President Obama Proposes Building “500 Empire State Buildings”!?

December 3, 2011

Earlier today, at D.C.’s Transwestern Building, President Obama and Former President Clinton formally introduced the “We Can’t Wait: Better Buildings Initiative.”  This project seeks to improve energy efficiency in buildings. Clinton’s own Clinton Global Initiative has been active in this effort for several years already. Today’s big announcement involved plans to retrofit federal buildings to increase savings on energy costs. It’s clearly an example of how the presidency can, on its own, without running the congressional gauntlet: “. . . today, I’m directing all federal agencies — all federal agencies — to make at least $2 billion worth of energy-efficiency upgrades over the next two years.  None of these upgrades will require taxpayer money to get them going.”

Kudos, Mr. President.  It’s what he said next about the plans for private commercial energy efficiency upgrades that confused the crowd, or perhaps, just me. “We now have 60 major companies, universities, labor unions, hospitals, cities and states, and they are stepping up with nearly $2 billion in financing to upgrade an additional 1.6 billion square feet of commercial industrial space by our target year of 2020. That’s more than 500 Empire State Buildings.”

I agree with the idea of greater energy efficiency, and retrofitting is a labor-intensive project that will employ thousands. The anticipated financial savings on energy expenses justifies the upgrade costs. Yet, to me, building another “500 Empire State Buildings” makes little sense, and would certainly insult New Yorkers, and endanger their 2012 votes.

If I were President, I’d stick to retrofitting existing buildings. Not a lecture, just an opinion, Mr. President.

Supercommittee Failure – Super Dooper Hysteria Mongering

November 27, 2011

It’s commonplace now, but still astonishing, the sense of panic consistently created by our news outlets, most recently, supercommittee madness. When the dire consequences then fail to emerge, pundits and newsheads wonder how such hysteria ever occurred. Case in point: the supercommittee sequestration deadline.

I’ve been aware of this falsely created hysteria for some time now, but, like the media I’m about to criticize, I haven’t written about just how false the “deadline” was. Its significance flew over my head. Classic fly-by. Mea culpa. What the mainstream media pundits and newsheads seldom mentioned is the most salient fact about the Supercommittee: it’s lack of recommendations, the “trigger” for sequestration of mammoth proportions, were, by statute, slated to begin in January 2013. That’s more than a year – and a complete session of Congress – from the statutory “deadline.” Yet, our newsheads kept the words “deadline” and “sequestration’ closely tied. Is this laziness? No (or let’s hope not, that would be even worse than their hysteria mongering). The newsies and their staff were aware of the practical “non-eventness” of the sequestration deadline. Then why the shell game?

It’s simple, as most of us know. Media thrives on creating ticking clocks, now more than ever. So, rather than mentioning that sequestration would not begin for another year, if at all, they deliberately “forgot” to mention that tidbit. Also, the yearlong (new) sequestration enforcement “deadline” leaves ample room for negotiating entirely new “deadlines,”  budget cuts, or (hopefully) tax increases on the you-know-who. Moreover, despite President Obama’s veto threat, Congress can game play a bill that amends the entire idea of sequestration in such a way that Obama will be unable to use his veto for political or other reasons. 

CNN’s Wolf Blitzer – the worst of the hysteria-encouraging newsheads – is notorious for this. He does it unreservedly. Once a pretty good reporter, he’s now a shill for CNN’s ever more rightwing take on events. (Last night, he waxed lovingly about Newt Gingrich.) Other networks fared little better. So, the civics-undereducated American public (through no fault of their own) was, for the most part, consistently kept in the dark about what a superdupercommittee failure would bring in its immediate wake. Many folks were counting off the seconds, fearing immediate cutbacks affecting everything from Medicaid to defense spending. What a show! And that is what it’s all about in the era of entertainment news. Walter Cronkite, Huntley and Brinkley, Edward R. Murrow, rest in peace, you’re all in a better place.

Obama 2.0 – Does a Challenger Lurk Within His Own Camp?

