would surely read it if I could.

In any event,

DON'T BOMB IRAN!




Wednesday, August 1, 2012

Romney's Plastic Wailing Wall

It's hard to improve on Thomas Friedman's editorial in the New York Times, below, though I do have one question for Mr. Friedman:

Why not focus some of your considerable talent for ironic wit on the misguided
AIPAC - AMERICA'S PRO-ISRAEL LOBBY
. . . which makes it impossible for American politicians to take reasonable positions on Israel, in a close election, at least before November 4?

Why not come out strongly in favor of

J Street - Logo

. . . which I hope you all will join.  J Street consistently supports a rational two-sate solution, and abhors the idea of Israel's becoming an apartheid state, which it will become if the settlements in the Wes Bank are not demolished.




The New York Times


July 31, 2012
Why Not in Vegas?
By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN
I’ll make this quick. I have one question and one observation about Mitt Romney’s visit to Israel. The question is this: Since the whole trip was not about learning anything but about how to satisfy the political whims of the right-wing, super pro-Bibi Netanyahu, American Jewish casino magnate Sheldon Adelson, why didn’t they just do the whole thing in Las Vegas? I mean, it was all about money anyway — how much Romney would abase himself by saying whatever the Israeli right wanted to hear and how big a jackpot of donations Adelson would shower on the Romney campaign in return. Really, Vegas would have been so much more appropriate than Jerusalem. They could have constructed a plastic Wailing Wall and saved so much on gas.

The observation is this: Much of what is wrong with the U.S.-Israel relationship today can be found in that Romney trip. In recent years, the Republican Party has decided to make Israel a wedge issue. In order to garner more Jewish (and evangelical) votes and money, the G.O.P. decided to “out-pro-Israel” the Democrats by being even more unquestioning of Israel. This arms race has pulled the Democratic Party to the right on the Middle East and has basically forced the Obama team to shut down the peace process and drop any demands that Israel freeze settlements. This, in turn, has created a culture in Washington where State Department officials, not to mention politicians, are reluctant to even state publicly what is U.S. policy — that settlements are “an obstacle to peace” — for fear of being denounced as anti-Israel.

Add on top of that, the increasing role of money in U.S. politics and the importance of single donors who can write megachecks to “super PACs” — and the fact that the main Israel lobby, Aipac, has made itself the feared arbiter of which lawmakers are “pro” and which are “anti-Israel” and, therefore, who should get donations and who should not — and you have a situation in which there are almost no brakes, no red lights, around Israel coming from America anymore. No wonder settlers now boast on op-ed pages that the game is over, they’ve won, the West Bank will remain with Israel forever — and they don’t care what absorbing all of its Palestinians will mean for Israel’s future as a Jewish democracy.

It is into this environment that Romney wandered to add more pandering and to declare how he will be so much nicer to Israel than big, bad Obama. This is a canard. On what matters to Israel’s survival — advanced weaponry and intelligence — Defense Minister Ehud Barak told CNN on Monday, “I should tell you honestly that this administration under President Obama is doing in regard to our security more than anything that I can remember in the past.”

While Romney had time for a $50,000-a-plate breakfast with American Jewish donors in Jerusalem, with Adelson at his elbow, he did not have two hours to go to Ramallah, the seat of the Palestinian Authority, to meet with its president, Mahmoud Abbas, or to share publicly any ideas on how he would advance the peace process. He did have time, though, to point out to his Jewish hosts that Israelis are clearly more culturally entrepreneurial than Palestinians. Israel today is an amazing beehive of innovation — thanks, in part, to an influx of Russian brainpower, massive U.S. aid and smart policies. It’s something Jews should be proud of. But had Romney gone to Ramallah he would have seen a Palestinian beehive of entrepreneurship, too, albeit small, but not bad for a people living under occupation. Palestinian business talent also built the Persian Gulf states. In short, Romney didn’t know what he was talking about.

On peace, the Palestinians’ diplomacy has been a fractured mess, and I still don’t know if they can be a partner for a secure two-state deal with even the most liberal Israeli government. But I do know this: It is in Israel’s overwhelming interest to test, test and have the U.S. keep testing creative ideas for a two-state solution. That is what a real U.S. friend would promise to do. Otherwise, Israel could be doomed to become a kind of apartheid South Africa.

And here is what I also know: The three U.S. statesmen who have done the most to make Israel more secure and accepted in the region all told blunt truths to every Israeli or Arab leader: Jimmy Carter, who helped forge a lasting peace between Israel and Egypt; Henry Kissinger, who built the post-1973 war disengagement agreements with Syria, Israel and Egypt; and James Baker, who engineered the Madrid peace conference. All of them knew that to make progress in this region you have to get in the face of both sides. They both need the excuse at times that “the Americans made me do it,” because their own politics are too knotted to move on their own.

So how about all you U.S. politicians — Republicans and Democrats — stop feeding off this conflict for political gain. Stop using this conflict as a backdrop for campaign photo-ops and fund-raisers. Stop making things even worse by telling the most hard-line Israelis everything that they want to hear, just to grovel for Jewish votes and money, while blatantly ignoring the other side. There are real lives at stake out there. If you’re not going to do something constructive, stay away. They can make enough trouble for themselves on their own.  [Emphasis added.] 

