http://groups.yahoo.com/group/libertyunderground/message/4187
-------------------------

*STILL WORKING THE TWO PARTY SCAM


*
**

*Mainstream media are pushing a media blitz that President Obama is
fundraising with the hope of getting a Democratic majority in the
Congress next year.  Even British news is reporting
<http://www.reuters.com/article/2013/04/03/us-usa-campaign-obama-idUSBRE93204Y20130403>
"The president has an interest in making the effort, because without a
significant change in the make-up of Congress, he faces possible
paralysis for many of the initiatives laid out in his inaugural address
and State of the Union speech."
*

*But weren't we told by Obama supporters that the Republicans wouldn't
let Obama do anything when he had both houses of the Congress, and a
super majority in the Senate?  When Obama previously had more Democratic
Party power than he is currently working to attain in the Congress, he
achieved what no Republican could have accomplished (particularly as
Bush left power with polling numbers south of whale poop), including
increasing the Bush bloated defense budget, increasing the Bush bankster
bailout, and expanding the unpopular Bush wars.
*

*Democrats continue to say "If only more of us were elected we would
change things," but all evidence goes against this.  In Bill Clinton's
first two years as president, he also had both the House and Senate
controlled by Democrats, and passed NAFTA and GATT to undermine labor
and the environment.  Of course, sold-out labor and environmentalists
sat on their hands during the mid term elections and the Dems lost both
the House and Senate as a consequence, just as Obama lost the House and
much of his Senate majority after his sellouts, as Democratic voters
stayed home.*

*NAFTA and GATT were Ronald Reagan's dream, but it took a Democrat to
pass them, with control of the House and Senate.  In his second term,
like Obama, Clinton encouraged people to donate to the Democrats to try
to win back Congressional Democratic Party control, the scam we are
currently revisiting, and many will fall for it, buying into the massive
media blitz to keep people from straying from their two party prison.*

*Many activists, understanding the scam, are working to build a public
interest opposition with parties like the Green Party, rather than
continuing to fall for the scam, understanding that yes, the Republicans
will screw you if they take control of the government, but so will the
Democrats, who have taken it further than Republicans have dreamed is
possible. *

------------------------------------------------------------------------
*MASS MEDIA NOT NOTICING THE WORLD IS ON FIRE


*
**

*"Major TV stations including ABC, NBC and CBS need to "connect the dots
between climate change and extreme weather" and provide far more climate
change coverage during their evening newscasts, a coalition of
environmental and media groups urged with the release of a new petition
campaign Tuesday," begins a piece at /Common Dreams/
<http://www.commondreams.org/headline/2013/04/02-9>.*

------------------------------------------------------------------------
*A MERE SEWER OF CORRUPTION WOULD SMELL BETTER THAN THIS


*
**

*How could Monsanto get the President and Congress to sell out the
American people so horribly as to get the Monsanto Protection Act signed
into law by President Obama?  On yesterday's /Democracy Now!/
<http://www.democracynow.org/2013/4/2/the_monsanto_protection_act_a_debate>,
Wenonah Hauter, executive director of Food & Water Watch and author of
the book, Foodopoly: /The Battle Over the Future of Food and Farming in
America/, said,
*

    *"I think we have to look at how much money that the biotech
    industry has spent on lobbying. I mean, over the last 10 years, the
    biotech industry has spent $272 million on lobbying and campaign
    contributions. They have a hundred lobby shops in Washington.
    They've hired 13 former members of Congress. They've hired 300
    former staffers for the White House and for Congress. And Monsanto
    alone has spent $63 million over the last 12 years on lobbying and
    campaign contributions. This is about political muscle and forcing
    their will on the American people."*

------------------------------------------------------------------------

**People often ask me, "Why don't you run more Paul Krugman articles in
/LUV News/?"  I haven't run many, because he is on the wrong side of
many issues, from a public interest perspective, the one we use at /LUV
News/.
**

**Unlike the mainstream media, we try to take a larger view, to see if
the poor and working class are considered.  The traditional middle
class-- the professionals and small business owners, and the wealthy,
make up the top 10% and are well represented, but the poor and working
class, the bottom 90%, are largely invisible in the mainstream economic
news.
**

**Krugman does better than most economists at defining what's wrong with
our economic system, but if he truly defended the bottom 90% in any
meaningful way, he wouldn't have a /New York Times/ column or be heard
in the mainstream media.
**

**William Greider, one of our favorite economic writers, explains,
following  --Jack Balkwill
**

*Why Was Paul Krugman So Wrong?
<http://www.thenation.com/article/173593/why-was-paul-krugman-so-wrong>
*