September 21, 2011

This year, in August, I wrote:

“In light of the generally lightweight resistance to the Tea Party mayhem caused during this long debt ceiling fight, I’m wondering about things I’ve never wondered before. Is the President who has often compromised with the GOP/TP, not the “down-in-the-dirt” fighter we need to run the Tea Party out-of-town? They are down and dirty, and, in this 21st century civil war skirmish, do we need a Grant rather than a McClellan, a Sherman rather than a Burnside?  It’s a war we’re in, without doubt. Clausewitz wrote, ‘War is a mere continuation of policy by other means.’ Since the close of the Civil War, whether we’ve formally noticed it or not, we’re largely a country where, to paraphrase freely, ‘Politics is a mere continuation of war by other means.’ Following his recent and worst compromise on the debt ceiling, is Obama up to this task?  And who is, or who might be?”

That was August, nonetheless, with this post, I’m disowning my conclusion then that we need a Democratic primary challenger to President Obama for the 2012 election. Three recent events caused my turnaround:  (1)  During his September 8th jobs program speech to Congress, President Obama debuted a new public persona, one with strength, resolve, and purpose. No pandering to Republicans, quite the opposite. No soft-spoken phrases to reassure the GOP of his bipartisanship; “Pass this bill” is short, sweet, and its intent obvious, a textbook declarative sentence, a leader’s statement. Incredibly for this President, he did not utter the word “bipartisan” a single time . . . A strong and hopeful start. Bipartisanship with this GOP Congress has been a losing proposition.

(2)  President Obama’s remarks on Monday about deficit reduction during which he added more heat to the fire that previously he lit on September 8th. Finally, he got rhetorically personal and physical, landing a series of roundhouse hooks to various GOP chins. Moreover, after calling out Speaker of the House Boehner by name, Obama – in the blue boxing trunks – hammered the Speaker’s orange nose. Yesterday, Boehner seemed a bit shaken, not stirred. His counter-punch was a weak non sequitura comment conflating “class warfare” with “leadership.”

(3) Ralph Nader’s Monday announcement that he is actively seeking six progressive/liberal contenders willing to challenge the President in primary contests was another reason I changed my mind.

Channeling Rocky Balboa?  The President’s deficit reduction remarks, added to his jobs plan speech two weeks ago, provided evidence of an unexpected moxie, a bit of a temper, and a tad of FDR’s sarcastic humor (“This is not class warfare. It’s math.”).  Rather than shadow boxing, he threw some swift, well-aimed uppercuts. He now evinces a full understanding that allowing the GOP to throttle him against the ropes will not wear them out, they can do that all day, all night.  You won’t exhaust them to the mat in the 15th round. You must flatten them, and publicly.

My earlier posting, set out above, pushed an entirely different agenda. Now, though, I believe that if Obama continues to battle without cravenly compromising with the GOP Congressloons on essentials, he’s got a reasonable chance to win some victories. It’s quite good too that he called out Grover Norquist and his anti-tax pledge that many Congressloons signed.  These moves are like spirited and stinging jabs to the nose, and if he does it long enough, publicly enough, the highly sought after Democratic base will rally.  Perhaps too will the independent voters, the Holy Grail of U.S. presidential elections, move into the Obama camp. . .

So, if Obama and his entire administration forcefully attack, attack, and attack the GOP (and some weak Democrats too) on all points, and demand they enact, at a minimum, the more substantial portions of his suggested tax provisions and his jobs plan, an impending primary battle would do more damage than good. My reason for promoting a primary challenge in early August was precisely, and only, to underscore the importance of President Obama to move to the left from a position many of us viewed as pandering to the far right-wing. I’d hoped he would decide to stand on Democratic principles and start punching. Yesterday, and in his jobs plan speech two weeks ago, he did it, and he’s got some fancy footwork, and John Boehner, a tough fighter, was bloodied. If yesterday’s speech is followed up, this is the President we’ve been looking for, waiting for, and a primary challenge would be ill-advised. Let’s allow the President to “float like a butterfly, and sting like a bee,” undisturbed by a 5th column of primary contenders that, in the end, will only aid the GOP/TP.

