Ross Hunter

Sustainability. Economics. Public Policy. Buddhism

Archive for October, 2009

Policy 10/24/2009

Posted by rosshunter on October 23, 2009

  • tags: Policy

    • where does the corruption of our government come from? It comes from business.

      From non-regulated, non-accountable, non-responsible business. Something outside of the political process that the people participate in.

      How do we the people fight back against the lobbyists and the corruption? Not by eliminating government.

  • tags: Policy

    • Actually the article is about lobbying, and the money spent by the biologics companies to hold exclusivity of patent on the new miracle drugs before the generic companies can make them too.

      Generics have saved $734 billion in a decade with the other drugs.

      But biologics is a new plateau of medical treatment only recently attained. Biologics are derived as always in medicine on the back of the standard model of the basic research being performed by government and other tax-funded entities, and with the final manufacturing end then handed away at no charge to business.

      Nontheless, the industry argues that too short a period of time for exclusivity of manufacture will not allow companies to recoup their development costs.

      Before biologics, drug companies had five years to make their margin. Obama as a compromise is suggesting 7 years. The companies want 12 years as a minimum.

      The article concludes by asking if the government will have the strength to resist the massive lobbying dollars (which cloud the air with consultants and dire prognostications) and to conduct this negotiation – where the asking party of course overstates as we all do in a negotiation – to the benefit of the dying patients who can’t afford more life, or to the profits of the biologics companies.

    • visonbrkr you crystallize the underlying dilemma here with your support for the “liberal” position.

      Wouldn’t it be nice if we could all deliberate this matter so that those with more liberal (“give to the people”) leanings could spar with those who held more conservative (“but don’t take from the owners”) leanings, and between the two extremes a representative balance could be struck.

      What damages this process for all of us is the distortion of lobbying, especially as it over-advocates, clouding the issues with spurious argument, and actually wearing opponents down with a kind of fatigue.

      I’ve said before that I think we have a good political system except for the corruptions upon that system. But I’m starting to realize that a system susceptible to those corruptions indicates a systemic flaw itself.

      How to strengthen the immune system of our political process?

  • tags: Economics, Policy

    • We’re not talking about more taxes, we’re talking about redistribution, narrowing that widened gulf between the holders of wealth and the dispossessed.

      We’re talking about redressing the massive shift in equities of the last 30 years, from Reagan on.

      There are reasons that the culture records a lack of progress in recent decades of that old American Dream – it stopped happening, and regresssive ideologies rolled back a lot of the well-being of ordinary people.

      Every chance, every micro-opportunity arising in the legislative chamber to redress this imbalance will be taken I trust, and should be taken, by the Democrats who were elected in general principle to do this very thing.

  • tags: Policy

    • I think the system really does work along the lines of the upper house acting as a cooling process for hot legislation from the lower.

      Also it takes much to develop an involved interest in any particular field, and each house has its acknowledged “experts” – you can’t just develop ideas on a dime. This is especially so at the Senate level perhaps, which, as said, is less the originating arena and more the finalizing arena.

      Especially with some study over the years I’ve always thought we have a pretty good system of government – it’s the corruptions upon that system that cause most of our heartburn I think.

      It’s not that the system is rotten, or government inept, more that money is rotten and inept, but carries the most weight and and has its way against all reason.

    • well if this thread is continuing this morning, let me add that the word “democracy” is a loaded one, since the founders of our system wanted a republican form of representation, not a fully typical democracy, which they equated with mob rule and its contemporary menace, the guillotine.

      So they wanted – and created (and this is what we’re dealing with) – a system that embraced proportional representation (one man one vote) somewhat equally with non-proportional representation.

      Bicameral systems of upper and lower houses seemed to be working well, in Europe and the current states, so as the Union was devised the states became the upper house with one state two votes.

      They debated if non-landowners should be given a vote at all, but eventually settled for yes. However, the brake of the states in the senate was intended to destroy the possibiity of “democracy,” precisely so that states with large populations couldn’t so easily prevail upon the inhabitants of the less populated states. This was a deliberate, and very liberal, altruistic conception.