*by William Greider
*

*Paul Krugman, the popular columnist and Nobel economist, recently
likened himself to heroic dissenters who stood up to the war whoops and
opposed the invasion of Iraq. The go-to-war consensus among policy
elites overwhelmed skeptics and tragedy ensued. Professor Krugman
evidently sees himself playing a similar role on important economic
controversies. *

*"What we should have learned from the Iraq debacle was that you should
always be skeptical and that you should never rely on supposed
authority," Krugman wrote in his /New York Times/ column
<http://www.nytimes.com/2013/03/18/opinion/krugman-marches-of-folly.html>.
"If you hear that 'everyone' supports a policy, whether it's a war of
choice or fiscal austerity, you should ask whether 'everyone' has been
defined to exclude anyone expressing a different opinion."*

*Good advice and good for Krugman. But there's a peculiar snag in his
declaration: Paul Krugman was himself a "supposed authority" who gravely
misled the American public on how to think about free-trade
globalization. As threatening losses and dislocations accumulated for
the US, the celebrated economist was like Voltaire's Dr. Pangloss,
assuring everyone not to worry. Pay no attention to those critics
dwelling on the dark side of globalization, he said. Economic theory
confirms that free trade is the best of all possible policies in this
best of all possible worlds.*

*A good many Americans did not believe him, mainly working people who
saw their jobs and middle-class wages decimated by the processes of
globalizing production. Krugman said they didn't see the big picture.
Educated professionals whose own livelihoods were not threatened by
globalization were more likely to embrace Krugman's perspective. While
he never won the debate with the broad public, his argument prevailed
where it counts -- among the political elites who influence government
policy-making. Both political parties, every president from Reagan to
Obama, embraced the same free-trade strategy: support US multinational
corporations in global competition, as their success is bound to lift
the rest of the country.*

*Roughly speaking, the opposite occurred, not only for the working class
but for the broad US economy. The multinationals did fine, but the
nation is now mired in large and permanent trade deficits that translate
into huge indebtedness to foreign trading partners in Asia and Europe
and that exerts continuing downward pressure on US employment and wages.
Yet the Obama government is seeking still more free-trade agreements as
the answer. The current fiscal debates in Congress do not even recognize
that free trade globalization is a core source of America's diminished
prosperity.*

*Like Krugman, governing elites dismissed critics and simply stated that
free trade will be good for America because US energies and endless
creativity are sure to prevail, as they always have in the past.
Opponents like organized labor were typically ridiculed as backward
Luddites, promoting what Krugman called "disguised protectionism." That
label scared off major media. Reporters take their cues from the
"supposed authority" of business leaders and scholarly experts. At the
most prestigious newspapers, reporters and editors simply ignored the
substantive critiques of free trade orthodoxy as not worthy of their
investigation. After thirty years, the case against free trade is still
a taboo subject in respectable circles. *

*Of course it is unfair to blame Paul Krugman personally. He was perhaps
the most influential economist with his flair for condescending
put-downs of dissenters, but Krugman was merely representative of the
standard beliefs widely shared by his profession and embedded in
government policies. The failure belongs to macroeconomics, an
intellectual discipline now in shambles. The financial crisis and
deteriorating US prosperity made clear the theory failed to predict the
future nor does it explain the past. *

*Yet failed dogma is still in the saddle, still dominating government
and steering the country toward greater problems ahead. The country
cannot start anew with clear eyes and fresh thinking so long as
established authority figures like Krugman are unwilling to acknowledge
error or candidly concede that that America's weakened economic
condition was in large part generated by the very free-trade principles
they had espoused. The US needs its own version of a "truth and
reconciliation commission" where those who misled the nation can come
forward to offer confessions and explanations. A new generation of
younger economists could begin to develop new economic theory by asking:
Why was Krugman so wrong?*

*In recent years, as the global system broke down, Krugman had less to
say about international trade theory, his academic specialty, because he
directed his wrath mostly at conservative Republicans demanding balanced
budgets. But for many years Krugman made it his personal duty to act as
the watchdog warning the public against non-economists peddling false
ideas. In practice, this usually meant skewering progressive writers who
criticized globalization from a liberal-labor perspective---offshoring
of jobs, stagnating wages, sweatshops and all that. *

*Krugman was notorious among opponents for a snide polemical style. An
old friend, another liberal author, once confided to me that he had
"inoculated" his own forthcoming book against a blistering Krugman
review. He attacked Krugman in print first, which effectively
disqualified Krugman as a potential reviewer.*