Ladies and Gentlemen, In This Other Corner, at 180 I.Q, Ralph Naaaaaaderrrrr.  On Monday, five-time presidential contender Ralph Nader called for a primary challenge to the President. Mr. Nader – whose nearly 100,000 Florida votes as a 3rd party candidate in the 2000 election caused George W. Bush to (eventually) be quasi-elected president – is seeking, six “recognizable, articulate “candidates. Nader does not want them to mount serious challenges to Obama, but to instead “rigorously debate his policy stands” on issues. Six candidates, mind you. According to an LA Times article: Nader insists the purpose of his latest electoral effort is not to deny Obama the Democratic nomination, or undermine his chances in the general election against whomever the Republicans put up against the president. ‘Just the opposite,’ Nader said, speaking via telephone from Washington shortly after the recruitment effort was made public. ‘If [Obama’s] smart, he’ll welcome it, because nothing’s worse than an incumbent president slipping in the polls, being constantly on the defensive, being accused by supporters of having no backbone and running an unenthusiastically received campaign. That’s a prescription for defeat. He’s got a lack of enthusiasm with his base,’ Nader continued, ‘If he goes through a one-year presidential campaign with mind-numbing repetition, responding to crazed Republican positions, he is not going to activate his base. He will be put on the defensive, just the way he is now.’” When Mr. Nader begins a project, as all of us over 50s know, he’s like a feral dog with a tasty bone. Nothing will stop him, although I’m sure at least some Democratic party HQ types are quietly trying to do so.

A primary challenge to the “new” Obama would be both constructive . . . and destructive. Constructive by forcing Obama to move more passionately toward his Democratic base and its members’ interests, to refine his sense of what the Democratic party stands for; destructive in causing a sense of Presidential weakness and vulnerability just at the time he’s building and demonstrating strength while taking the offensive against the GOP with force. In addition – and something I didn’t recognize in my early August posting  – a primary battle, despite some positives, would be a major distraction from the work the President has at hand – defeating the GOP and the Tea Party, or at least neutralizing them. Either result would likely secure Obama’s re-election, and just might deflate the most dangerous political group of fanatics since the civil war.

The Upcoming Budget and Deficit Battle – Go Ahead, Kick That Can Down the Road. Here’s Some Reasons Why

August 20, 2011

Go ahead, kick it again, you know you wanna. Congress will be back from summer camp in a couple of weeks for more warfare over budgets and deficits. All parties are thinking big, thinking long-term – as in ten year plans long-term. . . But the Clinton and Bush eras show that when it comes to budget and deficit projections, and the plans and proposals that come from them, usually it’s much more sensible to just “kick the can down the road,” a few yards at a time rather than a few miles. 

“An economist is an expert who will know tomorrow
why the things he predicted yesterday didn’t happen today.”
— Laurence J. Peter

“And that’s the way Mother Universe intended it.”
Your Beloved TWSA Editor

Other Than Rick Perry, What’s Predictable? Unpredictability, that’s predictable. We all project forward based on the past and the status of the present. Individuals, families, and – especially – governments. We all make big commitments to the next few years, or longer. We must, regardless of the sense of it. If we accepted that predictions are almost always wrong, our plans often futile, we’d have to admit we’re buffeted around by a world that is unresponsive to earnest, well-meaning plans. Some do admit this. Most people and all governments, though, push that kind of thinking where it belongs, away. Emotionally, humans need to plan, and for years ahead. We feel safe. In control. So, regardless of the sense of it, we project. We plan. Maybe, in the renewed budget and deficit battle, we need to shorten our horizon.

The Most Common Result Of A Ten Year Plan Is A Ten Week Lifespan. That’s why they call it “projection,” a “plan,” aka “wild ass guess.”  What happened to budget projections on September 11, 2001?  There’s that amoral random universe thing again . . . We all know that projections are guesses, and the educated ones fare no better than the uneducated ones. My concern is the great passion we have for these long-term, multi-year plans. Obama had a ten-year plan. Boehner had one, then didn’t, then did, then denied he ever had either. The Super Committee aims to produce a drastic long-term deficit and spending diet plan.