      Personally I think it works well, but you have to take the long view to think this perhaps.

Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

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Economics 10/24/2009

Posted by rosshunter on October 23, 2009

  • tags: Economics, Policy

    • We’re not talking about more taxes, we’re talking about redistribution, narrowing that widened gulf between the holders of wealth and the dispossessed.

      We’re talking about redressing the massive shift in equities of the last 30 years, from Reagan on.

      There are reasons that the culture records a lack of progress in recent decades of that old American Dream – it stopped happening, and regresssive ideologies rolled back a lot of the well-being of ordinary people.

      Every chance, every micro-opportunity arising in the legislative chamber to redress this imbalance will be taken I trust, and should be taken, by the Democrats who were elected in general principle to do this very thing.

Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

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Sustainability 10/17/2009

Posted by rosshunter on October 16, 2009

  • tags: Sustainability

    • A little late for this thread, but for the record:

      rmgregory – that BBC post has been completely discredited everywhere – start at climateprogress.org for Joe Romm’s peer-science debunking. It was a sad day when the BBC of all people (well regarded up til now for its climate reporting) let such a blunder from a weather presenter slip under its radar.

      mogreenie – yes, what you said, and please stick around. If we’re going to start turning now to climate and farming (they go together in lots of ways), it’s true we have to realize the FB speaks as little for the good of farming as the AMA speaks for the good of health care.

Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

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Policy 10/17/2009

Posted by rosshunter on October 16, 2009

  • tags: Policy

    • msoja, you know where all your principled framework falls down? It falls down when the insurance companies monkey with government.

      If every corporate lobbyist that perverts and corrupts our political process because they have irresistible amounts of money to withraw from competitive investment and throw at our representatives instead would simply stop it, and let the government simply be a government – then maybe we could start looking at your side of the fence, at the correct and perfect balance of representation versus individualism.

      But we don’t have a government ripe for that kind of philosophizing, because private enterprise has evaded the social police power in drastic measure, and made sure we’ll never be able to have a rule of law with any integrity.

      It’s not too much government that we have, it’s too little of the right kind.

Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

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Economics 10/16/2009

Posted by rosshunter on October 15, 2009

  • tags: Economics

    • There’s an insanity here that’s almost beyond analysis.  Wall Street can spark an economic slowdown that misses destroying the planet and causing a second Great Depression only by a hair’s breadth — said hair being an 11th hour emergency infusion of trillions of taxpayer dollars — and then turn around and use those trillions to return to bubble levels of profitability within a year.  And they can do it even though the rest of the economy is still suffering through the worst recession since World War II.  It’s mind boggling.

      Is there any silver lining here?  Probably not, but I’ll try: If Wall Street can shrug off the worst recession of our lifetimes as if it’s a minor fender bender and get the party rolling all over again in less than 12 months, it means the next bubble is already in the works and its collapse will be every bit as bad as this one.  That in turn means it will almost certainly happen while today’s politicians are still in office.  So maybe news like this will finally spur lawmakers to realize once and for all that the financial industry needs to be cut down to size.  Half measures won’t do it.  Self-regulation won’t do it.  Compensation limits won’t do it.  Byzantine, watered-down rules won’t do it.  Something like a Morgenthau Plan for Wall Street is the only thing that has even half a chance of working.

  • tags: Economics

    • This is the house they’ve built: an insurance market where plans are written for the healthy and all legal efforts are made to exclude the sick. That’s meant premiums are somewhat lower than they’d otherwise be, but only because the people who most need health-care insurance aren’t able to afford it, or in some cases, aren’t able to convince anyone to sell it to them. Now that arrangement is ending and they’re scared that they can’t provide an affordable product to the people who need it. They may be right, but it’s evidence of how deeply perverse their business has become, not of what’s wrong with health-care reform. When they say that the individual market would be cheaper in the absence of health-care reform, they’re saying the individual market would be cheaper if they could continue refusing to sell affordable insurance to people who need health-care coverage.

      This isn’t an argument against health-care reform. This is proof of its necessity.

Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

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Sustainability 10/14/2009

Posted by rosshunter on October 13, 2009

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Policy 10/14/2009

Posted by rosshunter on October 13, 2009

  • tags: Policy

    • Ezra keep pondering this stuff, there’s a lot of potential there.

      I’ve often wondered why the “soft” people let the “hard people take their language away from them, when marketing 101 says if the opposition hold the buzzwords, that’s where the battle is: you have to fight for the language itself, and steal the keywords from the enemy.

      Witness: billions of dollars spent branding Coca Cola, and 7-up takes a free ride on that investment with the “un-cola”.

      So, two forks to this: either take “strong” and demean it with qualifiers like “blindly” “rigidly” “scared” and such;

      or, better, take their word “strong” and show how it applies to your position best, as in “strong caution,” “strong restraint,” “strong open-mindedness” – the playground is pretty large once you decide to be strong about your softness, and strike instead of wilt.

Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

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Policy 10/10/2009

Posted by rosshunter on October 9, 2009

  • tags: Policy

    • I read the story you linked, and Alec MacGillis actually tells the story about the Senate existing to cool down legislation – but then he dismisses it. He never grasps the point that this safety check will inevitably disappoint people tied to immediate outcomes.

      The States weren’t “enticed” into joining a Union, they banded together and formed one because it was the clear imperative of the times. We are the result, and you have the luxury now to speak from that Union as if its existence was a given, as if we have always been one Society – the Founders would be proud of their achievement.

      Today the House majority is trying to vote its way into something I (very dearly) want, but tomorrow it won’t be. So we look to the checks and balances, the Senate and the President and the Supreme Court.

      The answer to one’s current frustration is not to abolish the Union or the States or the Senate, but to buckle down to the work required to pass legislation that will carry all of the component institutions of our system. Then one will have some legislation worth passing.

Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

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Economics 10/10/2009

Posted by rosshunter on October 9, 2009

  • tags: Economics

    • Wouldn’t it be lovely if experience could triumph over the cycle of euphoria and terror in their turns ? But our knowledge of the future is so fundamentally uncertain that financial markets will never cease their overreactions. It would be good if speculation with borrowed money were prohibited. It would be better if everyone recognized that movements in asset prices beyond those justified by reality are just another manifestation of inflation or deflation, and just as problematical as any other. For this reason, strongly counter-cyclical regulation is best; stability ought to be the regulators overriding goal. Finance has no independent value whatsoever. It is time it was put back in its place.

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Sustainability 10/08/2009

Posted by rosshunter on October 7, 2009

  • tags: Sustainability

    • What I discovered was people, themselves. And really just the number, and the breath, and depth of the ingenuity and authenticity in which people really applied themselves to being problem solvers and alleviate suffering, to addressing the ills of the world, and innovating and re-imagining what was possible. And they are organizing around different ways and different issues around different cultures and different manners. And when you stand back and you really get to see, if you will, not visually, not directly, but see it in a conceptual way, how large and diverse this movement is, then you just have to either laugh, or grin or smile.
    • Now then, you know what we pay attention to instead? All the institutional obstacles, and the resistance, and corruption, and financial chicanery, and on and on and on. And you look at that and you want to just jump off a bridge. And because you just see that, humans seem self serving, greedy, short sighted and violent. And if you just look at that, you just drink that potion, its toxic.

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Sustainability 10/07/2009

Posted by rosshunter on October 6, 2009

  • tags: Sustainability

    • Costco said it had found E. coli in foreign and domestic beef trimmings and pressured suppliers to fix the problem. But even Costco, with its huge buying power, said it had met resistance from some big slaughterhouses. “Tyson will not supply us,” Mr. Wilson said. “They don’t want us to test.”
    • The food safety officer at American Foodservice, which grinds 365 million pounds of hamburger a year, said it stopped testing trimmings a decade ago because of resistance from slaughterhouses. “They would not sell to us,” said Timothy P. Biela, the officer. “If I test and it’s positive, I put them in a regulatory situation. One, I have to tell the government, and two, the government will trace it back to them. So we don’t do that.”