*So Krugman chewed on my new book instead---/One World, Ready or Not:
The Manic Logic of Global Capitalism/
<http://www.powells.com/biblio/1-9780684835549-6>---which he described
as "a thoroughly silly book." He made a nasty campaign against it, first
on /Slate/ <http://web.mit.edu/krugman/www/hotdog.html>, Microsoft's
online magazine, next a harsh review in /The Washington Post/
<http://web.mit.edu/krugman/www/greider.html>, then again in his book
entitled /The Accidental Theorist
<http://www.powells.com/biblio/17-9780393318876-3>. /I have to admit it.
In Krugman's telling, I did sound like a drooling idiot.*

*I don't intend to reargue the matter, but my book was bound to provoke
authorities like Krugman because I concluded from my reporting that the
global system was careening toward "wrenching catastrophes" and eventual
breakdown. I essentially argued that the global trading system, despite
its fabulous wealth-creating powers, was generating new production far
faster than it created new consumers with the wherewithal to buy all the
stuff. Someone in the system would have to close some factories. The US
effectively accepted the role of "buyer of last resort" for the world's
over-capacity, every year buying and borrowing more from abroad than it
produced at home. That is where the trade deficits and swelling debt
came from and the rising inequality. They all persist under Obama.*

** * **

*At the time, Krugman dismissed trade deficits as the self-interested
complaints of organized labor or weak-minded analysis by folks like me.
He belittled critics like Robert Kuttner and the Economic Policy
Institute for maintaining "a steady drumbeat of warnings about the
threat that low-wage imports pose to U.S. living standards." Krugman
lamented the gloom-and-doom warnings. *

*"The truth, however, is that fears about the economic impact of Third
World competition are almost entirely unjustified," he wrote in the
/Harvard Business Review/ <http://www.pkarchive.org/trade/harvard.html>
in 1994. "Economic growth in low-wage nations is in principle as likely
to raise as to lower per capita income in high-wage countries; the
actual effects have been negligible."*

*"How can so many sophisticated people be so wrong?" he asked. He
explained that complex feedback relationships distribute incomes, jobs,
trade and investment among nations in ways difficult for non-economists
to grasp. "I hope to have made clear," he added, "that the seemingly
sophisticated view that the Third World is causing First World problems
is questionable on conceptual grounds and wholly implausible in terms of
the data."*

*But what would happen if the low-wage countries also managed to
generate large increases in productivity? "These emerging economies
would see their wage rates in terms of chips rise---end of story," he
said. "There would be no impact, positive or negative, on real wage
rates in other, initially higher-wage countries."*

*In any case, Krugman was skeptical that poor countries could become
high-tech producers. "A likely outcome is that high-tech goods will be
produced only in the North [the advanced industrial economies], low-tech
goods only in the South [low-wage developing economies], and both
regions will produce at least some medium-tech goods," he wrote.*

*But what if capital investment from the US and other advanced economies
begins to flow heavily into the low-wage economies? Wouldn't that
undercut US wages as labor unions feared? "The short answer is yes in
principle but no in practice," the professor assured. "As a matter of
standard textbook theory, international flows of capital from North to
South could lower Northern wages. The actual flows that have taken place
since 1990, however, are far too small to have the devastating impacts
that many people envision."*

*Krugman's over-confident answers to his own questions proved to be
mostly wrong, as subsequent events made clear. So was the textbook
theory in many instances. His most egregious error was perhaps the
assertion that wages always rise with an economy's rising productivity.
Certainly that had been the American experience for many years, but
Krugman did not seem to grasp that globalization liberated American
businesses from sustaining that relationship. If US labor costs became a
burden, the multinational corporations and even smaller firms can now
move the production to low-wage countries or merely threaten to do so.
In my experience as a reporter, workers on the factory floor recognized
this shift in power long before conventional economists figured it out. *

*Krugman, nevertheless, stuck with standard theory. "One last assertion
that may bother some readers is that wages automatically rise with
productivity," he wrote. "Is this realistic? Yes. Economic history
offers no example of a country that experienced long-term productivity
growth without a roughly equal rise in real wages."*

*Actually, as Krugman was writing this, US industrial wages were already
diverging from the old pattern, no longer keeping up with the curve of
rising productivity. US hourly wages have essentially been flat or
falling in real terms since the early 1970s when Japanese imports
started to penetrate US markets. American industrial wages had once led
the world. *

** * **

*By 2007, the facts were so visible and overwhelming, Krugman and other
economists were compelled to alter their conclusions. "Fears that
low-wage competition is driving down US wages have a real basis in both
theory and fact," he now announced in his /Times/ column
<http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/14/opinion/14krugman.html>. It seems
that organized labor was right, after all. "So there is a dark side to
globalization," Krugman wrote. But this time he had only a sheepish
response to his own question. "What's the answer? I don't think there is
one, as long as the discussion is restricted to trade policy." *