Given the poor record of distant horizon projections and the resulting plans why not agree to simply go short-range, a couple of years. Let’s face the galactic truth that we can’t predict the price of beans for the next week, although, admittedly, we usually have a decent shot at it. But the next three to ten years? And the Tea Party control freaks are insisting on rigid benchmarks in whatever multi-year deal that is struck. Hopefully, it’ll be a two-year deal, or less; something we can squirm out of when unexpected events arise. Most times – perhaps always – it’s good and sensible to “kick the can down the road.”

Soon, when the rascals return to Congress for more of the same, we’ll be bombarded like Fort Sumter with plans about plans, guesses posing as certainties, plans to make plans, and committees about planning more committees. Good plans. Lousy plans. Depraved plans. Then there’s Obama’s plan, the GOP plan, the Tea Party plan, Pelosi’s plan, ad infinitum. All plans, they’ll continue to say, are based on addressing a rapidly growing deficit. Democrats and Obama will try, but addressing immediate needs for jobs programs are most likely DOA. But plan for ten years out? That they and almost everyone else will do despite the proven futility of it. And what, in the end, will the plan that emerges be worth in practical terms? For some guidance, let’s have a look at the Clinton era budget surplus, a 1998 CBO 10-year budget projection, and the unpredicted activities of a president from Texas.

Can You Say Budget Surplus with a Straight Face? It’s hard to square it today, but remember how, ten years ago, many were worried about the problems that might come from our rapidly growing surplus.  You’re LOL-ing, aren’t you? I laughed too. But it’s true. Clinton left us with a budget surplus. And some economists were as worried about that as much as they worried about the previous deficit. Here’s a good example. Bloomberg Businessweek, February 2001. The dawn of the Bush II era. The article carried the giddy title, The Surplus? Make It a National Savings Account. . . with the private saving rate at record lows, it should be good news that the government is projected to run large budget surpluses over the next decade. Why, then, is Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan, an outstanding student of economics, concerned about” looming surpluses” and calling for ”surplus-lowering policy initiatives?”

See? People – Alan Greenspan –were worried about surpluses! Who knew? Among other esoteric things, Greenspan’s worried that the federal government would spend the coming surpluses on “private assets,” and thereby be subject to untoward and market disruptive political pressure. Good point. How’d Greenie’s concerns play out? That’s a rhetorical question; we’re now living through that result, that comeuppance to all well-meaning long-range predictors and planners. Boy howdie, are we! Here’s how a Connecticut bumpkin from Texas resided over it with near unanimity of members of his own party, and some support from the other side of the aisle.

Planning On Future Surpluses is ”necessarily subject to a relatively wide range of error. Alan Greenspan, February 2001. “Relatively.” Gotcha Alan. As we all know, and experienced first-hand, the arrival of Dubya in January 2001 very quickly provided the necessary “range of error” Greenspan spoke of. Quickly, he knocked off any rosy future of any kind. With his infamous – to many – tax cut he quickly put us back into deficit, and beyond, urging us to boldly go where no American deficit has gone since the Civil War or FDR. So now, ten years later, it’s deficits, deficits, deficits. How’s that for a ten-year plan?

1998: A Bold Projection by the Congressional Budget Office (CBO). In 1998, the government had a $70 billion budget surplus. Head scratching all around. This is the trend, many said. This trend is our friend. The CBO, in its The Economic and Budget Outlook: Fiscal Years 1999-2008, projected continuing surpluses from 1998 to 2008. Surreal, huh? Today, with what seems clinically insane optimism, CBO estimated that from January 1999, the government will have a budget surplus for each fiscal year from 1999 through 2009!  Even Candide’s mentor, “the best of all worlds” Pangloss would be dumbfounded.

If it had happened like that perhaps we’d have no Tea Party today, no Cantor, no Bachmann, no Ron Paul, no Rick Perry, no John Boehner (well, no, Boehner would have found a way). But it didn’t happen “according to Hoyle,” and it couldn’t. Here’s what happened instead:

The only predictable about a ten-year projection is its massive instability. A projection is based upon actual economic and political data that is static, it’s already behind us. The variables attached to events both big and small abound – nearing the infinite. If we could identify and list the thousands of variables that would more accurately predict a short-term result, we would not be able to compute them, so many possibilities would emerge. Computational capacities are still relatively weak in cases with even a dozen variables, much less thousands. “Certain” and “projection” don’t play well together at recess. Over ten years?