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Sustainability 10/06/2009

Posted by rosshunter on October 5, 2009

  • tags: Sustainability

    • It turns out these same foods and methods of agriculture are often the best for the planet. Agriculture and the transportation, processing, storage, and preparation of food are a big part of our ecological impact. When it comes to environmental impact, how a family eats is more important than the type of car they choose to drive.

Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

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Economics 10/06/2009

Posted by rosshunter on October 5, 2009

  • tags: Economics

    • Come and live a month in poverty

      One of our most powerful educational tools is the Poverty Simulation Workshop. The Poverty Simulation Workshop is a role-playing experience that offers the opportunity to learn more about the realties of living in conditions of poverty. Participants enter the workshop with a new identify and family profile. Participants experience one month of poverty compressed into the real time of the simulation (generally three hours total). Afterwards in the debriefing, they share insights of extraordinary vividness and intensity.


      As a result, ordinary people from all walks of life can share a very special kind of awakening. The Poverty Simulation Workshop can open people’s eyes to the human cost of poverty. The power of this unique learning resource is that it creates, like no other method, an insight into the state of chronic crisis that consumes so many working poor families.

  • tags: Economics

    • If you have never participated in a poverty simulation run by qualified people, you should seek one out and do it. I thought I wouldn’t learn anything but I was floored by what I realized I would do to cope and survive – and this was a one-hour sim. I was also shocked by the assumptions that people had about the poor. I ran into a lot of deeply internalized beliefs (often to the point of subconscious acceptance) that the poor are not to be trusted, addicted to drugs and/or alcohol and are neglectful parents. If I could, I’d run poverty simulations in every high school in the country.
  • tags: Economics

    • Since the early 1970’s real wages have been flat to falling. Workers’ share of GDP has been falling. Management used to reinvest profits in the business, and/or pay dividends. But since the marginal tax rates came down beginning in the 1980’s, management instead pays itself ever more exorbitant compensation packages.

      To make up the difference, ordinary people stopped saving then started borrowing. The financial sector aided and abetted this by devising ever more clever means to hook people on debt.

      Now the golden goose is dying because people can’t afford to buy stuff any more. People are cutting back on credit and saving as much as they can. Business can’t get credit because the banks are hoarding the money and so no one is hiring. The gov’t is stymied by “deficit hawks” who would rather see unemployment keep rising than spend public money to make up for the decline in private demand. And the rich? The people whose share of income has more than doubled over the past few years? Don’t even think of raising their taxes back to where they were in the Clinton years. That’s Communism!

    • Mimikatz – as good a 3 paragraph summary as I have seen.

      I would add that what I find really remarkable is that many of the rich seem to be willing to allow the golden goose to die.

Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

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Sustainability 10/03/2009

Posted by rosshunter on October 2, 2009

  • tags: Sustainability

    • We are in a silent crisis in America because our food supply chain is being poisoned, and will ultimately be destroyed. What’s causing this is the action of corporate practices that exist only to strip every last dollar out of farming until the land is dead. Then the buyers of food will eat whatever they are fed to survive.

      This crisis needs to become louder. It needs to turn into the scream it really is. We are being killed by bad food, and the answer for each one of us lies within a few miles of where we live.

  • tags: Sustainability

    • I think the answer is we make our markets where we can. In the end I don’t think all of America drives out to the farmer’s market, I think the food will come to us, one way or another.

      I can’t make it to the market tomorrow so I’ve asked someone else to pick up some things for me. Meanwhile I have neighbors here in Georgetown who drive to a market in Austin to buy farm food.

      Obviously I need to organize my neighborhood so only one person needs to drive to Florence to buy food for all.

      And you farmers need to have subscribers – people similar to investors really – who will guarantee a market for your crop, and who will stay with you in good season and bad, in order to keep you in business and to guarantee that they can put wholesome food on their tables.

      It’s a matter of re-arranging the economics of how we grow and buy food more than anything else, in my opinion.