*Krugman's pronouncements may have reflected the American hubris then
common among US elites and the obvious condescension toward poorer
nations rising rapidly in the global firmament. "The Myth of Asia's
Miracle," Krugman famously declared in /Foreign Affairs/, the
establishment journal. Fears about Japan and the "Asian tigers" reminded
Krugman of the post-Sputnik hysteria during the Cold War when US leaders
suddenly thought the Soviet economy was overtaking the American
powerhouse. *

*"Popular enthusiasm about Asia's boom deserves to have some cold water
thrown on it," Pangloss instructed. "The future prospects for that
growth are more limited than almost anyone now imagines." Krugman
dismissed writers like James Fallows, another non-economist, who argued
that capitalist economies were steadily losing their technological
advantage. "There are severe conceptual problems with this scenario even
if its initial premise is right," Krugman explained.*

*China, he allowed, was different and posed a larger challenge than
Japan if only because of its enormous size -- 1.2 billion people. Even
so, Krugman remained skeptical. "While we know that China is growing
very rapidly, the quality of the numbers is extremely poor," he
observed. "Chinese statistics on foreign investment have been overstated
by as much as a factor of six."*

*As it happened, about the time Krugman was belittling China, I was
there reporting for my book on the global economy. I toured massive
factories and dismal sweatshops, interviewed workers, managers and
well-placed economists. Unlike Japan which had been coy and evasive, the
communist mandarins running China's development were quite candid about
their ambitions. In the early 1990s, Beijing published a series of
industrial policy papers that bluntly laid out the government's
intentions, sector by sector, to become a world-class producer and
exporter of technologically advanced goods---autos, aircraft, steel and
others. These blueprints have since been largely fulfilled and faster
than anyone expected.*

*When I was in Beijing, the city was abuzz with US corporate types from
the best names in US manufacturing---General Motors, Boeing, IBM and
many others. They were negotiating deals to make things in China and
sell them to Chinese consumers. Multinationals from around the world
were scrambling to gain access to what would someday become the largest
consumer market in the world. The price of entry, demanded by the
government, was that foreign companies would have to share their
precious technology with domestic partners, the infant Chinese companies
learning to make things that could compete with the best and brightest
from America and Europe.*

*Like Krugman, some western executives were initially skeptical about
China's grandiose goals. But the capitalists rushed in to accept its
terms, for fear of being left out. I came home from my travels feeling
awe for the dramatic transformations underway and a little anxious for
the future of American workers. "People are capable, everywhere in the
world," I decided. Americans who still believed in their inherent
superiority were about to learn a little humility.*

*The American problem is not trade theory but self-delusion---an
overweening confidence that the US as world leader would prevail because
it always had. US leaders assumed they would define the architecture of
the new global system, much as they had done since World War II, and
other nations would sooner or later be compelled to follow---that is,
abandon their national strategies of managed trade and accept the
American ideology of free markets and free trade. In Washington and Wall
Street, American multinationals were given a free hand to design their
own strategies, free of government but of course supported by government
money.*

*The problem was, the rest of the world declined to cooperate. If they
could, developing nations pursued their own nationalistic strategies not
so different from how the US did industrial development in the 19th
century. And these newcomers succeeded spectacularly---first Japan, then
the Asian tigers, now China and India and many others. Authorities like
Krugman whose expectations were so wrong now tell Americans have no
other alternative except the ugly protectionism which would be ruinous
for all.*

*That assertion is mistaken too. The most compelling evidence of
American self-delusion is not in Asia but in Europe. The best evidence
that a nation can both manage its industrial system strategically while
participating fully and fairly in global trade is Germany. As an
exporting nation with large trade surpluses in advanced technological
goods, Germany's actual experience refutes the lessons taught by
orthodox trade theory and macroeconomics in the US. It sets high
performance standards for labor relations and for social entitlements.
Its goals for the nation's industrial base accept that some production
will be dispersed abroad but the companies must make sure the industrial
core---good jobs, high wages and technological invention---remain in
Germany. *

*Could Americans mobilize politics to develop such an approach in the
US? It sounds too radical to imagine, yet elements of organized labor
have been promoting similar ideas for decades and mostly ignored by
politicians in both parties. It would require a profound transformation
in public thinking. It would depend upon inventive economists to propose
how this could be accomplished. I used to think Krugman or others like
him would come forward eventually when the negative facts became too
much to soft pedal. I got tired of waiting.
*

*http://www.thenation.com/article/173593/why-was-paul-krugman-so-wrong*

------------------------------------------------------------------------

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**
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athttp://groups.yahoo.com/group/libertyundergroundtalk/
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*
*email: libert...@hotmail.com*
**
*Tell your friends about /LUV News/ because some people just don't get it*




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