To me, the 1998 CBO lesson is that whatever long-term plan comes out of the Fall 2011 budget and deficit battle will almost certainly be short-lived, overtaken by events unimagined and utterly beyond our ability to prevent. Old Rummy’s “unknown unknowns.”

Moreover, it’ll be obvious well before November 2012. Do you think the electoral politics from here forward makes agreement on anything substantial, like federal job creation, more or less likely? I tend to think “less likely” simply because the GOP hammer, the Tea Party, sees every problem as a nail. Unless their own constituents change their minds, and pressure them – there are some signs of this – there will be little backing off.

In any event, despite the checkered history of projections, that doesn’t mean we should abandon them for short-term budget planning. And demographic projections and derived longer-term plans are critical for Social Security outlays, Medicare costs, etc. Moreover, planning centers one’s attention on priorities. In the CBO case, though, projections and planning did not predict the economic cost of George W. Bush, 9/11, nor the housing bubble. These were true historical outliers, a gathering of events and trends that are equivalent to 100-year floods. Nobody can reasonably “blame” CBO in the slightest for this. Rather, it’s our overuse of, and overawe about, long-term planning that leads to wasted time, endless delay, sometimes brutal contention over issues expected to arise five, six, or ten years down the road. Worst of all, there’s the opportunity cost – time wasted in futile ten year planning – pushes attention aqay from immediate needs that government could rather quickly address.

So, Congress and President, go ahead, kick that can down the street where we now live, the one with all those out of work folks sitting on the stoops. Concentrate there, plan there, not on the street where we plan to live in ten years. That street will likely not even exist then.

The Wounded Stock Market and the Political Abandonment of the Working Class

August 4, 2011

Today, I’m not simply referencing the equities market collapse over the past week, including today’s significant losses as of 2:30 p.m. There are many other reasons for this week’s swan dive. So, eager as I may be to do so, I can’t put this entirely at the door of the GOP and its maniacal dancing monkeys, the Tea party. This week, though, undeniably, the debt “deal” is among the forces decimating equity prices and Americans’ confidence. 

The deal’s unrelenting tight-fisted approach seems, at present, to rule out any fiscal stimulus emerging from Congress. The independent Federal Reserve’s “according to Hoyle” monetary stimulus efforts seem to have done little good stimulating employment growth and lending so far, and it shouldn’t be expected to be helpful in the future. The fed funds rate has for a long time been as low as a snake in a cesspool, and, today, the Treasuries that were almost a pariah two days ago are rallying across the board, sending interest rates lower than low. To what avail after four years of recession? (Note: We never emerged from it in 2009 . . .) And now, without fiscal stimulus, the country and the equally shaky world faces a likely killing dose of American “fiscal austerity” and the further unemployment it brings with it. Who will be able to buy cars, refrigerators, computers, or bubble gum? Who, then, will be able to provide the earnings that could revive this critically sick stock market? 

Well, no one, it seems, in D.C., thought about that very much. The Tea Party wrecking crew pushed our overly accommodating President and most of the Democratic and Republican parties into a final package that will pummel employment at all levels and in all sectors. The debt ceiling deal just signed into law will, perhaps radically, worsen employment, lessen personal income, and diminish already anemic personal spending. If we avoid what would be remembered as the 2nd Great Depression, we need to make some WPA-type Hail Mary passes, and soon. 

For now, though, the Tea Party and the GOP it commands stand stolidly and stubbornly by the windows in their House and watch all this destruction without so much as offering the tiniest ray of hope that we, as a nation, will pull together again as we did in the 1930s. Unfortunately, the President, an apparently conflict averse leader, as well as much of the far too “civil” Democratic party, also watch from afar as well. Just watching, it seems, deeming it too uncivil or uncouth or strenuous to fight for the country. The unindicted co-conspirators.