  • tags: Sustainability

    • The $90 million Oregon Sustainability Center — for several years a gauzy notion but this year funded by the Oregon Legislature — will be a showcase of the state’s green building innovation that draws visitors, researchers and designer-developers from across the world. It will rely solely on its own solar panels for energy and use no more water than falls on the site, among other major environmental feats.
    • The driving goal: to become a magnet for any business or government looking to meet its sustainability challenges while growing green jobs in Oregon.
    • The sustainability center is intended to meet the Living Building Challenge, a new green building certification program that lays out the most all-encompassing green standards in the industry.
  • tags: Sustainability

    • interesting post, and discussion. I do think the food chain is poisoned nowadays, and with genetic modification now loose and untracked in the fields there are a lot of untested imponderables going into our mouths no matter how rich we are.

      But as to your main point, that the poor suffer extreme stress, and your secondary point, that the rich don’t really understand this because of their own relative insulation from stress – this is clearly true, and verified by all of our experiences if we review them in this light.

      As for answers…

Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

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Policy 10/03/2009

Posted by rosshunter on October 2, 2009

  • tags: Policy

    • One of the key differences between ‘93-’94 and today, I think, is that the Clinton adminstration was curiously tone-deaf to the political impact of many of its actions (gays in the military, a complex, government-centric health care reform proposal), while the Obama adminstration has been, extremely cautious (IMHO, too cautious) about taking actions which would ruffle anyone’s feathers. Numerous surveys have shown that the vitriol toward the Democrats that Cook cites is almost exclusively a Southern phenomena, and despite the fact that it is un-pc to say it folks, the issue is race, race, race. I have no doubt that the GOP will gain seats in the South in 2010, and that some of the Blue Dogs Rahm Emanuel so carefully courted may lose their seats, but the more that Republicans become identified as a Southern party, the less appeal they will have in the rest of the country, because the stereotype of the backwards Southern/Appalachian redneck will even more unattractive as the population continues to diversify.

      Posted by: exgovgirl | October 2, 2009 11:52 AM
      | Report abuse

      that’s a compelling perspective, exgovgirl, and makes a lot of sense.

      The Civil War is not very far in the past, and the seed of it was brought into the Union with slavery. From the beginning we’ve had this dirt to wash off. Perhaps we’re still washing, perhaps not, but the Republican party would be a great baby to throw out with the bathwater.

      Posted by: rosshunter

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Policy 10/02/2009

Posted by rosshunter on October 1, 2009

  • tags: Policy

    • so really, this blog thing worked pretty well. Ezra made a point and supplied links. His tremendously valuable commenters added greatly to Ezra’s seed piece, as we count on them to do. Ezra even found himself pulled back into the thread.

      The original point is now greatly rounded and enriched, and I’m off to read some entries.

Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

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Economics 10/02/2009

Posted by rosshunter on October 1, 2009

  • tags: Economics

    • But things started to change well before the Web became popular. Over the past few decades, news conglomerates took over local papers and stations. Then they cut on-the-ground reporters, included more syndicated content from news services, and focused local coverage on storms, fires, crashes and crime to pad profit margins. The news became less local and less relevant, and reporters became less connected to their communities. Surveys show a steep drop in public trust in journalism occurring during the past 25 years.
    • The truth is the Internet didn’t steal the audience. We lost it. Today fewer people are systematically reading our papers and tuning into our news programs for a simple reason—many people don’t feel we serve them anymore. We are, literally, out of touch.
    • Trust is key. Many younger people don’t look for news anymore because it comes to them. They simply assume their network of friends—those they trust—will tell them when something interesting or important happens and send them whatever their friends deem to be trustworthy sources, from articles, blogs, podcasts, Twitter feeds, or videos.
    • Mainstream media see social media as tools to help them distribute and market their content. Only the savviest of journalists are using the networks for the real value they provide in today’s culture—as ways to establish relationships and listen to others. The bright news organizations and journalists spend as much time listening on Twitter as they do tweeting.
    • The problem with mainstream media isn’t that we’ve lost our business model. We’ve lost our value. We are not as important to the lives of our audience as we once were. Social media are the route back to a connection with the audience. And if we use them to listen, we’ll learn how we can add value in the new culture.

Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

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