From Wikipedia, the West Bank

has an estimated population of 2,622,544 (June 2012). More than 80 percent, about 2,000,000, are Palestinian Arabs, approximately 500,000 are Jewish Israelis living in the West Bank,[3] including about 192,000 in East Jerusalem,[5] in Israeli settlements. The international community considers Israeli settlements in the West Bank, including East Jerusalem, illegal under international law, though Israel disputes this.[6][7][8][9]

From Wilipedia:

Legal status [of persons living in the West Bank]
Since 1979 the United Nations Security Council,[74] the United Nations General Assembly,[14] the United States,[75] the EU,[76] the International Court of Justice,[77] and the International Committee of the Red Cross[15] refer to the West Bank, including East Jerusalem, as Palestinian territory occupied by Israel. General Assembly resolution 58/292 (17 May 2004) affirmed that the Palestinian people have the right to sovereignty over the area.[78]
The government of Israel has argued that since the area has never in modern times been an independent state, there is no legitimate claimant to the area other than the present occupier, Israel.[16] This argument however is not accepted by the international community and international lawmaking bodies, virtually all of whom regard Israel's activities in the West Bank and Gaza Strip as an occupation that denies the fundamental principle of self-determination found in the Article One of the United Nations Charter, and in the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights. Further, UN Security Council Resolution 242 notes the "inadmissibility of the acquisition of territory by war" regardless of whether the war in which the territory was acquired was offensive or defensive. Prominent Israeli human rights organizations such as B'tselem also refer to the Israeli control of the West Bank and Gaza Strip as an occupation.[79] John Quigley has noted that "...a state that uses force in self-defense may not retain territory it takes while repelling an attack. If Israel had acted in self-defense, that would not justify its retention of the Gaza Strip and West Bank. Under the UN Charter there can lawfully be no territorial gains from war, even by a state acting in self-defense. The response of other states to Israel's occupation shows a virtually unanimous opinion that even if Israel's action were defensive, its retention of the West Bank and Gaza Strip was not."

Palestinians living in the West Bank are not citizens of any State unless there is a Palestinian State; they have no right to vote in Israeli elections; all public procedures and facilities are separateaand unequal; if Israel males the West Bank a part of it's territory, 2,000,000 people will be stateless and without rights; or will become citizens of Israel, and the present government will fall.

Neighboring countries won't accept 2,000,000 new folks:  Syria and Egypt cannot deal with their own people; Jordan is still struggling to care for some 750,000 displaced persons from Iraq  -- there is nowhere for 2,000,00 people to go, never mind that they have homes and businesses sand graves and all he accoutrements of living in the Wes Bank.

The only solutions are

     ∼ for Israel to become monstrous, or

     ∼ for a two-state solution to be implemented.

[Of course Palestinians and Israelis could become friendly neighbors, but that, I fear, is way too radical for any Conservative to consider.]

Images of the West Bank taken from a Palestinian perspective follow.  I did not find comparable images taken from a Settler perspective.: Unforgotten keys: A walk through the West Bank – Sixteen Minutes to Palestine.  Captions to the pictures are by the blog author.



Saeed, 18, with two of his nine siblings. Saeed’s family refused to sell their home to the Israeli military and have since been facing severe consequences.


In 2005, Israeli soldiers set fire to a room in Saeed’s family’s home in which Saeed’s newborn baby brother was sleeping. In 2007, his eight-month-old brother was shot, also by Israeli soldiers.


The Israeli military deploys a flying checkpoint and closes off a street in Al-Khalil to allow settlers to tour through the West Bank city. Besides shutting down streets to Palestinian civilians, Israeli soldiers have also broken into Palestinian-owned cars to “reassure safety on the streets”.



A Palestinian family’s home enclosed by Israel’s apartheid wall.



Khalid, 24, from the Jalazone Refugee Camp wears the key to his family’s home in Beit Nabala. On May 15, he joined the masses commemorating the Nakba, demanding an end to the occupation, and calling for their Right of Return.


Young men barter in the markets of Al-Khalil. Most vendors in Al-Khalil are young men who were forced to abandon their schooling in order to support their families.





More than 16.5% of Palestinians living in the West Bank are unemployed. As a result, selling antiques, metal fragments, and used furniture has become an increasingly popular sources of income for many families. In this picture, a small shop displays small metal trinkets, mostly keys to homes from which Palestinian families were evicted.


Geography for we who need it:




From another blog:


A couple weeks ago, Babylon & Beyond reported on the controversial comparison between the plight of Palestinians living under Israeli occupation and that of the Na'vi people featured in the hit movie "Avatar." 

On Friday, Palestinians in the West Bank took the analogy to heart, dressing up as the blue natives of the planet Pandora for their weekly protests against the Israeli occupation and the ongoing construction of a barrier in the town of Bilin.





DO NOT VOTE FOR ROMNEY FOR PRESIDENT.

He  doesn't understand what even an old man, living in the middle of  the Pacific Ocean, can understand.

I say, once a bully always a bully, unless events have caused a change.  No such event has been described in Romney's biography.

A bully when in the presence of a superior power (such as multi-billionaire Sheldon Addison) panders.  Romney panders.

 We know from guys who were present that Romney was a high school bully.  My wholly unscientific conclusion is that he remains a pandering bully.  We don't need a pandering bully in the White House.

VOTE OBAMA.  Whatever Obama's weaknesses, he's not a pandering bully, and he is said to be an American.  In Texas, after the primary you just had, pretend you have a choice of for whom to vote.  It's bracing.